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1 Assault with a Deadly Glue Gun

Page 4

by Lois Winston


  Three flights of stairs later, huffing and puffing, thanks to my aversion to any form of exercise more strenuous than racing around Macy's during a three-hour sale, I pushed open the door and sprinted for the safety of my car.

  I fumbled in my coat pocket for my keys. My hands shook like a wino with the DTs. Between rapidly panting breaths, I stabbed in the dark for the lock.

  Of all the nights for the damn lamppost bulb to burn out! Or had it? I hazarded a quick glance upward as the key slid into the slot. The lamp was shattered. Jagged edges of glass glistened in the dim glow of a half-moon. Broken glass littered the ground. My heart galloped into my throat. Yanking open the door, I jumped behind the wheel, locked myself inside the Hyundai, and started the engine.

  I had to call the police, but I wasn't about to wait for them in a dark parking lot with a killer on the loose. With my foot pressing the gas pedal to the floor, I sped out of the parking lot. Taking each turn on two wheels, I didn't slow down until I came to a well-lit twenty-four-hour Quickie Mart about a mile down the road.

  Leaving the motor running, I grabbed for my cell phone and punched in the three digits.

  "9-1-1 operator. State your emergency, please."

  "M ... m ... murder." Even though I could barely get out the word, I couldn't shake the ghoulish image of Marlys's blank stare and creepy pose filling my head. "In my office," I added.

  "Where are you, Ma'am?"

  I stared at the sign above the store, the letters not making any sense to me. Where am I? I'm in some crazy alternate reality. People like me don't find dead bodies glued to their desk chairs. Then again, people like me don't get calls telling them their husband dropped dead in Las Vegas when he was supposed to be in Harrisburg. And people like me don't get threats from loan sharks owed money by that same dead husband. Obviously, this was all one very long nightmare, and if I concentrated hard enough, I'd wake up soon. The sooner the better.

  "Ma'am? Are you still there?"

  The operator's question snapped me out of the murder induced stupor. I told her my location. "But that's not where the dead body is."

  "And where's that?"

  I gave her the office address. "I was too scared to stay. I didn't know if the killer was still in the building."

  "Okay, ma'am. I'm sending a squad car to meet you. Stay where you are, and I'll remain on the line until the officers arrive." Her calm voice attempted to soothe my jangled nerves. She wasn't succeeding.

  I had seen dead bodies before, most recently my own husband's, but I had never stumbled across a murder victim. I doubt most middle-class working mothers do-unless they happen to work in law enforcement. Which I didn't.

  Besides, a dead body in a casket reposes peacefully. Cushioned in satin, the deceased's hands are either folded across his chest or placed comfortably at his sides, his eyes closed. You can pretend he's sleeping. Marlys definitely wasn't sleeping.

  When a black and white cruiser pulled into the parking lot three minutes later, I felt safe enough to end the call. I unlocked my car, left the motor running, and stepped out into the frigid night.

  "Mrs. Pollack?" asked one of the officers, a giraffe of a man. I had to crane my neck to see his face.

  I nodded-as best I could with my head cricked back to my shoulder blades.

  "I'm Officer Garfinkle." He indicated the driver of the cruiser. "This is Officer Simmons."

  I had heard that shock can make normally sane people do really stupid things. I can now vouch for the truth of that statement. I glanced first at Officer Garfinkle, then at Officer Simmons, a squat, beefy-muscled black man with a shaved head and a gold stud in his left ear.

  "Simmons and Garfinkle?" The hysteria I had fought back since finding Marlys's body erupted with a force equal to when Vesuvius buried Pompeii. Tears streamed down my cheeks, but not from crying.

  I couldn't stop laughing.

  The officers exchanged glances. Garfinkle sighed. "Mrs. Pollack, have you been drinking?"

  I waved the question away with a flick of one hand while my other arm clutched my torso. "I'm sorry," I said, fighting to regain control.

  I knew I'd pass a Breathalyzer test hands-down. A sanity test might be another story. Brushing the stream from my cheeks, I took a deep breath and tried to explain. "I ... it's been ... I didn't mean ... first a dead body and now Simmons and Garfinkle." I slapped my hand over my mouth and fought back another gush of hysterics. "And me standing in a Hazy Shade of Winter on my very own Bridge Over Troubled Water."

