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Authors: Shirley Rousseau Murphy

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BOOK: Cat Cross Their Graves
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“W
hen Patty's daughter ran,” Dallas said, “could
you tell me more about that?” The tearoom fire had burned low, the pastry plate was empty save for one lone cinnamon roll, the coffee in its thermos getting cold.

“Because Marlie had testified against Craig and Irving Fenner,” Dorothy said, “Patty was afraid for her. She got Marlie out of the country, had a driver take her to Vegas. Marlie flew out of there under an assumed name, headed for Canada, for Calgary, where Patty's secretary had arranged for a new car to be waiting, and an apartment and a job. Marlie went to work as a secretary.

“Craig was in prison and would likely be executed. And Irving Fenner was in custody, awaiting trial. But Fenner was so enraged by Patty and Marlie's testimonies, and so vindictive. Patty was convinced he would send someone to find Marlie and try
to kill her. Patty didn't worry too much about herself, she always had people around her.

“Everything was fine for about a year. Marlie stayed in Canada, working. Fenner was convicted and serving time. Then one night, when Marlie had taken a weekend to drive up into Banff, her car went over a cliff in the rain. She died in the wreck.

“Some people said she'd committed suicide, that she hadn't been able to deal with life after Craig killed Conner. Patty knew different, she knew her daughter. She was certain that Irving Fenner had had Marlie killed.

“It could never be proved. No witnesses, no evidence that would hold up. When Fenner was released, Patty was more angry that he was free than afraid of him. Her friends convinced her to hire a bodyguard. She finally did; she kept him for about a year, then gave it up. Convinced herself that Fenner had left the state. Another of the group was already out, Harold Timmons. She heard rumors that he stayed in California, but she never found out where.”

Dorothy finished her coffee. “I don't know, Detective Garza. I seem to be going on about this and I'm not sure I'm helping. I don't know if those cases are connected to Patty's murder. I just…” She snatched a tissue from the pack, a fit of weeping silencing her.

When Dorothy's crying had subsided, Garza rose. She stood up and was pulling on her jacket when Garza's cell phone rang.

He answered, and talked for a moment, growing very still. A slow smile touched his dark eyes. “Hold a minute, Max.”

He shook hands with Dorothy and hastily thanked her for her time. “Will you let me know when you're leaving and how I can get in touch?”

“I will.” She gave him a watery smile and left the tearoom.

“Okay, Max. I'm in the tearoom, Dorothy just left.” Garza sat down at the table and, listening, poured the last of the coffee into his cup and picked up the last cinnamon roll. Above him atop the china cabinet, Joe Grey peered over, his silver ears sharp with interest, his claws silently flexing, every nerve in his tomcat body on alert. Harper had something, something was happening. He wished he could hear Harper's side of the conversation.

Garza smiled. “Yes, I know the cottage, I'll be right there. It takes two of us to collect evidence?” He listened again and shook his head. “Our woman snitch this time. Well, maybe she had a cold. How far in from the vent, did she say? Some of these old foundations—”

He was quiet, then, “I have tools in the car. I'll be there ASAP.” Rising, he gulped the last of his coffee, wolfed the cinnamon roll, wiped some sticky sugar from his lips, and headed out. Joe didn't know where Dallas was going, but he didn't intend to be far behind. There was no question, Harper's caller had to be either Dulcie or Kit. Very likely the kit, who had just rushed home in such a swivet. He stared across the patio to her third-floor window, but he didn't see her. As he leaped from the china cupboard to the table, he heard Garza's car start, out front. Hitting the cold tile floor, Joe was out of there, pushing open the tearoom door, heading across the patio for the
bougainvillea vine that would take him, faster than any stairs, up to the Greenlaw penthouse. Where was Garza headed? Under what house? If Dallas Garza and Max Harper were about to crawl under someone's house, presumably without a search warrant, he sure didn't mean to miss the entertainment.

 

Dulcie watched Lori leave the garden with Cora Lee, the child slipping through the gate as warily as if she expected that any minute someone would snatch her up. Dulcie looked after her, frowning. If Lori was in danger from more than a bad-tempered father, why hadn't she told Genelle and Cora Lee what more was wrong? Probably, Dulcie thought, because the stubborn little kid didn't want anything to do with the police. When they'd gone, Dulcie approached the terrace, watching Genelle Yardley with interest.

