I knelt down beside my friend, using the flashlight to reveal the lump swelling on her forehead. She’d had a rough time with her noggin these past few days. While she’d taken a fairly good lick, the swelling was coming out, which Aunt Loulane always said was a good sign.
“Damn, I nearly knocked my brains out,” she said.
I took it as a favorable omen that she knew what had happened. “You saw her, didn’t you?”
“Saw who?”
“The ghost.”
She grabbed my knee and used it as a brace to push herself up. “I can’t believe you’re trying to scare me after I just slammed my head into a board.”
“But I’m not. She was there. She asked us to help her. She said we were to save . . . someone or something.” The more I talked, the more I realized Tinkie was having no part of this. She’d been unconscious, lying on the floor, while I’d spoken with the ‘Ghost of Marquez Manor,’ and now she’d never believe it.
“This is not amusing, Sarah Booth. And it’s in poor taste, I might add.” With my assistance, she got to her feet. She was unsteady for a moment, but then she regained her equilibrium. “Did you really see a ghost? You’re positive it wasn’t some trick of lighting?”
“Carlita Marquez’s spirit is here, in this house, and she wants us to save someone or something. I don’t think she’s evil.”
Tinkie bit her bottom lip. “I wish I’d seen her, too. I want to believe you. It’s just that why would she appear right at the moment I get knocked out?”
That wasn’t a question I wanted to ponder while still crammed into a crawlspace without good ventilation or a speedy path of retreat. “We should go back to the study,” I said. I would come back later to look for evidence.
Even if Tinkie didn’t believe me, I knew I’d seen Carlita Marquez, and she’d asked me to save someone. Federico? Estelle? Both were safe. Then who? Maybe save her spirit from her father? It was very complex.
“You know, you and Jovan are the only people who’ve seen the ghost.” Tinkie was inching her way out, following my lead. She was wobbly but doing okay. If I didn’t get her on a plane and back to Zinnia, she might damage her brain for good. She couldn’t take a lot more bumping and whacking.
“There are stories in town,” I pointed out. “So kids have seen her standing on the balcony.”
“Or they just like telling the story. Good date material. Gives the girl an excuse to cuddle close.”
“For a woman who healed her own breast lump with the help of a faith healer in New Orleans, I find it strange you’re so determined not to believe this house is haunted.”
“I just find the timing interesting. And a little convenient. Maybe you want to see a ghost.”
Now that was the regular Tinkie—a zinger lurking behind every multiglitzed curl. “Thanks.”
“Why do you think the ghost presents to you?”
We were almost back to the study. “Because I’m willing to see her?” I didn’t add that it might be because I had my own ghost and had learned to listen.
Thinking of Jitty brought back the remarks that she’d made earlier in the kitchen while acting out Peyton Place. I stopped dead still and Tinkie bumped into me with a curse. “What’s wrong? I’m not going to have an inch of skin left that isn’t bruised.”
Jitty had said a picture was worth a thousand words. “Tinkie, we can’t be sure Estelle is in Maine.”
“Daniel said he had a photo sent from her phone. He was torn up because he figured some new guy had taken it. Do you think he’s lying?”
“No, but a photo doesn’t prove anything.”
She swung her light so that it was directly in my eyes, blinding me. I pushed it away as she spoke.
“You’re right. What if—”
“What if Estelle is who we’re supposed to save? What if the ghost of Carlita was talking about her daughter?”
Tinkie aimed the light down the passageway we’d just sweated down. “We’re going to find out.”
“You should go to the kitchen and check the dogs. I can do this.”
She ignored me and reversed down the tunnellike path. We’d gone only fifteen or so yards when we both stopped dead in our tracks.
Soft sobbing wafted to us, and this time it was closer. It sounded like a woman, exhausted and ready to give up.
“Estelle!” I called. “Estelle, can you hear us?”
The answer that came chilled me to my bones. “Please. So . . . much . . . blood.”
