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Authors: Shirley Rousseau Murphy

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Dillon said, “Jane was desperate, to sew that letter in the doll praying someone would find it. And no one did, not in time.”

“But we have her killers,” Harper said. “And no one might ever have known, their little scheme might never have been discovered, if not for you and Mae Rose.”

He thought he saw the tabby cat's expression change, a twitching of whiskers almost like a smile. But of course he was imagining that.

“The court won't let the Priors go free?” Eula said.

“No matter what happens in court, and I don't see them going free, Adelina Prior will not be back at Casa Capri, nor will Renet or Teddy. Judge Sanderson has promised that.”

The home, left without management, had been placed under jurisdiction of the court and was being managed temporarily by a court-appointed chain of retirement homes. In the interest of public relations, the new manager had organized not only this little gathering today, but had announced several new policies, trying hard to counter the bad publicity and bad feelings.

He had opened the Nursing wing to patients' families and to all residents each afternoon, so they could visit those patients who felt well enough to have company. The Pet-a-Pet program would continue as a permanent part of the home's therapy, along with several other new programs, including a weekly reading of best-selling fiction by one of the local library staff and several evening classes to be presented as part of the continuing education offerings of the local college.

“Them college classes,” Eula said. “Teddy talked about getting some kind of fancy schooling here, but it never happened.” Eula sighed. “Teddy was all hot air.” The old woman snorted. “He never did need that wheelchair. All the time, he could walk.”

She half rose at the table, addressing her audience. “I bet it was Teddy dug those graves. Maybe took those poor old folks out of here, himself, in his van.”

Minute particles of flesh and hair had been found in the van, identified as belonging to the dead patients. Clothing fibers were found matching threads from the graves. And similar particles had turned up behind the stable where, for years, an old truck had been parked. Harper's theory was that the bodies were transferred
from the van to the truck late at night, and driven out into the cemetery.

And, even more interesting, the fragments of tire marks found behind the stable had matched the casts of tire marks taken from the scene of Susan Dorriss's accident. Same tread, same small L-shaped nick at one edge. The truck had been recovered three days ago in the small town of Mendocino, north of San Francisco.

At one time the truck had been legally registered to Adelina Prior—its original plates had been found in the old stable along with a dozen other plates hidden in a niche beneath the wooden bottom of an old feed bin in one of the stalls used for storage.

His theory was that either Renet or Teddy was driving the truck when it hit Susan, and that Renet had taken the truck to be painted. He hoped with time the department could establish that it was Renet who appeared at the paint shop dressed as a little frumpy Latino housewife, black hair, Spanish accent. He was hoping they could find hard evidence that it was Renet who later bought the truck from the used-car dealer, dressed in a short leather skirt, her hair a blaze of red curls, her legs shapely in black hose. The redhead who bought the truck had put a FOR SALE sign in the window, and two hours later had sold it cheap to a Mexican family moving to Seattle. When the truck blew a head gasket in Mendocino, they sold it for bus fare.

Mae Rose looked at Harper. “Strange that Renet would hit on the idea of calling herself The Cat Burglar. I had a friend once who used to joke that if she ever became a professional burglar, that was what she would do. Pretend to be looking for her lost cat.”

She stroked Dulcie, watching Harper. “You said Renet worked in wardrobe, in Hollywood? So did Wenona. I wonder…” The little lady frowned. “It would seem strange, wouldn't it, if they knew each other? But Wenona lived in Molena Point when she was younger. She was forty when she moved to L.A.
Renet would have been about twenty then, doing those early films.”

The little woman cocked her head, thinking. “Wenona used to go down to the wharf to feed the stray cats. She liked to feed them, but she was afraid of them, too.”

Harper tried to keep a bland face, but Mae Rose's words hit home. When they locked Renet up, she kept shouting,
It was the cats. It was those damn cats that put me here
. No one had asked what she meant, she was in a violent temper. He hadn't asked, and he hadn't wanted to know.

Harper shivered. He didn't look up, but he felt, from the tree above, the yellow stare of the tomcat. And on the pink afghan, Wilma's cat didn't wiggle an ear, didn't open an eye, yet he could sense her interest as sharply as if she watched him.

And later, as Harper drove Clyde back to the village, he couldn't help glancing down at the the gray tomcat. The animal lay stretched insolently between them, across the front seat of his squad car. Clyde said taking a cat in the car was no different than taking a dog, and Clyde was so argumentative on the subject, you couldn't reason with him.

Everyone knew that dogs were fine in cars, dogs stuck their heads out in the wind, hung their tongues out and enjoyed. But cats—a cat was under the gas pedal one minute, then trying to jump out any open window. Cats weren't meant to ride in cars; cats were more attuned to creeping around in the shadows.

Besides, he wasn't keen about cat hairs in his squad car.

