Dolly Departed (21 page)

Read Dolly Departed Online

Authors: Deb Baker

Tags: #detective

"Don't look so happy," Nina said.
"There's a good reason you charge more to train Chihuahuas, and Enrico is a perfect example of why. Now, tell me about Daisy."
"She was supposed to meet me on Central Avenue. She agreed to help out with a new client, but she didn't show up. I had to cancel. The owner wasn't happy with me."
"That's not like Daisy," Gretchen said.
"If nothing else, she's reliable," Nina agreed. "And I know she needed the money."
"Maybe she's sick."
"She never told me where she was staying. It's a good thing you know," Nina said.
"Turn here."
Nina followed her directions, making several more turns and coming to a halt in the middle of a block when Gretchen instructed her to pull over. They stopped in front of an abandoned house marred by gang symbols. A weedinfested empty lot was next to it.
"The shed is behind this building." Gretchen had been in this neighborhood recently. "Ryan Maize lives close by,"
she said.
"Scary neighborhood," Nina said. "Why would Daisy choose this over a comfy room with you?
"That's a good question."
"I'm locking the pups in the car. They wouldn't be safe on the street. Do you have anything to protect yourself?"
"Like what?" Gretchen got out and waited for Nina.
"Take this." Nina came around the car. She had a silver lipstick case in her hand.
"Lipstick? We're primping before visiting Daisy?"
"Pepper spray disguised as lipstick. I bought two of them online."
Gretchen took the disguised weapon and chuckled. Leave it to Nina to have a custom pepper spray. She opened the cover and tested the spray by pressing on the bottom of the tube. A long, thin line of fluid shot out. Gretchen walked along the side of the boarded-up house, picking her way past a pile of discarded junk until she came to a shed in the back. Nina followed at a distance, her "lipstick" at the ready.
Gretchen tried the door, but it was locked. She peered into the shed through a dirty side window, wiping away some of the grime for a better view. Daisy's shopping cart, bulging with all her worldly possessions, was stashed inside. An unfolded sleeping bag was tossed in the corner.
"She isn't here," Gretchen said.
Nina, standing near the door, let out a screech. "Gretchen, come here. Blood!"
Gretchen rushed to join Nina. Streaks of red ran along the door frame as though someone with bloody hands had leaned on it for support.
"We have to get inside," Gretchen said.
"We should call the police."
"What if Daisy's in the shed, breathing her last breath?
There isn't time. Let's break in, find out if she's there, then decide whether to call for help."
"What about fingerprints?"
"Don't touch anything. I'll be right back."
Gretchen ran to the pile of junk, pulled out a discarded metal table leg, and returned to the shed. She swung her makeshift club at the window, then quickly turned her face away to protect her eyes. The window shattered. She hit at it until she had removed all the shards of glass.
"Windows seem to blow out whenever we're near," Nina observed. "You climb in. You're younger and more athletic. I'll cover you."
Gretchen peered inside the window. What would she do if Daisy was in the shed? What if her homeless friend was dead? The would-be actress with the red hat held a special place in Gretchen's heart. She couldn't be dead. She just couldn't.
"Go!" Nina commanded, managing the operation from a position well out of the way. She fingered the lipstick while scouting for danger from all directions. Gretchen went through the window with the table leg in her fist. She was careful not to touch anything with an open hand, which wasn't the easiest thing to do.
In spite of the sunny, cloudless day, the interior of the small building was dimly lit. But not dark enough to keep her from spotting more dark stains on the floor of the shed. She couldn't tell if it was blood.
The shed smelled of dirty clothes. Glass crunched under her feet as she stepped hesitantly to the shopping cart.
"Hurry up," Nina called in a stage whisper. "We don't have all day."
Gretchen used the table leg to lift off the top layer of worn clothes. Nothing.
"There's blood on the side of the cart," Nina noted from the window.
"Shush." Gretchen scooped out several layers of old clothes, before turning her attention to the corner of the shed.
"Wait." Nina cautiously climbed in and stood beside her. "Daisy could be under the sleeping bag."
They studied it.
Please, Daisy, don't be under there.
"You look," Gretchen said. "I can't."
