Don't Get Mad, Get Even

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Don't Get Mad, Get Even Page 13

by Barb Goffman


  “Lord give me strength,” Marjorie said. “I told you I’d find time to take you.”

  “When?” Kay screeched.

  “Soon!” Marjorie yelled back.

  This is how they behave with company?

  “A wedding,” I said to the oldest girl. “How wonderful.”

  “Yeah, you’d think so,” Anne said. “Until your mother starts foisting relatives on you that you don’t want to invite.” She looked at me with a hopeful smile. “I think the bride should get to choose her own guests, even if she’s not paying for the reception. Don’t you?”

  Oh boy. I didn’t want to get into the middle of this. “Well, are they relatives on your father’s side of the family? It might be nice to include them, considering his recent passing.”

  Anne’s eyes narrowed, obviously displeased. “Daddy wouldn’t have wanted them invited either. He thought our plans were way too expensive. He kept wanting to cut everything down, including the guest list.”

  “Well, we don’t have that problem now, do we?” Marjorie said, striding toward Anne. “Thanks to the life insurance, you can have the big fancy wedding you want. I don’t think it’s asking very much to invite your cousins! And you!” She turned to Kay. “Stop moping. At least now you can go to any college you want.”

  She took a deep breath and faced me. “I’m sorry. It’s rude of us to talk about money in front of a virtual stranger. It’s just been so stressful. Before Bruce died, we’d been having money problems. With the downturn in the economy, Kayla—Kay—was going to have to attend a state school, and my Anne would have to have a scaled-down wedding. Now Bruce is gone, and so are our money problems. It doesn’t seem right.”

  Indeed. Not right at all. All three of these ladies had a reason to kill.

  “What happened to your husband, if I might ask? He was so young,” I said.

  “He tripped. Fell down the stairs,” said a raspy voice behind me. “Broke his neck.”

  I turned to see an old man with heavy wrinkles around his nose and eyes wheeling himself into the room. He had white hair like mine and a long white beard dotted with crumbs.

  I glanced up for a moment. How come my beard had to be trimmed so much if this guy can wear his beard long? No response. Figures.

  “Dad,” Marjorie said. “I’d like you to meet Joseph Bookman. He’s a grief counselor. Rabbi Cohen sent him.”

  “Nice to meet you. I’m Saul,” he said as we shook hands. His accent sounded Eastern European. “Terrible thing that’s happened. Just terrible.”

  “Dad witnessed the accident,” Marjorie said. “None of the rest of us were home,” she added quickly. A bit too quickly, if you ask me.

  “What did Mr. Goldenblatt trip on?” I asked Saul.

  “My kitten,” Lauren, the youngest girl, said, her gaze glued to the feline in her arms. “Squeaker didn’t mean to do it!”

  “I’m sure she didn’t,” I said. Especially since I didn’t buy the story for a minute.

  “Come,” Saul said, as he grabbed a pretzel from a bowl on the counter. “I’ll show you where it happened.”

  He wheeled himself toward the front of the house, munching, the wooden floor creaking underneath. “I’m sure the rabbi meant well in sending you over,” he said when we were out of earshot of the kitchen. “But I think it’s best if the girls don’t dwell on this.”

  He stopped by the front door, clearly wanting me to leave. But I had a job to do.

  I turned to the long staircase. “Is this where Mr. Goldenblatt fell?”

  “Yeah.” Saul rolled up beside me. “The kitten came out of nowhere. Bruce was on his way up, tripped, and fell to the bottom. Poor Lauren’s been blaming herself. I really wish she wouldn’t.”

  “It’s her cat?” I asked.

  “Yep.” He nodded. “For good now.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “Lauren only got the kitten a couple months ago. Bruce was terribly allergic. He wanted her to take it back to the pound, but Lauren’s attached to Squeaker. She desperately wanted to keep her. Marjorie told Bruce he should keep trying the allergy shots, though to be fair they weren’t working.” He shrugged. “So now the girl has no father, but she has a cat. Not the best trade off, if you ask me.”

  Me either. Now all the women in the house had a motive. The yelling in the kitchen resumed, something about chicken or fish. At least they weren’t considering pork.

  “That must have been a horrible thing to see,” I said.

  Saul stared at the floor. “Yeah, it was terrible.”