After stumbling and banging our way down the torturous passage and climbing the narrowest stairs I’d ever seen, we finally found Estelle in the back of a cupboard in one of the rooms on the third-floor east wing. In my searches of the house and questioning of the staff, I’d been told the room was a linen closet. I’d even searched it once before.
There were stacks of sheets and towels, but there was also a false front that concealed a space large enough for Estelle’s body. Her hands and feet were tied so tightly, I wondered if the lack of circulation would necessitate amputation. She’d also been gagged, but she’d managed to work that loose. She was bleeding from a head wound and a severe cut to her thigh. Blood, dried and oozing fresh, had puddled around her.
The exterior door of the closet was locked, but using our shoulders, Tinkie and I managed to split the wood at the hinges and crash it open. While Tinkie called an ambulance, I untied Estelle and dragged her out into the hallway.
Estelle had slipped into a thrashing sleep, and I could tell by the heat coming from her body that she had a high fever. She was also dehydrated, but I was afraid to try to rouse her to drink. I wasn’t sure what to do, so I sat on the floor and cradled her head and talked to her, even though she was so delirious she couldn’t possibly understand my words.
I didn’t want to think how long she’d been in that cubbyhole, unable to move and without water or food, bleeding from two serious wounds. I could only hope that her condition wasn’t fatal.
Tinkie came running back upstairs. “The ambulance is on the way, and I put in a call to the Petaluma authorities and Daniel.” She saw the look on my face. “I think he was duped, Sarah Booth. I talked to him when he thought Estelle had broken up with him. He was devastated. I don’t think he had anything to do with this.”
Tinkie had good gut instincts, but I wasn’t as trusting in the area of love as she was. She’d married once and well. She’d lived a life where fairy tales did come true. That hadn’t necessarily been my experience, but I let it go.
“We’ll find out who’s responsible for this when Estelle regains consciousness.” I spoke with more authority than I felt. Looking at the unconscious young woman, skin taut from dehydration, her face pale but hot with fever, and her hands and legs still an unnatural gray color from the lack of circulation, I wondered if she would ever wake up. We had found her, but maybe too late.
Footsteps pounded toward us, and Daniel Martinez came up the stairs. If his expression could be taken at face value, he was shocked and horrified at what he saw.
“Estelle.” He slid across the polished floor on his knees. He picked up her hand and held it to his chest. “Holy Madre,” he whispered. “What’s wrong with her? Who hurt her?”
Tinkie gave him a rundown on how we’d found Estelle, and how we didn’t know who might have hurt her.
I could see the anger building behind his eyes, and when he spoke, the flash of fury was in his speech. “I’ll find the person who did this, and he will pay.”
“Any ideas who it might be?” I asked.
He considered. “Estelle sometimes behaved like a spoiled child. She made enemies, but not the kind that would do this.” He waved a hand over her unconscious body. “Will she live?”
I didn’t have an answer to that, but I heard the sirens of the paramedics. At least the presence of the movie crew and my friends had helped the local economy by keeping the hospital and vet clinic busy.
“Estelle.” He rubbed her hand frantically, as if he could erase th
e gray tone and bring it back to the full flush of life. “Wake up,” he begged.
I eased her head into his lap and stood. There were things to be done. At a signal from me, Tinkie backed away so we could talk privately.
“So it couldn’t have been Estelle who was haunting the house. She’s been in the closet awhile.” Tinkie was watching as Daniel stroked her hair from her face. If he wasn’t acting, he was truly grief-stricken.
“The timeline is everything. Was Estelle in the closet when I was lured onto the beach?” I’d always assumed it was Estelle playing the role of her dead mother for dramatic effect. Now my theories were blown to hell and I needed to rethink the sequence of events. “Estelle could have pushed Jovan.”
“Or the ghost could have.” Tinkie met my gaze. She was choosing to believe me and what I’d said I had witnessed.
