“No, she spoke with my voicemail,” Hal replied. “I was on the West Coast all week, interviewing for graduate school, and I took the red eye, so I was out of range for cell communication all night. When the plane landed, I checked my voicemail. She’d left a lot of long, rambling messages, asking me to call her. I tried to return her call, but she never picked up.”
“You called her ‘Vicky’? Just how well did you know Bethany’s sister?”
Hal placed his hands on his knees, leaned forward in his chair. “How is this any of your business Miss McClure—”
“
Mrs
. McClure”
“You haven’t answered my question, Ms. McClure.”
“I’m not asking about your relationship for the sake of gossip, Mr. McConnell. I co-own this bookstore. Victoria Banks caused a scene here and now she’s missing along with the author she threatened. The police aren’t yet taking Victoria’s disappearance seriously. She’s over eighteen and hasn’t been missing twenty-four hours yet. You might say I’m an ‘unofficial’ investigator.”
“I can’t help you.” The wall behind his eyes was up again. He lifted his chin.
He’s clamming up. Tenderize him. Just keep bumping gums till he yammers.
“Can you at least give me a sense of how much of Angel’s book is true? For instance, what she said about you and Bethany—was it all lies what she claimed? Didn’t you feel anything for Bethany?”
I expected my question to hit a wall and drop away. But Hal McConnell’s shoulders sagged. His tight scowl loosened into a sad frown. The expression, combined with the long hair falling forward around his face, made him look every bit the sensitive, intelligent man-boy Angel had described.
“I loved Bethany . . .” He swallowed. “But Bethany and I were never lovers . . . does that answer your question?”
So Angel was right about that one,
noted Jack.
I nodded. “And
why
did Bethany’s sister call you last night?”
“Vicky and I were friends. I tried to help her through the worst of it.” He sat up straighter, met my eyes. “We both took her death very hard. After the funeral, we began to talk. E-mails, phone calls at first. Soon we became closer.”
“But you were never lovers?”
Hal’s eyes narrowed. “Whether or not we were lovers is not your business, and I refuse to discuss the issue. Especially since Victoria is missing and, as you obviously presume, foul play was involved.”
“You sound as though you know something you’re not telling me.”
“I know nothing.
You’re
the one informing me. I just know that Vicky hasn’t been ‘all right’ since her sister’s murder—and things became much worse after the publication of Angel Stark’s book, which dragged the whole tawdry affair into the limelight once again. I knew it was possible that Vicky would confront Angel. I’m only sorry I wasn’t here to prevent it. But at least . . .”
Hal paused. I waited for that wall to come up again. But, once again, the sad boy seemed to overwhelm the cautious man. He leaned forward in his chair. So did I.
“Look, a few weeks ago, around the time Angel’s book was first being hyped, Vicky called me from her parents’ home in Newport. I was surprised to hear she was back at the family’s place because she had been excited about immersing herself in a special film studies program she’d signed up for during the university’s summer session. Then she told me she’d come home for only one reason—to steal a gun from her father’s trophy room. She claimed she’d read excerpts from
All My Pretty Friends
and was going to get even with Angel at one of her book signings.”
“What did she mean by ‘get even’? Did she want to kill her?”
“Vicky
wanted
to kill Angel; we all did. But I think she just wanted to scare Angel witless by pointing the weapon at her. I told Vicky she was crazy, of course. I tried to make light of her plan, and I also offered to conspire with her to make a better one. She told me to come over, and I went.”
Hal tightened his already tight tie, looked around.
“It was pathetic, really. She’d hauled down some antique from World War One, probably didn’t even have the proper ammunition—as if either of us would know. Vicky begged me to help get even with Angel. After hours of letting her cry on my shoulder, I returned the Mauser to its display case.” Hal shook his head. “The next morning, I drove her back to Providence. I left for California not long after that. I hadn’t spoken with Vicky for over a week, hadn’t even heard from her until last night . . . and that’s really all I know, all right?”
Hal McConnell rose. “Now, Ms. McClure, you have to excuse me. I have to get back to Newport.”
I stood. “What’s the hurry? Don’t you want to stick around? Maybe talk to the local police? Aren’t you worried about Victoria Banks?”
