“How did you know that Libby was going to be there at that particular moment?” Sean asked. “Exactly,” Sean said when Bernie didn’t say anything. “That’s what I thought. I’m going to say to you what I used to say to my men: Planning is the key to everything. You have to know what you’re doing before you do anything. Otherwise you’re relying on luck and luck only takes you so far.”
“Are you done?” Bernie asked, trying to stem the rising tide of irritation she was feeling at her dad’s lecture. She hated when he kept on repeating things over and over. Like she didn’t get it.
“Yes, I am,” Sean said.
He ate another mouthful of home fries and scanned the front page of the local paper. Not that there was anything worth reading in it today, unless you were interested in the fact that Mrs. Gardenia had six cats living in her house, one more than the local ordinance allowed for.
A moment later, Libby came into the room. She was wearing a white terrycloth bathrobe and had a purple towel wrapped around her head.
“I don’t know why you can’t get white towels,” she complained to Bernie as she reached over and took a sip of coffee out of Bernie’s cup.
“Hey, get your own,” Bernie told her.
“I will in a minute. Why do you have to get all of these weird colors?”
“Because that’s what’s on sale, that’s why. Have you heard from Marvin yet?”
Libby shook her head.
“So that’s good news.”
“I guess so,” Libby said. It was true. When something bad happened, especially something with his father, Marvin always called her. “But what happens if his dad wants him to file a police report? You know what he’s like.”
“Marvin will tell him he doesn’t want to,” Bernie said.
“But if his dad insists?” Libby said.
Sean shrugged. “Then Clyde will take it and it will conveniently be buried.”
The things his eldest child found to worry about continually amazed Sean. She’d been like that ever since he could remember. At five she worried about what happened to the lightbulbs when they burned out. She didn’t want Rose, their mother, throwing them out because she didn’t want their feelings hurt. They’d had to sneak them into the trash at night.
“Because,” Libby continued, “I would feel terrible if we filed something and the police picked someone up because of it.”
Sean snorted. “I wouldn’t worry about that if I were you. Things that happen around Leon’s don’t get investigated. That’s just the way it is,” he said, forestalling his daughter’s next question. Even though they were older he still didn’t like discussing payoffs with them. He knew this was ridiculous, but there it was.
“And I certainly don’t want Clyde to get in trouble,” Libby continued.
“He won’t,” Sean assured her. “Everything will be fine. Really.” He rolled his wheelchair back from the table to give himself another inch of room. “Anyway, on a different note, did you learn anything from last night?”
Libby gave Bernie a bitter look. “Besides the fact that saying the first thing that comes out of your mouth is not a good idea?”
“Yes. Besides that,” Sean replied.
“We learned quite a bit,” Bernie said.
Libby sat down, took a piece of raisin toast off the plate set in the center of the table, and bit into it. There was the sweetness of the raisins, the nuttiness of the whole-wheat flour, the slight hint of orange rind, and the sharpness of cinnamon. The bread was so good it didn’t need butter or cream cheese. They would just mask the flavors.
Libby took a second bite of toast and poured herself a cup of coffee out of the carafe sitting on the table. “I suppose we did.”
“So?” Sean prompted.
He’d gotten a general idea of what had happened last night, but between Marvin moaning, Libby running up and down the stairs to get ice packs, and she and Bernie arguing, it had been difficult to sort out the particulars.
Bernie ate the last piece of her cake. “For openers, we learned that Rick Crouse has poor impulse control.”
“A lot of guys would have done what he did given the circumstances,” Libby objected.
“That’s true,” Bernie admitted. “But an equal amount of guys would have walked away or they would have said something, but they wouldn’t have punched Marvin in the jaw.”
“I thought it was a bad idea from the beginning,” Libby told her. “Marvin thought it was a bad idea too. We told you it was.”
“Then you shouldn’t have gone along with it,” Bernie shot back.
