A Sensitive Kind of Murder (A Kate Jasper Mystery) (17 page)

BOOK: A Sensitive Kind of Murder (A Kate Jasper Mystery)
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“What if Steve drove the hit-and-run car?” my aunt countered.

My mouth dropped open. I hadn’t even thought of
that
possibility.

Wayne shook his head hard.

“Garrett just isn’t a murderer,” he proclaimed.

“Then who is?” I fired back.

Wayne looked stung. Sometimes I wished he had thicker skin. Sometimes I wished I could sew my mouth shut.

“Listen,” Aunt Dorothy chirped. “I’ll bet we can all use a change of pace. Let’s all go do something fun—”

“That sounds—” I began.

“—like look at wedding books,” she finished up.

“Wedding books!” I objected. “But Aunt Dorothy, we have a murder to solve.”

“I am quite capable of multitasking, Katie,” she told me. She didn’t shake her finger my way, but she might as well have.

I turned to Wayne. He turned his grinning face away. Well, at least she’d made someone happy.

I wondered if she would believe there were no bookstores in Marin.

“Kate, how about that little store in Horquillo?” Wayne suggested helpfully. “They have a big section on wedding planning.”

My mouth dropped open again. If I kept this up, I’d have more than one reason to sew it shut. But I just couldn’t believe that Wayne had noticed they had a section on wedding planning. I certainly hadn’t. And worse yet, I realized it was possible that he had actually browsed there.

“Oh, that sounds perfect,” Dorothy declared, standing.

“Aunt Dorothy,” I began.

“What, dear?” she asked.

“Um, this wedding stuff, I just don’t know whether I’m really up for—”

“That’s exactly why you need to research,” my aunt assured me with a big smile. “It must seem overwhelming, but any task can be broken down to its component parts. And some of these books can be very helpful.”

Wayne was standing now, too. What was I supposed to do? Faint? Demand to go to the hospital? Claim aliens had arrived to abduct me? It was no use.

“I’ll drive,” I muttered glumly.

Wayne obviously didn’t hear me. When we got out to the driveway, he was in the driver’s seat as fast as Felix Byrne pouncing on a good story. Maybe he was afraid I would hijack the car. In fact, that was a good idea. Too bad I wasn’t faster than he was.

Once we were rolling, I worked on the multitasking.

“So, Aunt Dorothy, who’s your best bet for murderer so far?” I asked.

“Well, I can think of a motive for everyone in the Heartlink group, and for their sigos,” she began.

“You can?” I exclaimed. She was a lot farther along than I was. “Like what?”

“Well, Van Eisner is obviously paranoid about his drug problem,” she pointed out. I nodded. That was a no-brainer. “Carl Russo would do anything to protect his son. And his son is none too stable, judging from appearances. Ted Kimmochi has secrets he doesn’t want his wife to know. Is she, perhaps, the money as well as the brains in their little partnership? Even Helen—”

“Look at that,” Wayne interrupted, pointing. We were passing a boy on a bicycle with a six-inch crystal tied to his shoulder by a black Velcro strap.

Dorothy laughed.

“Only in California,” Wayne told her.

They were bonding. Ack.

“And Helen?” I prompted.

“No more talk about murder,” Dorothy ordered. “We’re out here to cheer up.”

And then she proceeded to talk about wedding books. Funny, I’d never thought of murder as a relatively cheerful subject before now.

“So, I suggest a comprehensive book,” she was finishing up when Wayne turned the Toyota into the small, shrubbery-bordered Horquillo shopping center where he’d spotted the wedding books. There were no places directly in front of the bookstore, so Wayne parked across the lot, in front of the empty space where a yardage store had once been.

“The book by Murray Lynne is the most comprehensive, I think,” Dorothy continued after the two of us had exited the car.

She linked her arm in mine, and we began to cross the lot together while Wayne locked the Toyota. We were almost to the bookstore when I heard a car gunning its motor. I turned to look for Wayne. He was in the exact center of the small lot, in an aisle between two rows of cars, his eyes lowered thoughtfully as he ambled along.

A black car came barreling down the aisle in his direction.

“Wayne!” I screamed.

He looked up, but he looked at me, not at the car. And he stopped moving.

I reached him in three leaps, and I shoved him with everything I had. He flew through the air, out of danger from the car that was almost on us. Then I dropped to the ground and rolled away from the shrieking engine, smelling exhaust fumes. As I rolled, I remembered something important: I had to get the license plate number of that car.

