“But . . .”
“If those blasted reviews didn’t shame me—”
“Yes, but you
paid
him?”
“I did. It was great fun.” Elysia sighed. “And he did need the money rather desperately, poor love. This is such a tragedy.” She seemed quite sincere.
A.J. and Mr. Meagher exchanged worried looks. “Let me get this straight,” A.J. said. “You met Dicky on your Egyptian cruise and had some kind of affair. Later he tried to extort money from you to keep him from releasing embarrassing photos. You paid him but . . . you’re
not
actually embarrassed by the photos?”
“You do have such a lovely, succinct way of putting things, pump-poppet.”
A.J. narrowed her eyes at her mother.
“Why’d you pay this villain?” Mr. Meagher cut in. “Why didn’t you come to me?”
“
Why
? But you’d have put a stop to it.” Elysia clearly thought this was too obvious to need spelling out. “I was enjoying myself.”
Silence.
“How much did you pay him?” A.J. asked when she could.
“About ten thousand dollars.”
“
Mother!
”
“Sweet Christ in heaven.” Mr. Meagher sounded faint. He had lost color—not so easy with that tan.
“Oh, that was nothing.” Elysia flipped a careless hand. “A bit more than a thousand dollars a month. He wanted much more, of course, but I—”
“You—?” echoed A.J. and Mr. Meagher. They exchanged looks again.
Elysia bit her lip looking a little abashed. “I’m afraid I did rather string him along a bit. Pretended to forget my payment dates, pretended to be hard up, that sort of thing.”
In the astounded silence that followed, the kitchen timer went off—a loud and distinct ping from down the hall.
Elysia jumped up.
“Wait!” A.J. exclaimed, and her mother paused in the doorway. “You teased him? You deliberately
teased
a blackmailer?”
Elysia’s scarlet mouth twitched with amusement. “You make him sound so sinister. He wasn’t, you know. Not the brightest bloke, darling Dicky. But really rather sweet. And so lovely to look at. Charming manners and a
marvelous
dancer. I expect I did make his life a misery sometimes. He really wasn’t cut out to be a blackmailer.” She added thoughtfully, “Yes, I suspect he felt a little guilty . . .”
“One of his other victims must not have been as accepting of Dicky’s bad habits.” Mr. Meagher was game but he looked a wee bit shell-shocked.
“One of his other victims must have murdered him,” A.J. said. “Do you know who else he was blackmailing? I thought he was Egyptian?”
“He was. But any nationality is capable of—”
“I
mean
what was he doing here in this country?”
“He’d moved here. He said he wanted to marry me.”
A.J. gulped. She couldn’t bring herself to look at Mr. Meagher. “Were you planning to . . . marry him?”
Elysia’s pencil thin brows shot up. “He was a blackmailer, pumpkin. I would hardly bring him into the family.”
A.J. muttered, “Who knows? You might have thought it was funny to torture him full time.”
Elysia looked unamused. She stalked away down the hall on her way to check on the dinner.
Mr. Meagher wiped a hand across his face. He and A.J. risked looking at each other once more.
“It looks very bad,” he said. “Very bad indeed.”
“But she didn’t kill him. She couldn’t. She wouldn’t.”
“Aye. But . . . imagine hearing this malarkey . . .”
A.J. didn’t want to imagine it. “She doesn’t even own a gun.” She considered this uneasily. “At least . . . I don’t think she does.” Now
there
was a scary thought.
Mr. Meagher didn’t bother to answer. “The affair is bad enough. He was blackmailing her—she makes no bones about it—and he was killed in her very own garden.”
“But that’s just it. If she was guilty, she’d surely try to hide the fact that he was blackmailing her. And she’d hardly kill him in her front yard.”
“This is your mither we’re speaking of. Her lover was murdered on her front step and she’s concerned with not burning the Easter dinner.”
He had a point.
