On the Edge

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On the Edge Page 40

by Jayne Ann Krentz


  Celina smoothed her dress over her thighs.

  At first Jack watched with detached interest, then he dropped the detached bit. She really had gorgeous legs, and they went on and on. He wondered if she deliberately let her simple little pump fall free of her heel when she pointed her jiggling toe. Somehow he doubted it. She was just naturally sexy.

  She fiddled with a seam in her dress, glanced at him, fiddled some more.

  “Is there anything else on your mind?” he asked, and wished she’d say something she wasn’t likely to say, such as how much she wished he could stay in Royal Street until the alarm system was in. What a dreamer he was.

  Celina continued to pluck at the seam.

  “You’re going to make a hole in that,” he said when he couldn’t stand the wait any longer.

  “Did Errol make his payments to you in cash? For the house?”

  Jack felt blank. “Payments? Oh, no. They were an automatic bank payment.”

  “Probably from his personal account?”

  “Of course.”

  “I see.”

  Jack crossed and recrossed his feet—and waited.

  “I had to pay some bills today.” she said. “I went through Errol’s in basket and just picked out what was due.”

  “You can sign checks?”

  She shook her head. “I was going to pay them myself, then get the money back.”

  “That won’t be necessary. I’ll pay them until I can get your name on an account. Okay?”

  “Mmm. Yes, thank you.” She picked up her big purse and produced a business-sized book of checks. “I thought I ought to take a look at this—just to see where we are. Here.” She handed it to him. “It’s the business account.”

  Jack stopped himself from saying that was obvious. He turned pages but didn’t see anything that struck him as unusual.

  “Oh,” she said, delving into the bag again, “you need this. The last statement.”

  He took it from her and scanned the several sheets of check numbers and amounts, then looked at the balances and said, “Wow.”

  “Uh-huh. What do you think it means?”

  “It means a great deal of money has been coming in, but in the last three weeks, even more money went out. This is overdrawn.”

  She got up and stood beside him, and leaned around him to look at the checkbook. “See this? And this? And this? Those wouldn’t equal house payment amounts, would they?”

  “No. I’ve already told you that money didn’t come out of this account.”

  “They’re for cash.” She pointed to a deposit entered in the checkbook register. “I made all the deposits. This one never happened.”

  “Maybe Errol thought it did.”

  “I guess. But why? He never made deposits to this account himself, and I’m the one who balances the statement. I think he hoped to make it right before I saw it.”

  Jack felt queasy. “I see your point.”

  “I’ve tried everything I can think of, and there’s nothing that would have called for that kind of expense. And if there had been, it wouldn’t have been paid out in cash.”

  Jack looked into her face, at her eyes, then at her mouth, then he returned his attention to the checkbook. “Would you know if this had ever happened before?”

  “I would now. I’ve checked back through several years of canceled checks. Nothing bigger than a few hundred for petty cash.”

  “In other words, Errol needed cash and didn’t have enough in his personal account.”

  “I don’t see how he could have,” Celina said. “He took only bare living expenses out of the foundation. I had to beg him to buy socks or a new shirt. He didn’t care about those things.”

  He used to care about those things—and a lot more. “Any ideas?” he asked her. “Hunches? Anything? We’re desperate here, aren’t we?”

  “I can only think he hoped he could pay it back before he ever had to explain it to anyone. Although he didn’t actually deal with incoming funds or deposits, he was in charge of the money. He was the only one who could write checks—except you, of course, and you didn’t play an active part in this. Jack, you know Errol was an honest man.”

  “Yes, I do know.”

  The phone rang in the hall, and the slap of Tilly’s shoes brought a startled expression to Celina’s blue eyes.

  “That’s Tilly,” Jack explained. “She looks after us—keeps us on the straight and narrow. There isn’t a phone in here.”

  Tilly’s tightly curled gray hair and florid face appeared around the edge of the door. “This is not good for an impressionable child, Mr. Charbonnet. All this upheaval when she should be quiet.”