Though certainly Clyde's cat was obedient enough, it didn't make a fuss, didn't leap around clawing the upholstery, didn't go crazy trying to get out the window. It napped on the seat, purring contentedly. It looked up at him only once, a blank, sleep-drugged gaze, dull, ordinary, unremarkable, making him wonder what he thought was so strange about the animal.

If he thought this dull-looking cat had anything to do
with events at Casa Capri or at the Prior estate, maybe he needed a few days off, a vacation.

Pulling up before Clyde's white Cape Cod, he watched Clyde swing out of the car carrying the cat and set it down on the lawn. The cat yawned, glanced up blearily, and wandered away toward the house. Just a dull-looking, ordinary tomcat.

 

The tomcat, the minute Harper let him and Clyde out of the squad car in front of their cottage, headed for his cat door. Walking slowly, trying to appear stupid, he was nearly choking with amusement.

Pushing in through his cat door, leaving Clyde leaning on the door of the squad car talking, he moved quickly to the kitchen, where he might not be heard, leaped up onto the breakfast table, and rolled over, laughing, pawing the air, bellowing with laughter, working himself into such a fit that Clyde, coming in, had to whack him on the shoulder to make him stop. It took three hard whacks before he collapsed, gasping, and lay limp and spent.

“It's a wonder he didn't hear you; you were bellowing like a bull moose. You really have a nerve, to laugh at Harper.”

Joe looked at him slyly. “Harper gets so edgy. Every time we wrap up a case, hand him the evidence, he gets nervous, starts to fidget.”

“Just where would the case be, Joe, without Harper? You think Adelina and Renet would be in jail? You think you and Dulcie would have made a citizen's arrest? Hauled Adelina and Renet and Teddy into jail yourselves?”

“I wasn't laughing
at
Harper. I was laughing
because
of Harper.”

Clyde looked hard at him. “You're not making sense.”

“Harper's a great guy, but he's letting us get to him.
How can I help but laugh? He's developing a giant-sized psychosis about cats.”

Silence. Clyde snatched the dish towel from its rod, folded it more evenly, and hung it up again.


You
can laugh at Harper,” Joe said. “So why can't I? There he is, a seasoned cop with twenty years on the force, and he's letting a couple of kitty cats give him the fidgets.”

Clyde sat down at the table, looking at him.

“In the squad car—he could hardly keep from staring at me. He knows we were up to something, and he can't figure it out. So we helped nail Adelina, so does he have to get spooked about it? We scare him silly. Can I help if he breaks me up?”

Clyde put his face in his hands and didn't speak.

But it was not until later, when Joe had trotted up through the village to meet Dulcie in the alley behind Jolly's Deli, that he realized the full import of what he and Dulcie had done and how their maneuvers would affect Harper. Why wouldn't Harper be upset? The man was only human.

“Three murderers are behind bars,” Dulcie said. “A rash of burglaries has been stopped. And, best of all, now that those old people are free of Adelina, they're not afraid anymore. They're safe now, and looking forward to enjoying life a little, in their remaining years.”

She looked at him deeply, her green eyes glowing. “And we did it. You and me and Dillon and Mae Rose.”

“And Max Harper,” he said charitably.

“Well of course, Max Harper.” And she began to grin.

“What?” he said. “What are you thinking?”

“Renet in her underpants and bra, with that wrinkled old witch face.” She rolled over, mewling with laughter, and soon they were both laughing, crazy as if they'd been on catnip. Only a sound from the deli silenced them, as George Jolly came out his back door bearing a paper plate.

They could smell freshly boiled shrimp, and the aroma
drove out all other thoughts. They looked at each other, licked their whiskers, and trotted on over, smiling. As they began to eat, old Mr. Jolly stood looking up and down the alley, wondering how those laughing tourists had disappeared so quickly. Only the two cats knew that there had been no tourists, and even for old George Jolly, they weren't telling.

About the Author

SHIRLEY ROUSSEAU MURPHY
has received six National Cat Writers Association Awards for Best Novel of the Year for the Joe Grey books, and five Council of Authors and Journalists Awards for her children's books. She and her husband live in Carmel, California, where they serve as full-time household help for two demanding feline ladies. You can visit her website at
www.joegrey.com
.

Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.

Books by
Shirley Rousseau Murphy

C
AT
S
EEING
D
OUBLE

C
AT
L
AUGHING
L
AST

C
AT
S
PITTING
M
AD

C
AT TO THE
D
OGS

C
AT IN THE
D
ARK

C
AT
R
AISE THE
D
EAD

C
AT
U
NDER
F
IRE

C
AT ON THE
E
DGE

And in Hardcover

C
AT
F
EAR
N
O
E
VIL

This book is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogue are drawn from the author's imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

CAT RAISE THE DEAD
. Copyright © 1997 by Shirley Rousseau Murphy. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

ePub edition November 2007 ISBN 9780061740213

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

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