Silver Scream : A Bed-and-breakfast Mystery

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Silver Scream : A Bed-and-breakfast Mystery Page 12

by Mary Daheim


  “Yes,” Judith said weakly. “So I have.”

  “The patrol car is close by,” the operator assured

  her, “and the medics and firefighters have been alerted.

  You’re not calling for your mother, are you?”

  “No,” Judith whispered, fixated on Joe, whose efforts appeared to be futile. “No.”

  “How’s she doing?” the operator inquired. “I hear

  she’s quite a character.”

  “Fine. Good. I . . . must . . . hang . . . up . . . now.”

  Judith clicked off and, with a limp wrist, placed the

  phone on the kitchen table.

  Panting, Joe looked up from Bruno’s prone form.

  “It’s no good. He’s dead.”

  Judith crossed herself while Joe hung his head.

  “Damn,” he breathed, “how did this happen? Was it an

  accident?” His eyes traveled to the light fixture. “Oh,

  hell! What’s that thing?” He picked up a long cooking

  fork and poked at the spider. “It’s fake.”

  “I need a drink,” Judith said, her voice hoarse. She

  noticed that the balky cupboard door had swung open

  again and closed it with a shaky hand. “I can’t believe

  this. Yes, I can believe this. But why me? Why us?”

  “Hey,” Joe said, reaching into the Flynns’ private

  liquor stash, “it isn’t personal. When I was on the job,

  I investigated at least a half-dozen homicides involving

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  families that had already suffered through at least a

  couple of other murders.”

  “They were probably all crooks,” Judith pointed

  out, wincing as she looked at Bruno, whose face was

  an unnatural color. She was about to turn away when

  she saw something round and white on the floor next

  to his body. Moving carefully so as not to touch the

  dead man, Judith fingered the object. “Aspirin,” she

  said, holding it between her thumb and index finger.

  Not seeing the bottle she kept on the windowsill, she

  placed the pill on the counter. “Then you don’t think

  it’s all my fault?”

  “No.” Joe handed Judith her drink, then stared at

  Bruno. “I wish I could figure out what happened. Does

  the spider suggest a setup?”

  Judith gaped at him. “You mean . . . to scare Bruno

  to death?”

  “Maybe just to rattle him,” Joe replied, wearing his

  deadpan policeman’s face.

  As Judith gazed with compassion at Bruno’s lifeless

  form, the familiar sound of sirens could be heard in the

  distance. “The neighbors.” She sighed. “What will they

  think now?” She paused, a hand clutching at the deep

  neckline of her Roman gown. “The guests! What shall

  I do?”

  “Nothing,” Joe replied as the first of the sirens

  stopped nearby. “Yet. I’ll get the door. You stay with

  the stiff.”

  Judith flinched. It was bad enough that she and Joe

  were drinking Scotch and standing over a corpse. But

  now her husband had reverted to his professional self,

  hard-boiled, keeping his distance, just-part-of-the-job.

  She, on the other hand, apparently had slipped into the

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  role of Joe’s longtime partner, Woody Price. Despite

  her not infrequent confrontations with corpses, Judith

  wasn’t indifferent to the body on the kitchen floor.

  Surely Bruno had family who must be notified.

  Winifred would know.

  Joe returned with two familiar figures in tow. Darnell

  Hicks and Mercedes Berger had been summoned to Hillside Manor before, when a mobster had been gunned

  down outside of Gertrude’s toolshed. Over two years

  later they still looked young, but not nearly so naive.

  “What a shame,” Darnell said, gazing down at

  Bruno. “How’d he get so soggy?”

  Mercedes glanced at the sink. “What’d he do, stick

  his head in there and couldn’t get out?”

  Before Judith or Joe could respond, the medics and

  the firefighters arrived. “Come on,” Joe said with a

  hand on Judith’s elbow, “let’s retreat into the dining

  room and give the folks some space.”

  “To do what?” Judith asked, moving through the

  swinging doors. “Oh, Joe, I can’t stand it! It’s got to be

  an accident, right?”

  Joe didn’t answer directly. “We’ll find out more

  after the ME gets done. It may be tomorrow afternoon

  before we hear anything. Saturday nights can be pretty

  busy, especially on a holiday weekend.”

  Darnell Hicks gave a tentative rap on the swinging

  doors. “May I?”

  “Sure,” Joe said, going back into the kitchen.

  “What’s up?”

  “We’re going to take the body to the morgue.” Darnell’s brown eyes seemed intrigued by the Flynns’ costumes. “Do you or Mrs. Flynn have any idea what

  happened to the guy? Was this a Halloween party?”

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  As Joe started to explain, Winifred appeared in the

  dining room. “What’s going on?” she demanded of Judith. “Why are the police here?”

  Judith put a hand out to the other woman. “Oh, Ms.

  Best, I don’t know how to say this—except that Mr.

  Zepf is dead.”

  Winifred clutched at the front of her deep blue

  bathrobe. “Dead? As in . . . actually dead?”

  Judith supposed that to someone in the movie business, dead didn’t always mean losing one’s life. “Yes,

  as in expired. We don’t know what happened.” She

  glanced over the top of the swinging doors into the

  kitchen. “They’re taking him to the morgue. We’ll

  know more later.”

