Murder for Bid (15 page)

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Authors: Susan Furlong Bolliger

BOOK: Murder for Bid
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*

The next morning, I shrugged into a pair of cutoffs and a wrinkled shirt, pulled a pony tail through the back of a baseball cap, and skipped my makeup routine. I felt like crap, I might as well look like crap.

I drove immediately to my favorite donut shop where I ordered two chocolate glazed and a large pop. A few minutes later, the fuzz began to clear. I returned home ready to face my day.

Mom’s car was already gone; just as well, I wasn’t in the mood to answer questions about last night. I entered the garage through the back door, pulled a soda from the little fridge under the work-bench, and went back to work on the dresser. I would have been better off if I had just stayed in last night and finished this project.

Working steadily for a couple of hours, I focused on my work, and avoided thoughts about Greg and Sean. When I finished, I stepped back and surveyed my handy-work. I had completely stripped the old varnish, rubbed it with white paint and distressed the corners. I was just working on adding some antique pulls when Dad made his way in with a tray of muffins and two cups of tea. I put down my screwdriver and joined him on the back deck. 

“How’s the dresser coming along?” he asked.

“Fine.
It should sell easily at the flea market.”

He nodded, sipping his tea quietly. “Finally, it’s stopped raining, huh?”

“Yeah, I’m sick of rain.”

“It’s supposed to start again this afternoon.”

“Oh,” I sighed.

Again we settled back and sipped. Things were always like this between Dad and me. Unlike Mom, he never approached sensitive topics head-on, instead he skirted the issue, prodding and poking until I cracked.

“It sure rained last night. Hope it didn’t put a damper on your evening,” he remarked with raised brows.

“No, the weather didn’t ruin my evening.”

He sat forward. “I take it things didn’t go that well.”

“No it was fine. Just not what I expected,” I said, hoping he’d drop the subject. I placed the teacup down with a thud and averted my gaze toward several potted flowers on the side of the deck.

I was searching for a topic diversion when he pressed on, “I hope he behaved like a gentleman. I never cared for the man myself.”

I regarded him with surprise.
“Really? I didn’t know you knew him that well?”

Dad smiled. He’d sucked me in and he knew it. “Yes, of course. When your mom first started in the business, I used to attend all the realtor functions with her. At the time, Davis was a rising star in the business. He was such a cocky young man, really full of himself.” Dad shrugged. “I guess maybe that’s what it takes in that sort of business.”

“That sort of business is Mom’s business,” I stated boldly.

“I know, honey. What’s more, she’s good at it. She’s built her reputation on honesty and hard work and
it’s taken years. Some people aren’t willing to wait so long, that’s all.”

“Some people meaning Greg Davis. What have you heard?”

“Just rumors. I don’t know if your mother buys into them all or not. She sure seemed anxious to see you go out with him last night, huh?”

“Yeah, getting me hooked up with a successful man must be high on her priority list.”

Dad patted my arm. “She’s just worried about you.”

“Worried or embarrassed?”

“No. No,” he said, grabbing my hand for emphasis. “Look at me, Phillipena. Your mother and I have never been embarrassed by you. You’re a good girl. You’re a smart girl … woman. You’ve never been an embarrassment. We just don’t always understand you.” He sat back and sighed. “You see, when you left the firm and went on your hiatus, we were worried sick. No one could find you for days. Your sisters and all their kids camped out in the living room and started a full search and rescue campaign. Even your little nephews and nieces were making missing person posters.”

“I know, Dad, I know. I’m so sorry.” We had gone through this a hundred times. My big regret about flipping out and leaving the firm was the toll it took on my family. Despite my state of mind, I should have been more considerate of them. I just lost it. I left work, got into my Lexus, and drove until I ended up in the backwoods of the Upper Peninsula where I rented a dilapidated cabin for a hundred dollars from
a whiskery drunk named Azark and disconnected from reality. I holed up in that cabin for over a week before I mustered the courage to call home and tell my parents what I had done. At the time, I hadn’t realized that they had been so worried.

