The Haunted Beach (Tropical Breeze Cozy Mystery Book 4)

Home > Other > The Haunted Beach (Tropical Breeze Cozy Mystery Book 4) > Page 21
The Haunted Beach (Tropical Breeze Cozy Mystery Book 4) Page 21

by Mary Bowers


  “I knew she wasn’t playing tricks on Dolores,” Parker said. “She wouldn’t have done that.”

  “No,” Ed agreed. “Rod needed Dolores to be found on the beach, but he let Peggy go out to sea. He didn’t want to wait for Dolores to be declared dead. There was a distinct possibility she’d be leaving some of her fortune to Willa, whom he planned to marry. Also, he might have realized that Ben would have the same motive: wanting her declared dead immediately so he could inherit. He probably hoped it would divert suspicion to Ben, which it did. Dolores was easy to overpower and had no telltale marks on her body, but Peggy had obviously been murdered. So he made sure the tide took her out. He hoped to finish up in Santorini and disappear long before her body came back, if it ever did.”

  “Wait a minute, Ben said. “All this must have happened before you and I got out onto the beach that night. I went all up and down the beach; she wasn’t there. And it didn’t happen after we left the beach, or we would have seen her lying in the sand from my house, later.”

  Ed took a deep breath. “I believe the fact that you and I were roaming the beach that night and going back and forth in Santorini meant that Rod spent a very long night on the beach, hiding on the dune with a dead body.

  “When Rod realized that the second woman with Dolores was not Sylvie, he called Claire to make sure his daughter was at home. She wasn’t. When she saw Dolores with another woman on the beach, Sylvie must have gone into Frieda’s house. Rod knew I was investigating and might find the body right away, and if their daughter arrived on the beach suddenly when it was swarming with cops, he knew she’d blurt out everything, just like she did tonight.”

  “So that was Sylvie that I saw in Frieda’s house when we were leaving the beach,” Ben said.

  “Right,” Ed told him. “When she heard us coming in the garage, she ran out the back door. Rod had carried Dolores up to the dune and hidden her, waiting for Claire to tell him she had Sylvie back home. Instead, Claire looked out the window and told Rod to hunker down; the neighborhood was too active. Once we got into Frieda’s house and put the garage door down, Claire hurried out to the beach to look for Sylvie.”

  “So the two figures we saw from the third floor must have been Claire and Sylvie,” Taylor said.

  “Right,” Ed said. “They looked like they were dancing along the water’s edge, but really, Claire was trying to chase Sylvie down. Before we could get back to the beach, they had taken another walkover and gone back home down A1A. Claire got Sylvie home just before we came back and started roaming between the houses in Santorini. She told Rod to stay put. Finally, hours later, Claire let him know Santorini had quieted down, and he’d better set the scene before people started coming out to watch the sunrise. He washed Dolores in the ocean, settled her in the sand and came back. Then he took Sylvie to his house and sat on her while Claire went out make sure the body didn’t wash away. When she saw Dan coming down the walkover, she ran to him, screaming she’d just found Dolores, dead. All she had to do was act hysterical, which was probably easy after the night she’d had.”

  “They had it all worked out, except for one little thing,” Taylor said.

  “Right,” Ed said. “Rod was so used to being able to control women that it never occurred to him that his wife would fall in love with another man. He’d been using women since he’d been young and good-looking. He was older and less attractive now, but he still thought he had ‘it’ when it came to women. Right up to the end, he never believed Claire would leave him, even after she suggested they split up. He thought he owned her, right up until the moment she pulled out a gun and shot him. Then, of course, she had to kill Willa too, since she was staging a murder-suicide.”

  “Would that have made sense?” Lily asked, fascinated. “Why would Willa kill her new husband, not to mention herself?”

  “Her motive was to be that she’d found out she’d married a con man, and couldn’t face the humiliation. Rod’s body would certainly have been identified as that of Jerry Stancel eventually, but by then, Claire planned to be long gone. Dan had asked her to go away with him.”

  “I asked her to marry me,” Dan said. “I didn’t say anything about running away. I like it here. I didn’t want to leave. But she must have assumed I was the kind of guy who would just take off.”