  “Oh, my God!” Winifred swayed, then caught herself on the big breakfront. “His heart! Maybe he had a

  heart attack! He was complaining of a terrible

  headache earlier.” She pulled out one of the diningroom chairs and collapsed onto it, her slim body convulsing.

  Judith glanced at Joe, who was answering routine

  questions in the kitchen. She heard a squeal from Mercedes Berger as Joe mentioned Dirk Farrar’s name.

  “Ms. Best,” Judith began, “do you want to have the

  medics check you out?”

  Winifred shook her head. “I must see Bruno,” she finally said, but couldn’t get to her feet. Winifred fell

  back into the chair as a knock at the front door made

  Judith jump. She hurried into the entry hall and peered

  outside. Under the porch light she could see Dade

  Costello, still in his costume and dripping wet.

  “Mr. Costello!” she exclaimed, opening the door.

  “What are you doing out in this rain?”

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  Dade made an angry gesture toward the cul-de-sac.

  “What are they doing out here?”

  Closing the door behind the screenwriter, Judith

  glimpsed the emergency vehicles, their lights still

  flashing. “I’m afraid I have bad news—”

  “I don’t need any more bad news tonight,” Dade

  broke in. Without another word, he stomped upstairs.

  “Oh, no,” Judith groaned. Glancing at Winifred,

  who had her head down on the din
ing-room table, she

  hurried into the kitchen but had to step aside as the

  medics began to remove Bruno’s body.

  “Move, Jude-girl,” Joe said, taking Judith by the

  arm. “They’re going out the back way, they need room

  for the gurney. I gave them as much information as I

  could.”

  Mercedes’s blue eyes were huge. “Is it true?” she

  asked Judith. “Is Dirk Farrar really under this very

  roof?”

  “Yes,” Judith answered. “As far as I know.” Nothing

  seemed certain on this wretched night. For all she

  knew, Dirk could have climbed out a window and been

  blown away by the gusting winds.

  “What a hunk!” Mercedes was visibly palpitating.

  Darnell’s dark skin seemed to glow. “Movie people.

  Wow. You know, I hate to bring this up just now, but I’ve

  been working on a script, and I wonder if I could—”

  “Patrolman Hicks,” Joe interrupted in a solemn

  voice, “you’re on duty. Let’s get on with the job.

  Maybe I can mention your name to . . .” He paused, apparently wondering which guest would be interested in

  a script. “Chips Madigan, the director. Okay?”

  “Really?” Darnell looked elated. “Golly. That

  would be terrific. Believe me, my script isn’t just an- SILVER SCREAM

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  other piece of junk. I’ve got serious themes.” He turned

  to his partner. “Come on, Merce, let’s hit it.”

  The kitchen was clearing out. Judith put both hands

  to her head and gave Joe a frantic look.

  “What do we do now?”

  “We wait,” Joe said, sitting down at the kitchen

  table. “It may look like some kind of freak accident,

  but in fact they’re going to have to send the homicide

  ’tecs in.”

  Judith was aghast. “Tonight?”

  “Of course. You know the drill.” He shot her a wry

  glance.

  “But it’s two in the morning, and we’ve got all these

  people upstairs, and—” She stopped, looked out over

  the swinging doors, then lowered her voice.

  “Winifred’s still at the dining-room table. She either

  passed out or she’s asleep.”

  But Winifred Best was wide-awake. Her head jerked

  up, then she slowly rose to her feet. “Where’s Morris?”

  she demanded.

  “Morris?” Judith echoed in a dull voice. “Morris . . .

  Mayne?”

  Winifred thrust open the sliding doors and entered

  the kitchen. “Of course I mean Morris Mayne. The

  publicist. He must be at the hotel.” She pulled her cell

  phone out of her bathrobe pocket and began to dial in

  a staccato manner.

  Judith felt not only exhausted but helpless. “I’ll

  make coffee,” she said, and started for the sink.

  “Hold it,” Joe said. “You can’t use the sink, remember?”

  “Yes, I can,” Judith shot back. “We’ll plunge it. I

  can’t imagine that it’s seriously plugged up. Anyway,

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  we’ve got a snake. If the plunger doesn’t work, the

  snake should clear the line.”

  “You’re missing the point,” Joe said, his patience

  sounding thin. “The sink may be a crime scene.”

  “Oh.” Judith stared into the murky water. “Oh,

  damn. You’re right, I should have realized that.” For

  the first time she saw something bobbing listlessly

  around in the sink. Judith reached out to touch it, then

  quickly withdrew her hand. “Evidence,” she murmured. “It looks like my aspirin bottle. I found a pill

  on the floor.”

  “When I talked to Bruno the last time,” Winifred

  said, clicking off the cell phone, “and he complained

  of a headache, I told him I’d seen some aspirin in the

  kitchen.” For a brief moment she looked as if she were

  going to cry, then rallied. “Morris will be issuing a

  statement. He’ll hold a press conference later for the

  early newscasts.” She looked up at the schoolhouse

  clock. “That will be four A.M. our time for the seven

  o’clock news on the East Coast. Perhaps I should join

  him at the Cascadia. I doubt I can do anything here.