Dad sighed, “No, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to bring all that up again. Just know, honey, that your mom and I love you very much. We support you no matter what you do.”

I smiled, knowing that he meant what he said, but also that they would support me a little more willingly if I were to take on a ‘decent’ job. Or better yet, settle down, marry, and get started on a family.  

“So why did you hightail it out of here yesterday when Jack Warren showed up?” he asked, changing the subject.

I hesitated, knowing that my answer was about to open another can of worms. “There was a car in the alley the other night. I saw it from my window right before I went to bed. It was just parked there, for I don’t know how long. Then its lights suddenly flipped on and it drove off.”

“Someone was watching you?”

“I don’t know. I thought so. Then when I saw a strange guy coming down the walk, I just freaked.”

“Why would someone be watching you?”

“I’ve been asking around about Amanda Schmidt’s death.”

His brows furrowed.
“The Schmidts?” I could practically see the light come on over his head. “Uh, oh. She’s the one who was murdered. There’s been a lot in the paper about that. Why are you interested in this?”

“At first, I was a suspect.”

“A suspect?” Dad bolted forward with his lips pursed, eyes bulging and head shaking back and forth. He looked like a puffer fish struggling against the current.

I placed both hands on his shoulders. “Calm down, Dad. You’re going to pop a vein. Sean took care of it. It’s not an issue anymore.”

He sat back and took a couple of calming breaths. “So, you’ve gone from being a suspect to being a victim.”

I shook my head. “I don’t know that for sure.”

He sucked in his breath, slightly trembling. “Just tell me why you’re still pursuing this woman’s murder if you’re no longer a suspect.” His blue eyes were large and worried. I searched for the right answer, one that wouldn’t cause him to worry more. He remained silent, waiting for my reply.

“I don’t know,” I finally said. “It’s hard to explain. You see, I was out with Sean when he took the call. I was there at her house. I heard how she was murdered. It was brutal, horribly brutal.”

Dad shuddered.

“There’s more,” I said. “I was there earlier that afternoon, going through their garbage. It must have been just before she was killed. That’s why I was a suspect, because Richard Schmidt saw me going through his garbage. Then, I started poking around finding out things that the police didn’t seem to bother with. You see, I think Richard Schmidt killed his wife. The problem is, he’s a councilman and it’s all so political. Anyway, I feel involved and I just can’t seem to let it go.”

“Phillipena.” Dad’s tone had shifted; I recognized a lecture coming on. “This is my fault. All those days I took you to work with me at the library and you sat around reading mystery novels,” he said, his face taking on his wise-old owl expression.

I sat back and prepared for the onslaught.

“Honey, you have to realize that life is not like a book. Fiction is written to entertain us, not for us to emulate. You are not a trained detective. You’ve not been schooled in police procedure. Normal citizens do not go around solving crimes like Miss Marple or Sherlock Holmes.”

“You’re showing your age, Dad,” I jested, trying to break his focus. It didn’t work.

“Those works are ageless, but nonetheless fiction. Do not confuse fiction with real life. You’re going around and playing detective like a professional and you’re
not
a professional. You’re going to make the wrong person angry. Leave the detecting up to the police. Don’t you remember the time you got in so much trouble when you chased down that poor man who was carrying his wife’s purse?”

“Isn’t anyone ever going to let go of that? Honestly, the guy looked like a purse snatcher. How was I supposed to know?”

“Well, I think the key thing is to leave that type of stuff up to the police.
They’re
trained to handle these situations.” His eyes narrowed. “Does Sean encourage you to do these types of things?”

My stomach lurched at the mention of Sean’s name.
“No, of course not. He worries about me, too.”

“Good. I’m glad to hear that. I’ve always thought he was a sensible young man.”

