She agreed before her faced darkened. “Poor Bonnie—she’s Stephanos’s wife. They were only married a little while ago. I met them last week, but they seemed like wonderful people. You have to find his killer.”
Of course I did.
She went to the doors and hesitated, turned around, and looked at me. “Oh, one more thing, Tuck.”
“Yeah?” The look on her face reminded me that women, like private dicks and coppers, have a sixth sense about all things dangerous.
“Later, you will explain about Sassy,” she said, and smiled the smile I knew meant trouble.
eight
Jorge the waiter pulled his motorcycle into a parking space two lots west of the John S. Mosby Center for American Studies and turned off the engine. It was well after midnight and the security patrols were all at the campus security office having coffee. He’d have about forty-five minutes to get in and get out before the patrols made their next rounds through the University of the Shenandoah Valley campus. While he might fit in on campus during the day—he was twenty-seven, average height and build, shaggy dark hair, with three days worth of straggly, untrimmed growth on his face—explaining why he was roaming campus at this hour might be tricky. They might ask for a campus ID. In particular, if things went bad, he didn’t want to explain the short-barreled semi-automatic on his ankle or the package inside his leather motorcycle jacket.
Forty-five minutes had to be enough.
The campus was empty and dark. He dodged the ornate street-lamps winding along the roads and courtyards, staying in the shadows. The campus was empty—not even a late-night jogger or strolling couple broke the cones of light. There were no sounds but an occasional night bird. No car engines. No town noises. Nothing but silence.
Jorge made his way across campus to the three-story brick history center where he stood beneath a tall oak watching the building’s windows. Satisfied there were no faculty lingering and no teaching assistants cramming extra-credit, he took the long way around to the rear of the building where no streetlamp shined and both of the building’s corner floodlights were off.
The double-security lock on the rear door was no hazard—Jorge had a master key—and he was inside and slipping onto the third floor five minutes ahead of schedule. Using only a small, red-beamed flashlight, he maneuvered down the main hall, past the conference room and reception desk, to the senior staff hall. There, he found the corner office door and master-keyed his way inside.
Once the door was relocked, he took out his cell phone and sent a simple one-word message: “Inside.”
Jorge moved faster. First, he slipped a small, vinyl case from inside his black leather motorcycle jacket and opened it on the large oak desk. There were three electronic devices, none larger than a bottle cap, which he secreted around the room in strategic places he’d planned out earlier from diagrams. He placed one inside the desk phone and one in the extension on the small conference table across the room. He slipped the larger one behind a framed photograph of a handsome, fortyish man roughhousing with a large black Labrador retriever—the dog was getting the best of his master. The photograph was selected, not by random, but because it had more dust accumulated on its frame than the others sitting on the credenza behind the desk.
Next, Jorge sat in the plush leather chair behind the antique desk and began a systematic and careful search of its drawers. Then came the files atop the desk. The outbox. Credenza, bookshelf, and filing cabinet. No space was left untouched.
There was no frustration when his search failed to yield trophies. He hadn’t expected any and yet he’d hoped for something to justify a late night report and perhaps a few more days on the job. Six-hundred a day went a long way.
Often, small failures meant bigger retainers.
Before he slipped out of the professor’s office, he sent one more simple message. This time, it was two words. “Complete. Nothing.”
Then, Jorge—who was neither a college student nor named Jorge—checked the outer office area, slipped into the hall, and relocked Professor Angela Hill-Tucker’s office door.
nine
Katalina—Kat to her friends at the county property office—made the turn off I-81 onto County Route 37 and headed south around Winchester. She was sleepy and knew she’d drank too much at the club. But it was Friday night and it had been months since she’d done more than work and sleep and work some more. Her second job took too much out of her and paid her little more than nothing—the cost of the right papers and a chance at a new life in Virginia.
