JUSTICE Is SERVED (Food Truck 7) (8 page)

I looked down at my hands and remembered the ring. “Thanks, but I’m already in a relationship. So what was the subject then?” I felt a little like I was interrogating Jason.

Jason paused for a long time. “I don’t remember.”

“Can you remember his exact words?” I asked. “What did he say about me?”

“Something like ‘I nailed the food truck bitch.’” He flushed bright red, and at that point he opted to put a shirt on. I waited for him to return more fully clothed.

“So that was it? Did he use my name at any point?” I was thinking of how easy it would have been to prove David’s claim false. Why did these men just decide to accept it for fact?

“Not that I know of, but then again if he’d mentioned your name, I wouldn’t have known who you were. Trent might have known your last name, but no one else would have even known your first name. So why would he tell us?”

I pushed the matter. “Is that all he said? Did he claim that we did it in a particular place — or recently — or a long time ago?”

Jason furrowed his brow. “Why do you want to know all these details? It’s bad enough that he trash talked you, but now you want to know everything he said about you. It’s awkward.”

It was my turn to shrug. “Since we’re talking about a murder investigation, everything could be important. So I’m tough enough to take whatever you’re going to tell me. I need to know.” My last words were almost a plea. I was getting desperate to find out something that would change this case.

He took a deep breath. “He said that it was a few weeks ago. He’d seen you downtown at your food truck, and that when you were done with your shift you two met in the truck to have some fun.”

I furrowed my brow. The story was obviously false, but there was no way I could prove that from the story. Obviously Land would have noticed a man walking into the food truck and me disappearing from sight. At the end of the shift, he’d already be at Government Square. However, since he had been arrested for this crime, his word wouldn’t hold much weight in court. I’d need to be able to prove that I hadn’t been having an affair, which was incredibly hard to do. Given my lack of a dating history, I thought I wouldn’t rank high on the likely to cheat list, but even so I was sure that I could be painted as a cheater who had provoked her boyfriend into murder.

Jason didn’t have much else to say. Finally, I left and went home. There was no one to come and see me tonight, so I watched television until I fell asleep on the couch.

 

 

Chapter 10

 

The next day went by fast. I was hardly able to keep up with the truck’s business. It seemed like we had more business than we had with two of us working, or perhaps it was just my perspective, given that I was doing it all.

Carter stopped by for a few minutes at the start of his shift, but he only offered a few condolences and the running totals for sales at Basque in the Sun. The arrest of Land had left us short-handed, but had not impacted sales at all. Things were still moving ahead.

I didn’t have much to do that evening. Gina called me as I was leaving the secured lot and invited me over. She had gotten the proofs back from the photographer, and she wanted to know if I would like to see the images from the wedding. Given that I had no plans at all, I agreed, in part because I had nothing to do. However, part of me wanted to investigate all the prints to see if I could spot anything that would give me a clue to what had really happened that evening.

Gina welcomed me at the door a bit effusively, which I attributed to her guilt regarding Land’s arrest. If we hadn’t done her the favor she’d requested, then Land wouldn’t have been at the wedding to be arrested. Trent didn’t seem to be around when I arrived. I glanced around, and Gina got the hint. “Trent went out with some friends tonight, so I thought I’d invite you over. I thought maybe we could place where people were based on the photos,” Gina explained

I nodded. “Do you have the video too? Is it just the wedding?”

Gina rolled her eyes. “Don’t I wish. Trent’s cousin did the video. She’s some aspiring director, and she got everything down on video. There’s footage of the photographer taking pictures. There’s footage of you setting up. I mean, everything is there.”

I had a flash of excitement. This would be even more helpful than the photos for trying to place people and hopefully listening to what the people were saying at the wedding. We might be able to even spot who had written on the tablecloth.

“Do you have the footage?” I asked.

“Yeah, do you really want to watch all of that? I can burn you a DVD, if you’d like.” Gina stood up again and made for the computer. “I’ve got the whole thing here. It’s no problem.”

I asked for a copy, and Gina put a DVD in the drive. She clicked a few things and the whir of the drive started up. I started flipping through the photos as we waited.