  “Thank you, Tilly. I take it the call’s for me?”

  “Who else would it be for? Certainly no one would call me in the middle of the night.”

  “It isn’t the middle of the night.”

  Jack excused himself to Celina and went to the phone, leaving his study door open. “This is Jack Charbonnet.”

  Detective O’Leary identified himself and kept his remarks short, so short that Jack found himself staring at the receiver after the other man had hung up.

  He remembered Celina in his study and walked slowly back.

  She said, “What is it?” and made an involuntary move toward him.

  Jack took hold of her outstretched hands and held them tightly. He closed his eyes but couldn’t shut out the picture of Errol on his bathroom floor.

  Celina’s hands trembled. He pulled her into his arms, rested his chin on top of her head, and held her tightly. She held him right back.

  “Tell me what they said,” she whispered.

  “Somebody set it up,” he told her quietly. “The whole scene. Dead men don’t climb out of bathtubs. The autopsy showed Errol drowned.”

  Chapter 7

  The detective—Celina thought Jack had called him O’Leary—hadn’t actually said they were calling Errol’s death a murder. Couldn’t he have slipped under the water, then struggled out and…

  Errol had drowned. Someone had drowned him, then tried to make it look like something else killed him. He had, in fact, had a heart attack, but the coroner had been adamant—according to this O’Leary—that it hadn’t been his heart that precipitated Errol’s death.

  Jack’s embrace hadn’t surprised her until she’d left him and had time to think about it. He wasn’t the kind of man she associated with spontaneous kindness, but evidently she was wrong. She didn’t know how long they had stood there, just holding each other, but the effect had been more disquieting than calming. He was a strong man in every way, a man with a heady ability to make a woman feel very much a woman—and like it.

  The analysis was a waste of time. She doubted she’d spend more time wrapped in Jack Charbonnet’s arms.

  The cab she’d taken from Chartres Street dropped her in the driveway of the Lamar house. She paid the driver and he gave her a card with a number to call when she was ready to go home. She’d have liked to go then, but her mother would already be watching for her and worrying. How embarrassing it was when Celina, who had once been a part-time member of Wilson Lamar’s campaign force, failed to show up on time, showed up many hours late, in fact. Mama and Daddy were turning their connections into cash again by smoothing Wilson Lamar’s path to the old money New Orleans set. They needed and expected Celina’s support.

  She loathed the prospect of seeing Wilson.

  Small white lights trembled in the oaks lining the drive. More lights outlined the two galleries along the front of the house. And from the volume of laughter and music issuing through the open front door, enough liquor had flowed to make it unlikely anyone would either notice her arrival, or care if she was or was not there. Except for Mama. And Wilson. Wilson noticed everything.

  The first word Celina heard clearly when she entered the Lamars’ elegant foyer was her own name. Someone screamed her name, and a sudden surge toward her made her consider retreat.

  She stood her ground while
drunken partygoers swarmed about her.

  “Where have you been, Celina?” Mama’s voice was always easily recognized. “We’ve been waiting for you for hours. There was no answer at your apartment.”

  “You aren’t going to stay in that grizzly place, are you,” Mrs. Sabina Lovelace asked, her thin-bridged nose very red. Mrs. Lovelace, of the timber Lovelaces, was a close friend of Mama and Daddy’s. Many people here were their close friends.

  “What grizzly place would that be?” Celina asked, deliberately widening her eyes.

  “Why”—Sabina Lovelace’s voice dropped—”the Royal Street place, of course. How could you even think of sleeping there. They say it takes the dead a while to vacate, if you know what I mean.”

  Celina let her eyes get even rounder. “Vacate? You mean Errol Petrie?”

  “Well, Ι surely do. He’s the only one who died there recently, isn’t he? And they say violent deaths are the worst. The poor, dear departed has been violated and can’t rest while he or she is watching and waiting for justice to be done.”

  Celina smiled suddenly, brilliantly, and said, “Why, Mrs. Lovelace, I thank you. I’ll feel so comforted knowing Errol is still there with me.”

