Jude Devine Mystery Series (84 page)

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Authors: Rose Beecham

Tags: #Gay & Lesbian, #Lesbian Mystery

BOOK: Jude Devine Mystery Series
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After they’d taken a close look at Maulle and left the body to be removed, they started their assessment downstairs, examining possible points of entry. As they worked, the forensic crew dusted for prints and collected trace.

“These French doors are deadlocked, but there’s a pet door in the laundry.” Koertig pointed to custom double swing doors. “Someone could crawl right on in.”

Jude looked out the laundry window. A fenced dog run occupied most of the backyard, a sensible precaution in the mountains, where pets were often attacked by wild animals. “Maulle’s poodle was out back when the killer arrived. And no one carries a pile of bologna in their pocket because they like the smell. He came prepared to deal with the dog.”

“He must have cased the place ahead of time,” Koertig said.

“Or he knew about the poodle because he and Maulle were already acquainted.”

“Do you think Maulle let the guy in?”

“If he did, why shoot the dog? No, I think our perp entered via the pet door and exited out the front.”

“So the dog barks, he feeds her bologna and whacks her, then he comes in the pet door on his hands and knees—”

“By which time, Maulle is on his way down with his walking cane,” Jude said. “He must have heard the barking and the shot.”

“So the killer takes a knife from the block on the kitchen counter,” Koertig said.

From the looks of the block, each slot was usually occupied. There were two knives missing. The larger one was in the sink.

“Why take a knife when he already has a gun?” Jude asked.

“He’s freaking out because Maulle caught him. Something goes wrong with the gun, maybe.”

“That’s a possibility. Or he had a change of heart. His plan was to execute Maulle just like he executed the dog, but for some reason he got angry. A shooting would have been too quick.”

“He chased Maulle up the stairs,” Koertig mused aloud. “They wrestled for control of the knife. Maulle took a stab wound.”

“I think he hit the killer with the head of the cane first,” Jude said. “Then the killer got mad and stabbed him.”

“So, Maulle staggers along the hallway to his office—”

“Accounting for the blood and the sets of bloody footprints.” There were three, from what Jude could see. One set was significantly smaller than the others. Pippa’s.

“Why did Maulle make a run for the office instead of the bathroom?” Koertig asked. “He could have locked himself in there and called 911.”

“Self-defense,” Jude said. “He keeps a gun in the top drawer of his desk.”

“You looked already?”

“Yes, and there’s a bloody handprint on the desk and blood on the drawer handle. Maulle was clutching his abdomen. He put his left hand down to steady himself while he opened the drawer with his right hand.”

“But the killer aimed his gun and told him to freeze,” Koertig conjectured. Maybe he convinced Maulle that if he cooperated he wouldn’t be shot.”

“Or it could be the other way around,” Jude said. “Maybe Maulle reasoned with the killer. A rich guy like him could offer money.”

“Why didn’t the perp cut a deal?” Koertig strolled through the kitchen once more. “Either this hump is the dumbest burglar alive, or robbery definitely wasn’t the motive.”

It was too soon to rule anything out entirely, but Jude thought they were pretty safe excluding the burglary angle. As they analyzed the evidence, their theory of the crime would evolve, but for now, she was pretty sure the killer had some kind of connection with Maulle.

“I don’t think this was random,” she said. “Maulle had an enemy. So, we’re looking for a motive.” Murder 101: motive plus opportunity equals suspect.

Koertig stared around. “No one gets this rich without trampling on a few toes.”

“How do you want to do this?” Jude asked, reminding herself that she wasn’t the primary this time. “We’ll need to interview Pippa Calloway and get the search started ASAP.”

“You take the girl. She might be more comfortable with a female.” Koertig checked his watch. “Belle’s going to be on scene all night. I’ll pick up the warrant first thing tomorrow after the briefing and meet you here when you’re through with the niece.”

“Works for me.”

They walked through the huge living room once more before heading out the front door. The outdoor lights were on and people were leaving. Animal control had caged Maulle’s three cats and were loading them into the back of a van. The K-9 units had found no sign of the assailant in the heavily wooded vicinity. They’d be back in the morning to resume searching for evidence. The few reporters who’d shown up for a statement from Pratt had left with breaking news to report.

A gust of wind stirred the treetops, causing mournful creaks. Night birds cried. The thin, waxing moon was obscured by a drift of cloud cover. Around the staging area, the temporary lighting seemed garishly overbright. Jude shivered slightly. Fall was in the air, making the temperature drop sharply at night. She was puzzled to see Pippa Calloway sitting on the verandah where she’d left her.

Approaching Sergeant Pavlic, she asked, “Why haven’t they taken Ms. Calloway to the hospital yet?”

“She won’t leave the bird, and they wouldn’t take it in the ambulance with her.”

“Well, she can’t stay here all night.”

“We’re waiting on the grief counselor,” the sergeant said, plainly thankful that a caring professional would soon show up to deal with the stalemate.

Jude watched Pippa Calloway press her cheek to the cage and stroke the bird’s cloud-colored breast feathers. In response, the parrot leaned into her and ran its beak across her lips.