Genelle, pushing back the breakfast dishes, had spread out the front page and was reading about the little graves. Something drew Dulcie to the old woman, something about the way Genelle kept looking up the garden at her. Such a knowing look, so secretly amused. Shivering, Dulcie padded nearer, but she stayed beneath the bushes. This woman couldn't know what she was, that wasn't possible. But yet…Why that secret smile? Too many people knew already. Though those who shared the cats' secret in friendship would never tell, the more who knew, the more chance there was of some unintended slip.

Genelle looked up from the paper, her faded blue eyes widening. Dulcie remained very still as the old
woman studied her where she crouched in the bushes, looking straight into her eyes.

“Good morning,” Genelle said in much the same way she had greeted Lori.

Dulcie's heart dropped. Warily she trotted across the bricks and smiled up at Genelle, as friendly as any neighborhood cat, waving her tail as if longing for a nice gentle pet and a bit of breakfast.

“You are Wilma's cat, the library cat. I think your name is Dulcie?”

Dulcie purred and rolled over, waving her tail, pretending that she was used to people talking to her, carrying on one-sided conversations.

“You can speak to me, Dulcie. I know who you are.” The old woman smiled gently. “And I know what you are. You live with Wilma Getz. Oh, Wilma doesn't know that I know the whole story. Wilma took you home from this garden, Dulcie, when you were very small.”

Dulcie tried not to stare at her.

“She had no idea what she was getting when she took one of our litter of kittens. Nor did I, I wasn't sure. I only knew that my own dear Melody, your mother, was a very unusual cat, that she could speak,” Genelle said softly.

“Melody and I had many talks here in this garden, many long and fascinating discussions in this house. She was with me until she died,” Genelle said sadly.

Dulcie looked at the old woman as blankly as she could manage, dropping her ears as if she were shy or frightened. Genelle paid no attention; she kept talking.

“I didn't know how her one litter of kittens would
turn out, nor did Melody herself. She said that none of her six brothers and sisters could speak.” Genelle reached out to stroke Dulcie, but Dulcie backed away.

“This morning,” Genelle said, “you came here following the child. I gather you've been watching her.” She put out her hand, toward Dulcie. “I am terminal, my dear. In a few months, I'll be dead. Your secret will be dead with me. I will tell no one.”

Dulcie could only watch her. Her heart skipped, as if it had lost all sense of timing.

“Melody had five kittens, three orange, one calico, and you, a dark, striped tabby. You were the tiniest. The others kept pushing you out. They didn't seem to like you, didn't want you to eat. I guess all young animals are that way with the runt, it's the way of nature. But something about you…” Genelle shook her head. “Melody would carry you up onto an easy chair and feed you alone, so you did indeed thrive. But she worried over you.”

Genelle looked at Dulcie. “I kept the other four kittens. Neither I nor Melody knew—there was no way to guess—if you would be the most likely to speak. We thought you would, but we didn't know. And I…I thought even then that I wasn't well. We found the best home for you, where we could keep an eye on you. We chose Wilma with great care, but I told Wilma nothing.

“Your calico sister died when she was just six weeks old, a twisted intestine, the vet said. But you grew healthy, a wild, strong kitten. It was not until you began to steal your neighbors' lingerie, when you were little, that I felt sure you were more than
you appeared to be. Melody did that when she was small; she so loved beautiful things.”

Dulcie dared not speak. She couldn't stop shivering.

“Melody was not a young cat. She seemed determined to have that one litter. She died four months later.” Genelle's voice shook. “It was…it was as if she knew. She wanted to produce at least one kitten like herself.

“And you were the only one.” Genelle smiled and reached down to touch the peach-toned markings on Dulcie's nose and ears. “A bit of the Irish orange,” she said with a fond, faraway look. “The other three cats are with me, orange tabbies, you've surely seen them around the village; they are dear, sweet cats, but they are normal, ordinary cats, not like you and Melody.” Genelle rose, gripped her walker, and slowly crossed the terrace to the edge of the garden.