Gina popped the drive open and pulled out the DVD. She wrote a few words across the front of it with a Sharpie and handed it over to me. “Here you go. Have fun with this.”

“Are you trying to get rid of me?” I asked.

She laughed. “Not at all. I have some leftover champagne, but you’ll want to watch that by yourself. I don’t know if I can watch it again. It’s that bad. It’s like a ‘behind the scenes’ movie or something.”

I laughed, but I had a small amount of hope that I’d see something in that video to help out with the investigation. I was running out of options.

I stayed until late to look through the photos. I found the shots that Jason had talked about where the bridesmaids were all lined up. The photos were cute, and I would never have been able to tell that the best man was trash-talking me in the background.

 

 

Since tomorrow was a Saturday, I decided to stay up and watch the video when I got home. I made some popcorn, grabbed a soft drink and curled up under a blanket. The May weather had turned cool, and without another person to cuddle with, the room was chilly.

Gina had been right about one thing. The video was long. There was a ridiculously long montage of images while Gina was getting ready. The video showed the bridesmaids arrive in their cars to dress and prepare together. I knew that Christie had not been in the wedding, so there was no real reason for me to watch all of this, yet I did. I was determined to find any clues that this video had on it, and I persevered.

Just about when I thought I’d go crazy if I had to watch one more discussion over curls, the video switched to the men. Trent arrived with David. I still hadn’t seen Christie, which must mean that she’d arrived on her own. Jason showed up not too much later. The men stood around pretending to be waiting for the women, which was a tradition I could do without.

Then it showed the men having their photos taken simultaneously to the bridesmaids. I watched in surprise. Perhaps this was what Jason meant when he talked to David about my virtue. However, the men were lined up by their height after David as the best man. Jason was the shortest of the men, and that meant he was the furthest from Trent and David. It confused me to think that David had passed up the chance to talk to either of the other groomsmen in order to just tell Trent about his so-called relationship with me.

I paused the video. I had to think about this. If what I was seeing was correct, then Jason was not telling the truth. He’d said that he’d talked to David during the women’s photos and at that time, David had told him stories of his conquest. Yet here he was during that time period, and there was no interaction.

That meant two things to me. First, Jason’s testimony was incorrect. Land’s lawyer could use this to get him free. There was no evidence to show that David had really said this to Jason. Why would he lie about this? Jason had to be involved in some way if he was making up stories that would incriminate someone else. Jason’s statements about David’s comments had to be somewhat official, or else they would not have felt comfortable in arresting Land.

If the police were relying solely on the testimony of one man, then Land would have no motive to kill David. Without motive, then why would someone kill David? The one thing we’d all been sure of was David’s philandering, but what if that wasn’t true? What if he hadn’t been cheating on Christie all this time? We were so certain to believe her, but what evidence did we have that he’d really been fooling around with other women? Only Christie’s word for it.

Granted that David had disappeared at times, but people had assumed that he’d left with another woman. He could have been doing any number of things instead. I started trying to ponder what he could have been doing at the restrooms if he wasn’t there on a rendezvous with another woman.

I struggled to think about what could have made David disappear at odd times later in the evening. I began to wonder; what if David had been diabetic? If he’d spent the evening drinking and eating, then perhaps he might have gone to a secluded place to check his blood sugar? That would explain the disappearances and the food in the pocket.

If he’d been eating a sweet glaze like the sweet and spicy dogs, then perhaps he’d not felt well. He could have gone off to check his blood sugar and then met someone who he argued with. He could have hit his head during an argument, but already been sick from the poison.

That would mean that he’d been poisoned earlier than the police thought. They’d assumed that he was poisoned at the restroom, but my theory suggested he was already sick when he headed to the restroom, which would mean that he’d eaten the poisoned hot dogs by the time that happened.

The most likely person to have fought with David would have been Jason, mainly because he’d been so anxious to push the crime off to someone else. His story about me had been a convenience to push the guilt on to Land. In retrospect, the story had been weak and missing a number of details. He kept saying that he hadn’t been expecting to repeat the stories, but he’d been clear enough on David’s comments about me.

