Wedding Cake Killer: A Fresh-Baked Mystery

Home > Fiction > Wedding Cake Killer: A Fresh-Baked Mystery > Page 15
Wedding Cake Killer: A Fresh-Baked Mystery Page 15

by Livia J. Washburn


  “What about Eve’s clothes?” Sam asked.

  Phyllis frowned in thought for a moment before she said, “Lay them on the bed in my room. I didn’t tell her we were going out to the bed-and-breakfast, so she doesn’t know we were bringing those things back. I don’t want to spring them on her without preparing her first. I’ll talk to her, and then I can hang the clothes in her closet later.”

  Sam nodded. “Sounds good to me.”

  Phyllis made grilled ham and pepper sandwiches for lunch. One of the neighbors had brought them a ham, so she used big slices to make the sandwiches. That was the quickest and easiest thing to do, and it didn’t take much thought. Her brain was already busy going over everything Jan Delaney had told her and Sam that morning, as well as the things Jan had done to reveal her personality.

  Both theories she and Sam had come up with—that either Jan or Pete Delaney could have killed Roy because of his advances toward Jan—seemed reasonable. There was no proof to indicate that either of those things had happened, but the Delaneys had had both motive and opportunity, and if the letter opener was in Eve and Roy’s room, either of them could have picked it up and used it just as easily as Eve could have. Only the facts that spouses were always suspects in homicides, Eve had no alibi, and only her prints were on the weapon made the authorities believe she was guilty.

  But Eve had said that she didn’t have the letter opener at the bed-and-breakfast, Phyllis recalled, which opened up even more questions. How else could it have gotten there and been used to commit murder? She supposed Roy could have taken it along. The sheriff’s department investigators just assumed that Eve was lying about it, of course. To them, her denial might just make her seem even more guilty.

  It was a dizzying situation, Phyllis thought, made even more so by the fact that one of her friends was accused of the crime.

  Carolyn came into the kitchen as Phyllis was browning the sandwiches in a large frying pan. “I was just going to see about some lunch,” she said. “I knew you and Sam were back, but I thought you might be helping him carry things in from the car.”

  “There really wasn’t that much,” Phyllis said. “How’s Eve?”

  “Slowly getting better. I got her working on some needlework. I think it takes her mind off of everything that’s happened.”

  It was also unlike Eve, Phyllis thought. Eve had never had the patience for crafts. She liked to be out doing things, rather than sitting quietly.

  “I can tell she still has her dark moments,” Carolyn went on, “but that’s to be expected, I suppose.”

  “Yes, certainly,” Phyllis agreed.

  “Did those people from the bed-and-breakfast have anything to say?”

  For a moment Phyllis considered sharing the ideas she and Sam had come up with. She decided not to, however. It was too early in the investigation, and Carolyn might say something to Eve about it, getting her hopes up prematurely. At this point, Phyllis had no reason to think that either Jan or Pete had killed Roy . . . only that they might have.

  Phyllis settled for saying, “Mr. Delaney wasn’t there. And Jan just said to give her best to Eve.” She held out one of the plates to Carolyn. “Do you think you could get her to eat some of this sandwich?”

  “I can certainly try,” Carolyn declared. She marched out of the kitchen like a woman on a mission.

  Phyllis was on a mission, too, but it didn’t involve food. Its only goal was to find a killer and clear Eve’s name.

  * * *

  After lunch, Phyllis went into the living room and sat down at the computer in the corner. She didn’t turn the monitor on immediately, though. Instead she took a legal pad and a pen from one of the drawers in the desk and wrote down five names.

  Alice Jessup

  Frank Pitt

  Ingrid Pitt

  Henry Mitchum

  Rhonda Mitchum

  She paused for a moment, frowning in thought, and then wrote down two more names, those of Jan and Pete Delaney. She didn’t consider the five people who were staying at the bed-and-breakfast to be possible suspects in Roy’s death, as she did with Jan and Pete—the Mitchums couldn’t be, because they hadn’t even arrived at the place until after the murder—but she wanted to know more about them anyway. It was a matter of being thorough. After another brief hesitation, she added Julie Porter’s name to the list and then finally wrote down one final name.