A.J. said feebly, in an effort to spare his feelings, “It sounds more like she was paying him to act as a professional escort than a lover.”
Mr. Meagher seemed to have no reply. From down the hallway Elysia was humming.
They listened without looking at each other. “It’s not possible,” A.J. said finally.
Mr. Meagher vouchsafed nothing. A.J.’s heart ached for him. She had long suspected Mr. Meagher’s feelings for her mother were more than that of a dear old friend.
After a few minutes Elysia returned to the bedroom. “Dinner is ready. Shall we have it here on trays or did you need to rest, pump-poppet?”
A.J. quit rubbing her head, all efforts to soothe the ache in her temples failing. “I don’t think I’m going to get much rest, and I’m not hungry. Mother, do you have any idea who might have killed Dicky?”
“I suppose another one of his birds. Perhaps someone got jealous.” Still maddeningly untroubled, she requested Mr. Meagher’s help in the kitchen. He rose like a somnambulist obeying commands and went to do her bidding.
Shortly afterward they returned with plates laden with ham, cheese potatoes, Jell-O salad, and all the trimmings. Monster rose, wagging his tail hopefully—and was sent packing. Elysia and Mr. Meagher set up trays and arranged the plates and silverware and glasses. The food was all A.J.’s childhood favorites. The smell alone was wonderful, and she was surprised to find that despite all she’d been through that day, she
was
hungry.
A.J. used her nightstand to push herself upright. Sitting was the worst, but she could hardly eat lying flat. Tray settled at last across her knees, she asked, “
Were
there other birds—er, women?”
Neatly dissecting her ham into bite-sized sections, Elysia murmured vaguely, “Sorry?”
“Dicky. Did he have other lady friends?”
“Oh, he must’ve done. He could hardly afford to live on what I paid him.”
A.J. thought of the Armani coat, the Rolex watch, the Gucci shoes. She suspected her mother was right about Dicky supplementing his income with other victims. Perhaps blackmail was like potato chips—no one could stop at one.
She probed cautiously, “And it didn’t bother you that Dicky had other lady friends?”
Elysia looked up and laughed.
So much for that theory. “But you don’t have any idea of who these women might have been?”
Elysia shook her head. “It’s not the kind of thing he would share with me, you know. Not when he was trying to convince me we should plight our—er—troths.”
Mr. Meagher said grimly, “You must know, Elysia, how very bad this looks.”
Mr. Meagher rarely called Elysia
Elysia
. Even Elysia seemed to sense the gravity of the situation. Her eyes darkened. She said, “Oh yes. A.J.’s inspector will do his best to stitch me up for this, I’ve no doubt.”
“You know, in fairness to Jake, you do make a lovely prime suspect.”
“I know.”
“It’s not a compliment.”
“A.J.’s right,” Mr. Meagher put in. “You could well be arrested for this.”
“I’ve no doubt I will be.” Elysia nibbled on ham. “That
is
good. I am a bloody good cook!”
A.J. struggled to control her exasperation. “Did you tell Jake everything you told us?”
Elysia’s mouth full, she nodded pleasantly.
Of course she had. For all her love of quotations, Elyisa had apparently never heard the one about discretion being the better part of valor. “What did he say?”
“What you would expect from a man with his limited imagination.”
A.J. let that slide. “What about your alibi?”
Elysia raised an elegant shoulder. “He seems to think it’s shaky. I lost my receipt—well, who holds onto the receipt for a single container of milk? Field Marshall Rommel suggested that I might have shot poor Dicky, tossed a tin of evaporated milk in a paper sack, and taken a drive around the valley.”
“But won’t they remember you at the store?”
“One can but hope.”
“It can’t have been crowded on Easter morning. And they’ll have a surveillance camera, surely?”
“No, it wasn’t crowded, but there’s the question of when the murder occurred. The timing is going to be fairly tight. I expect the prosecution will argue that I killed poor Dicky and then went shopping to give myself an alibi.”