“We had no choice,” Libby pointed out. “You didn’t consult us. You’d already told Sam about Marvin being an agent.”
“You certainly did have a choice,” Bernie countered. “You didn’t have to go into the bar if you didn’t want to. Neither did Marvin. We could have turned around and come home. All you had to do was say something.”
Sean brought his fist down on the table.
“Enough,” he said as Libby opened her mouth to reply to Bernie.
“But…” she said.
“No buts,” Sean told her. “Now are we going to try to solve this crime or am I going to have to spend the morning listening to you girls bickering?”
“Solve the crime,” Bernie and Libby said in unison.
“Good,” Sean said. “Let’s begin again, shall we? Now, what else did you learn last night?”
Bernie cleared her throat. “We learned that Rick was sleeping with Annabel. That’s number one.”
Sean nodded. Bernie had told him that last night.
“She was giving him money, but according to Joanna, Annabel was cutting Rick off moneywise,” Bernie said.
Sean nodded again. “Okay. Do we know whether Rick was getting any money from Annabel if she died, because if he wasn’t, then he had a motive for keeping her alive, not the opposite.”
“No. We don’t know,” Libby said.
“We should find out,” Sean said.
“Yes, we should,” Bernie said.
“So what else do we know?” Sean asked.
Bernie took a sip of her coffee. “We know that Rick and Joanna were married, that Annabel seduced him, and that in revenge Joanna seduced Richard.”
“Wow,” Sean said. “Talk about drama. And we know this how?”
“From Joanna,” Bernie said. “It’s one of the things she told me outside Leon’s.”
“Do you think she was telling the truth?” Sean asked.
Bernie thought for a moment. “Yes, I do. Why else would she have said it? I mean, she implicated herself by telling me that.”
“Well,” Sean said, “an alternative scenario could be that she said that because by doing so she would appear to be innocent.”
“That line of thought seems a little too complicated,” Libby objected. “Dad, haven’t you always said that simple works best?”
“True,” Bernie said. “But hurt pride in some people can be a powerful motivating force for revenge. Especially in a man. Which she is clearly not.” Bernie shook her head. “Did I just say that?”
“It may be a good reason,” Sean said, returning to the subject at hand. “In fact, gender aside, it is a good reason. But then the question becomes: Why now?”
“What do you mean?”
“Well, this thing with Annabel seducing Rick happened a while ago, correct?”
Libby and Bernie both nodded.
“So then why should Joanna pick now to kill her?”
“Maybe Joanna had managed to put this all behind her and something Annabel did brought it up again. Only this time it was worse than ever. This time Joanna decided to exact revenge,” Bernie suggested.
“But we don’t know what this hypothetical something is,” Sean said.
“No, we don’t,” Libby said. “It’s a stretch.”
“Yes, it is,” Sean admitted. “Anything else?” he asked.
“Joanna mentioned Joyce as well,” Bernie said. “She implied t
hat she had a reason for killing Annabel. She said that we should talk to her.”
Sean drummed his fingers on the arm of his wheelchair. “And Joyce is who? Refresh my memory.”
“She was Annabel’s best friend,” Libby told him. “She was there at the dinner.”
“That’s right,” Sean said. “Of course, according to Annabel’s last speech, everyone at the party had a motive for killing her.”
“That’s what makes this so tough,” Libby observed.
“Correction,” Sean told her. “That’s what makes this so interesting.”
“If Annabel didn’t have a heart condition she might have survived,” Bernie observed.
“How many people knew she had a heart condition?” Sean asked.
“Everyone at that party knew,” Bernie said.
Sean thought over what Bernie said for a moment. He’d just come up with his to-do list when the house phone rang. Libby sprang up to answer it. She came back a couple of moments later with a puzzled expression on her face.
Chapter 16
“Who was it?” Bernie asked when Libby sat down at the table again.
“That was Richard Colbert and he wants me to meet him at his house at two o’clock this afternoon.”