Her new girlfriends—two older divorcees and one loud party girl who were as obnoxious as they were fun and friendly—wouldn’t take no for an answer and swept her to a night out. They ended up at a nearby bar whose promise was cheap beer, loud music, and country boys for any rodeo she wished to ride.
Kat wasn’t looking for any bronco riding, but a few drinks and some dancing made her reminisce about happier days. Days before a man named Anatoly came into her life. She took fifty dollars from her rent money, donned a tight, bright-red dress cut too low for the meek at heart, and drove her dilapidated Escort ten miles across the West Virginia border.
Did she know what she was doing?
Hours later, and too many sweet drinks down, she wasn’t sure.
She had to concentrate to keep the car steady and under the speed limit. She couldn’t afford to attract the police. The alcohol coursing through her veins would mean jail. Jail would mean an unexplained absence. Both would mean Anatoly.
Fifteen minutes later, she navigated two backstreets, nearly collided with a bicycle left along the road, and turned into the entrance to her condo.
It was then she saw him. He was the cliché he portrayed—a tall, wide, muscular man with short black hair and dark sunglasses even at night. He wore a heavy black leather jacket and dark pants. He smoked a cigarette, leaning on the side of his dark four-door in the far corner of the center lot. Even in the faint moonlight, he was unmistakable.
Anatoly.
Her breath caught. Adrenaline washed the fuzziness of alcohol from her eyes. Her fingers screamed from her grip on the steering wheel. She was already committed to the entrance but she veered hard left and made a tight circle, accelerating out of the turn and speeding back to the main street before Anatoly could get a good look at her car.
His car headlights came on.
She crushed down on the gas and headed across town. She fumbled in her clutch bag and found her cell phone. Three times she dialed the wrong number. She was supposed to commit it to memory—stored numbers or speed dials were dangerous. But at the moment, fear was hiding it. On the fourth attempt, she connected with a voicemail.
“Dmitry, please answer—”
The voice on the mailbox was not familiar.
She swerved down a side street trying to remain undetected. “Think, Katalina.” Finally, she reached a voicemail only answered with a number. “Dmitry! You say no call you unless important. Please. It is Anatoly. He come to house. He chase me. Help me. Anatoly, he coming.”
She ended the call and turned right, heading south toward the highway.
The headlights behind her were gone, replaced by a higher, wider set she was hoping was a pickup truck like the local boys drove. She wheeled into an all-night convenience store and parked around the side where no one from the street could see her car.
She redialed the number again but got the same voicemail. Once. Twice. Three times.
Tears drained her makeup into black tracks down her cheeks. She could not face Anatoly—not tonight. Not again. Not ever.
Kat wiped her eyes and dug into her clutch bag again. This time, she slipped out a plain white business card secreted in her makeup kit. The card was simple—one name printed in the center and a handwritten phone number below it.
If she called the number, there would be no going back. Not to Anatoly. Not even to Dmitry. But if Dmitry did not reach her in time—if Anatoly found her first—there would be no going back anywhe
re.
She dialed the number, whispering a prayer, and cursed at the same time.
A grandfatherly voice answered, “Good evening.”
“Yes. I … I am sorry—” For a moment she considered hanging up but realized she had forgotten to mask her number with *67. She closed her eyes. “You say to call if ever I needing help. I am afraid. Dmitry, he will not answer. I am in very terrible fear.”
“I understand, Katalina. Please, do not be afraid. Tell me where you are. I can have someone accompany you to my home. You will be safe there.”
She sighed. “No. It must be you. I will not go with anyone. Just you. You must know this, yes? A man like you must understand, yes? Anatoly and you, you are not so different, no?”
The old voice laughed over the sounds of many mumbling voices. “Forgive me, I am unable to leave just now. And, Katalina, Anatoly and I are very much different people. Please, do not confuse us. Tell me where you are.”
“Please, you must tell me, what will it cost—what must I repay you to help me?” Kat’s hands trembled and she peered around the car as though someone might be just outside. “What must I do for you?”