  Roy Porter

  The real Roy Porter, not the one they had believed they knew, Phyllis thought. Was it a mere coincidence of similar age and appearance that had led “Roy” to adopt the other man’s identity? Or was it possible there was some other connection between the two men, something that would provide a reason for the fake Roy’s death?

  Phyllis considered that unlikely, but again, it was something she wanted to look into.

  She was about to turn on the monitor when she heard a car door close outside. A glance through the front window showed her Juliette Yorke’s SUV parked at the curb and the lawyer herself coming toward the house. Juliette’s breath fogged in the cold air in front of her face. Phyllis got up and went to meet her at the door.

  Juliette didn’t look particularly upset, Phyllis thought, but she certainly wasn’t jubilant, either, so it was probably too much to hope for that the investigators had found Roy’s killer and the charges against Eve had been dropped.

  “Hello,” Phyllis said. “Come in. How are you today?”

  “I’m fine, I guess,” Juliette said. “I have some news for Eve.”

  “Good news, I hope?” Phyllis didn’t really believe that was what was coming, but it didn’t hurt to hope.

  With a solemn little smile on her lips, Juliette shook her head. “No, not good news,” she said, “but not bad news, either. At least, not as bad as she’s been getting. More like expected news.”

  “Well, come on in. Eve’s upstairs.”

  Phyllis took Juliette’s coat as Juliette went on, “I suppose I could have just called her, but I wanted to see her, too. To find out how she’s holding up.”

  “I haven’t seen much of her myself,” Phyllis said. “She’s been holed up in her room. But Carolyn’s spending quite a bit of time with her.”

  “Good,” Juliette said with a nod. “Maybe that keeps her from brooding too much.”

  Before all this happened, Phyllis would have said that Eve wasn’t the type to waste even a minute brooding about anything. Eve had never suffered quite the same level of shocks as she had recently, though. Even when those earlier husbands of hers died and she came under suspicion in their deaths, she had never been arrested and charged with their murders. She had been considerably younger then, too.

  “I’ll tell her you’re here,” Phyllis said. “Unless you’d rather go up to her room and speak to her in private.”

  Juliette shook her head. “Oh, no, that’s all right. We can talk down here. This is nothing that you and the others can’t hear.”

  “All right. I’ll be right back.”

  She climbed the stairs and went to the door of Eve’s room. When she knocked, Eve called, “Come in.”

  Phyllis opened the door to find Eve sitting in the rocking chair while Carolyn sat in the other chair. Both of them were doing needlework. Carolyn was saying, “Now, if you’ll just tighten up those stitches a little—”

  “What is it, dear?” Eve asked Phyllis.

  “Juliette is downstairs and wants to talk to you.”

  “Oh. All right.” Eve put the needlework aside with what seemed to Phyllis like eagerness and stood up. “Should I go downstairs, or should she come up here?”

  “She said there was nothing private about it.”

  “Fine. I haven’t been downstairs today. I suppose I should make the effort.”

  Eve was starting to look and sound more like herself, Phyllis thought. True, it was just flashes so far, but that was better than nothing.

  “I suppose we can come back to this later,” Carolyn said as she set her own needlework on
the dresser.

  By the time the three of them got downstairs, Sam was in the living room talking to Juliette. “I’d be glad to,” he was saying.

  Juliette said, “Fine. I’ll let you know the dimensions. Thank you, Mr. Fletcher.”

  “Call me Sam. And it’s my pleasure.”

  Juliette turned to Eve and asked, “How are you feeling today?”

  Eve smiled faintly. “Well, I suppose that’ll depend to a certain extent on what you’ve come to tell me, dear.”

  “It’s nothing we weren’t expecting. The arraignment will be Monday morning at nine o’clock.”

  Eve nodded. “Do I need to be there?”

  “It’s not absolutely necessary. As your attorney I can enter a plea for you, but it would be better if you were there. For appearance’s sake.”

  “Then I’ll be there,” Eve said.

  “We all will,” Carolyn said.

