Honeymoon With Murder (22 page)

Read Honeymoon With Murder Online

Authors: Carolyn G. Hart

Very wary.

“What do you want?”

Annie hesitated, then said irritably. “Look, I haven’t told anybody about you and Mavis.” She kept her voice low.

But he darted a hunted glance at the waiting group. “There isn’t anything to tell,” he said roughly. “I don’t know what you’re talking about. Mavis and I hardly know each other. If you say anything else, it’s a lie, cause you’re trying to protect Mrs. Jones.”

So he was going to brazen it out. Couldn’t he see that lying would only make it worse?

“Billy, listen to me. You want to find Penrick’s murderer, don’t you?”

“The real murderer, yeah.”

“Then tell me this: Did the laboratory find pine needles sticking
to
Jesse Penrick’s clothing?”

THIRTEEN

Mid-morning Monday

Agatha was not happy. In fact, Agatha was furious. Her amber eyes glistened balefully and her tail whipped with increasing velocity.

There were those who would scoff at imputing such emotion to a cat, deeming it anthropomorphic.

Annie knew better. And even though she was going to have to race to reach the ferry on time, she scooped up the sleek, taut-muscled feline and murmured, “I’m sorry, love. I know you’ve been ignored. I know just how you feel—and I’ll understand if you make a report to the SPCA. Come on, now”—and she nuzzled her cheek against her pet’s neck—“lighten up.”

Agatha was, gradually, calmed and appeased, and grudgingly appreciative of a tasteful serving of salmon.

As a result of that essential interlude, however, Ben Parotti’s ferry was giving its final whistle, indicating impending departure, when Annie roared aboard, the last car to make it. Simultaneously, the storm struck, the first large drops pelting the Volvo’s windshield. Annie gave a whoosh of relief and switched off the ignition. Ben, sensibly clad in a bright yellow slicker, leaned out of his high cabin to yell, “Annie. Hey, Annie!”

Annie grabbed her umbrella (no Broward’s Rock inhabitant ever traveled without one), slipped out of the car, and struggled against the wind and rain to the ladder at the base of the tower. She peered up anxiously. Ben was a fanatic
about his schedule. What could possibly impel him to delay the ferry’s departure to talk to her?

He bent over the railing, his grizzled, leprechaun face both irritated and impatient, his eyes narrowed against the force of the wind. “Listen here, why’re those damfool women out in Max’s speedboat in this kind of weather?”

It would not be wrong to say that Annie felt a distinct sinking sensation, though the ferry rocked sturdily beneath her.

Ben’s finger stabbed the air. “You’d think any man would know better than to let damfool women out in a boat like that, even in good weather. But how could we tell his mother she couldn’t take it?” Ben was grumpy, anti-establishment, always wore tobacco-juice-stained coveralls, but he had a corner on some of the most thriving markets in town, his combination beer hall and bait shop, the ferry, and the only covered boat slips on the island.

“Laurel’s out in this?” Annie cried, and she gestured at the driving rain and at the white caps glittering atop the choppy waves of the sound. Laurel and Ophelia must have driven across the island like demons, too.

“She and that damfool woman in a turban. Took the boat out about five minutes ago. You tell Max I think he’s a damfool, too.” Parotti punctuated his disgust with a piercing shrill of the whistle, and the ferry lurched away from the dock.

Annie was drenched by the time she reached her car. She’d planned to marshal her thoughts for her upcoming attack on Posey. Instead, she gripped the steering wheel and stared grimly out at the rough water. Where the
hell
were Laurel and Ophelia, and what did they think they were doing?

Barbie sounded regretful. “You’ll just have to hang on, Annie. He’s on long distance.”

Static crackled. “Tell him I’m on a short fuse—and I’m about to drown.”

“About to town?” Barbie yelled. “It’s hard to hear you.” Why do people always yell when they can’t hear you?

The first phone Annie had found was outdoors, of course,
and her umbrella was more a sop to convention than a protection. Her cold, wet skirt clung to her legs like plastic wrap; she began to shiver.

Five moisture-laden minutes crawled soddenly by before Max came on the line.

“Hey, Annie, I can’t talk long. It looks like Betsy Raines is missing for sure. She wasn’t on the flight to Atlanta this morning, and I just talked to a maid at the hotel. Said the last time she saw the woman in 1113 was about noon Thursday. Nobody’s seen her since. The bed was just used the first night, but all her luggage is there, except the maid remembered she was carrying an overnight case.”