“Of course I’m concerned,” he snapped. “That’s why I’m leaving. You said yourself that the local police aren’t taking the missing persons report all that seriously yet. That situation will change once Cambridge Upton Banks enters the picture.”
“Victoria’s father?”
“Of course. Mr. Cambridge Banks is a punctual man. He should be finishing his afternoon golf game right about now. If I hurry, I might just catch him at the country club.”
Then Hal McConnell’s eyes hardened. “I certainly wouldn’t want old man Banks to hear such disturbing news from anyone else
but
me. So I thank you for your concern, Ms. McClure, but I can assure you that this matter will be well taken care of and you can drop your ‘unofficial’ interest from this moment on.”
With that, Hal McConnell turned his back on me and strode to the front door. The bell tinkled as he went through it, into the sun-splashed afternoon. I hurried to the window, watched him climb into a silver BMW.
Needless to say, I was disappointed it was not the black Jaguar with the blue and white bumper sticker on the trunk that had nearly run Angel down the night before. Things might have gotten simpler.
It’s okay, kid,
said Jack.
You got some good info.
“I’ll say,” I whispered in reply. “Angel lied in her book. She herself was cheating on Donald Easterbrook while he was engaged to Bethany. And, according to Hal, it sure does sound like Victoria was planning to kill Angel herself—as we’ve suspected all along.
One more thing, sweetie. According to Stephanie Usher, Victoria’s parents are on the grand tour of Europe. So who was lying to you? Hal or Stephanie?
I sighed in frustration. And confusion. “This thing is getting complicated. We need some help to sort it out.”
The coppers?
“No, the Quibblers.”
Oh, my God, not that yammering band of cracker-barrel philosophers and coffee-klatsch raconteurs you call a business association?
“The very same,” I replied. “A half dozen heads—”
You mean head cases.
“—are better than one, so I’m taking this case to the Quindicott Business Owners Association.”
Doll, please. Spare me an evening with those fruitcakes.
“No.”
CHAPTER 17
Kangaroo Court
You got a tender spot in your heart for the palooka but it’s not going to do him any good.
—Frederick Nebel, “Take It and Like It,”
Black Mask
magazine, 1934
AFTER CLOSING THE bookstore at seven, I set up the folding chairs in the Community Events room, placed a table against the wall, and prepped the coffee urn. Then I locked up and went upstairs to the somewhat rundown yet cozy three bedroom apartment above the store to have dinner with my son. My aunt had stepped out already to have quahog cakes with Bud at the Seafood Shack. (And before you ask, quahogs—which comes from the Narragansett Indian name “poquauhock”—are usually referred to as “hard-shell clams” outside of Rhode Island.)
By nine, I was pulling the plug on Spencer’s
Shield of Justice
marathon, which was playing on the Intrigue Channel.
“But Mom!”
“No buts, Spencer. I agreed to let you watch TV until nine. Now it’s time for bed.”
“But I’m gonna miss the next episode. My favorite one’s the next one . . . The one where Jack Shields goes undercover at a racetrack and at the end he has to chase the bad guy down on the back of a horse!”
A soft male chuckle rolled through my head.
I silently asked Jack if that particular episode was based on his case files.
Only the racetrack part, baby. Those horseback antics are pure Hollywood.
I smiled. “You won’t miss a thing,” I promised my son. “I’ve got a tape in the machine. You can watch it in the morning.”
“Thanks, Mom.”
While I was less than thrilled that my nine-year-old was enamored of crime melodramas, I was relieved he’d taken an interest in anything after the suicide of his father. Sometimes I still worried that moving him away from the life he’d known in New York City, away from the private school and luxurious Manhattan apartment, might have been a mistake. But one look at the smiling face of my seemingly normal and healthy boy told me I did the right thing.
After tucking Spencer into his narrow bed with a recent children’s Edgar winner, one of the many young adult mystery books we carried, I was ready to implement my plan, beginning with presenting the facts in the case of Johnny Napp to the rest of the Quibblers. I headed back downstairs to turn on the lights and start the coffeemaker. But as I proceeded to the Community Events room, I was startled by a noise—something had bumped against one of the metal folding chairs in the darkened room.