  “Actually, that’s not a bad idea,” Juliette said. “A show of support for the media. I’m not trying to influence the jury pool . . . Oh, who am I trying to kid? Of course I am. So is the district attorney. That’s why Sullivan—”

  Juliette stopped short. When she didn’t go on, Phyllis said, “That’s why Sullivan did what?”

  Juliette looked uncomfortable, but she shrugged and said, “He had a news conference this morning to announce the arraignment. Actually, I’m surprised you hadn’t heard about it already.”

  “We’ve all been busy,” Phyllis said.

  “Yes, Carolyn and I have been doing needlework samplers,” Eve said.

  “Sullivan’s just trying to make it look like he’s right on top of everything and handling the whole case himself. Like a tough district attorney.”

  Carolyn said, “Yes, as if prosecuting a harmless old woman makes him tough on crime.”

  Eve winced a little at that description of herself, but she didn’t say anything for a moment. Then she said, “I don’t want people feeling sorry for me.”

  Carolyn turned to her. “But you’ve been wronged—”

  “I said I don’t want people feeling sorry for me. I made my own choices, just like I always do, and if Roy fooled me, it’s my own fault for being so gullible. I’m not some dotty old lady who can’t think for herself.”

  “No one has claimed that you are,” Carolyn said.

  Eve looked at Juliette and went on, “I don’t care what you do as long as you don’t make me look feeble and defenseless.”

  “We have to be careful about what image we present—,” Juliette began.

  “I don’t present an image,” Eve said. “I am who I am.”

  Phyllis tried not to smile. Eve was sounding more like herself by the minute.

  “I didn’t kill Roy,” Eve went on, “but if I had found out the truth about what he was trying to do, I might have.”

  It was Juliette’s turn to wince. She shook her head and said, “You definitely don’t need to be saying things like that, especially in public. Here among your friends it’s one thing, but—”

  Eve interrupted her again. “If it comes to a trial, I don’t want a jury voting to acquit me because they feel sorry for me. I won’t play the poor-little-old-lady card, Juliette, and if you try to, I swear I . . . I’ll stand up in court and fire you right there on the spot!”

  Juliette met Eve’s intense gaze for a moment before nodding. “I believe you would, too,” she said. “All right, Eve. You’re the client, which means you’re the boss.”

  “Darned right I am.”

  “As long as it doesn’t go against my best legal judgment,” Juliette went on. “If that happens, then maybe we will have to come to a parting of the ways. But I hope it doesn’t come to that.”

  Eve smiled. “It won’t, dear. I like you.”

  “Anyway, we’ll meet at the courthouse at eight thirty Monday morning, okay?”

  “We’ll all be there,” Phyllis promised. “Have you heard any more about the investigation?”

  A bleak look came over Juliette’s face. “At this point, the investigation is closed. The sheriff’s department has turned over everything to Sullivan’s office. They believe they have the killer, so that’s how they’re going forward.”

  “They’re not questioning anyone else, looking for evidence to corroborate their theory?”

  Juliette shook her head. “No, and that tells me they think they’ve got plenty already. Sullivan is confident of a conviction.”

  Eve said, “Well, then, we’ll just have to prove him wrong, won’t we?”

  “That’s right,” Juliette said, summoning up a smile. “And now that I’ve talked to you, Eve, and seen how you’ve gotten some fight back in you, I’m sure that’s exactly what we’re going to do.”

  “That’s the spirit,” Sam said.

  Yes, that was the spirit, all right, Phyllis thought, but spirit wasn’t going to save Eve by itself. They needed evidence, too.

  And judging by what Juliette had said about the sheriff’s department closing its investigation, the responsibility for finding that evidence fell to her, Phyllis told herself.

  She just hoped she was up to the task.

  Chapter 22

  This was Friday afternoon. The arraignment was Monday morning. That gave her two days to start looking into the case. It wasn’t much time. Phyllis wanted to spare Eve the ordeal of going through another court appearance if she could, but that might not be possible.