  The woman moaned and turned to Celina’s mother. “Bitsy, you poor thing, I think your girl is unbalanced. Must be because of the shock. You need to get her to a good therapist, and soon. I’ll call you with the name of mine in the morning. I need another drink.”

  Questions burst from all sides. Who had been the first to see Errol after he died? Who had been the last to see him before he died? What had he looked like when he was dead? Did the police think it was murder? Was it true that Errol had been involved in a sex orgy and that he passed out from...you know? Did he hit his head on the floor because he slipped? They always said most fatal accidents happened at home. And it was murder, wasn’t it?

  “Let the poor girl be.” Wilson Lamar’s voice boomed over the rest. “She’s had a terrible day, I’m sure. Thank you for makin’ yourself come, Celina. I take it as a personal compliment and a sign of your commitment to my senate bid. What will you have to drink?”

  She didn’t want anything, not if it came from Wilson, but she forced a smile and said, “I’ll take a cranberry juice and tonic, please.” Her breath always shortened around the man. Why couldn’t her parents see that he was slime and wanted people only for what he could get out of them?

  Wilson snapped his fingers and sent a waiter sliding through the throng to get the drink.

  Sally Lamar appeared at her husband’s side, her long, reddish hair caught up at each side with a diamond comb. More diamonds glittered at her ears. A soft face. Rounded cheekbones and jaw, a full mouth colored pale pink and moistly shiny, ingenuous brown eyes that managed to appear liquid and innocent at all times. Sally was a perfect compliment to her tall, fit husband. Wilson’s blond good looks, his easy smile, usually drew attention away from a vaguely supercilious light in his intelligent eyes. The most stunning couple in the county, that was what was said about the Lamars. Sally’s sequined shift was the color of Irish coffee and set little reflections dancing off her smooth white skin. Matching pumps with very high heels drew attention to beautiful legs shown to advantage all the way to mid-thigh.

  Celina detested both of them.

  “You do know how to draw attention to yourself, honey,” Sally said to Celina. “All over the television screen all day.”

  “Oh, Sally, you couldn’t even see her face,” Mama said, not looking at the other woman. “And they just kept repeating the same footage. You know how those things go.”

  “No, I don’t, thank goodness,” Sally said sharply. “Unless I’m at my husband’s side—which is my job and my pleasure—Ι manage to keep myself out of the limelight. We can only hope Celina’s attachment to Wilson’s campaign won’t draw any negative attention.”

  For her mother’s sake, Celina didn’t remind the gathered company that she was no longer involved in helping with Wilson’s senate bid. “Well,” she said with forced cheer, “you all look as if you’re having a time of it. Nice music, Sally, and the house looks gorgeous.”

  Sally simpered, and hung on Wilson’s arm. “My daddy was famous for giving the best parties in the parish. Some said the best parties in Louisiana. I guess I inherited his talent.”

  “I guess you did, sugar,” Wilson said, patting her hands while he took subtle advantage of the moment to release himself from her. “Here’s your drink, Celina. It’s hot in here. Let’s find a couple of seats outside and you can catch me up on everythin’ that’s been happenin’ to you. Old friends shouldn’t lose touch.”

  Celina’s skin crawled. Goose bumps shot out on her bare arms.

  “There you are, little pet.” Dear, ineffectual Daddy tottered up to Celina and dropped a liquor-laced kiss on her cheek. “You are lookin’ lovely, as always, my child. You make your daddy proud. I worried about you today. All that unpleasantness. You ought to come home to your mother and me.”

  A big man who still showed remnants of how handsome he’d been when he’d married Celina’s young, newly widowed mother—back before the liquor did its worst—silver strands glinted in his sandy hair. He still worked out—when he was sober enough. Neville’s primary problem had been that although he was physically strong, he was one of the most emotionally ineffectual men she’d ever known.

  Grateful that he hadn’t yet drunk enough to turn nasty, she hugged him and felt the first rush of genuine warmth she’d felt all night...except for when Jack Charbonnet had embraced her, and that had been an entirely different kind of warmth. “Hi, Daddy,” she whispered. “I love you, y’know.”