But the car was gone by the time I raised myself to sitting position again. I could hear the roar of its engine speeding away, but I couldn’t see it over the shrubbery surrounding the shopping center.

If it hadn’t been for the aching of my body, and Wayne sitting stunned on the ground a few yards away from me, I would have thought I’d imagined the black car. But I hadn’t.

 

 

- Eighteen -

 

“That vehicle tried to run over Wayne,” my Aunt Dorothy announced from somewhere above me. Her voice sounded distant, as if from another planet.

I brought my own body back down to Earth, looked up, and took in the shock on my aunt’s elfin face. No, I hadn’t imagined the black car.

The last of my adrenaline rush faded away, leaving me weak. I closed my eyes. I was already on the ground. If I fainted—

“But Kate hit me first,” Wayne growled. My eyes popped back open. Wayne! He stood up, wincing at me. “Remind me not to ever make you
really
mad.” He limped toward me, held out his hand, and then whispered, “Thank you doesn’t cover it, Kate. Love you.”

“Oh, Wayne,” I answered. I couldn’t think of anything else to say. I took his hand and let him lift me to a standing position. “Are you really hurt?”

“No, just a little bruised, ego more than body. All that karate training.” He shook his head. “Shouldn’t have let you throw me. Should have been underneath the wheels of a car. Hate it when I goof up like that.”

I giggled, then couldn’t believe I had. Wayne had almost been killed, for all I knew. I threw my arms around him and squeezed.

“Ouch,” we both said at once, and I let go.

“Oh, no, I didn’t look at the license plate!” Dorothy broke in, her voice sounding a little closer now. “Did either of you?”

Wayne and I looked into each others’ eyes, and shook our heads.

People were streaming into the parking lot now.

“What happened?” a tall woman in khaki demanded.

“Should we call an ambulance?” a shorter man in a Grateful Dead T-shirt asked.

“Did someone get hurt?” someone I couldn’t see threw in.

“It was a car; it almost hit that guy,” a red-haired teenager said, pointing Wayne’s way.

“On purpose?” asked the woman in khaki.

“Sure looked that way,” the guy in the Grateful Dead T-shirt answered.

“Did any of you get a license plate number?” Aunt Dorothy inquired politely.

But these people had more questions than answers. No one remembered the make of the car, just that it had been black. Or maybe dark blue. An American car, kind of big. No one saw the driver, though one woman thought she’d seen dark glasses and maybe a muffler or something. They were actually doing better than I was in the memory department; all I could remember was Wayne’s face as he’d looked at me and stood stock still in the path of the speeding car.

“What were you thinking about?” I asked him.

“Thinking about?”

“When the car was coming at you,” I explained. “You didn’t hear it. You didn’t see it.”

“Oh.” His skin grew pink. “I was thinking that I shouldn’t be so judgmental about all the secrets that people have been keeping. Secrets aren’t necessarily lies.”

I wondered whether Steve Summers would agree, but then people were asking questions again.

“D’ya wanna report this thing?” was the question that came through the loudest.

Did we?

“Perhaps we should call Captain Wooster,” Dorothy suggested.

“I’ll get my cell phone,” Wayne said. That’s when I knew he was still shaken. The cell phone was in his Jaguar, not my lowly Toyota.

“Um, Wayne—” I began.

“Right,” he muttered. “No cell phone. Home.”

So, the three of us said goodbye to the sympathetic crowd that had gathered, got into my Toyota, and went home to call Captain Wooster.

On the way, Wayne, Dorothy, and I all argued over who should call the captain.

“I saw the most,” I put in.

“The car was aimed at me,” Wayne insisted.

“That young man won’t listen to you,” my aunt pointed out.

“I heard it first,” I tried again.

By the time we got home, we were all tired and cranky. But I was the fastest on my feet into the house, and I was dialing Captain Wooster’s number before Aunt Dorothy and Wayne even made it up the stairs. Unfortunately, the captain was in, and my call was put through to his office. I should have listened to my aunt.

First, I told him about going to Horquillo for wedding books. I should have never mentioned the “W” word.

“Weddings! Eve’s apples, do you have to marry the poor clod twice before you kill him or what?”

“I don’t even want to get married again,” I fired back. Then I looked over my shoulder. Dorothy and Wayne were just settling into the living room. I lowered my voice. “But that’s not the point. We were in this little shopping center, you know the one that used to have the yardage shop in Horquillo—”

“To get wedding books?”