  Was the old man covering for someone? One of them could have pushed Bruce down the stairs. Did the mother care more about throwing a fancy wedding and sending her daughter to an expensive college than she did about her husband? Or was the bride so selfish that she’d kill her father for the life insurance money? Or her sister with the nickname—was attending some impressive school that important to her? Or the youngest one? Did she choose a kitten over her father?

  Sheesh. I’d like to believe none of them was capable of such a horror. Unfortunately I feared otherwise.

  “You live here?” I asked Saul.

  “Yeah, ever since my Estelle died five years ago.” He nodded at a room off the hallway. “Moved in there. It used to be Bruce’s home office, but he was nice enough to convert it into a bedroom for me.” He rolled closer. “Look, Mr. Bookman, I want you to know, these girls loved their father. And Marjorie loved her husband. I know how it must have sounded back there. So much bickering, especially at a time like this. But that’s just their way.”

  I bent down so Saul and I would be eye to eye, and I laid a hand on his arm. “It must be hard for you, being the only man in the house. Now that Bruce is gone, you’re their protector.”

  He nodded. “Not that I’m really needed. Marjorie’s a very strong woman.”

  “Do you go to shul, Saul?” I asked, rising.

  “Synagogue? Of course, on the High Holy Days. It’s not so easy getting around with this chair, but I manage. We’ll all go together next week for Rosh Hashanah.”

  “A time to ask for forgiveness of sins.” I began pacing. “There are many sins in this world. It can often seem confusing. If you’re trying to help someone you love—to protect them from the consequences of something they’ve done—is that a sin?”

  Saul sat quietly for a moment. “I’d like to think that when God closes the Book of Life each Yom Kippur, that he considers everything a person has lived through and everything he’s done, not just one act. We all know good men can do bad things.”

  “And good women.”

  He stared at me, his lips curling. He wanted to tell me what happened. I could see it.

  “Mr. Bookman,” he finally said. “I think you should go.”

  “Go? Already?” Marjorie approached us with a plate of rugelach. “You just got here. And I haven’t even offered you anything to eat or drink.”

  I wasn’t getting anywhere with Saul. Maybe I could work on Marjorie directly. I turned to her, selected a piece of pastry filled with raisins, and smiled. “A glass of water would be nice. Thank you.”

  Saul wheeled to his bedroom, muttering to himself, while I followed Marjorie to the kitchen.

  * * * *

  An hour later, my stomach was stuffed, my head was pounding from all the yelling, and I knew more about the impending wedding than anyone would ever want to know. (Apparently having the same vase and flowers at every table is out. Each table needs its own “pop of style,” whatever that means.) But I wasn’t any closer to figuring out which of these women needed to unburden herself, and I had the feeling I was wearing out my welcome. I needed to speak to each one alone. But how?

  Just then the kitten scampered past. Ah. I glanced up. Thanks.

  “Lauren,” I said. “I can tell you feel bad about Squeaker tripping your dad. Why don’t we take a little walk and talk about it?”

  “Okay,” she said and hopped off her barstool.

  “I hear
your dad was allergic to Squeaker,” I said as we entered the hallway, heading toward the front of the house.

  She shuffled next to me, focusing on the floor. “Yeah. Anytime Dad was in the same room with Squeaker, his eyes turned red and he started sneezing.”

  “Must have been hard for you.”

  “Uh huh.” She looked up. “Dad wanted me to give Squeaker back, but Mom convinced him to keep taking the allergy shots. He told me he’d try them for another month, but if things didn’t get any better…”

  “How’d that make you feel?”

  “Mad. I mean I know it wasn’t Dad’s fault, but why couldn’t I have a pet like everyone else?”

  I couldn’t tell if she was just a typical self-involved teen or something worse. I needed to test her.

  “You know,” I said as we approached the front staircase, “your grandpa could only see what occurred from a distance. Maybe it just looked like your dad tripped on Squeaker. Maybe he actually tripped on something else. Loose carpeting, perhaps.”

  Her eyes lit up. “You think?”

  She raced to the stairs and scrutinized each one. I followed her up. She looked so hopeful. She really believed it could be true. A good feeling rose in my heart. She couldn’t have pushed her father.

  When we reached the top, she turned to me, shoulders hunched. “I don’t see any loose carpeting. Thanks for trying, Mr. Bookman. I guess Squeaker really is to blame.” She burst into tears and ran down the hall. A moment later, a door slammed and loud music began blaring from behind the door.

