Read No Pity For the Dead Online
Authors: Nancy Herriman
“She must continue to rest,” she said. “The contractions are growing more frequent and increasing in intensity. We do not want the baby to arrive too early, though.”
“Don't worry, John,” said Maryanne to her husband, seeking to soothe the furrow in his brow. “I won't ask you to stay with me and ignore your work. Our neighbor will help me again, I'm sure.” She turned to Celia. “Mr. Martin has hated the delay in repairing his offices so much that he even asked John to meet with him
yesterday and review the progress. On a Sunday, of all days. The man's a tyrant.”
“Now don't be sayin' that, Maryanne,” reprimanded her husband. “His money puts bread and butter on our table.”
“Yesterday?” Celia asked him. “After the excitement at Cliff House, I am surprised Mr. Martin wished to meet with you, Mr. Kelly. We all left so shaken.”
“Excitement, Mrs. Davies?” he asked, shifting his daughter in his arms and causing her to stir. “What happened?”
“Someone pushed me over the wall above the cliff,” Celia answered, watching his face. After all, he
was
one of her suspects.
“So that is why your palm is scraped,” said Maryanne.
“Yes.” Celia had scratched her hands when she'd clutched at the rock wall; she buffed her fingertips across the tiny scabs on her skin. “Fortunately, Mr. Hutchinson grabbed me and prevented me from falling to my death.”
Maryanne gasped. “Mrs. Davies!”
“There is no need to be alarmed, Mrs. Kelly,” said Celia. “I did not mean to cause you to worry for me.”
“You should be more careful, ma'am,” said Mr. Kelly, his expression as unchanging as the expression on a ventriloquist's doll. He did not, however, look guilty.
“I endeavor to try, Mr. Kelly.” Celia rose and folded away her stethoscope, then gathered her shawl and medical bag. “I shall return tomorrow.”
“If you have the time,” said Maryanne.
“I most certainly have the time for any and all of my patients,” Celia replied, and bid them both farewell.
She touched the sweet face of the child sleeping in Mr.
Kelly's arms and stepped around him to descend the stairs and exit the house. When she was a few doors distant, something made her turn and look backâjust as the curtains in the upstairs window flicked back into place.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
“I
'm looking for Rob Bartlett,” Nick said to Frank's workers, the entire bunch lolling about on overturned barrels and empty crates in the enclosure behind the offices.
He'd found the building itself empty, tools discarded, all work stopped. No Kelly. No Martin. No Frank. And all his employees enjoying a break in the sunshine.
When the cat's away . . .
One of the men spat a stream of tobacco juice into the corner. “Bartlett ain't here.”
I can see that.
“Perhaps you can tell me where he
is
, then.”
“Rob was done for the day, and Kelly sent him home,” said another, his mouth quirking. “To recline on his divan.”
“His divan!” guffawed the tobacco-chewing fellow, a trickle of juice dribbling down his chin. “Yep, that's it. Old Rob's reclining on his
divan
at his place, Officer.”
The youngest one of the group, who looked no older than eighteen with his scanty sprouts of chin hair, spoke up. When he did, Nick noticed he was missing a front tooth. “He mighta gone to the restaurant on the corner, Officer. He likes to eat there.”
“Obliged,” said Nick, turning to leave.
As soon as he was out of sight of the men, Nick heard the sound of a thump followed by a muffled bawl.
“What'd you go and tell him that for?” one of them asked.
“'Cuz he's a cop!”
“Stupid kid,” came the answer. “You get Bartlett in a pucker and you'll live to regret it.”
Nick stepped outside and surveyed the busy street. He located the restaurant and headed there. He didn't have to poke around inside it, because a man who looked like the fellow he wantedâNick realized he'd seen Bartlett the last time he'd been at Martin and Companyâcame strolling out through the front door.
“Mr. Bartlett!” he called out. The fellow confirmed he was Bartlett by stopping. “I need to speak with you.”