  He drew back and looked at her with eyes that didn’t quite focus but which became instantly teary. He patted her arms, stroked her cheek, leaned close, and whispered back, “Forgive me, pet. I wish I could have done more for you. Never could quite...well, you know. Never mind, your mama’s strong enough for all of us, hmm?”

  Celina nodded and smiled, but sadness struck very deep. Neville Payne had married Bitsy and adopted her children. His deterioration had kept pace with the speed with which he’d spent his wife’s fortune—which meant it had been relatively rapid.

  “I’m borrowin’ your daughter, Neville,” Wilson announced. “This is one savvy girl you raised here.” He affected the drawl of a southern gentleman—which he was not. When he looped a muscular arm around her shoulders, she was heavily pressed not to shrug away—or scream.

  “You aren’t leaving our guests, are you,” Sally whined. “Marshall Compton wants to talk to you about something, darling.”

  Wilson ignored her and shepherded Celina outside and along the path that skirted the house until it reached the wide white marble ledge around an oval pool. The pool shone turquoise under soft lighting.

  She didn’t want to go with him, but neither did she want to make a scene.

  He pulled up two Adirondack chairs and placed them so that the arms touched. “Now, you sit right here, Celina. You’ve had a terrible day. It would be terrible for anyone, but you’re a sensitive little woman. You were never intended to deal with unpleasantness.”

  “Thank you for thinking of me,” she said, gingerly taking a seat. “But I’m pretty tough, Wilson. I’ve got to be to do what I do.”

  “Did,” he responded promptly, lowering himself into the chair beside her. “That’s something I want to talk to you about. I need you, Celina. You made a memorable Dreams Girl, but obviously Dreams won’t continue with Errol gone. He was the heart and soul of that little effort. Of course, I’m the first to say it’s sad to see it disappear, and I intend to put forward a plan to provide special little services to these terminally ill children. And when I’m elected, I won’t be one of those politicians who forgets the platform he ran on, so don’t you worry about that. But in the meantime, I need you, my dear. I’ve missed you. Now, I know we haven’t always seen eye to eye, but I do think that philosophically we’re on the same side, and it’
s a thorn in my side to think of you doing anythin’ but workin’ for me, and for the good of your brother and sister Louisianans, and your countrymen. What do you say?”

  She stared at the bright, lapping water and didn’t trust herself to say anything.

  Wilson covered her hand on the arm of her chair and Celina promptly pulled away.

  If Wilson was offended, he hid it very well. He said, “Now, I know I’ve probably surprised you by moving so quickly, but you know that’s how it has to be in my business. The man who misses a beat, misses the boat, so to speak. It’s time to put any disagreements behind us for the good of the cause. You’re too sophisticated a woman to dwell on little misunderstandings.”

  Her nerves felt sheared. He was incredible. Nothing stopped him, not the fact that he continued to laugh at her parents behind their backs while he used them and that he’d told Celina he would drop them the instant he’d got everything he could out of them, and not Celina’s decision to leave his campaign staff because she’d discovered that he was skimming funds. She had told him what she knew, and he’d laughed at her, and threatened to make her “pathetic” parents look like fools in front of all they had left, their connections, if she made any move against him. But that hadn’t been all Wilson Lamar had done to try to ensure her “loyalty.”

  “You think I can forget the past, Wilson?” Her voice sounded unused.

  He guffawed and reached to pat her thigh. His hand lingered, and squeezed. “Might as well, sugar. It isn’t as if deadbeat Mama and Daddy are going to take up your financial slack. You’re going to need a job, and what better job than with someone who really appreciates your gifts? I’ll make it well worth your while. Have you ever been to Washington?”

  Glass splintering brought both of them to their feet. A boy in jeans and a striped T-shirt, with a hood pulled over his head, dashed from the house. He’d collided with a waiter carrying a tray of glasses and knocked both the man and his tray to the ground.

 

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