  Great. I made a child cry. More to repent for.

  I bent down to examine the top step. Had God sent me on a wild-goose chase? Could Goldenblatt really have just fallen over the cat? Heck, maybe he threw himself down the stairs to get away from all this squabbling. I needed to talk to the other girls to—

  I felt hands on my shoulder blades. Then a shove! I began tumbling down the stairs. Oof! Urk! Hey, my suffering was supposed to be over!

  I landed at the bottom and smacked my brow hard against the entryway table’s base. Apples and pears began falling on my head. Lord, what have I done to deserve this?

  When the pounding stopped, I opened my eyes. Blinked. The room spun. I shut my eyes and waited for someone to come help me up, fearing it could take a while. Between the music upstairs and the yelling from the kitchen, I doubted anyone had heard me fall.

  Hey. Wait a minute. Who pushed me?

  Not Lauren. I would have seen her coming. Couldn’t have been Marjorie. I could clearly hear her in the kitchen. And there was Anne, yelling back, also in the kitchen. And Kay’s complaints were wafting down the hallway, too.

  What the heck?

  The floor creaked, and I felt a shadow fall over me. “God, forgive my terrible temper again,” Saul said. “But he was trying to hurt my girls, to blame them for what happened.”

  Saul?

  I opened my eyes. His flew wide.

  “You’re alive?” he said.

  “You pushed me?” I said, eyeing his wheelchair. “And Bruce? But how?”

  He suddenly appeared very old and scared. “The elevator.” He nodded toward one of the closed doors in the hall. “Bruce had it installed for me when I moved in.”

  An elevator in a house? I guess I wasn’t as up on the modern world as I’d thought.

  “I don’t understand,” I said, trying to get up but slumping back down. Oy, my head hurt. “He let you move into his home. Gave you his office. Enabled you to get around the whole house, apparently. Why would you do this to him, Saul?”

  He paused. For a moment he seemed far away, lost in thought. Then he held out his left forearm and pushed up the sleeve. Tattooed numbers. I sighed deeply.

  “I was a teenager when we were sent to the camps,” he said. “Auschwitz. I never saw my mother and sisters again.” He shivered and shook his head, as if he could make the memories disappear. “I was the only member of my family to survive. When the war ended, I promised myself I’d create a new family and I’d protect them from everything.”

  “But Bruce loved you and the girls. Didn’t he? How was he a threat?”

  Saul gazed toward the kitchen, where the argument had moved on to the flavor of the wedding cake. “Marjorie and the girls raise their voices, but not Bruce. Never Bruce. Until the economy turned, and he lost a lot of money in the market.” Saul wrung his hands. “He wanted Marjorie and the girls to sacrifice. A small wedding. A state school. That I could understand, but he had no right to yell at my Marjorie.”

  He paused. I stared quietly at him, hoping my silence would encourage him to continue. Finally, he did.

  “The day Bruce died,” Saul said, “he and Marjorie had another argument about money, much louder than the one going on right now. He called her extravagant, said she was spoiling the girls. Marjorie called him a tightwad and insisted on her way, but Bruce said that for once he was going to get his way. Marjorie’s waterworks wouldn’t work. Marjorie stormed out, and Bruce headed up the stairs here. I was at the top, where I’d been listening. I couldn’t help myself. I was so angry. My Marjorie deserved to be treated like a queen! You don’t scream at queens.” Tears spilled from his eyes. “No one suspected a thing. Just like they won’t with you.”

  He grabbed the ceramic fruit bowl and raised it over my head.

  “Daddy, no!” Marjorie ran toward us. “Not again!”

  Saul’s arms quivered as he lowered the bowl. I let out a deep breath. I’d died once before. Believe me, once had been enough.

  Marjorie grabbed the bowl from Saul’s outstretched hands and clutched it to her chest.

  “You know?” he asked her.

  A tear ran down her cheek. “I thought you did it for the money, Daddy. So Anne could have her wedding and Kayla could go to a good school. I didn’t know you killed Bruce because of me. You shouldn’t have. I loved him. He was a good man.”

  Saul leaned back in the chair, his face ashen. “It was the yelling, Marjorie. I couldn’t stand that he yelled at you.”

