Lending a Paw: A Bookmobile Cat Mystery (Bookmobile Cat Mysteries) (25 page)

I’d pulled off an inch of tape. Hallelujah! I rolled the shoelace aglet up inside the sticky stuff, used my hot, swollen fingers to tie the other end of lace through an eyelet of the shoe, stretched my leg out, and pulled.

The ripping sound of the tape unfurling was the sweetest sound I’d ever heard.

I kept rolling the unstuck tape into a larger and larger sticky ball, kept using the leverage of my leg to pull off more tape, rolling, pulling, rolling, pulling. . . .
Free!

Of their own volition, my hands moved apart as far as they could go, as if they wanted nothing to do with each other. A hiccuping sob bubbled up out of me. Silly old hands. You’d have thought they’d have gotten used to each other, tied together like that for so long.

How long, in fact, had it been? I had no idea.

The urgency came back with a vengeance. I untied the one end of the shoelace and relaced it through the shoe. I yanked at the big ball of tape, but couldn’t get the other end free of the sticky mess. Cursing, I was forced to leave the tape attached to the lace, and tied a bad and very lumpy knot.

I scrambled to my feet and ran across the small room. Hand there, foot there, and I was balancing on the bottom of the window frame. Hand up, foot up, hand up higher into a cobwebby darkness, foot up on the window frame’s top, other foot beside it.

Gingerly, I stood up straight, doing my best not to look down. I didn’t think I was afraid of heights, but I’d never been standing on a board not even an inch wide with my head at least ten feet off the ground before, either.

I poked my head over the top of the wall. Please, let there be a way out. Please . . .

The darkness on the other side was deep. But that didn’t mean there wasn’t an unlocked door through which I could escape. All I had to do was figure out a way to get over the wall and drop down on the other side without getting stuck in the ceiling or breaking a leg on the way down.

I stood there, my legs starting to quiver, waiting for my eyes to adjust to the dark. Was that a shelf down there? Maybe it would hold me. Maybe . . .

The sound of gravel crunching changed everything.

Without thought, I jumped high and shoved myself into the small space at the top of the wall. I didn’t fit, didn’t fit, had to fit, had to get through and out and away before he got here, had to go out, and then my head and shoulders were through and—

Voices. Footsteps. Car doors opening and closing.

I grabbed the top of the wall, pulled, couldn’t get my big fat butt through the gap, wiggled, squirmed, pulled the rest of me over to the other side, slithered down the wall, hung on as my feet scrabbled for the shelf.

Where was it? I had to find it couldn’t risk landing on it had to run had to get away had to—

A hand clamped around my ankle.

“NO!”
I yelled, screamed, shrieked. I kicked, I kicked again, I was not going without a fight, he’d have to kill me in order to kill me he’d have to—

“Ms. Hamilton,” said a male voice, “this is Detective Inwood. You can come down. Don’t worry. You’re safe now. It’s okay.”

But I was frozen in place. I couldn’t move, couldn’t make a sound, couldn’t even nod my head. Strong hands encircled me, helped me down, away out of that barn, and into the sunlight of early evening.

Evening. I’d been in that barn a full day.

“You’re shivering,” Detective Devereaux said. “Let me get you a blanket.” Two police cars were in the driveway, one unmarked vehicle and one patrol car with someone, I couldn’t make out who, sitting in the backseat. Devereaux sat me in the unmarked and brought me a fuzzy blanket. I saw real concern in his eyes.

I tried to thank him, but it came out as a froggy croak.

“What was that?” the detective asked. “Your voice is pretty hoarse. Bet you’re dry as a bone after spending, what, almost twenty-four hours in that barn. I’m so sorry we didn’t get to you sooner.” He looked over his shoulder. “Deputy, get the lady some water, will you?”

A uniformed officer, whom I recognized as Deputy Wolverson, ran over with a water bottle. He cracked the top off the bottle, and held it out to me.

Water. I stared at it. At him. My mouth moved, but nothing came out.

“Go on,” Detective Devereaux said. “It’s all yours. There’s more, if you want.”