  Simmons cocked his mouth into a wry grimace. "We're used to it."

  I gasped, the laughter dying on my lips mid-chortle. "To murders?"

  "The reaction to our names," said Garfinkle.

  "What makes you so sure the victim was murdered?" asked Simmons.

  Odd as it seemed to me, I suppose from the officer's viewpoint the question was legitimate. We weren't in Newark or Camden. We were out in the middle of nowhere. Surrounded by cornfields. Or what would become cornfields after spring planting.

  "We don't get many murders around here," said Garfinkle. "This would be the first in over three years. If it is a murder."

  I exhaled, my breath forming a cloud in the icy night air. "That's a relief, but you've got one now, and it's certainly not your run-of-the-mill murder."

  Garfinkle raised his eyebrows. "Meaning?"

  "Meaning, Officer, I doubt you've ever seen anything as bizarre as what I found in my office."

  Simmons took a step closer to me and placed his hand on my upper arm. "We'd like you to accompany us back to your office, Mrs. Pollack. We have a forensics team on the way that will meet us there."

  I rubbed at my quickly numbing arms. I was afraid they'd ask that, but someone needed to let them into the building, and I was the nearest someone-besides being the person who had discovered the body. They probably had a gazillion and ten questions to ask me. I turned to step back into my car, stumbling as I reached for the door.

  Garfinkle grabbed for my other arm, nearly lifting me off the blacktop. "Would you like one of us to drive, ma'am? You look a little rattled."

  A little? Any more rattled and I could pose as a baby's toy.

  Less than fifteen minutes later a forensics team descended on my office. From the hall, flanked by Simmons and Garfinkle, I watched the technicians do their CSI thing-which bore little resemblance to the Hollywood version. Not surprising. I've seen plenty of television sitcoms set in magazine publishing houses. All of them were as realistic as SpongeBob SquarePants.

  "So how do you think she died?" I heard one of the homicide detectives ask one of the evidence collectors. "I don't see any outward trauma."

  "You're not gonna believe this one." Wearing a rubber glove, the technician unplugged my heavy-duty-emphasis on the heavy-hot glue gun and started to drop it into a plastic evidence collection bag.

  "No, don't!" Everyone in the room spun around to face me. I pointed to the glue gun. "That nozzle is extremely hot. It'll melt a hole in the bottom of your bag."

  Rather than appreciating the fact that I stopped him from contaminating evidence, the forensics investigator took offense. He dropped the gun into the bag and sealed it. "You telling me how to do my job, lady?"

  I waved a hand at the bag. "Heaven forbid. You obviously don't need me, so I'm out of here. The front door will lock behind you when you leave."

  I turned on my heels. One of the detectives placed his hand on my shoulder to stop me. "Garfinkle, why don't you take Mrs. Pollack down to the lobby so she can sit down?" he said. "We'll be with you shortly."

  As we headed down the hall, Simmons to my left, Garfinkle to my right, I heard the unmistakable sound of plastic shattering against the Terrazzo floor. An extremely annoyed "Shit!" followed.

  Simmons and Garfinkle exchanged glances, then stared at me. I offered them an I-told-him-so smile.

  A few minutes later, two detectives joined us. "I'm Detective Batswin," said the woman who had asked about the cause of death.
/>   She stood nearly six feet tall, dressed in a conservative darkgray suit with a powder-blue-and-white pinstripe oxford shirt. She wore her silver-streaked sable hair tied back off a face devoid of make-up except for a slash of peach gloss across her lips. A long loop of liquid silver earrings that swayed as she spoke were her only adornment.

  With a tilt of her head she indicated the man who had stopped me from leaving. "This is my partner, Detective Robbins."

  I nodded to both of them, keeping my lips pursed tight for fear of letting loose another eruption of laughter. This was getting too weird. Simmons and Garfinkle as uniformed officers. The dynamic duo of Detectives Batswin and Robbins. Holy Spoonerisms, Gotham City! What was next? Woodstein and Bernward waving press passes?

  "Can you tell us your connection to the deceased and how you happened to discover the body, Mrs. Pollack?" asked Robbins.