Annie tried to assimilate this unexpected news and keep her teeth from chattering. What a hell of a time for Laurel to cause trouble!

“Max, I—”

“So I’ve got to—”

“Max, wait! Your mother. Laurel. She’s out in the speedboat. Now. Out on the sound somewhere. She and Ophelia.”

A moment’s pause. “Isn’t it raining?”

“Raining! My God, it’s a deluge. I’m standing at an outdoor phone, and I’m wetter than a damn duck. Yes, it’s raining.”

“Well, I guess they’ll get wet. Listen, I’ve got another call—”

“Max, Max, aren’t you going to do anything? Send out help? Look for them?” A sudden gust pulled the umbrella ribs straight up. Annie felt like a bucket of cold water had been dumped over her head.

Max, who, of course, was sitting snugly in the warm and dry environs of Confidential Commissions, chuckled. Annie thought it quite the most odious sound she’d ever heard. “Annie, honey, relax. Laurel can take care of herself. She’s regatta class. She doesn’t mind a little rain.”

On that, Annie hung up.

She was still fuming as she tried to do something about her appearance in the basement women’s room of the county courthouse. Part of her distress sprang from a
welling uneasiness. How could Max not be worried? Didn’t that indicate that her husband of—she drummed her fingers—her husband of not quite two days was not really in touch with reality? She tried not to think how spacey his mother was. It wasn’t profitable to think along those lines. Moreover, at the moment, she could only cope with so much stress. She sighed and looked without pleasure in the discolored mirror. Not that she was vain. But it was hard enough to deal with Brice Posey without looking like a leftover extra from
Les Miserables
.

Still shivering, she gave her lank hair one final swipe. God, she looked like a cross between Celia Montfort in
The First Deadly Sin
and Claudia, that charming baby bloodsucker in
Interview with a Vampire
. Maybe she’d scare Posey to death.

Cheered at the thought, she fished in her purse, found her small notebook and flipped it open.

Five minutes later, she surveyed her list with satisfaction.

EVIDENCE:

  1. Penrick suffered a contusion on the back of his head.

  2. There was nothing upon which he could have struck his head if he were standing in the center of the living room when stabbed, and there is no indication the body was moved after death.

  3. Pine needles are present on the rug where his body was found.

  4. There are NO pine needles elsewhere on the rug or, indeed, anywhere in the living room.

  5. The police laboratory reports pine needles adhering to Penrick’s clothing. (Posey might not be happy at Billy Cameron having revealed this information, but he couldn’t dispute it.)

CONCLUSIONS:

  1. Penrick was rendered unconscious prior to his death. Otherwise (if stabbed where found, and lividity indicates this is so), he wouldn’t have suffered a contusion on the back of his head.

  2. Penrick’s unconscious body must have lain on a carpet of pine needles.

  3. Penrick was transported to Mrs. Jones’s cabin and then stabbed with the sword which occupies a prominent place in her living room.

  4. This method of murder indicates prior planning, so the selection of Mrs. Jones’s living room as the murder site is obviously part of a plan to implicate Mrs. Jones.

  5. This information indicates indisputably (surely an attractive word to Brice Posey) that Penrick’s murderer must have observed the disagreement between Mrs. Jones and Penrick on Saturday morning.

  6. Therefore, the conclusion is inescapable that the following must be seriously considered as suspects in his demise: All residents of Nightingale Courts and any others in its vicinity about 8
    A.M.
    Saturday.

Annie paced the small anteroom of the women’s lounge. This next part was tricky. She didn’t want to end up in the county jail for housebreaking, but how, without indicating her own forage through Jesse’s cabin, could she successfully sic Posey on to those very interesting folders in Jesse’s pine desk?

“Oh, oh, oh,” she said aloud, and practically broke into a tap dance. Of course, of course. Quickly she scrawled the final lines.

OBVIOUS LINES OF INVESTIGATION:

  1. An immediate search of Penrick’s papers should be instituted by authorities to garner more information about the dead man’s activities and to look for possible motives for murder.

    Even though Posey didn’t like her, how would he be able to resist that pompous passage?