I did my best to smile at the deputy, then took the bottle and drank greedily, slugging it all down, not wasting a single precious drop. Nothing had ever tasted so good. The detectives let me drink, then asked if I needed an ambulance. I shook my head. All I needed was water and, after a gallon or so of that, a hot shower and whatever dinner Kristen wanted to cook for me.

“You sure?” Devereaux asked. “We can have one here in no time.”

I shook my head again and drank water until I couldn’t drink any more. When I lowered the bottle, I wiped my mouth with the back of my hand and envisioned dinner. Prime rib or whitefish, that was the question.

“Okay, then,” Devereaux said. “What was that you were saying before?”

“. . . Thanks. Just . . . thanks.”

He studied me. “You know, we were listening to you all along.”

Either my time in the barn had done something to my hearing or I hadn’t gotten the memo about you-know-where freezing over. I looked at him. He didn’t appear to be playing a practical joke on me. “It didn’t seem like it,” I said.

“Yeah, I know.”

I finished off the water bottle and he handed me a full one. When I’d poured it down my throat, I said, “If that was an apology, it wasn’t a very good one.”

“How about if I say I’m sorry you were locked in a barn all night?”

I shook my head.

He looked around. “Hey, Woody! She wants me to apologize for you being such a jerk.”

Detective Inwood came over. “Ms. Hamilton, I’m deeply sorry.”

I eyed him. “For what?”

Inwood sighed. “Ms. Hamilton, we seem to have gotten off on the wrong foot. Please accept my apologies for not seeming to take you seriously. But we were, and it was your tip about the quad that got us looking in the right place.”

“Okay,” I said. “Apology accepted. And I’m sorry, too. I should have had more patience and I really shouldn’t have lost my temper yesterday.”

The detectives nodded, and, for the first time, we were friends. But . . . “How did you know I was out here?”

They exchanged a glance I couldn’t interpret at all. “You can thank your cat,” Inwood said. “He was howling and making such a racket this morning that your neighbor, Louisa Axford, came to see what the problem was. When you weren’t there, she used the key she said you gave her”—he looked at me with his eyebrows raised and I nodded—“to get in. She was worried you might have been sick and went in to check. That’s when she saw the note you’d written. The one that said you’d expected to be back by dark yesterday. Good idea, leaving that.”

Bless you,
Mom,
I thought.
You were right all along and I will forever do whatever you say without question.

“The note also said where you were and what you were doing,” Devereaux said. “We’ve been searching for you for some time. Nice to find you all in one piece.”

I agreed wholeheartedly, and I told him how much I appreciated their efforts, but . . . “Who’s in the backseat?” I gestured to the other vehicle.

“Oh, yeah.” Detective Devereaux smiled. “That is a gentleman who was found driving down this road. After a short chase he obligingly stopped. Since the only place the road leads is this house, what do you bet we’ll find his fingerprints all over this barn and that nice quad parked inside?”

“A quad with an ORV license issued to one Kyle Sutton.” Inwood raised his eyebrows. “And I’m willing to bet that Mr. Sutton here owns the exact type of rifle that was used to murder Stan Larabee. What do you think, Don?”

What I thought was that it was over, and that I wasn’t surprised at the ending. So it had been Kyle Sutton. He was the one who put me in the barn. Afterward, he’d probably left for his shift at the restaurant. Some of those growling noises in my dreams had probably been his car returning.

The knowledge that he’d been sleeping in the house while I’d been trying to escape gave me the creeps. And the knowledge that I must have been making too much noise to hear the noise of his recent leave-taking was even creepier.

But at least it was over. I wasn’t dead from dehydration or any other means, and Stan’s killer was in police custody.

“Sorry this took so long, Stan,” I murmured, and in a quiet part of my thoughts, I heard his reply.

Remember what I told you about reputations, Minnie. And thanks.

“Thanks for what?” Devereaux asked.

I shook my head. “Could I get a ride back to my car?” There was a cat waiting for me, and I had a lot to tell him.