  “I’m a grown woman, Daddy. I could have handled it.”

  “I know,” he said quietly. “I lost my temper. I’m sorry.”

  While they were talking, I’d struggled to my feet. My head hurt, but I’d felt worse. Marjorie seemed to notice me at that moment.

  “Oh, Mr. Bookman. Please don’t turn my father in. He did a terrible thing, but his heart was in the right place. He’s suffered so much already, and we need him here with us.”

  I looked at her and then at Saul for a good while, and I understood why God had sent me.

  “You should go to your rabbi, both of you. Confess what happened. He’ll help you find your way.”

  Marjorie’s eyes widened, afraid, but Saul nodded.

  “You’re right, Bookman. I’ll go. We’ll both go.” He held out his hand, and I shook it. “It’ll be good getting it all off my chest. Maybe we can find a way to let Lauren know that she wasn’t to blame because of her cat. And I’m sorry about…this.” He gestured at the bowl and had the decency to look sheepish.

  I nodded and turned back to Marjorie. “I have to ask. You said you weren’t home at the time. How did you know what happened?”

  “Yeah,” Saul said. “How?”

  She set the bowl on the table. “I was only gone a couple minutes, Daddy. Remember? Got as far as the corner, then turned around. I came in, saw Bruce, and screamed. You called from upstairs that you were on the phone with 911. You said Bruce had tripped over Squeaker halfway up the stairs. Fell all the way down.”

  “So?” Saul asked.

  “I knew Bruce couldn’t have tripped over Squeaker. Bruce would have known if Squeaker were anywhere near him. He started sneezing whenever the cat came within five feet.” She sniffed hard and reached out, plucking a large crumb from Saul’s beard. “And then I saw some pretzel crumbs on Bruce. You’re the only one of us who eats pretzels, Daddy. You eat them constantly, as if you’re afraid we’ll run out of food. I knew Bruce mus
t have made it to the top of the stairs, and you must have touched him. It’s the only way crumbs from your beard would have fallen onto him. So I knew you lied about how he fell.”

  Saul turned my way, looking surprised yet also proud. “That’s my girl,” he said. “A regular Columbo.”

  * * * *

  I said my goodbyes, left the brownstone, and by the time I reached the sidewalk, poof! I was home again. My hair was long, and I had on my favorite robe and sandals.

  The swirling cloud appeared before me. “A job well done, Job.”

  “So it was Saul, huh?” I said. “I didn’t suspect him for a minute. I knew all about elevators, but I didn’t know they put them in houses. That’s what I get for taking classes from Moses. Sure, he knows his Torah, but he also got lost in the desert for forty years. I never should’ve expected he’d get all the details on the modern world right.”

  God chuckled.

  “I hope I handled things the way you wanted,” I said.

  “Yes. You got Saul to confess his sin and Marjorie to admit she knew about it. Good work.”

  “Too bad I nearly had to die to do it,” I said.

  “Well,” God said, “it’s not like you haven’t died before.”

  Easy for you to say.

  “If there’s nothing else,” I said, “I think there’s a pinochle game going on.”

  The mist began swirling more.

  “I’ll speak to you again soon, Job.” If a cloud could wink, I’d swear this one did. “Hopefully things won’t be so dangerous the next time.”

  Next time?!

 

  “The Lord Is My Shamus” originally appeared in Chesapeake Crimes: This Job Is Murder, published by Wildside Press in 2012. This story was nominated for the 2012 Agatha Award.

  One thing mystery authors (perhaps all authors) often try to do is come up with an idea for an original protagonist. I’m no different, but it’s not so easy. Until one day I had a eureka moment. Who’d be more original than God? I hadn’t recalled him starring in any amateur-sleuth series. Of course, there’s probably a reason for that. If God is omniscient, then he already knows who did it, which would take the fun, and the mystery, out of the story. So I stored God away in the back of my mind, until I was trying to come up with a story idea for Chesapeake Crimes: This Job Is Murder. I saw the word “job,” which was intended to mean something you do for money, and I thought “Job,” the tortured biblical character. What if God sent Job back to Earth to do some investigating for him and try to right some wrongs? And if Job happened to suffer some more while he was at it, well, would that be so bad? I shared the idea with a friend, who laughed with delight. A job for Job. Yes, I knew I had something there.

 

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