“I…yes. Anyway, I heard this car—”

“Hell’s bells, just do up the wedding favors in cyanide and be done with it—”

“So this car came barreling down on Wayne, but I shoved him out of the way—” I pressed on.

“You’re saying this was in Horquillo?” Captain Wooster stopped me, his voice sounding almost happy for a moment.

“Yeah, and then I rolled away—”

“If this was in Horquillo, why are you calling me?” the captain demanded.

I closed my mouth for a minute to digest his words.

“Because this has to be related to Steve Summers’ murder—” I finally started up again.

“So
you
say. I say, let the Horquillo Police Department deal with it.”

“Are you kidding?” I yelped.

“Listen to me, Ms. Jasper. Noah’s giraffes, I’ve got two murders on my hands, and you call me about a traffic accident in Horquillo? And you ask me if I’m kidding?”

“This wasn’t a traffic accident!” I screamed. “Someone tried to kill my husband.”

“Were
you
there?” he asked me accusingly.

I took a deep breath. I was seeing pinpoint dots in front of my eyes in colors that would have been more appropriate to the Sixties.

“Captain, I was not driving the car in question,” I replied, hoping my voice was calmer than the rest of my body.

“Ha!” he shot back. “Tell that to the guys in Horquillo.” And then he hung up.

I walked into the living room. Aunt Dorothy and Wayne were both on the denim couch with expectant faces.

“Captain Wooster feels that the Horquillo Police Department has jurisdiction,” I summarized.

Dorothy just nodded. She was not a woman to say, “I told you so.” Not out loud, anyway.

“He what?” Wayne asked, squinting his eyes.

“He’s nuts!” I moaned.

“Oh, right,” he murmured calmly. Maybe he was seeing pinpoints of color, too, but at least Wayne
sounded
calm.

“Sorry,” I whispered.

“Oh, now, Katie, don’t you be sorry,” my aunt told me. “You did your best. And our Captain Wooster
is
missing a few berries from his basket.”

Wayne stood up and put his arm around me. “Plus, you
did
save my life,” he added. “A small thing, maybe, but I appreciate it.”

I felt my mouth curve into a smile then. The tension rolled away from my body, leaving me as limp as a Beanie Baby.

“Well, I’ll let you two youngsters have some peace,” Aunt Dorothy announced. “I’m going back to my hotel for a nice, hot bath.”

It wasn’t until Aunt Dorothy’s car pulled out of the driveway that I began to cry. But once I started, I couldn’t seem to stop. And then Wayne was holding me. He might have been crying too, or maybe I just splashed tears on his face. We just held each other, bruises and all. And then we were kissing. And cuddling. And then we were back in bed, where we’d started the day an eternity ago.

*

Sunday morning, Wayne and I woke up simultaneously, groaning—not from lust, but from sore, aching bodies. It was lucky we’d made love the night before because showing each other our bruises wasn’t exactly erotic. But then again, neither of us was afraid anymore.

The phone rang while I was examining a black and blue spot on Wayne’s backside. It was the size and shape of Brazil.

“I’ll get it,” we both said.

Amazingly, Wayne bowed, letting me do the honor. I didn’t have time to be suspicious as I threw on a robe and headed to my phone just in time to hear the answering-machine tape end and Garrett Peterson say “hello.”

“Garrett,” I greeted him, grabbing the receiver.

I wanted to talk to this man. We had something in common—hit-and-run. Did Wayne’s close call the night before have anything to do with Garrett’s sister’s final call years before? Would I have the nerve to ask?

“Kate?” Garrett said, a slight lilt to his deep, slow voice. “It seemed important to call, to take some action.”

“Uh-huh,” I murmured, feeling very therapeutic.

“I think it’s time for another meeting of the group. And not just the members. I…well…”

“You want all the suspects there,” I put in.

There was a brief silence. Garrett
did
realize that all the members and their sigos were suspects, didn’t he? Even if he didn’t know about the key, he had to realize the implications of the deaths. And then I reminded myself that I really didn’t want him to know about the Jaguar key because the only way he could know about it was if he’d stolen it himself. And I truly liked Garrett.

Finally, he replied, his voice barely audible. “Yes, I suppose I mean the suspects.”

“Garrett, do you think you know who did it?” I asked.

“No, no,” he told me. He sighed much more audibly than he was speaking. “Jerry told me about your aunt’s theory. But I have no idea. I just need to talk to everyone. To see them react with my own eyes. If one of us did this thing, I want to know. I need closure.”

“So you want the group to meet—”

“See you in a few minutes!” Wayne called out.