“I saw Carlita up close. She didn’t have enough meat on her bones to push a pea across the table. She looked awful.” I shook my head. “I had this crazy idea that ghosts got to choose their bodies and how they looked at any time in their life. Poor Carlita. She died a terrible death, and she’s stuck in the phase just before she passed on.”
“Carlita didn’t do this to Estelle,” Tinkie said, “and we have to find out who did.”
“I’m afraid that answer is going to be in Hollywood, not Petaluma.” It had to be someone on the cast and crew. If it wasn’t Daniel, and I believed Tinkie was correct in her assessment, then it had to be a member of her father’s movie ensemble—or someone who’d passed himself off as part of the crew. Each day there were dozens of hangers-on—people who catered or drove cars or cleaned clothes and brought them back or provided some special service like a massage or bottled water of a certain brand. While the core group of the movie was fairly well known to me, there were people coming and going all the time.
“What about the grandfather?” Tinkie asked.
He was an evil and unhappy man, but why would he punish Estelle in this manner? Yet he’d refused to divulge the floor plans of the house even when he knew Estelle was missing. “He’s a possibility.”
We heard the ambulance pull up in the yard and right behind it was a squad car with two police detectives. I ran down to let them in and direct them to Estelle. The paramedics wasted no time putting her on a gurney and moving her into the ambulance. The medical experts gave me and Tinkie the strangest looks, but they said nothing and focused their skills on Estelle.
“I’ll ride with her,” Tinkie said. “Sarah Booth, you can give a statement to the detectives.”
“Please, let me go with Estelle.” Daniel was distraught. “I should never have left. She was obsessed with her father. I knew she was doing things she shouldn’t, but I never dreamed she was lying in that hole, hurt.”
“Go with her,” Tinkie told him. “We’ll be there soon.”
After the ambulance was gone, we told the police officers the sequence of events, showed them the secret passage, and then answered their questions. Before they began the forensics work, they told us we could go.
I turned to Tinkie. She had a huge lump on her forehead. I touched my own head, where the heel of her stiletto had done its work. We looked at each other.
“Frik and Frak.” She shook her head. “Jesus, Sarah Booth, we look like members of some religious cult that batters their foreheads. No wonder the paramedics were giving us the evil eye.”
“The good news is, I can’t work looking like this so I might as well solve this case.”
“Oscar is going to throw a hissy, but that’s too bad.”
“Let’s ride,” I said, though I wasn’t certain which direction we needed to take.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
With Sweetie and Chablis riding shotgun, we drove into Petaluma. I’d left word for Federico to call me, but I felt we needed to tell Estelle’s roommate.
When we got to the cabana-style apartments, we ran into Regena in the courtyard. She took one look at us and winced. “Who whacked you two?” she asked.
“We’re fine,” Tinkie told her. “It’s Estelle you should be worried about. She’s at the hospital.”
We filled her in on what had happened; I watched closely for some sign that she knew more than she was letting on, but she was floored.
“Is she going to be okay?”
“We don’t know.” I glanced at my watch. Time was slipping away from us too fast. “If there’s anything you can tell us about Estelle and who she’s been talking to or seeing, it might help.”
Although Regena was anxious to get to the hospital, she motioned us to a seat in the shade of a big tree.
“When Estelle first heard the movie was going to be filmed in her mother’s house, she was upset. I know she got some calls from someone in the States, and there was one time when I overheard part of her conversation. It was pretty extreme.”
If only Regena had come forward with this information sooner, I thought, but I refrained from saying so.
“What did you hear?” Tinkie prompted.
“She said something like she’d never forgive her father for what he’d done, and that Carlita would not go unavenged.”
This was old hat. “Who was she talking to?”
“It was a woman. That’s all I know. I tried to question her, but she said it would be best if I didn’t know anything about her plans.”
“She was right about that,” Tinkie said, “but it doesn’t much help us figure out who hurt her. Or who was hurting us.”