  Those cretins upstairs don’t need to be consoled.” With

  a swish of her bathrobe, Winifred started to leave the

  kitchen, but stopped abruptly. “Where is he?” she

  asked in a hollow voice.

  Judith was puzzled. “You mean . . . Morris? I

  thought you just—”

  “No!” Winifred exploded, waving a frantic hand.

  “Bruno! Where did you put him?”

  In the dishwasher? Judith almost said as the giddiness she’d felt earlier tried to reclaim her emotions.

  But Joe intervened. “His body was removed just

  minutes ago.”

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  “Oh.” Winifred’s shoulders slumped. “Of course.”

  Without another word, she left the kitchen.

  The doorbell sounded. Joe got up to answer it while

  Judith gazed at the mess that still hadn’t been—

  couldn’t be—cleaned up. She, too, felt like crying.

  But there was no time for tears. Joe, whose face had

  become so red that he looked as if he might explode,

  came storming back into the kitchen.

  “It’s Stone Cold Sam,” he said under his breath, and

  then swore such a rapid blue streak that Judith—mercifully—could hardly understand him.

  “Who,” she finally dared to inquire, “is Stone Cold

  Sam?”

  Joe stared at her. “You don’t remember? Stone Cold

  Sam Cairo, my nemesis in the department? The

  world’s biggest pain in the butt?”

  “Oh!” Judith did remember. There had been several

  occasions when Joe had come home from work fuming because Stone Cold Sam had interfered with an investigation, offered unwanted criticism, and generally

  tried to make Joe’s life miserable.

  The stocky man with the goatee and mustache

  swaggered into the kitchen. Following him was a small

  young woman with short blond hair sticking up in

  peaks and an intimidated expression on her pretty face.

  “You know, Flynn,” the man said in a rough, deep

  voice, “it looks like you’ve got everything here, including the kitchen sink. Har, har.”

  Joe cradled his drink and leaned against the refrigerator. The gold flecks glinted in his green eyes, but

  with malice rather than mischief. “We don’t know if

  we have a homicide or not,” he said without inflection.

  Stone Cold Sam Cairo chuckled, an unpleasant,

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  grating sound. “Yeah, I guess it always took you a

  while to figure out the facts.”

  Judith didn’t know whether to introduce herself or

  not. Not, she decided. Any gesture of hospitality would

  annoy Joe.

  Cairo, however, took matters into his own hairy

  hands. “Meet my new partner,” he said, dragging the

  small blonde forward by the hand. “Dilys Oaks. Dilys,

  this is Joe Flynn, a former colleague, now retired.

  Don’t be misled by the choirboy outfit. Joe can’t sing

  a lick.�
� Cairo glanced at Judith. “Let me guess. You’re

  either a Roman empress, Joe’s wife, or Joe’s slave.

  Maybe the last two combined. Har, har.”

  “I’m Judith Flynn,” Judith said, as noncommittal as

  Joe.

  Cairo gave a faint nod. “Okay by me.” He looked at

  the sink, and noted the phony spider, which swayed

  grotesquely from the overhead light. “Halloween stuff,

  huh? Nice touch. What was this movie guy doing, bobbing for apples?”

  Joe didn’t respond, which forced Judith to speak. “I

  think he was taking some aspirin. He had a headache.”

  “Hunh.” Cairo steered Dilys to the sink. “What does

  this tell you?”

  Dilys’s smoky-gray eyes widened. “That the drain is

  plugged?”

  Cairo put an avuncular arm around Dilys’s narrow

  shoulders. “Think a little harder. Take in the whole picture. Remember, you’re a rookie. This isn’t like your

  first two cases with the drunks popping each other and

  the spousal murder-suicide.”

  “But,” Dilys protested in her little-girl voice, “is it a

  homicide?”

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  119

  Cairo removed his arm and wagged a finger at his

  partner. “There you go, young lady. Is it? How can we

  tell?”

  “We don’t have the body,” Dilys noted. “Shouldn’t

  they have waited until we got here before they removed it?”

  Cairo nodded approval. “That’s right. Haste makes

  waste,” he added with a disapproving glance at Joe,

  who remained expressionless.

  “I guess,” Dilys said slowly, “you should have told

  them we were on our way. Now we’ll have to wait for

  the autopsy.”

  Cairo shot Dilys a sharp, wary glance. “They should

  have known we were coming. But you’re right, only

  the ME can tell us for sure how this guy died.” He gave

  Joe an even darker look. “You know better, Flynn—

  why didn’t you tell them to hold their horses?”

  Joe stared up at the ceiling, looking innocent in his

  choirboy costume. “I’m retired, I’m old, I forgot.”

  Cairo grunted. “If you say so.”

  Joe said nothing.

  But his former colleague wasn’t giving up. “Hey,”

  Cairo urged with an expansive gesture. “Share your

  thoughts with us, for old times’ sake. Reach out. We’re

  listening.”

  “I never speculate,” Joe said quietly.

  “No kidding?” Cairo gazed at Joe with feigned

 

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