  “Um, yes,” Ed said. “You do project that character type. By that point, Claire no longer cared about the money; she just wanted out. But she needed to make sure Rod wouldn’t come after her, and she knew that if he was alive, he’d find her. So she killed him. Next, she shot Willa and was about to plant the gun on her when we charged in and found her still holding it.”

  “And then,” Dan said, “it was a matter of killing as many people as she needed to in order to get away.”

  “She’d never have killed you,” Parker said. “She was in love with you.”

  “If I didn’t go along with the mass slaughter, she was prepared to gun me down with the rest of you,” he said bitterly. “She loved herself more.”

  Chapter 28

  It was daylight by the time Taylor trailed Ed back to his house. Teddy and Lily had come in a separate car, and they left.

  “I’m very tired,” Ed said pointedly.

  “You’re not going to bed now and we both know it. You’re too wound up to be able to sleep, and so am I.”

  “I think everything that needed to be said has been said,” he told her. Then he stopped. “Except for one thing, perhaps. When Sylvie first came into Willa’s house, she claimed she had never used Frieda’s perfume. I didn’t want to mention that in front of the others. Interesting, no?”

  “Huh! How did that come up?”

  “I asked, of course.”

  “For the sake of completeness,” Taylor said, straight-faced, but giving him a wink. “Only you would fixate on a detail like that while all hell is breaking loose. Okay, I have a question. When we were talking the other day, you said somebody lied. Who was that? What lie?”

  “I believe you said the same thing. You first: did you catch the same lie that I did?”

  She lifted an eyebrow, but let him get away with it, just because she didn’t want to get tangled up in digressions. “Claire lied. She came up with some song-and-dance about her sister-in-law trying to get at her inheritance. But even if there was no will, the wife would inherit, and in her story, the sister-in-law didn’t have any documentation to back her story up. Of course, now I see that she just didn’t want Rod to find out about her affair with Dan. But at the time, it puzzled me. Okay, now you. Did you catch that one too?”

  “Actually, I was talking about Rod. I wanted to find out more about the man Willa had married, and I had been, um, picking around the internet, looking here and there, finding out this and that –“

  “Ed! Were you hacking into police databases?”

  “That kind of thing is not strictly necessary,” he said evasively. “For a slight fee –“

  “Ed! You clever devil! I’m proud of you. Gimme five,” she said, leaning forward and raising her hand.

  “Five what?”

  Taylor sat back and smiled.

  “To continue,” he said, uneasy at missing yet another societal pivot point, “I managed to find the name Rod Johnson in a list of aliases of a man named Jerry Stancel, who’d been convicted of fraud. He’d married an octogenarian and gotten control of her estate. Her rightful heirs sued. When I looked up his booking photo, I recognized our Rod. Apparently, his alias, Rod Johnson, was something of an inside joke,” he said, looking stuffy and uncomfortable. “He found it too good to let it go, and his marks usually weren’t internet savvy. Willa certainly isn’t. So I knew Willa had married a con man, and was in big trouble. After you left, I was planning my next move when I ran across a picture of him with his wife and co-conspirator, Elvira. Our Claire. With that information, I knew I needed to act. It became obvious that something bigger was afoot. They had probably committed two murders already. Willa might be in mortal dange
r.”

  “Because Claire was in love with Dan?”

  “No, I didn’t know that.”

  “Only a blind man could’ve missed it. Did you really not notice?”

  “What really mattered,” he said, a little louder than he needed to, “was that Dan had fallen in love with Claire. He always seemed so . . . remote. Uninvolved. Inviolable.”

  She snorted. “He’s flesh and blood like everybody else.”

  “So it would seem.”

  “And you went right over and told him his girlfriend was an ex-con. Good move, Ed. Has it hit you yet that if Dan was a more dishonest man, you’d all be dead by now?”

  “That’s enough sarcasm, I think. I did manage to save Willa in the end. It looks like she’s going to pull through, thank God. Claire would have made sure she was dead, if nobody had been there to stop her.”

  “Yes, you did manage to save Willa. I’m sure she’s going to be very grateful.”

  When Ed didn’t get it, she said, “Are you two going to start talking to one another now?”

  “We’ve always been very cordial.”

  “’Cordial,’ is the way you describe a business relationship. You’re in love with her and you know it. What you don’t seem to know, because you’re selectively blind, is that she is in love with you.”

  He gaped at her. “Do you really think so? After all she married another man.”