  2. Penrick’s relationships with all the residents of Nightingale Courts must be explored.

  3. A door-to-door canvass should be instituted along the inlet to see if residents have any information about Penrick or his activities. (He was observed on Wednesday night returning to the Courts in his boat while looking very pleased in an unpleasant way)

Annie gripped the notebook like a lance and hurried out the door. Annie Laurance-Darling off to war! But she did wish her shoes would stop squishing as she walked.

“God, was it that much?” Max whistled.

“That’s what Hagerty said. And it was damned hard to get it out of him—until I explained why I was calling.” Buddy shoved a hand through tousled brown curls. “You know how bankers are.”

Max did indeed. Hardly any banker would enjoy divulging that he’d loaded a customers attaché case with $220,000 in unmarked twenty-dollar bills.

“He said he’d told her it was a big risk, taking cash. He wanted her at least to put the money in a cashier’s check.” Alan looked miserable. “I told her, too, cause I knew it was a lot. She just laughed. Jesus, do you think she got hijacked?”

“I don’t know. But we better get somebody to check and see if her attaché case is in that hotel room.”

“Not here?” Annie never thought the news that Brice Willard Posey was unavailable would strike such dismay in her heart.

“The circuit solicitor is at present actively engaged in an ongoing murder investigation on behalf of all residents of the county.” The hatchet-faced secretary was leathery skinned and adenoidal, but she spoke in a ringing tone that sounded suspiciously like the intro at a campaign contributors’ dinner.

“That’s why I need to talk to him,” Annie said insistently.

The secretary pushed rimless glasses higher on a beaked nose. “Are you a member of the press?”

Annie got the point. She pulled her notebook out of her purse, leaned against the desk with one hip, and said breezily, “Right.
Island Gazette
. Beverly Gray at your service.”

As she figured, old horseface had never thrilled to Clair Blank’s stirring stories about Beverly Gray, who met
mystery everywhere from the college campus to the Orient. Horseface had probably arrived full-blown, rimless glasses intact, as a forty-year-old virgin.

“Of course, Miss Gray.” She picked up a mimeographed sheet from a stack on the corner of her desk. “The circuit solicitor, as always, attempts to keep the people’s representatives
fully
informed of his efforts on behalf of the citizens of this county. The telephone number at the bottom of the page will provide hourly updates as further information is received.” She concluded with a toothy smile that rivaled the shark of
Jaws
for awesome display of dentures.

Annie smiled in kind. “Thanks so much. But I do love to talk to Mr. Posey in person. He adds so
much
to a story. Do you have any idea when he’ll return?”

“Oh, I just can’t say. I believe he’s gone to the scene of the crime and may be out there for hours. Despite the inclement weather.”

“That’s very brave of him,” Annie murmured.

There was an instant of suspicion in the reptilian eyes, but Annie bore it with choirboy innocence. (Anyone reading Joseph Wambaugh would know just what a multitude of sins that description could cover.)

“If you want to leave the name of your paper, I will give him the message when he gets in.”

Annie decided not to push her luck, though she was tempted to provide the number of Death on Demand.

“That’s all right. I’m going to the scene of the crime myself. I’ll find him there.”

Out in the hall, she glanced down at the mimeographed sheet. Though why Posey would be back in Ingrid’s cabin—

Stark words leapt from the page:

… nude body of a middle-aged, unidentified woman discovered early Monday floating in a lagoon in the Savannah National Wildlife Refuge …

Oh, my God! The Savannah National Wildlife Refuge—but that was on the mainland, hallway between the island and Savannah—how could it be?—Henny had been so sure that Ingrid had been kidnapped—and now a body—the Refuge—

Annie plunged down the hall for the stairs.

*   *   *

The whirling red light atop a sheriff’s car cast a warning glow despite the thick grey curtain of rain. Annie turned the Volvo off Highway 17 at the entrance to the Refuge, which was blocked by two sheriff’s cars. A slicker-clad deputy waving a lantern struggled toward her. Beyond the barrier of cars, a single-lane dirt road snaked into the river-bottom hardwood swampland. By now, it would be a wallow of mud, navigable only by four-wheel-drive vehicles.

The full force of the storm struck Annie as she climbed out of the Volvo. Before she had been wet; now she was pummeled by wind and rain. Her shoes fell immediate casualties to the sucking mud.

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