Read Murder Can Rain on Your Shower Online
Authors: Selma Eichler
guided enough to be crazy about. She would never
have hurt him like that.’’
‘‘Then we agree.’’
I was about to pose another question, but Carla
preempted me. ‘‘And don’t ask me to come up with
anyone else who might have wanted Bobbie Jean in
her grave, because I can’t. I’ve shot my load.’’
Well, that ended that.
I did bring up a couple of other matters, though.
Had the girl seen anyone entering or leaving the din
ing room before lunch that day? Well, had she noticed
anything
that was at all suspicious?
As expected, the inquiries produced a ‘‘no,’’ fol
lowed by a second ‘‘no.’’
After which Carla got to her feet.
‘‘Would you like to hear what I have to look for
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ward to tonight?’’ she said as we began walking to
the door.
‘‘What’s that?’’
‘‘Informing my mother that a new son-in-law is not
in her immediate future. She will positively wallow in self-pity. She’ll probably keep me on the phone for
hours, too. And are you interested in hearing what I can look forward to tomorrow night?’’ This time I had
no chance to respond. ‘‘Meeting with the Forsythe
chief of police and answering the same damn ques
tions I just answered for you.’’
Standing in the open doorway, I told Carla how
much I appreciated her cooperation. And then we said
good night. The girl already had one foot in the hall when she spun around to impart a few words of
inspiration.
‘‘Life is crap,’’ she muttered.
Then she turned on her heel and was gone.
Chapter
20
There wasn’t a speck of onion pie left over—in spite of my denying myself so much as a sliver. But I can’t say that I really minded having to rethink my supper menu; I regarded Carla’s gluttony as a testimonial to my culinary skills.
Anyway, after considerable deliberation, I decided
to stir-fry some of the vegetables sitting on the cock
tail table. Which, with the addition of soy sauce and chopped garlic—along with a little of this and a dash of that—turned out to be a pretty tasty dish.
I had no sooner plugged in the coffee when the
doorbell rang. It was Harriet from across the hall, and
there was a cake box in her hand.
‘‘Steve’s in Florida,’’ she announced. ‘‘He flew down
this morning. It seems Pop’s seriously considering
remarrying.’’
‘‘That’s great!’’ I blurted out, a reaction that was completely in my own self-interest. Pop (a.k.a Gus,
a.k.a ‘‘the ball-buster’’) being Harriet’s eighty-plus
father-in-law and my sometime suitor—whether I
liked it or not. And I didn’t like it one bit. ‘‘Come in and tell me all about it.’’ I pulled her into the room, practically yanking her arm out in my excitement.
‘‘She’s a divorceé,’’ Harriet informed me as soon as
she was seated at the kitchen table. ‘‘Oh, I almost forgot,’’ she said, handing me the box in front of her.
‘‘This was supposed to be Steve’s dessert tonight. It’s cherry cheese cake. I thought maybe you’d like some.’’
‘‘I certainly would. Thanks.’’
I cut us a couple of slices of the cake, then quickly
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poured two cups of coffee and joined her at the table.
‘‘You were saying?’’
‘‘Steve’s worried sick about his father, Dez. This
woman—the divorceé—is more than thirty years
younger than he is.’’
‘‘What, in heaven’s name, could she want with
Pop?’’
Harriet took a sip of the coffee and grimaced.
Which didn’t hurt my feelings at all, since almost ev
eryone reacts to my coffee that way. And after that she had a couple of bites of the cheesecake, no doubt
to erase the taste of the vile brew. ‘‘Money,’’ she re
sponded at last.
‘‘Pop has money?’’
‘‘No, but Steve thinks that maybe
she
—her name’s Gladys—is under the impression that he does. Any
how, Steve wants to meet the woman and find out
what’s what.’’
‘‘That’s probably a good idea,’’ I granted grudg
ingly, concerned that this could lead to Steve’s throw
ing a monkey wrench into this blessed union. And
Harriet must have had the same fear. I mean, if the world’s most annoying old man became the world’s
most annoying old
married
man, there was a good possibility that he’d cut down on those frequent—and
often prolonged—New York visits of his. Which, I as
sure you, Harriet didn’t look forward to any more
than I did.
‘‘Oh, incidentally, I heard from that Forsythe police
chief this morning,’’ she said then. ‘‘He asked me a million questions.’’
Probably
more
like
four
or
five.
‘‘But Steve claims that’s pretty much routine. Any
how, I told the chief I’d never even met the poor
woman before. And he seemed to believe me.’’
‘‘I’m sure he did.’’
‘‘Have you any idea yet who killed her?’’
‘‘Well, I had it narrowed down to four suspects, but
now I’m not certain I’m on the right track.’’
‘‘Would you like my opinion?’’
‘‘Sure,’’ I told her, anticipating that Harriet’s nomi
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nation for perpetrator would be as off the wall as my other neighbor’s. Barbara, if you’ll recall, had some
how divined that it was Ellen’s friend Ginger who’d
sent the victim on to her reward.
But Harriet’s idea was a little more general—and a
lot more apt to be true. ‘‘I wouldn’t be shocked if it turned out that this Bobbie Jean had been playing
around with the wrong woman’s husband or lover or
something. After all, she was a very sexy-type person,
and I imagine men must have found her extremely
attractive.’’