He’d been unsure as to the answers to several of my questions, and now I could show that the timing did not reflect his testimony. Jason was free to change his story, but that would make the court case even more difficult. Green would have to think twice about her evidence and the case.

Still it wasn’t enough to get Land free. I wanted him to be considered “not guilty” instead of “not proven.” That meant I would have to come up with the rest of the story. As I sat there, I began to put together a few pieces.

I fast-forwarded the video to the end of the reception and then slowed it down again. I found what I wanted to see. Christie was at Table 15 with a bottle of mustard. The video didn’t show her writing the words, but she was definitely there at the end of the ceremony, writing the words.

The only person who could be writing that particular plea at the end of the reception would be the one who knew that tragedy was coming. She’d had the most opportunity to poison her date, and apparently she had. I always marveled at how people got away with the actual crime and managed to screw up on the aftermath. Why bother for the melodramatic message? Why not leave it as a death in the bathroom?

While I was ruminated, an image on the screen caught my eye. Jason moved out of the frame of the video, heading in the direction of the restrooms at about the appropriate time. While it didn’t prove things, it would be another point that he’d neglected to mention and that he would have to explain in his latest statement to the police.

If he’d been at the scene of the crime, he’d have a lot more explaining to do than just overhearing David talk about his relations with the food truck owner, aka me. Now he would be front and center, and he’d have to explain his own presence at the restrooms. Good luck with that.

 

 

I didn’t want to deal with the drama of accusing anyone of the crimes. In this case, I wanted the evidence to go to the police, and let them deal with the aftermath. So the next morning, I called Detective Danvers as soon as I woke up. Normally on a Saturday, I would sleep in, but today I was on my second up of coffee by 7am.

Danvers, who used Land’s help on a number of investigations, agreed to meet me, even though he had no jurisdiction.

I had another pot of coffee brewing by the time he arrived. He was looking harried and tired. “So what’s the information you have?”

I explained the situation in detail. I showed Danvers the video clips of Jason lying about his testimony and the video of Christie getting ready to vandalize the tablecloth.

Danvers eyed me askance. “Do you want me to arrest her for vandalism? That’s pretty small time for you. I was expecting a serial killer at least.”

I sighed and started again. “Don’t you think that it’s suspicious that Jason said that he heard it during the photography, but he couldn’t have. He was nowhere near the victim.”

Danvers nodded. “Yeah, it’s going to cause Green some heartburn. I would suggest giving this to Land’s attorney. I’ll give a copy of it to Green, and see what she wants to do. I wouldn’t be surprised if she drops the charges. It’s never good to find out that your star witness lied to you.”

I beamed at him. “Good. I have a hunch that he lied to cover up his own involvement in the case,” I explained. I told Danvers about the scenes in the video where Jason had left in the direction of the restrooms.

Danvers shook his head. “That’s even worse. Why exactly did you bring this to me?” he asked. He continued to look at me suspiciously. “Why aren’t you crowing about this and making Green feel like an idiot?”

I furrowed my brow, thinking that this must be how Danvers sees me – whereas I see myself as a helpmate to justice. “I want this to be above reproach. I don’t want Green to get pissed at me and refuse to change her mind. I don’t want to have messed up the evidence. I want to make sure that everything is just right so that Land can get out of jail and move on with his life.”

Danvers scoffed. “You definitely have it bad for him, don’t you? Geez, I hope he doesn’t let you down, like all the others.”

I just put this down to Danvers being a jerk. Land hadn’t dated anyone since I’d known him, so I didn’t see how many women he could have let down in that time. It was all ancient history to me.

“I’d do the same for anyone I cared about. You know that. I just am not used to dealing with a hard-nosed woman cop. I know she doesn’t like me, so I want it to be wrapped up right. That’s all.” I remembered what Sabine had said about an engagement ring, and wondered if Danvers knew as well. He certainly wasn’t going to tell me about it, since he was too busy hinting that I would soon be another forgotten memory to Land Mendoza.

 

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