  A compact middle-aged man who looked like he'd be more comfortable in sweats or jeans than his navy blue serge suit, he stood nearly a head shorter than his partner. The fluorescent lights of the lobby sparkled off his polished head. His Scooby-Doo tie suggested a sense of humor hidden behind steely gray eyes and a grim expression.

  I explained why I had come back to the office. "I didn't expect anyone else to be here this late. Especially Marlys. I was surprised to see her car in the parking lot."

  "Why is that?" asked Batswin.

  "This morning she mentioned she had a dinner date in Manhattan."

  "Was she meeting her date here?" asked Robbins, taking notes on a small pad with a stub of a pencil. Just like in every cop show I'd ever seen. Were all police budgets so tight that cops couldn't afford regulation size pencils, let alone PDAs?

  "I was under the impression she was meeting him in the city."

  "Do you know his name?"

  "Some new designer. I can't remember. One of the other staff members might. Or Marlys's assistant. I wasn't paying much attention at the time."

  "Why is that?" asked Batswin.

  "Because Marlys is always bragging about her celebrity connections. I tune it out."

  "You don't sound like you cared for her very much," said Robbins.

  I laughed. "No one liked Marlys. Except Marlys. She collected enemies the way my kids collect video games and baseball cards."

  When both detectives raised their eyebrows and glanced sideways at each other, I realized my mistake. "Look, in the past week I've lost my husband and discovered I'm in debt up the wazoo. Marlys and I didn't get along. That's no secret. She didn't get along with any of her co-workers. But she's way down on my pain-inthe-butt list. I didn't kill her."

  Robbins paused taking notes and trapped me with that steelyeyed stare of his. "We didn't suggest you did, Mrs. Pollack."

  Refusing to blink, I eyed him back. "I'm glad we have that cleared up, Detective."

  "Can you think of anyone who hated Marlys enough to kill her?" asked Batswin.

  I could think of a long list of people who probably dreamed of boiling Marlys in oil every night, but I also knew them well enough to know they weren't killers. Hugo had neither the strength nor the temperament. Naomi wouldn't stoop to something as low class as murder. And Erica was too much of a wuss to say boo to her boss, let alone whack her.

  That left Vittorio Versailles. And he had threatened Marlys in front of an office full of witnesses. I mentioned to the detectives how he and his entourage had stormed into our offices earlier in the day.

  "Anyone else?" asked Batswin.

  "I suppose whoever wanted the diamonds."

  "What diamonds?" both detectives asked in unison.

  "They were on loan from Cartier. Marlys was wearing them this morning. A necklace, earrings, and hair clip."

  "You mentioned your debt," said Batswin.

  "For godsake, Detective, do you think if I took the diamonds, I'd be telling you about them?"

  "Stranger things have happened, ma'am."

  I rolled my eyes.

  "You aren't planning any trips, are you, Mrs. Pollack?" asked Batswin.

  "Does a trip to the supermarket count?"

  "Cute. Don't leave town," said Robbins. "We'll be in touch."

  A snappy rejoinder about how I didn't live in this town, let alone this county, probably wouldn't be an appropriate response at the moment. Not when I suspected that Detectives Batswin and Robbins had already mentally placed me on their Who Killed Marlys Vandenburg List. So I kept the comment firmly sealed behind my closed lips.

  I wondered if the Dynamic Duo would even bother questioning Vittorio Versailles. Why should they? My big mouth had already handed them both motive and opportunity. As for method, it didn't take a Ph.D. in Forensics to figure out my glue gun had played some part in Marlys's murder.

  Detective Batswin reached into her pocket, pulled out a business card, and handed it to me. "If you think of anything else, here's where you can reach me."

  By the time I arrived home, it was nearly two in the morning. In less than five hours I had to turn around and head back to the office-if I'd even be allowed in my office. None of the cops had said anything one way or the other, but I suspected I'd find lots of yellow crime scene tape blocking the entrance to my cubicle tomorrow morning.

  And I still had work to finish up before tomorrow's scheduled photo shoot. If there'd even be a photo shoot. At the moment, I was too tired to care.

  I pulled into my driveway, expecting to find a darkened house. Instead every window was lit up like Rockefeller Plaza at Christmas.

  A not-very-welcoming committee greeted me when I opened the front door.

  "ANASTASIA, WHERE IN THE world have you been at this ungodly hour?"