C
hapter 20

T
he next evening, Kristen and I sat out on the marina’s patio. My best friend was smart, brave, strong, and able to cook soufflés without a recipe, but she hated boats with a passion. Wouldn’t have anything to do with them. Wouldn’t even sit on the houseboat’s deck while tied up to the dock. I’d long since given up trying to jolly her out of her fears and had brought out a freshly opened bottle of red adult beverage and a couple of glasses.

“When I hired Larry,” she said, “I asked around about him. I knew him in high school, but hadn’t seen him since. Everybody said he was a great chef, but that managing money was his weak point.” She snorted. “I’m such an idiot. I remember thinking, well, gosh, I’m hiring a chef, not a manager. What do I care about his financial skills? But this was all about money, wasn’t it?”

On the ride back to my car, Detective Devereaux had told me what they’d already found out through some fast investigating.

Larry, aka Kyle, and his wife had lost their house to foreclosure a few months ago. They’d rented that place in the valley because it was dirt cheap. His wife had hated it. Devereaux had already tracked down her phone number; she said she’d left Kyle and moved downstate to stay with friends while she was looking for a job.

The captured Kyle had told the detectives that he was headed south that morning to talk her into coming home, that he was going to call the police from a pay phone at a rest stop somewhere and give an anonymous tip that I was locked in the barn.

Kristen rolled her eyes. “And they believed him?”

I shrugged. They hadn’t, but I had. Or I’d wanted to. Thinking that he’d left me there to die wasn’t going to improve my dreams any, and since I’d escaped, I’d decided to accept the explanation.

Kristen sipped her wine. “Man, this is good. Where did you get it?”

“You gave it to me for Christmas.”

She nodded absently. “There’s one thing I haven’t been able to figure out. Why did Larry think he was going to inherit anything?”

I looked at the never-ending blue sky. “He thought Stan liked him.” I remembered what Larry had said, the night Caroline and I had eaten dinner together. From Stan’s undoubtedly offhand comment about money being easy to come by, Larry must have built up a fantasy of inheritances and money owed from long-ago wrongs. And I heard again what Larry had said, the first time I’d met him, about his dreams of building a restaurant.

Had it really been all about money?

I’d had a lot of time to think about Kristen’s question, out there in the barn, and I still didn’t know. I’d had time to think about the farmhouse, about Stan, about his shady business practices, and about his six sisters. I’d thought about genealogy and how the sting of injustice can survive through generations. I’d thought about how Stan’s sale of the farmhouse had started his empire, and how it had ruined his relationship with his sisters forever. I’d thought about families and money and motivations and hatred, and standing there in the warm sunshine outside the barn, I’d asked the detectives if they knew the maiden name of Kyle’s grandmother.

They’d looked at each other. “No idea,” Inwood said. “Why?”

When I suggested that it might be Larabee, they both gave slow nods and pulled out their cell phones. Devereaux got the answer first, from his sister-in-law who’d grown up in that part of the county.

He’d nodded. “Larabee. How’d you know?”

I didn’t say anything, but watched as Deputy Wolverson got into the patrol car, started it up, and drove off, taking Larry away.

“Say, I forgot to tell you, Ms. Hamilton,” Detective Devereaux had said. “We recovered a bullet from one of the bookmobile tires. What do you bet the bullet was fired from a gun Mr. Sutton owns? And it’ll be easy enough to get witnesses to testify that Mr. Sutton knew the bookmobile lady was trying to find Stan’s killer.”

I’d frowned. “It will?”

Devereaux had chuckled. “Sure. Everybody knew.”

When I was relating this part of the story to Kristen, she sat up so suddenly that wine slopped over the side of her glass. “Shot?!” she yelled. “Larry shot at you?”

Oops. “I never told you about that? Well, it was only a few days ago. And nothing happened, so—”

“Nothing happened?” She sent me her fierce I-could-make-life-miserable-for-you-if-I-wanted-to look. “My best friend gets shot at by one of my employees—
shot
at!—and she doesn’t think I might want to know?”