Nina was pale in the light from the window as she took the table leg from Gretchen and lifted the sleeping bag with the end of it. "Gretchen."
"Yes." A lump formed in Gretchen's throat. She squeezed back tears.
"It's just bedding."
Just bedding. Gretchen's legs threatened to give out. She leaned against the wall of the shed for support, feeling weak. This was too personal. Daisy was part of her life.
"Let's get out of here," she said.
"What about all the blood? Shouldn't we call the police?"
"I don't know," Gretchen said, swinging through the broken window. "Let's try to find her first. She wouldn't be happy if she thought we had sent the police after her."
"What about her things?" Nina said, eyeing the cart. "I can't imagine anyone wanting to steal from her, I mean, what's worth taking? But she treats them like treasures."
"Let's put everything in the trunk," Gretchen said, grabbing a pile of clothing. They checked out the soup kitchen and questioned people on the street who knew her. Two women feeding crumbs to the pigeons from a bench on Central Avenue didn't know where she was. No one had seen her.
A phone call told them she hadn't been admitted to a local hospital. At four o'clock they gave up and went home. Daisy had vanished from the homeless community of central Phoenix, leaving behind her precious shopping cart and a trail of blood.
26
Gretchen walked along the sidewalk leading to April's home in Tempe with Nimrod in her purse. She had learned to accept April's green Astroturf lawn and weeds forcing their way merrily along the edges wherever a bit of dirt existed. She appreciated the woman for her internal beauty rather than for her external environment. The inside of the house would be just as unkempt.
She heard an eerily familiar snarl when she knocked on the front door.
Please don't tell me Enrico's inside! It can't be true.
Nimrod perked up his ears in recognition. His tail beat in puppy glee. "How can you like that little devil?"
Gretchen asked the fluff ball, bending close. Nimrod gave her a kiss on the nose.
April opened the door holding Enrico, who emitted another threatening growl.
"He knows who I am," Gretchen complained in exasperation. "Why is he growling? Look at him, his teeth are bared."
"He likes to put on a show," April said. "He's a scaredycat underneath the bravado. Come on in."
Gretchen thought back on her conversation with Nina. Her aunt had been intentionally evasive about Enrico's new home. She wouldn't want to be around when Gretchen learned that the monster menace might be a permanent member of the group. "I can't believe Nina talked you into taking him."
"He's kinda cute, and I can always send him back if it doesn't work out. This is a trial run for both of us. Have a seat."
Gretchen sat amid April's miniature dolls and told her friend about the visit with Evie and the discovery that Bernard had been embezzling from Charlie Maize.
"Charlie knew and didn't stop him," Gretchen finished.
"That sounds just like Charlie," April said. "She had a big heart when it came to her friends."
"Some friend."
"Let's move him to the top of our suspect list."
"He's number one on mine," Gretchen said. "Charlie showed the room boxes to Evie the day before she died. Evie says she never saw a kitchen scene. Charlie must have left it until the end as a surprise to all of them. The killer had to have found out what Charlie was up to."
"What about Daisy? Nina told me what happened. She's a tough cookie, and she's streetwise. I bet she's okay."
"I keep telling myself that." Gretchen let Nimrod down. He trotted off to investigate the kitchen floor, knowing April's floor always produced tasty morsels.
April stroked Enrico's tiny ears with her large hand. They both looked contented. Who would have guessed they'd hit if off?
"Any news on Ryan Maize?" April asked. "Have the police found him?"
"Not that I've heard."
"And that hunky detective? What's with you and Matt?"
Gretchen shrugged.
"That's one very scary female he's trying to get rid of. She has her hooks so deep in him, he'll never get away."
"My thoughts exactly." Gretchen remembered the kiss, how sweet it was.
"You aren't giving up on him, are you? You aren't going to let her win?"
"I can't get involved with a married man."
April covered her ears. "I can't stand hearing you say that one more time. The man is getting a divorce. He'd be available right now if she wasn't fighting it. He hides from her. Believe me, the love is gone."