‘‘Apparently they did—at least for a while. None of
her three marriages lasted, you know.’’
‘‘But to have that sort of a hold on men, even if it’s only temporary . . .’’ Harriet smiled wistfully. I can’t say that I didn’t share her sentiment. The
truth is, though, I found the victim’s effect on the male
sex somewhat puzzling.
Okay. I was willing to concede that she was fairly
good-looking. And that her slim figure included a cou
ple of really outstanding protuberances, which—from
what I saw at Ellen’s shower—she wasn’t too modest
to advertise. (Although why men are so obsessed with
breasts totally escapes me.) Nevertheless, I really had to marvel at the woman’s success with the opposite
gender. Listen, there are ladies of my acquaintance
with equally impressive fronts—along with a whole
bunch of qualities Bobbie Jean evidently lacked—who
don’t score particularly well with men.
‘‘She certainly was the quintessential femme fatale,
wasn’t she?’’ Harriet murmured.
‘‘Let’s just say that if she’d ever been able to bottle
whatever it was she had, she could have made Bill
Gates look like a pauper.’’
Once Harriet was back across the hall I began to
rehash my meeting with Carla Fremont. And I had to
concede that as far as advancing the investigation, it had been a complete washout. I tried to give myself a pep talk. Could be that Carla
had
provided an
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Selma
Eichler
important clue, one that I’d somehow missed. And it
could also be that I’d pick up on it when I went over my notes. However, considering that I intended to
transcribe the notes tomorrow and study them on
Wednesday, at the latest, this was a little hard to buy into. I mean, what were the odds I’d suddenly get
smarter by then?
Right after this I began thinking about how Carla
had again been kicked in the head by a man she cared
about. The girl was right. Life
was
crap—or, at any rate, what she’d sampled of it so far. But after all, there was—
The telephone interrupted my ruminations. It was
close to eleven. Could Nick possibly be calling at
this hour?
He couldn’t. Or, anyway, he wasn’t.
‘‘I hope I didn’t wake you,’’ Harriet told me, ‘‘but I know you never go to sleep until one.’’ (A slight exaggeration—there have been times when I’ve made
it to bed before midnight, although not that often, I admit.) ‘‘Good news. I just heard from Steve, and he said that before he even got down to Florida, Pop had
changed his mind about remarrying. In fact, it appears
as if my father-in-law and his lady friend might have come to a parting of the ways.’’
I shivered. And not from the cold, either. ‘‘And you
consider this
good
news?’’
‘‘Don’t you? Pop’s in circulation again. Not only
that, Steve told me he asked about you. He wanted
to know if you were still available.’’ Before I could respond, Harriet giggled. ‘‘Just kidding, Dez,’’ she as
sured me, continuing to giggle.
As far as I was concerned, though, this was no sub
ject for levity. (Listen, if—as the result of being ca
joled, browbeaten, and emotionally blackmailed by my
friend Harriet here—you’d spent as many agonizing
hours with her pain-in-the-butt father-in-law as I had, you wouldn’t exactly be laughing your head off, ei
ther.) In fact, I failed to see what she could find so amusing. I mean, the woman was positively giddy.
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Then it occurred to me that after entertaining the pos
sibility—however briefly—that Pop would no longer
be foisting himself on her all that often, Harriet must have been shaken to the core by Steve’s bulletin. In fact, it may have sent her straight to the cooking
sherry.
And you know something? Between my lack of
progress in solving the murder of Bobbie Jean Morton
and the prospect of the dreaded Pop’s return to New York, all of a sudden that cooking sherry didn’t sound
half bad.
Chapter
21
I admit it. I’m as big a busybody as the next one. (Okay, bigger.) Still, being privy to one of Jackie and Derwin’s little squabbles is something I’d just as
soon avoid.
With my luck the way it was lately, though, when I got to work on Tuesday Jackie was on the phone,
lacing into that significant other of hers. I wondered—
but only for an instant, maybe—what Derwin’s trans
gression had been
this
week. Well, whatever it was, to put himself in jeopardy so soon after being on the
receiving end of that last tongue-lashing I’d overheard,
the guy had to be either the bravest or dimmest soul God ever created. Listen, you’d think that he’d have been walking on eggs—at least for a while—wouldn’t
you?
But maybe he was emboldened because of the way
things eventually turned out that other time.
I mean, remember those cheapo theater tickets he’d
acquired for that past Saturday night? Well, Jackie
had finally agreed to go to the show with him, all the while bitching like crazy that they’d be sitting at least a mile away from the stage. That, however, was noth
ing compared to the bitching she did once the perfor
mance was over. According to Jackie—and she’d
really ranted on about it at lunch yesterday—this was one of the worst musicals ever produced on Broadway.
It was such a stinker, in fact, that she actually appreci
ated being so far removed from it. And what did those
newspaper critics have for brains, anyhow, giving gar
bage like that such rave reviews?
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At any rate, feeling as she did about the show, she’d
let up on Derwin regarding the seats he’d bought. But
apparently the man wasn’t averse to pushing his luck. Because right now Jackie was screeching—and before
I met Jackie I never knew that it was possible to
screech in a near-whisper—into the mouthpiece.
‘‘What do you mean your dark blue suit? It’s a formal