Jude wasn’t the only one staring in astonishment when it crooned in a soft masculine voice, “I love you, Pip.”

Chapter Six

Jude escorted Pippa Calloway to Southwest Memorial in Cortez and waited while the doctor examined her. She sent a deputy out to Eddie House’s place with the parrot. Eddie was an expert in rehabilitating birds. When she called him he seemed excited, or that was Jude’s interpretation when he said something long and pensive about the mysterious telepathy of the African Grey and its single-minded devotion to its humans.

Jude planned to escort Pippa to the Holiday Inn once the she was cleared by the doctor. She was staying at the same hotel, her usual accommodation when she had work to do at the MCSO headquarters in Cortez. Pippa would have to remain there until her uncle’s house could be occupied or she made other arrangements. Sheriff Pratt had called her mother, Maulle’s next-of-kin. Mrs Calloway was planning to fly to Durango with her husband tomorrow. According to Pratt she was “the snooty type.”

Jude hoped Pippa would be comforted to hear that her folks would be in town soon. After she’d signed off on the paperwork and picked up a sleep aid prescription, they strolled out to the parking lot and she told Pippa the good news.

“Your parents are flying in tomorrow.”

Pippa’s reaction was interesting. She said, “Of course they are, the vultures.”

“You don’t sound pleased.”

“I just escaped from them.” With the melodrama of youth, Pippa added, “They ruined my brother’s life by making him marry my sister-in-law. I’m not letting them ruin mine.”

Jude wondered how bad it could be. During the conversation with the grief counselor before they left for the hospital, Pippa had described graduating from Harvard and realizing, after a few trips abroad to various European capitals, that she could never face being a dentist. Her parents had arranged a cushy job for her and were angry that she was throwing her training away. Not that she needed to work, anyway, she’d pointed out. She had a small annual allowance from her grandfather’s estate, enough to scrape by on if she lived somewhere inexpensive and grew her own vegetables.

Her plan had been to stay with her uncle for a while and pursue a career as a sculptor. Obviously she wouldn’t have to worry about ending up on the street if that didn’t pan out.

“Your uncle never married?” Jude asked as they climbed in the Dakota and set off for the hotel.

“He was gay.”

“Is there a partner?”

“Years ago he was with someone. That didn’t work out and since then I don’t think there’s been anything serious.”

“It sounds like you were close to your uncle.”

“Yes.” Pippa’s voice was husky. “He’s the only person who really cared about me. I mean I know Mom and Dad love me, it’s just that it feels totally conditional. They want me to be a certain way, to have certain people as my friends. My first serious boyfriend was African American. You wouldn’t believe what happened.”

“Try me,” Jude prompted.

She could sense that Pippa was chattering to distract herself from all she’d been though. In this state, she could reveal quite a lot in an interview. Jude was tempted to drive direct to headquarters and make the most of the opportunity. On the other hand, just talking like this would establish a rapport and build trust.

“Dad got him into Vanderbilt and paid his tuition for a year,” Pippa said in disgust. “That was the deal. We break up, he gets ahead.”

“Well, if he agreed to that—”

“I made him agree. Things weren’t going to work out anyway.” Anger sharpened her tone. “Not that my parents could see that. I thought he may as well get a parting gift at Dad’s expense.”

“Pippa, I’m going to ask you this question again down at the station tomorrow, but do you have any idea who killed your uncle?”

“I wish I did.”

“Even a vague suspicion. Just a feeling.”

Pippa shook her head. “I really don’t know any of Uncle Fabian’s friends. He kept family separate. I mean, I met people sometimes if we were out and ran into them. But honestly, I don’t know much about his life outside of home.”

“You spent time with him regularly?”

“Usually a couple of vacations each year and some long weekends.”

“Did you ever notice anything odd? Phone calls late at night. People dropping off parcels to the house, and your uncle acting strangely. Anything like that?”

Pippa was silent for a long while. “I don’t know if this counts, but after Katrina, something happened at the house in New Orleans and all of a sudden Uncle Fabian hired a security guard.”

“Do you know what occurred?”

“No. It was in November. He said I didn’t need to worry about it.”

“When Detective Koertig and I were examining your uncle’s office, we found his computer was dismantled and the hard drive removed. Do you know when that occurred?”

“No, but Uncle Fabian would never have done that,” Pippa said with certainty. “He was the ultimate technophobe. He wouldn’t have known what a hard drive looked like.”

“Would he have backed up his computer onto a CD or a memory stick?”

“No, I did that for him when I stayed. I showed him how, but he never got organized about that stuff.”

“He had computers in both his homes?”

“In all four houses. And he had a laptop. I helped him buy that around Christmas.”

Four homes. What was he, head of a drug cartel? Jude decided to leave that intriguing question unanswered for the moment. She turned into the Holiday Inn parking lot and took her bag and Pippa’s from the back of the pickup. After the exhausted young woman had settled into her room, Jude handed her one of the sleeping pills with a glass of water.

“I don’t do drugs,” Pippa said.

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