“It has taken a lot of self-control not to speak to you until now, my dear, nor to speak about you with Wilma. I thought that best. You have both guarded your secret as well as you are able, considering your busy life—you and your two friends,” Genelle said softly.

Dulcie swallowed and backed away, slipping into the bushes again. That Genelle was aware of her ability was one thing. That Genelle knew about Joe Grey and Kit deeply alarmed her.

“Nor will I speak of them, to anyone,” Genelle assured her, peering after her into the bushes. “I promise that. But I have enjoyed observing from afar the adventures I imagine for you three. From bits of news, my dear. From glimpsing you in the village,
very busy and intent. From news clips about the crimes that have occurred in the village, and from the anonymous tips the police often receive. I know a couple of officers in the department, Dulcie. And I know a reporter or two. I hear things, things no one else would put together.” The old woman laughed and winked. “And more power to you, my dear. The three of you are remarkable.”

This was too much. Crouching deeper among the bushes, Dulcie was filled with feelings of chagrin, of betrayal.

She had no reason to feel that way. Indeed, she felt she could trust Genelle Yardley. But for a stranger to know about them, to have known all this time, to have been watching them…To Dulcie, the implications were immense and terrifying.

Stepping away from the walker but still holding on to it, Genelle knelt at the edge of the bushes, an exercise that took a great effort. “Please come out, please indulge an old woman. Mavity won't be here for another hour. Please come out so we can talk? And help me decide what to do about Lori?”

And Dulcie could do nothing else. She came out at last, her ears back, her tail switching.

“I don't mean to tell anyone about Lori,” Genelle said. “It's very clear that she's afraid. But it seems to me that the child must go to the police on her own. Before her father knows she has the billfold.” She looked hard at Dulcie. “Have you thought about what that billfold could mean?” Genelle rose, the effort so tiring that Dulcie longed to help balance her. Clutching at her walker, she turned away, making for her chair. Dulcie came out from the bushes then and
leaped into the chair opposite, eyeing the last crumbs of bacon; crumbs were all that Lori had left.

Pushing the plate across to her, Genelle said, “It would be far safer for Lori if she'd go to the police now, of her own volition. Before Jack Reed knows what the child suspects, and that she has what could be damning evidence.”

 

As the sun lifted above the eastern hills, and Dallas Garza hurried away from Otter Pine Inn to meet Max Harper, Joe Grey leaped into the bougainvillea vine, heading up to the kit's window. He wanted some answers. He halted halfway up, as, below him, Lucinda and Pedric emerged from the stairs into the gardens. Looking down, he watched the kit race ahead of them, all fizz and ginger and switching tail. The old couple, in the first cold light of dawn, was headed for the dining patio. Quickly Joe dropped down again to the bricks and followed.

No one else was out there at the garden tables; it was too early and too cold. Bundled in fleece coats and sheepskin boots and caps as if they were at the north pole, the Greenlaws seemed fixed on indulging their young runaway with a welcome-home patio breakfast. Even beneath the patio heaters, and seated beside the fire pit where flames danced, they had to be freezing. The moment they were seated beside the warming blaze, Joe trotted over and, before Kit could leap into a chair, he pressed against her, nosing her toward the far end of the garden, away where nosy waiters wouldn't overhear.

She followed him, scowling, but wide eyed with
questions, glancing back at Lucinda and Pedric with a be-back-in-a-minute look. Lucinda and Pedric, watching the little drama, could say nothing, observed by an approaching waiter.

Deep beneath a pyracantha bush whose branches hung heavy with red berries, Joe stood looking at the kit. “I see you got home.”

She hung her head, ashamed that she had worried everyone, but then smiled with smug delight. “I found him, Joe, I found the man who killed Patty and I went in his old dirty cottage and watched him and saw his car, too, and all the garbage like he's been there awhile and I—”

“Will you slow down, Kit? Tell me where. Does Harper know? Did you…?”

“I called Captain Harper just now from upstairs and told him it was an old gray Honda two-door all dented and the license number and told him where to find the newspaper clippings and the pictures of Patty and I put them where he can get them without a warrant like you told me and I told him about the gun but I don't know where that is except he might have it on him and I—”

BOOK: Cat Cross Their Graves
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