  Before she started, she was curious about something else. As soon as Juliette was gone and Eve and Carolyn had gone back upstairs, Phyllis said to Sam, “When we came in you were talking to Juliette about something. She said she’d call you with the dimensions?”

  He smiled. “Yeah, she asked me if I could make a bookshelf for her office. I guess the word’s gettin’ around about what a good carpenter I am.”

  “You are a good carpenter,” Phyllis said. “Is she hiring you?”

  “She offered to pay me,” Sam said with a shrug, “but I told her that if she’d just cover the cost of the materials, that’d be fine. It’s not like my time’s worth a whole lot.”

  “You ought to get paid for your trouble.”

  He shook his head. “No, woodwork’s just a hobby with me, and somethin’ I can do as a favor for friends. If I start takin’ money for it, it becomes just another job . . . and I’m retired.”

  Phyllis nodded and said, “I can understand that, I suppose.”

  “Anyway, Juliette’s not makin’ all that much money, even if she is a lawyer, and she’s got a daughter to raise. Seems like there are as many single parents these days as there are married ones, but it still can’t be easy.”

  “I didn’t know Juliette had a daughter,” Phyllis said. “I’m not sure I even knew that she was single, although I’d noticed that she doesn’t wear a wedding ring.”

  Sam shrugged again. “Guess I’m easy to talk to. Folks just naturally open up to me.”

  “I know. That’s one reason I like to take you along when I’m looking into things.”

  “And here I thought it was so I could subdue all the suspects.”

  “That, too,” Phyllis said.

  The banter concealed an actual worry of hers. More than once, her investigations had put both her and Sam in danger. If she kept looking for Roy’s killer, it was possible that could happen again. Anyone who would drive a letter opener into a man’s throat like that was capable of, well, just about anything, Phyllis thought.

  Unfortunately, she had no choice. She had faith in Juliette’s skill as a defense attorney, but she wasn’t going to let Eve’s fate fall into the hands of a jury if there was anything she could do about it.

  Sam went back out to the garage, and Phyllis sat down in front of the computer. She turned on the monitor, checked her e-mail, then did a search for the first name on her list. A lot of Alice Jessups turned up, too many for her to go through all of them in a reasonable amount of time. Jan had said that the Alice Jessup staying at the bed-and-breakfast was from
Louisiana. Phyllis added that to the search to narrow down the number of hits.

  There were still quite a few, and a quick scan of the list didn’t make any of them jump out at her. She would come back to Alice later, Phyllis decided. She moved on to Frank and Ingrid Pitt. Again there was a multitude of results, and she didn’t even know where they were from. The same was true of Henry and Rhonda Mitchum.

  Phyllis was starting to feel like she was wasting her time. She didn’t consider it likely that there was anything important to the case in the background of Jan or Pete Delaney—their involvement was more immediate than that, and if either of them was involved in Roy’s death it was because of something that had happened at the bed-and-breakfast, not before—so she moved on to Julie Porter and the real Roy Porter.

  “Roy” had done a good job of identity theft. Phyllis called up the real Roy’s obituary again, which included a photograph. There was a slight resemblance between the two men. No one would have ever mistaken one of them for the other, but it wasn’t as if they were totally unlike each other. The real Roy had worked at the same company the fake Roy claimed to. The fake had done his homework and had moved right in to take over the real Roy’s life. Was it possible the fake had known the real Roy?

  Phyllis wasn’t sure how to go about discovering that, so she switched her attention to the late Julie Porter, searching out older mentions of her. She was quite a successful saleswoman when it came to real estate. Even in these lean economic times, she had managed to sell more than a million dollars’ worth of property several times in past years. Phyllis called up a newspaper story about Julie receiving some sort of award. There was an accompanying photograph that showed a number of other agents from her company applauding as a smiling man handed her the award.

  Phyllis’s eyes narrowed, and she leaned closer to the monitor. That didn’t really do any good, she realized, so she saved the image instead and then opened a photo-editing program to enlarge it. There was only so much she could increase the resolution—it was an Internet image of a newspaper photo, after all—but as she stared at the group of clapping real estate agents, the face of one man in the picture seemed awfully familiar to her.

 

‹ Prev