Bartlett watched him approach, his right hand resting on his hip where a gun caused a bulge in his dark reefer coat. Didn't he know it was against the law to conceal a deadly weapon? Bartlett, not the handsomest of fellows, had a heavy chin outlined by a scraggly beard and narrow-set eyes. When Nick walked up to him, he caught a whiff of what smelled like almonds. Maybe Bartlett was using bear's grease to fill in a patch of thinning hair hidden by his bowler. Just because a person was plug-ugly didn't mean he couldn't be vain.
“Can I help you, Officer?” he asked, recognizing Nick as well from the last time he'd been at Martin and Company.
“I have some questions about Dan Matthews.”
Wariness showed in his eyes. “What about him?”
Two men exited the restaurant at Bartlett's back and slowed to stare at the cop and the fellow he was interviewing. “How about we find someplace more private to talk, Mr. Bartlett?”
Fortunately for all concerned, Bartlett was astute enough to go without complaint.
Nick chose a nearby alleyway, the sole occupant of which appeared to be a flea-bitten mongrel nosing through trash, and stepped into its shadows.
“Ain't this cozy,” said Bartlett.
“I want to know why you went to visit Dan Matthews yesterday.”
Bartlett folded his arms and leaned against the brick wall of the building behind him. “We're friends. Been friends a long time. And friends visit each other.”
“Did you talk to him about his plans to leave town?” asked Nick.
“He wasn't there. I left without talking to him.”
The mongrel trotted over, intrigued by the visitors to its alley, and sniffed Nick's trouser legs. “Pfft. Get outta here.”
The dog got the message and scooted.
Bartlett raised his brows, which had the effect of lifting his bowler hat. “Don't like dogs, Officer?”
“Not when I'm interviewing suspects.”
“Didn't know I was a suspect,” said Bartlett. He fished around in the pockets of his reefer coat and found a brass toothpick, which he proceeded to use calmly. Among the many things that amazed Nick, the ability of suspects to act composed was a never-ending wonder. Innocent people tended to shake in their boots.
“And what are you talking about? Dan leaving town?” said Bartlett. “'Cuz if he did, I wanna know. He owes me money.”
Nick removed the silver watch from his inner coat pocket. “Recognize this?”
Bartlett eyed it. “Can't say that I do.”
“You sure? It was found on Matthews' body.”
For a second, the toothpick paused. “His what?”
“Your good friend Dan is dead, Mr. Bartlett, and this watch and a whole lot of money were found on him.”
“What do you mean, he's dead? How is he dead?”
Bartlett did look surprised by the news. Nick repocketed the
watch. “What I mean, Mr. Bartlett, is that Matthews was found this morning with a broken neck on the road heading south out of town.”
“What the . . .” He put away his toothpick with a shaking hand. “He killed him, then.”
“Matthews died in an accident.”
“All the same . . . ,” said Bartlett. He glanced toward the street at the end of the alleywayâmaybe hoping a diversion would calm his nerves. Cowboys rode past with their spurs jingling, a cart went in the other direction, and rough laughter echoed nearby, one of the voices that of a woman. Not much to note, actually, and when Bartlett looked back at Nick, he was ready to talk. “Last Friday, Dan was blubbering in his beer that he'd seen somebody suspicious hanging around the offices one night a couple weeks ago. He figured it was the night Nash was murdered. âHe'll kill me.' That's what Dan said to me. âHe knows I saw him and he'll kill me.' I tried to get him to say who, but he wouldn't.”
“Why didn't you come to the police with that information?”
If it's even true.
“Would you have believed me? You sent that kid to spy on Dan. How do I know you're not trying to get information on me so you can accuse
me
of killing Nash?”
“You don't,” Nick answered. “Who do you think Matthews might've seen that he thought would kill him for noticing?”
“Somebody he knew and who knew him. Seems obvious,” said Bartlett.
“It sure would've been helpful if Matthews had told me what he'd seen so I could be more inclined to believe you.”
“And admit that he'd been going by Martin's office every night to figure out when was the best time to dig in the cellar?”
“To look for a treasure you told him about but that didn't exist.”
Bartlett shrugged, his expression revealing not one ounce of remorse for having lied to his so-called friend. “Ain't my fault Dan Matthews was a sucker. Never could tell when I was joshing.”