I looked up and saw my sweetie at the door, fully dressed. How had he done that so fast?

“Hold on a minute, Garrett,” I ordered and put my hand over the receiver.

“Wayne, where—”

“I’ll be back in half an hour,” Wayne assured me, or tried to assure me.

“But—” I protested.

Wayne was out the door before I could even finish my objection.

“Are you okay, Kate?” Garrett asked me.

His voice invited me to confide in him. No, I wasn’t okay. Wayne was going out without me. Was he going to investigate? Why did he run out so fast? But Garrett was the man who took on everyone else’s problems. I wasn’t going to make him take on mine.

“Fine,” I lied, hearing the Toyota start up and leave as I did. “So, when do you want the group to meet?”

“Today?” Garrett suggested. “Maybe I could reach everyone by late afternoon. I know it’s short notice, but still, it’s Sunday.”

Maybe
I

d
be able to reach
Wayne
by then. Damn. Where had he gone?

“Sounds fine to me,” I agreed.

“Is Wayne okay?” Garrett asked softly.

“What do you mean?” I shot back. My skin tightened on my bruised body. Did Garrett know about last night’s car assault?

“The murders must be affecting him, Kate,” he answered slowly and clearly, as if addressing a mental patient. I knew the tone; I’d used it myself years ago when I’d worked on a psych ward. “I know Wayne’s a very sensitive man.”

“Oh, right,” I muttered. “Um, you know Jerry was over here last night—”

“And told you all about my sister,” Garrett finished for me, his voice speeding up. “I know I should have shared information about my sister with the group, but it was so long ago, and the others had more current problems. It didn’t really seem appropriate. Still, I wasn’t trying to hide anything.”

“Some things just hurt too much to discuss in a group?” I guessed.

“Yes,” he agreed simply.

“It’s all right, Garrett,” I told him, wondering if it was all right with Wayne, too.

“Thanks, Kate,” he replied. “Wayne’s lucky to have you.” And once again, paranoia made me wonder if he was talking about the car that had aimed for Wayne last night. I rolled my sore shoulders impatiently, as if I could roll away my suspicions.

“And Jerry’s lucky to have you,” I reminded him. “You know, I’ll bet Jerry wouldn’t mind if you leaned on him for support more often.” Me, the Dear Abby of the Heartlink men’s group. There was something about Garrett that brought out the inner meddler in me.

Garrett was silent for a few heartbeats, then he spoke seriously.

“You’re right,” he conceded. “I’ve got to start paying better attention to Jerry.”

“Well, anyway…” I said, suddenly embarrassed by my meddling. Then we talked about the proposed afternoon get-together. We worked out details, and Garrett promised to call the others, and finally, I hung up the phone.

Wayne hadn’t returned by the time I’d finished talking. But then, a half-hour hadn’t gone by either.

I went to my desk, still in my robe. Paperwork awaited me. A workaholic tipple would get me through the time left before Wayne returned. Invoices, ledgers, checks…The choices were endless.

Within minutes, I was working on invoices, but my mind continued to hum with questions. I hadn’t planned to leave Wayne’s side until I found out who was driving the black car, until I found out who’d murdered Steve Summers and Isaac Herrick. But Wayne had escaped. And for what? A half-hour wasn’t long enough to go into the city to work. It certainly wasn’t long enough to investigate. What
was
he doing?

My mind was so loud that I didn’t hear the door open at first. But a swishing sound caught my attention—the sound of a lion slithering through tall grass.

I jumped out of my chair and ran toward the entryway.

But the tall grass wasn’t grass, it was flowers—a huge bouquet of flowers: gladioli, irises, roses, Shasta daisies, cosmos, and more, swishing toward me. I couldn’t even see the lion.

And then the flowers bowed my way.

‘To the superiority of fast reflexes over somber thoughts,” a deep voice intoned, and then the flowers were standing again.

I opened my mouth to yell at the homely face that peeked over the top of the flowers, but his worried eyes stopped me.

“Damn, you’re cute when you’re flowers,” I drawled in my best Mae West voice.

Wayne smiled shyly, and I remembered again why I loved him.

“Didn’t know how else to thank you,” he mumbled.

“I thought you did a fine job last night,” I reminded him.

He blushed. Too bad I was too bruised to make him
really
blush.

We’d finally found a vase big enough for the flowers when Wayne mentioned Ann Rivera, my friend who worked as a psychiatric hospital administrator.

“She might know Garrett,” he reminded me.