The smooth, grandfatherly voice sounded sincere—comforting. “My dear, Katalina. You owe me nothing. If an old man cannot protect a young woman in trouble, then why grow old at all?”
She closed her eyes as rivers of black streamed down her face. “Thank you. I will meet your men. Please, hurry them. I am so afraid, Nicholai. I am so afraid.”
ten
After wandering the house for clues and snooping on all the hush-hush conversations the rich-folk were having—that’s what private eyes do—I got bored and looked for Angel. A few of the conversations were, to say the least, interesting. Oh, one or two voiced genuine concern for Stephanos Grecco’s murder, but most of the guests never heard of him. I listened to catty sniping about who wore what dress and the way Mr. Him undressed someone else’s Mrs. Her with their eyes. Then there were never-ending complaints about the police taking too long, “Dear God, I want to go home—can’t it wait until morning? He’ll still be dead then, won’t he?”
Someone even sniped the caterer should have been murdered.
Did anyone understand one of their own was lying in a pool of blood face down in the middle of the ballroom? Didn’t they notice Stephanos Grecco bought it during a champagne dance in front of their eyes?
No. They didn’t. “Oh, look, a murder. Waiter, the champagne isn’t chilled right.”
Still, I didn’t think the caterer deserved to be murdered—no matter how slow the service.
I found Angel in the rear garden patio under the watchful eye of a uniformed deputy. She sat at a small wrought-iron table with Stephanos Grecco’s wife, Bonnie. She was an elegant lady in her late twenties—maybe in her thirties. Her slim, sleek figure and platinum hair should have come with a removable sign reading “trophy wife” for whenever she was with the round, frumpy, and much older Stephanos Grecco.
But, based on what I’d heard in the crowd, perhaps the sign was unnecessary.
Bonnie wiped tears from her face—at least appeared to—and with each dab, she glanced into a compact mirror in her hand to check her appearance.
“I don’t believe this happened,” Bonnie sniffed. “I just can’t.”
“It’s going to be all right, Bonnie,” Angel said, touching her arm. “It’s very difficult, I know. I recently lost my husband. Whatever I can do, just ask.”
“Well, not too lost.” I slipped into an empty chair beside Angel. “You two shouldn’t be out here, Angel. The cops—”
“It’s all right. Captain Sutter said we could sit here. Away from the crowd, I mean.”
Bonnie looked at her and then around the garden. “I know.”
Angel just smiled. Sometimes, without thinking, she forgets others cannot hear or see me. “I’m sorry, of course you know. I just didn’t want you to feel rushed. Take all the time you need.”
“Thank you.” Bonnie dabbed a tear and straightened her gown. “I wish I had gone to the police sooner.”
Excuse me? What?
“Bonnie?” Angel squeezed Bonnie’s hand. “What do you mean?”
“Steph’s murder is my fault. I could have stopped it.”
Angel blinked several times and shot a glance at me as she leaned forward in her chair. “What do you mean?”
“It’s my fault.” Bonnie dropped her face into her handkerchief and sobbed for a long time. Then, she turned away from Angel and set me back on my seat.
“Steph’s bullet was meant for me.”
“You?” Angel stared. “Why?”
“Steph and I were arguing.”
Angel nodded. “Yes, I know—it was hard not to see you two fighting. But how does—”
“I got real mad.” Bonnie looked down. “He was drinking too much again. So I grabbed the nice man at our table—the very handsome young man—and Steph got madder.”
“But why do you think the shooting was meant for you?”
“I know it was.” Bonnie cleared her throat and looked around the garden as though there were spies behind the forsythias. “The letters.”
“The letters?”
Bonnie took Angel’s hand in hers and whispered, “I got two letters this past month. They said they were going to get even. I’d destroyed them and they were going to get even. One said that I’d betrayed him and I had to pay. They said I’d taken everything from him and he wouldn’t let me go on hurting people.”
Angel’s mouth went agape waiting for more details. None came.