For a split second I wondered if it was the ghost of Jack causing some sort of poltergeist mischief, as he had been prone to do when I first opened the new wing of the store over a year ago. I moved to snap on the lights. But before I could feel the switch in the darkness, a callused hand clapped over my mouth and a strong arm encircled my waist. A man’s voice hissed in my ear.
“Don’t scream.”
I didn’t. I stomped down with all my might on the intruder’s toe instead. He howled and released me. Stepping backward, he threw his hands up in surrender.
“Mrs. McClure! . . . It’s me . . . Johnny Napp!”
I flattened myself against the wall next to the light switch, flicked on the lights. It was Johnny all right, blinking against the sudden glare. Beneath an open grease-stained denim workshirt, he appeared to be wearing the same baggy blue jeans and black T-shirt he’d worn to Angel’s reading the night before.
“How did you get in here?” I cried, unable to suppress the hysteria in my tone.
“I jimmied the lock on the back door. I thought nobody would come back until morning.”
“Your uncle is looking for you.”
I realized Johnny was at least as rattled as I was. “My uncle Bud isn’t the only one. I tried to get home, but spotted a State Police car staked out around the corner, another in the alley behind my uncle’s hardware store. They’re out to get me again!”
“Yes, they’re looking for you. But they only want to ask you some questions—”
Johnny violently shook his head. “The last time cops ‘asked me questions,’ they grilled me all night and roughed me up in the process. They want to pin Angel Stark’s death on me, Mrs. McClure, just like they tried to frame me for Bethany’s murder!”
“You heard about Angel?”
He nodded. “On the pickup truck’s radio. They talked about Angel’s books and said her death appeared to be a homicide. When I heard the news, I turned around and came right back. I knew Uncle Bud would help me figure out what to do. But then I saw the police, and I was scared they’d grab me before I even got a chance to talk to my uncle.”
The kid’s in a panic. Tell him to take a breath.
“Calm down, Johnny. Okay? If you’re innocent, you have nothing to fear.”
Johnny’s look made me feel naïve, and I realized that if I were arrested for a murder I didn’t commit, I probably wouldn’t have much faith in the system either.
“My uncle’s the only guy who believed in me. He’s the only person who ever stood up for me.”
“It’s up to a jury to decide who’s guilty or innocent. That’s why we have a justice system,” I replied, even though I knew it probably sounded like a platitude to Johnny.
I closed my eyes and took a deep breath. “Jack?” I silently asked. “What do I do here?”
You said it yourself. It’s up to a jury . . .
“What are you saying?” I silently asked. “Turn him over to the cops?”
No. Your little gang of cornball yahoos. Have him tell his story to them. See if he’s believable. Get a whiff of how his case’ll play out on the witness stand.
I met Johnny’s scared, brown eyes. “Listen,” I told him, “you have your side of these events, right?”
“Yeah . . . ,” he replied warily.
“Then I want you to tell it.”
“But the cops—”
“Not to the police—not yet, anyway. You uncle is on his way over here. I want you to tell your side of events to him, Sadie, me, and a few other people whom he trusts.”
Johnny looked doubtful.
“Just think of us as a jury of your peers . . .”
“I OBJECT!” BELLOWED Seymour Tarnish, jumping to his feet.
Fiona’s eyes narrowed. “You object to what? I haven’t said a word.”
“I object to getting the wobbly folding chair. You got another one stashed around here, Pen?”
“Sure, Seymour.”
“That’s what you get for showing up last,” said Milner, who was busy with wife Linda, setting out Cooper Family pastries around the coffee urn.
I dragged out several more chairs—deciding we needed one or two near the wooden podium, as well. Earlier, I had set up more chairs than a typical meeting would require, but this was certainly not going to be a typical gathering of the Quindicott Business Owners Association. Usually the subject of our merry band of bold commercial entrepreneurs was the town’s parking woes. Lately a popular topic has been the draconian sanitation rules imposed by the city council, along with the tickets that go with them—the newest ploy by the municipal zoning witch (don’t ask) to squeeze Quindicott’s small business owners just a little bit drier. But no matter what issue was on the table, within an hour the conversation usually veered into a spirited discussion of the pastry of the evening, politics, books, or just local gossip shared over coffee.