Regena frowned. “She was so bitter toward her dad. I tried to talk to her about it a couple of times. I mean, what’s the point? Her mom is dead. Her father is all she has. It just seemed senseless to hate him for something from so long ago.”
She was preaching to the choir—unless Estelle knew something we didn’t. Federico had always been a weak suspect, and I couldn’t believe he’d hurt his own daughter in such a way, but it was a lead and I had to follow it.
“Did she say why she hated Federico?”
“She never said specifically.” Her eyes widened. “Except for one comment. She said her dad and his friends used women as brood mares and dropped their sperm and then forgot about them.”
Tinkie and I looked at each other. “Thanks, Regena.”
“I have a dance lesson scheduled, but I’m canceling and going to the hospital.”
“Daniel is there,” Tinkie said.
She smiled, and for the first time I realized she was a lovely young woman in her own right. “He loves Estelle. If she’d only wake up and see that people care about her, she could have a very different life.”
We left her at the parking lot, where she revved the engine of her little car and took off. “Sounds like she has her head on straight.” Tinkie cast a sidelong glance at me.
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“I didn’t want to get into it with you, but I can’t leave Costa Rica without telling you. Coleman loves you, Sarah Booth.”
“And I love him.” I didn’t see any reason to lie. “But that doesn’t mean a thing. Graf loves me, too. And I’m falling deeper in love with him with each passing day.”
She put her arm around my waist. “I can see that. I thought at first he was shallow and a user, but he has depth and strength, and the two of you are wonderful together. That’s why I’ve been quiet about all of this. But I wanted you to know the truth. You can’t make a fair decision unless you know everything. And whatever you decide will be right.”
“Thanks, Tinkie.” I couldn’t give her any more than that, because I didn’t know more myself. I’d spent so long waiting for Coleman, wanting him to be a real partner. But I’d given up hope.
“Where to next, fearless leader?” Tinkie asked and gave my waist a firm squeeze before she let go.
“Maybe we need to consult with Millie?”
“Or that Tor person she told you about.”
“Good idea.” I put a call in to the café and got the answering machine. It was the lunch hour a
nd the place was hopping. Millie was waiting on customers, ringing up tickets, laughing and talking and planning the menu for the next day. And Tor’s number was unlisted; I’d have to wait for Millie to give it to me.
“Let’s grab some lunch,” Tinkie said. “My head throbs and my stomach is growling. And you look like something from a Star Trek episode that involves a brain leech.”
“If I was ever inclined to get the big head, my friends would deflate it instantly.”
“That’s our job.” She linked her arm with mine and we headed to the rental car.
Lunch was delicious, and it was a pleasure to sit on the patio of the small café and indulge in Tinkie’s company. From the moment she’d arrived, we’d been in one crisis or another. We’d had no time to talk, to giggle and do the girl things we loved.
Sweetie Pie and Chablis were allowed to sit beneath the table as long as no one complained. We slipped them morsels of food, and I was relieved to see that Chablis was perking up with each bite. She still couldn’t jump into Tinkie’s lap, which was a good thing since we would’ve been thrown out of the restaurant.
“I think this movie is going to be a smash,” Tinkie said, stirring some mango concoction that looked cold and luscious.
“It still doesn’t seem real,” I told her. “It’s like a dream, a fantasy. I’m doing the one thing I’ve wanted to do since I was a child. And people say I’m good at it. That I have talent. This is balm to an old wound.”
“They speak the truth.” She pushed her plate back. “You’re also a good detective.”
“Then why am I stumped on this case?” I’d been going over and over it but couldn’t come up with a single reasonable explanation for all the things that had happened.
“It’s strange that Federico never called back.” Tinkie signaled the waiter for our check. “I left a voice mail saying to call one of us instantly and that it was about Estelle.”
“Jovan may have erased it,” I said. “She feels Estelle is deliberately sabotaging the film by claiming all of Federico’s attention.”
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