Bernie reached over, grabbed a piece of raisin toast, and took a bite. “You’re kidding.”
“Nope.”
“That’s interesting,” Sean said.
“Isn’t it, though? Richard not being one of our biggest fans,” Bernie replied before turning to her sister. “Libby, he asked for you specifically?”
“Yes,” Libby told her. “He did. And I said I’d be there. Maybe he wants to apologize to us.”
Bernie barely managed to keep from rolling her eyes. “I wouldn’t count on that if I were you.” She finished her toast. “On the other hand, it does offer an opportunity….” Her voice trailed off and she started to smile.
“Don’t even think about it,” Libby warned, catching sight of Bernie’s expression. “Because it’s not going to happen.”
Bernie widened her eyes. “Think about what?”
“About going through the house while I talk to Richard.”
“Such a thing would never enter my mind.” Bernie held up her hand. “I swear.”
“Do you sister swear?” Libby demanded.
“That’s absurd,” Bernie said, trying to summon up indignation and failing.
Libby folded her arms across her chest and leaned back. “That’s what I thought.”
“At least she has the good grace to blush,” Sean said to Libby.
“You don’t think it’s a good idea?” Bernie asked him.
“On the contrary, I think it’s an excellent idea as long as everyone is out of the house. This is going to be the only time, as far as I can see, that you’re going to get to look around there.”
“I’m pretty sure we’re just talking about Joanna being there,” Bernie said.
“We don’t know that for sure,” Libby said. “There could be lots of people working there. Maybe we should find out first.”
“We don’t have time to do that,” Bernie said.
Libby bit her lip. “All the more reason not to do this. Besides, the house is huge.”
“I’ll go through as much as I can,” Bernie said. “I realize it’s not ideal, but I think we have to take advantage of this opportunity. What do you think, Dad?”
“If we can get Joanna out of the house, I think we should go for it,” Sean said. “If Bernie meets anyone, she can always say she came in to use the bathroom and got lost.”
“I still don’t like it,” Libby said.
“It’ll be fine,” Sean said. “If I thought it was dangerous, I would never put you and Bernie at risk. You know that.”
“How are you going to get Joanna out of the way?” Libby asked. She hoped that would provide the metaphorical fly in the ointment. But it didn’t.
“Listen and learn,” Sean said. He turned to Bernie. “Brandon’s pretty good at imitating voices, isn’t he?” he asked.
“Yes, he is. But he’s asleep.”
“Then wake him up.”
Richard Colbert seemed much friendlier this time around, Libby decided when he met her at the door of his McMansion. Although this place wasn’t even a McMansion. It was a McMansion on steroids. She looked at the way Richard was dressed—tweed sports jacket, immaculately pressed blue and white windowpane shirt open at the neck, tan corduroy pants, chestnut brown leather loafers that gleamed; in other words, the epitome of the country squire as filtered through American designers—and wished she’d dressed in something other than her old jeans, flannel shirt, and hiking boots. But what could you do?
Okay. She could have done something. She could have worn her black slacks and black sweater, the way Bernie had suggested. But she hadn’t wanted to be here in the first place—the whole thing felt wrong—so she’d decided she’d be damned if she was going to take the time to change her clothes. That would just have been adding insult to injury. She’d told her sister that and Bernie had just shaken her head and walked away. Maybe Bernie was right about dressing to fit a part, Libby decided as Richard smiled and shook her hand. But it was too late now.
“Thanks for coming,” he said as he took her old ski parka and hung it in the hall closet next to an expensive-looking fur coat.
Bernie would know what kind of fur it was, Libby thought as Richard led her down the hall. But since her sister was otherwise engaged in exploring the upstairs areas of Richard Colbert’s mansion, she couldn’t ask her. Libby felt a stab of resentment at Bernie for making her worry this way. Then she put the emotion away and concentrated on the matter at hand.