  “Only after you dragged your feet for years. She wasn’t getting any younger, and she wanted a life. She figured Rod was her last chance. If you want to know if she loves you, go ask her yourself. And bring flowers.”

  “Flowers, right,” he said, writing it down on one of his little note pads.

  “And candy. Chocolates, the kind in a fancy box. Not breath mints.”

  “Chocolate, fancy box,” he murmured as he wrote.

  “And when she’s off the ventilator, take her in your arms and give her a big, passionate kiss. On the lips. Write that down.”

  He had stopped writing and was gaping at her. “Taylor, are you being witty now? I can’t tell. This means a lot to me.”

  She took pity on him and said, “A little kiss on the cheek would be nice for starters. Big, passionate kisses after the first date. You’d better call me ahead of time about the first date, so you don’t make any huge blunders.”

  She was preparing to leave when the cat Bastet came regally out of nowhere and began to follow her to the door.

  “You’re leaving?” Ed asked the cat, looking hurt.

  “Apparently so,” Taylor said. The cat preceded her out the door.

  Taylor looked back at Ed and paused, then said, “I know why she wanted to stay with you. You were right and I was wrong. I thought Ben killed his wife. You knew he hadn’t. She wanted to be with the one she could influence. Whose mind wasn’t closed. This time, that was you.”

  Ed gazed at her silently.

  Then she said, “I guess it’s really over now.”

  She closed the door softly behind her.

  Ed had a few days to collect himself before the twins came to clean again. In the meantime, the investigation for the lady from New Smyrna Beach had wrapped itself up neatly. When he saw her name on the Caller I.D., he’d braced himself, but she couldn’t have been nicer. It turned out that she had suspected her brother all along. She thanked Ed prettily and fired off a check that same day with a nice tip added to it.

  Still, he was not looking forward to getting back to normal. The twins hadn’t shown up right after the final set of murders and tried to get information out of him. They could get into his house any time they wanted, just by bringing baked goods; still, they hadn’t come. By Monday morning, he believed, the pressure would have built up to the point of imminent explosion, and Ed fully expected them to come in and explode right in his face.

  But when they arrived, they were all business. They even appeared subdued. And despite the fact that they knew Teddy wouldn’t be there, they had brought blueberry muffins, baked fresh that morning. He was pleased, in a greedy sort of way, but he was still keyed up, waiting for them to blow. After an hour, when they seemed even calmer than when they’d arrived, he nearly exploded himself.

  As they were preparing to leave, he finally said, “Well?”

  “Well, what?” Rosie said.

  “Don’t you have any questions?”

  “We already know everything,” Poppy said.

  “Of course you do. Silly me.”

  “Mr. D-D, are you all right?” Rosie said, taking a step toward him and looking concerned.

  “Why wouldn’t I be all right?” he said hysterically. “My neighborhood is haunted, four of my neighbors are dead, and another one is still in Intensive Care. What could possibly be bothering me?”

  They started to go to him, then seemed to hit a wall. Ed was standing inside the doorway to his office, and they looked past him.

  “You need to repaint your room,” Rosie told him. “Then we’ll come in and clean it again. And you need to get rid of those paintings,” she added.

  “Why? They’re not of Frieda’s ghost. They’re of the daughter of a pair of grifters, who is lovely, even if she is a little off.”

  “I don’t know,” Poppy said. “Miss Purity said –“

  “Miss Purity would be better off running a potato farm out there, instead of calling herself a spirit medium.”

  The twins stared at him.

  “Now, Mr. D-D,” Rosie said, “there is no reason to get nasty. Technically, Miss Purity has a point. You’ve got no business painting the walls of your office so they can trap a ghost.”

  “I happen to like Haint Blue. Anyway, justice has triumphed. What are you two looking so depressed about?”

  At that moment, Dan Ryder walked down his driveway and turned down Santorini Drive, heading for the beach. The looks on the twins’ faces as they watched him said it all.

  “Oh,” Ed said. “Yes. Tragic, that. It may be quite some time before that man opens his heart again.”

  The twins nodded silently, collected their gear and left, moving through Technicolor daydreams of Dan Ryder running wild in the Highlands, fearless in battle, rushing toward death so he could be reunited with the only woman he had ever loved.

  The End

  Table of Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

 

 

 


‹ Prev