“Hey, Dad,” I interrupted, cutting him off before he launched into a Sean’s-such-a-wonderful-young-man speech. “Thanks for the tea. I’ve got to get back work. I’m really behind this week.” I leaned over and gave him a quick hug and peck on the cheek, trying to ignore the hurt expression on his face.

He called after me, “Don’t forget about Saturday. Your mom’s worried that you don’t have anything appropriate to wear.”

I winced.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter
Ten

Although my shoulders ached, I was happy with the way the dresser turned out. At least my week hadn’t been a total loss. Hopefully it would bring enough cash to make up for my detecting time.

With that in mind, I decided to forgo a post office run and do a little more sleuthing. I shrugged off the guilt that tugged at my conscious, I didn’t plan on completely defying my father’s advice about staying out of police business, but what would a little Internet research hurt? Anyone with a computer could look things up, right? It wasn’t as if I was interviewing suspects, or searching for murder weapons. Besides, wouldn’t Sean be grateful if I came up with some information that would help him crack the case? Maybe grateful enough to forget about my little indiscretion with Greg Davis.

As my computer booted, I thought over the list of possible suspects. While I still favored Richard Schmidt as the murderer, I had to admit that there were several other people that would have benefited from Amanda Schmidt’s death. Both Madeline Reiner and the judge had made their way to the top of my list. I decided to start with them.

A couple of clicks later, I was deciphering the County Bar Association’s website. Judge Reiner had been raised in Lisle and obtained his law degree in Chicago at Northwestern. In 1981, he started working in his father’s law firm, making partner in 1991 …
blah, blah, blah
… he was appointed as an associate judge and then a full Circuit Court Judge … pretty dry stuff. There was a ton of information about his many rulings as Chancery. He had the reputation of being a discrete and equitable presider over his bench trials. I started to read about some of his rulings, but they were too numerous and tedious to stick with for very long.

I leaned back, stretched, and let out a jaw-cracking yawn.

I zoomed back in on my screen and forced myself to dig around a little more. Eventually I happened upon a couple of articles that were a little more interesting. Apparently, Reiner had been a running back at Northwestern where he broke several records and was up for a Heisman. Which even I, a non-aficionado, knew was a big deal. I perused through a couple of pictures of a younger, slimmer, hairier Judge Reiner who had definitely bulked up since his glory days. Of course, so had I.

There weren’t many references on-line to Madeline Reiner, and definitely not anything mentioning her shoplifting incidents, proof that being the wife of a judge had its benefits. All I ended up finding were a few blurbs here and there about charity events such as the library fund raiser, her community work, and
ooooh … she was a Kappa Alpha Theta woman at Northwestern. In fact, she had served two terms as the sorority’s president in the eighties. It struck me that my friend Sheila, while much younger than Madeline, was also a KAT. I tucked that little tidbit of information away for future use.

I also searched Ms. Sarah Maloney. The more I researched, the more I hated the woman. Not only was she beautiful, she was incredibly smart. After being crowned Ms. Teen Illinois, she attended the University of Illinois on a full scholarship and eventually earned her law degree at Harvard. Was there anything she couldn’t do?

Miss Perfect was published in several law journals and, as the article said,
widely admired for her inventive trial methods
. Her colleagues referred to her as a tiger in the courtroom. She also, somehow, found time to work for several charitable cases and volunteer her time in the community. A couple of references actually popped up in reference to the Special Olympics. I clicked on one and got their website. Curious, I panned through the photos noticing that Sarah was in a good number of them; organizing athletes, bandaging ankles, keeping time for events…  Then I saw something that made me sit up a little straighter.  It was a photo of Sarah handing over a medal to a jubilant young man who had apparently just won a track and field event. Standing right next to her, in his favorite blue POLICE issue T-shirt and holding a stopwatch was Sean. Only, instead of being focused on the athlete, Sean was gazing admiringly at Sarah. There was no mistaking the expression on his face; he was completely enamored with her.

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