One thing was for sure, she decided as she followed Richard down the hall: He didn’t look like a man prostrate with grief. In fact, he looked pretty relaxed and happy. As if a great weight had been lifted off him. Interesting, as her dad would say. She and Richard walked past the solarium and turned to the left.
“This is the guest wing,” Richard explained as they passed the exercise room, the sauna, and a room with a large loom in it. “Well, here we are,” Richard said, pausing at the doorway in front of him. “I thought we’d have our little chat in the library.”
“It’s amazing,” Libby said as she caught up with him.
“It’s rather showy if you ask me,” Richard said. He gestured at the floor-to-ceiling shelves of leather-bound books, the large Oriental rugs, the leather sofa and armchairs, the elaborately carved old oak desk. “Annabel bought the whole room lock, stock, and barrel from an estate on Rhode Island and had it transported here one carefully wrapped piece at a time.”
“That must have been quite a job,” Libby said.
“You have no idea.” Richard pointed at the two stained glass windows over on the far wall. “Tiffany glass. Annabel had to have them. Had to. Was going to die if she didn’t. I can’t tell you how much they cost or what a pain they were to transport here. I had to get a special crew from the Metropolitan Museum down in New York City up to Rhode Island to wrap them for shipping.
“That was the only way I could get them insured. Then, of course, when they got here they didn’t fit the original openings. We had to knock some of the wall down to make a space for them.” Richard shook his head at the memory. “But whatever Annabel wanted that’s what Annabel got.”
“Well, not quite everything,” Libby said, thinking of the Malathion.
Richard corrected himself. “Almost everything.” He gestured for Libby to sit in one of the leather armchairs, which she did. He took the one across from her.
“So where is everyone?” she asked when she’d gotten herself settled, no easy task in a chair deep enough for a pro wrestler to get lost in. She just wanted to make sure there were no surprises.
Richard shrugged. “Joanna had to go out on an errand and the cleaning crew comes on Tuesdays and Thursdays.”
“Cleaning crew?” Libby repeated.
Good grief. Th
at’s what had been bothering her. Richard had mentioned something about a cleaning crew coming in. How could she have forgotten? She closed her eyes for a second. She could hear her dad now. The plan is only as good as the information it’s based on. But, she reminded herself, she had to focus on the positive. What did Brandon always say? No harm, no foul? Fortunately, this time luck was on their side.
And Joanna was definitely down in the city, thanks to Brandon pretending that he had information about Rick’s finances and asking her to meet him down in a little Italian restaurant in Staten Island—a trip that would take Joanna at least two hours to make.
“Where’s Trudy?” Libby asked. She’d expected the little dog to be at Richard’s feet.
Richard sat back in his chair and rested his right ankle on his left knee. A man in control of his world, Libby couldn’t help thinking.
“She’s in the kitchen,” he replied. “Which is where she belongs. I don’t want her tracking dirt over the rugs. They’re quite expensive.”
“Doesn’t she mind?” Libby asked, thinking back to the birthday party Annabel had thrown for her. “She was the princess of the house.”
“Not anymore,” Richard snapped. “My wife made that dog into a child. I treat her like a dog. She stays in her crate and eats dog food. It’s as simple as that.”
Suddenly Libby felt very sorry for Trudy. She was thinking about how hard it had to be for her: first she lost her mother, so to speak, and then she was demoted to living in the kitchen like a scullery maid. Just like Cinderella, Libby couldn’t help thinking when Richard unfolded his legs, leaned forward, and folded his hands together.
“Thanks for coming,” he said in a voice dripping with sincerity. “I can’t tell you how much I appreciate it. I’m sorry if I treated you and your sister rudely the other day, but I’ve been under a lot of stress lately. A lot of stress,” he repeated in case Libby hadn’t gotten it the first time.
Libby made a noncommittal sound.
He leaned forward a little bit more. “And I realize that what happened at the dinner party must have been very stressful to you and your sister as well.”
A Catered Birthday Party Page 12