“It wasn’t me, it was the tires. And at the time I didn’t know it was Larry.”

“Kyle,” she muttered. “Should have known from the beginning that guy was trouble. Anybody named Kyle who’d rather go by Larry is bound to have a screw loose.” She squinted a little. “Of course, he looks like a Larry, doesn’t he?”

“If you live in the town where you grew up, it can be hard to get rid of a nickname.” Or a reputation.

When I’d called Aunt Frances last night, I’d told her that not only was Stan’s killer in jail, but none of it had been her fault. Not in the least. She hadn’t believed me at first, but I’d eventually convinced her. After her tears had stopped, we’d made a pact to rehabilitate Stan’s reputation. It would take time, but with two determined women on the job, maybe it wouldn’t take so very long.

“Yeah, well.” Kristen sipped her wine. “I just hope when he gets out of jail, he comes to me looking for work.”

“Why’s that?”

“So I can beat him over the head, of course.” One-handed, she used an imaginary bat to do the job. “By the way, what’s going on with that hot doctor of yours?”

I looked at her sideways. “You were there our whole first date. What don’t you already know?”

“Oh, come on, it was funny. Yeah, I see you trying not to laugh. Don’t laugh, Minnie, don’t laugh. . . .”

I swiped off my smile with the back of my hand. “So how about a double date, me and Tucker, you and Mitchell Koyne?”

She nodded. “Good idea. How about Friday?”

My jaw dropped. “You . . . you’re going out with Mitchell?”

“Why not?” She shrugged. “He’s about our age, can almost speak a complete sentence, sometimes has a job, and of course I’m not going out with him, you goofus.” She laughed. “Had you going there, didn’t I?”

I rested my head against the chair’s back and blew out a huge breath. “For a second I thought I’d created a monster.”

“The only monster around here is in jail,” she said. “And now I’m short a chef three days before the Fourth of July. You know, if you’d been more considerate of your friends, you would have waited until after the holiday to get tossed in that barn.”

“I’ll try to do better next time.”

She grinned. “Good. So, now that we know what happened, who’s going to get Stan’s money? Is the library going to make out like a bandit?”

“From the number of attorney letters I’ve seen on Stephen’s desk, I’d guess it’ll be tied up in courts for months, if not years.”

Kristen snorted. She wasn’t a big fan of the lawyer breed.

“On the other hand,” I said, “both Caroline Grice and Gunnar Olson have sent nice donation checks.”

“Hey, congratulations!” Kristen held out her glass to tink with mine, but before the glasses clinked, she looked down. “Hmm. Minnie, methinks you might have an escapee.”

“Mrr.”

Sure enough, it was my rotten cat. “Eddie, what are you doing out here?” I’d left him inside the boat with the windows shut and the door . . . The door. I’d left the solid door open, leaving only the screen door latched. Wonderful. Eddie had learned how to open the screen door. Simply outstanding.

He bumped my shin with the top of his head, jumped up onto my lap, and turned around one, two, three times. When he finally settled down, he was facing Kristen. “Mrr,” he said to her, dipping his head.

She laughed. “And to you, Mr. Bookmobile Cat.”

I petted his thick fur. Eddie, the bookmobile cat. Eddie, the cat who had found Stan. Eddie, the cat who’d ripped up the Grice genealogy research that had been a waste of time. Eddie, who’d gone ballistic when he’d seen Audry. Eddie, who had nearly scratched a hole in the door when I’d left for the farmhouse.

I stared at him. Had he actually guided me toward the answers? Pushed me in the right direction when I was taking the wrong path? Tried to warn me of danger?

My hand stilled and I looked down at him. He looked up at me and our gazes met, my brown eyes staring into his yellow ones.

Nah. It was my imagination. Had to be. Eddie might be smart, but he wasn’t that smart. No cat was.

He shut one eye, then opened it again.

“Did he just wink at you?” Kristen asked. “He did! He winked at you!”

“I hope not,” I said slowly. “I really, truly hope not.”

Eddie shut both of his eyes.

And purred.

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