Nick stepped up close to Bartlett, who recoiled at the sudden movement. “I don't think you're telling me the half of what you know, Bartlett, and if you've been leading me down a merry path, I can be very unforgiving.”
“I ain't lying to you, Officer.”
So, it was back to “Officer.” And Nick had felt so privileged to have had Rob Bartlett address him as “Detective Greaves.”
“I'd be careful if I were you, Mr. Bartlett.”
“Oh, I'll be careful, Officer,” Bartlett responded, his hand hovering above his waist where his weapon was concealed. “You can bet I will.”
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
C
elia walked home, lost in her thoughts, and was nearly run over by the horsecar clopping along Powell. Lifting her skirts, she dashed to the safety of the curb, knowing this particular accident would have been solely of her own making. She passed the grocer's, a bustle of activity, and turned up Vallejo.
Angelo Cascarino was perched on the porch step of his house, looking forlorn as he watched the neighborhood children chase a hoop in the street, their feet, some bare, kicking up dust. His mother must have forbidden him to join them until the gash on his head healed.
“How is your cut, Angelo?” Celia called out to him, gesturing at her own forehead so that he understood her.
Angelo touched the stitches and nodded.
“Grazie, Signora,”
he said in his small voice. He resumed watching his friends, propped his chin on his fists, and heaved a dramatic sigh.
Celia entered the house and dropped onto the entry hall chair. Female voicesâBarbara's and Grace'sâsounded in the parlor. Having heard the door, Addie rushed in from the back of the house. She was wearing her best straw bonnet and had tossed her shawl over her shoulders.
“Are you going somewhere, Addie?” Celia asked as her housekeeper knelt to untie the laces of Celia's half boots.
“We havna enough butter and flour for supper, ma'am.”
“Well, you are looking very smart for a visit to the market,” Celia observed.
“Am I?” Addie asked evasively, her head bowed over Celia's feet.
Celia leaned to one side to get a better view of Addie's face. Yes, her housekeeper was definitely blushing. “Yes, you are. Are you perhaps intending a visit to someone in particular while you are there?”
“I had the thought that, while I was at the market, I could stop at the butcher's stall and ask that galoot who works there if he's been sending the tokens,” she answered, not meeting Celia's gaze.
“And if Mr. Knowles turns out to be your admirer, you wish to look your best.”
“It canna hurt,” said Addie, Celia's boots sliding free.
“That is so.”
Addie looked up at her. “Will you be all right, ma'am? Here, by yourself?”
“I am not alone, Addie. The girls are here with me.”
“They'll nae be able to protect you.”
“Do I require protecting?”
“I've come to believe you always require protecting these days, ma'am,” said Addie. “I didna doubt that becoming involved with that detective would come to grief for you.”
“I am hardly âinvolved' with that detective, Addie,” Celia protested. “And I do not feel that I have come to grief.”
“Nae yet, ma'am, though you had a close call at Cliff House,” said Addie, rising to her feet. “God has been watching over you, but I canna help but wonder for how long he'll tolerate your foolhardiness.”
Addie emphasized the comment by lifting an eyebrow. How many times she'd seen that expression on her housekeeper's face. How many times she'd been glad for it, too.
“Och aye, I see where your thoughts are headed.” Addie added pursed lips to the lifted eyebrow. “You've nae mind to be careful.”
“I always wish to be careful, Addie. I cannot help that I do not always succeed,” Celia said, standing as well and removing her bonnet, which she hung on the hook near the door. “If it eases your mind, I will lock the door behind you.”
Addie heaved a sigh nearly as dramatic as Angelo's had been. “If I dinna go, I willna need worry.”
“But I thought we required butter and flour,” Celia teased, which raised another blush in Addie's cheeks.
“There it is! I willna go.” Addie moved to take off her shawl, and Celia stopped her.
“Please. Go on. We will be fine here.”
“If you are certain . . .”
“I am,” she said, giving her housekeeper a small push toward the front door.
“Well then,” said Addie, checking her reflection in the mirror that hung adjacent to the hallway's case clock. “I do wonder, though, that a man like him would keep his admiration a secret. He's e'er so loud with everything else.”
Celia laughed, and Addie went out onto the porch. “Lock the door, ma'am.”