“Lunch?” I asked.

“Yeah,” he breathed We were a team again.

I got on the phone and convinced Ann to go to lunch with us. Ordinarily, Ann would have preferred a feast cooked by Wayne’s own hands, but Sundays were always busy at the hospital. So, she suggested a trip to Eco-Eats, a vegetarian place near her work. We agreed on a time, and I hung up. Then I remembered Aunt Dorothy, the third member of our team. Wayne promised to call her and shooed me into the shower.

The hot water stung my bruises, but after a while it eased the sore muscles in my neck and back. I leaned into the water and luxuriated, and smiled secretly at the naive sweetness of my husband.

A few hours later, Aunt Dorothy, Ann Rivera, Wayne, and I were seated at a table at Eco-Eats. Our table mats were woven, not paper, and our waitpersons weren’t persons at all, but Disneyesque endangered species. We’d been shown in by a sad-looking panther and were being read the specials by a six-foot spotted owl.

“…avocado-tempeh burgers, six-grain pilaf, and stuffed zucchini with lemon-walnut sauce, and our soups today are mushroom-miso and basil-bean.”

Wayne gave a little grunt beside me. Eco-Eats was not his kind of restaurant. Wayne managed to put up with vegetarian food, but only the best vegetarian food.

“I’ll give you a little time,” the spotted owl said and turned in a flurry of scruffy plumage.

“So, you know Garrett Peterson.” My aunt Dorothy returned to the subject at hand once the owl was out of earshot. We’d all taken turns filling Ann in on recent events and suspects while we were still in the car driving to Eco-Eats.

“I certainly do know Garrett,” Ann answered. “He’s a visiting psychiatrist at our hospital. And let me tell you,” she shook a finger here, “Garrett is one of the kindest men I’ve ever known. You can take him off your suspect list right now.”

“You’re a loyal friend,” my aunt encouraged her.

Ann relaxed into her linen suit, her brown face breaking into a toothy grin.

“Okay, so I’m a little biased,” she admitted. “If Isaac wasn’t dead, I’d think
he
had a hand in this mischief in some way, though.”

“You knew Isaac?” I asked.

“Isaac was a man you couldn’t
not
know in the therapeutic community,” she told us. “And he was a real joker.” Her face turned serious again. “I never really figured him out. He was smarter than he acted, that’s for sure.”

Aunt Dorothy nodded solemnly.

Ann sat back in her woven hemp seat, her eyes unfocused and thoughtful.

“Did you tell me that the mother of the Kimmochi girls said Steve spent a lot of time with them?”

I nodded.

“Well, if you’re looking for motive—”

“Have we made up our minds?” the spotted owl interrupted us.

We all jumped.

Ann and I got the avocado-tempeh burgers. Dorothy decided to try the stuffed zucchini. Wayne played it safe with the miso soup and a vegan chef’s salad. We all ordered herbal iced tea, and our owl shuffled away. I wondered how hot it was in that bird suit.

“Have you guys considered sexual molestation?” Ann interrupted my thought.

“Huh?” the three of us replied.

“Steve, the Kimmochi girls,” Ann reminded us impatiently.

“But Steve was Mr. Clean,” I objected, “ethical at the least—”

“You ever notice how these religious leaders are always the ones fooling around when they shouldn’t be?” she shot back. “Child molesters don’t wear signs.”

“Steve was very quiet,” Wayne offered. I didn’t know if this was an indictment or a character reference.

We all sat in silence for a while. Steve Summers as child molester. I shook my head, and realized that I was still sore from my dive and roll the night before. Still, I didn’t buy it. Steve was too self-righteous to bring himself to do something so despicable. He’d have killed himself first. And then I wondered if he
had
killed himself, had somehow planned his own death. But who’d killed Isaac Herrick? And why?

Our food arrived before anyone voiced any more arguments, pro or con.

The avocado-tempeh burger was stuffed with onions and hot mustard, and it was good, despite Wayne’s unspoken disdain. The thought of Steve Summers as a child molester was less appetizing.

We all left Eco-Eats in a more sober mood than that in which we’d entered its ecologically correct doors.

Dorothy and I began to talk once we’d dropped Ann off at the hospital—theories, second theories, conjecture. Could Steve have been a child molester? Wayne cut in authoritatively after a few minutes.

“No,” he stated. “It’s not possible. Steve Summers couldn’t have done it.”

Dorothy looked thoughtful, but said nothing. I don’t think she believed his absolute no, but she didn’t state any further opinion.

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