“The prosecution.” A.J. looked worriedly at Mr. Meagher. “But surely it won’t go to trial?”
The lawyer’s expression was not reassuring.
“What can we do?”
Elysia said, as though the answer were obvious, “We could always solve the crime ourselves.”
Three
Voices.
Arguing.
A.J. opened her eyes. Moonlight illuminated her bedroom. Monster, on the foot of the bed, raised his head, listening. A.J. listened, too. The voices were not raised—in fact they were muffled—but all the same it triggered unpleasant memories of her adolescence. Her parents had enjoyed one of those can’t-live-with-and-can’t-live-without relationships. Although
enjoyed
was perhaps not the right word. They had certainly loved each other, though, despite everything.
She turned her head on the pillow. The clock on the bedside table read twenty past eleven. A.J. swore under her breath. It took great effort, but she managed to crawl—nearly literally—out of the bed. Hobbling across to the door—it felt like she was about to crack in half—she inched it open.
Light from the front room fanned the hallway. Jake’s voice was quiet but carried. “Listen, lady, the only reason you’re not in jail right now is that you’re A.J.’s mom.”
“I certainly wouldn’t want mere innocence to sway you!”
A.J. huffed an exasperated sigh and, hanging on to the doorframe, pushed the door wider. “What’s going on out there?”
“I am
trying
to throw this brute out,” Elysia moved into view. “What are you doing up at this hour?”
“I’m not six years old, Mother. I’m allowed up past ten o’clock—even on school nights.” She stared past Elysia to Jake who stood by the front door as though uncertain of his reception. “I didn’t think you were coming over this evening.”
“Yeah. Well.”
“I can see why you can’t resist this silver-tongued devil.”
“Mother.” Jake’s gaze held her own. A.J. said to her mother, “You don’t need to stay. I’ll be okay now.”
Elysia did not exactly roll her eyes, but the effect was similar. “Far be it from me to play the third wheel, but are you expecting Herr Himmler to help you bathe in the morning, fix your breakfast, and the rest of it?”
A.J. blinked as the reality of her situation sunk in.
Her point made, Elysia said dryly, “I’ll be down the hall if you need me.” She and Jake passed each other in the hallway like a cat and dog pledged to an uneasy truce.
Jake reached A.J., who backed carefully into her bedroom. He heeled the door shut and took her—carefully—in his arms and kissed her.
“Are you okay?”
“Better now.” She kissed him back. She was very glad he was there, glad she was in his arms again, despite the strain of knowing that he suspected Elysia.
As though reading her mind, Jake said, “I didn’t expect her here. I guess I should have. What did the doctor say?”
A.J. freed herself gently, making her way to the bed and lowering herself slowly and painfully to the mattress. “No twisting, no turning, no lifting. What you’re seeing is basically my full repertoire.”
“How long are you on bed rest?”
“For as long as it takes. I’m supposed to get a steroid shot on Tuesday if the inflammation is reduced enough.”
Jake hovered over her. It was not in his nature to stand by helplessly, that was obvious.
A.J. bit her lip against a yelp.
This was so unbelievably frustrating!
When she was lying flat again on her heating pad she said, “It’s not as drastic as it sounds. I used to have a lot of back trouble. The yoga has really helped. Until this morning.” She added, “You’re an awfully long way away over there.”
He sat down gingerly on the side of the bed. “I don’t want to hurt you.”
“You won’t.” She held out an arm and he came to her, kissing her mouth lightly.
“Poor baby.”
It should have been patronizing, but oddly . . . it wasn’t.
She nuzzled him back. “How is the investigation going?”
“Not good. And before you say anything else, remember that I cannot discuss this case with you. Not at all.”
“She’s my
mother
, Jake.”
“You think that escaped my notice? That’s my point.”
“You cannot honestly believe she did this thing.”
“Just cool down for a minute and look at this objectively.”
“I don’t want to look at it objectively!”