  "Mama!" My mother enveloped me in one of her all-consuming embraces, my nose and mouth smothered by her eggplantcolored nubby wool suit. I twisted my head to gulp in some air, the wool scratching against my icy cheek.

  "My poor baby. So young to be a widow!"

  I stepped out of her bear hug and stared at her. "You know?"

  "The boys told me." She jutted her chin toward the sofa where Lucille sat camped out in all her angry glory, the Devil Dog on her lap. "That despicable woman tried to keep me from entering the house."

  "No one in her right mind comes calling after midnight," said Lucille. "She woke me out of a sound sleep. And scared Manifesto half to death the way she wouldn't stop pounding at the door."

  Ignoring Lucille, Mama turned to me and launched into an accusatory tirade. "Why didn't you call? You had our itinerary in case of an emergency. If Karl dying doesn't qualify as an emergency, I don't know what does!"

  Seamus O'Keefe, Mama's current husband, had taken her to Ireland several weeks ago to meet his family. I wanted to call herwould have called her-if I could have called her. "Because you mailed me your dry cleaning claim check instead of your travel schedule"

  Mama's face glazed over in puzzlement. "Did I? So that's what happened to it. I turned the apartment upside-down looking for that damn piece of paper. Good thing the cleaner knows me. You remember that nice Mr. Wong, don't you, dear?"

  "Focus, Mama."

  "At this hour? You want coherent conversation, I need eight hours sleep." She shook her head to dismiss the birds from her brain. "Anyway, like I said, it was a good thing my grandsons woke up or I'd have frozen to death on your doorstep. That nasty taxi driver zoomed off the moment I stepped out of the cab."

  She motioned toward Alex and Nick who were camped on the living room carpet. They both seemed to be enjoying this family farce far too much. Who needed reality TV? "You guys should get back to bed," I said. "Tomorrow's a school day."

  "And miss the good stuff?" asked Nick.

  I pointed in the direction of their bedroom. "Now!"

  Mama blew them a kiss. "Sweet dreams, my knights in shining armor.

  "'Night, Grandma."

  "'Night, Mom."

  Both pointedly ignored their other grandmother. Not that I blamed them. I'd like to ignore the old battle axe, too. However, I'm th
e parent-the only one they had left-so I had to act like one. I cleared my throat, the universal Parent Signal.

  "Good night, Grandmother Lucille," they sing-songed from halfway down the hall.

  Lucille didn't even bother to respond with her usual, "Hmmph!"

  "Saved me from frostbite or worse, those two sons of yours did," continued Mama. "Not to mention trying to find a hotel at this ungodly hour, not that I had any way to get to one. Can you imagine? Barred from my own daughter's home by Comrade Lucille!"

  My mother, a lifelong member and past social secretary of the Daughters of the American Revolution was convinced my motherin-law, president of the Greater New York area chapter of The Daughters of the October Revolution, was plotting to overthrow the government. Considering the total membership of The Daughters of the October Revolution consisted of thirteen semicrippled female octogenarians, I found the threat negligible. Mama thought otherwise.

  "We don't have room for her," said the Comrade in question. With one hand she clutched the lapels of her ratty gray robe to her throat. Her other hand rhythmically petted the growling Devil Dog curled up on her lap. With her closely cropped head of steel gray hair, her large ears, wrinkled skin, and perpetual scowl, my mother-in-law bore a more than striking resemblance to her bulldog. And right about now she looked two seconds away from echoing one of his deep, menacing growls.

  I followed Mephisto's slit-eyed doggy grimace to the object of his own growl. Catherine the Great, my mother's extremely corpulent white Persian cat, crouched in attack mode on the fireplace mantle.

  Mama had feigned innocence when I accused her of an ulterior motive in naming the cat, but I knew she knew it would annoy the hell out of Lucille. Anything smacking of Czarist Russia launched Lucille into seethe mode. I suspected Mama was trying to provoke the old bat into a stroke.

  "Braaaawk!" Ralph kept watch over the interlopers from the relative safety of the top of the bookcase. Luckily, he could take wing faster than Catherine the Great could pounce, thanks to her over-indulgent mistress.

  I glanced around the room; a queasy feeling tiptoed its way into my stomach. "Where's Seamus?"

 

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