Leave it to April to put the situation in perspective. Was she using Kayla as another excuse to run away? Was she more frightened by the possibility of a close relationship than by a crazy wife? Gretchen hadn't exactly excelled at choosing men in the past. Was she relationship phobic?
Everyone else seemed to have some kind of phobia-Matt with his dolls, April and clowns. Was it so far-fetched that she might be too afraid to open up her heart again?
"Bonnie said a court date is coming up," April said.
"She has great hopes for this one. Matt will be a free man."
Gretchen wasn't going to hold her breath. "Nina, Britt, and I are going to the rodeo tonight," she said. "I'm inviting you to go with us."
April's eyes widened. "But-"
"I know you're afraid of clowns. You don't have to go, I'll understand. But I want you to know you're welcome to come along. Besides, at the rodeo, clowns are helpers. They protect the riders. They aren't the scary ones. It's the bulls you should be afraid of."
"I'll come," April said a little hesitantly. "Maybe I can beat this thing. Yes," she said, with more confidence.
"Count me in."
The Parada del Sol rodeo was in full bucking motion when they arrived. The women entered the arena without any pets. The noise and commotion, Gretchen had reasoned, would scare the dogs. April thought it over and sided with Gretchen, as did Britt, leaving Nina with the only vote to bring them along. She reluctantly left Tutu in the company of Nimrod and Enrico. Caroline agreed to dog-sit and protect Wobbles from the small gang of miniature instigators.
"Why spoil your fun?" Gretchen had argued with her mother. "They can stay alone. Wobbles doesn't need protection from the dogs. It's the other way around."
"I know that," Caroline replied. "But I don't really like rodeos ever since I saw a cowboy gored by a bull." She shuddered. "The man almost died. It's not fun anymore. I'd rather work. I've started my second doll book, and it's moving along nicely."
Tutu had watched Nina leave with such baleful eyes that her aunt almost broke down and took her along. Gretchen whisked her aunt away before she could cave in to the manipulative animal. Wearing western gear like everyone else in the arena, the three women found places on the metal bleachers. April's cowboy hat had an enormous brim. Nina wore a snappy white cowgirl hat and a sequined jean jacket. Britt had even toned down her severe style by wearing jeans with a blue blazer.
Gretchen and Nina kept April between them so she couldn't panic and bolt. They weren't sitting five minutes before a clown popped out of a barrel. April screamed and crammed her knuckles in her mouth. With her free hand, she grabbed the red bandanna around Gretchen's neck and squeezed.
"It's going to be all right," Gretchen reassured her, trying to break free before her airway was damaged. "Focus on something else. Look over there."
A cowgirl rode into the arena, lasso swinging over her head. The crowd cheered when she roped her calf. April's grip loosened, and her eyes lit up. "I've never been to a rodeo before," she said. "This is kind of exciting."
"What a deprived childhood you had," Nina said.
"I couldn't go because of the clowns. But this isn't so bad. As long as the clowns stay way over there, I should be fine. This is much better than a parade where they come right up to you. They aren't going to come right up to me, are they?"
"Nope," Gretchen readjusted her bandanna. "You're safe here." She loved the excitement of a rodeo, the danger, the feeling that she'd time traveled back to the past. "Cowboys are sexy," she said as one of the riders dusted off his pants with his hat and strode from the ring.
"Yummy," April agreed. "Good enough to eat."
"Look at that one!" Gretchen said, getting into the swing of things. Why not? She was single. She could ogle as well as any man. Although she didn't think any of them compared to Matt Albright. He was in a class of his own. April pointed across at a group of cowboys getting ready to ride. "They could
all
eat crackers in my bed, all at the same time."
The women warmed up to the game, evaluating the rugged cowboys. Suddenly Nina gasped. "Don't look," she said harshly, leaning across April and squeezing Gretchen's knee.
"What?" Gretchen glanced at her aunt. Nina was full of drama most of the time. Tonight wasn't an exception.
"I said, don't look." Nina's eyes swung across the arena. Gretchen craned her neck. At first, she didn't see anything unusual. Then she spotted Matt Albright sitting on the other side, slightly to the right and a few rows below them. She was surprised that Nina had been able to pick him out of the crowd.

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