I said, “We gotta get those letters, Angel. And—”
“Do you still have them?” She was way ahead of me. “Do you know who sent them, Bonnie? Do you know what they mean?”
I had trained her well.
“No, I don’t. The letters were like a computer printed them, not handwritten, and they weren’t signed. I showed them to Steph and he laughed. He said he got letters, too, and it was old news. He said forget about it and he’d take care of it.”
“Angel,” I said, “you better get Bear. He needs to hear this.”
Angel stood up but Bonnie held tight to her hand, pulling her back into her chair. “Please, don’t go. I’m so afraid. He could be anywhere. If he can try to kill me here—if he can kill Steph in front of all of you—I’m not safe anywhere.”
“It’ll be all right, Bonnie. I promise.”
“No, I’m not safe. He’s going to kill me next.”
eleven
“Revenge?” Captain Sutter stood with Bear beside the wrought iron table watching Angel console Bonnie Grecco. “Revenge for what?”
“I am not sure, Captain,” Bonnie said. “If I knew, I would tell you.”
“Committing murder in public shows a lot of anger,” Captain Sutter said, “or arrogance. And it takes a lot of planning.”
“And no one saw him and there’s no evidence yet.” Bear’s crossed arms and set jaw showed frustration. “We need a break.”
For the past twenty minutes, Captain Sutter and Bear had listened to Bonnie’s story over and over—pulling details and fishing for lost memories. None were caught. So far, all we had were a couple threatening letters and a dead Stephanos Grecco.
“Bonnie, where are the letters?” Bear asked.
She shrugged. “I’m not sure. Steph had them. I don’t know what he did with them, but they must be at home in his office.”
“Okay. As soon as we’re through here, I’ll have two of my detectives escort you home to search for the letters and anything else helpful.”
Bonnie nodded.
Angel asked, “Would you like me to come with you, Bonnie?”
“No.” Bonnie feigned a smile. “I’ll be all right. I’m afraid I’m a little wobbly right now, and, to be honest, I don’t want to stay at home tonight. I can’t.”
I understood. “She’s terrified, Angel. And distraught.”
“Take your time,” Angel said, patting her hand.
“It’ll all sort out—we’ll help you. Bear will find the killer.”
“Thank you.” Bonnie looked away. “I’m afraid I know very little about Steph. I don’t even know about a will or his finances—not about burial stuff. I cannot believe I was so stupid.”
Bear leaned in. “You’re not stupid. It’s normal—well, as normal as these things can be. Angel knows what to do. You’re in good hands.”
“Bonnie,” Captain Sutter said, “You said you have no idea who sent the letters or what they meant. Do you think Stephanos knew? I mean, he seemed unconcerned about them, right?”
“No, he didn’t take them seriously at all, so I never thought twice about the threats afterward. I asked and he dismissed it. Like always. If I asked about his past, he changed the subject. He never liked talking about it.”
“Oh?” Bear’s eyebrows went up. “Why?”
“He didn’t like talking about his money. You know, about business. He didn’t with me, anyway.”
I said, “Bear, I’ve been snooping around. You know, listening to the guests. Nobody knew anything about him. Nothing. Zip. Crap-ola. Odd, don’t you think?”
“Really?” Bear looked down and frowned. “What did your husband do for a living, Bonnie?”
She thought a moment; a moment too long for me. “He was a, what do you call it, a day trader? Yes, a day trader. He worked the stock markets and made private business deals. You know, like financing deals for people. He seemed to be very good at it.”
“What company did he work for?” Bear glanced over at Captain Sutter and she didn’t look convinced either. “I’d like to contact them.”
“None I that I know of. He worked alone.”
“But, you said he did business deals.” Captain Sutter’s eyes narrowed in the way I’d seen her when a suspect was weaving a tale. “We’d like some names, Bonnie. Did any of those deals go bad? Anyone whose money Stephanos lost?”
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