Pick Your Poison

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by Leann Sweeney


  He flushed and took a gulp of his club soda.

  The doorbell rang again, and Kate left to let Aunt Caroline in. From his expression, Willis didn’t appreciate my jab at his humble beginnings—beginnings he had spent a lifetime disguising with fancy cars and expensive suits.

  “Let me be straightforward, Abby,” he said. “What do you hope to find inside this safe-deposit box?”

  “Something linking Daddy with Ben’s murder.”

  “Do I need to remind you that your father died three months before Ben’s murder?”

  “Daddy may have known more about Ben’s past than he let on,” I said.

  “Like what?”

  “Ben’s using an alias, for one thing. Maybe Ben told him why, and Daddy hid away anything concerning Ben in that box—maybe for Ben’s protection.” I wouldn’t bring up my theory on the adoption connection again—not until I had hard facts rather than guesses.

  Willis smirked. “Abby, you’re cooking up stuff to entertain yourself now.”

  I stacked the checks I’d just gone through back in the box. “Okay. Sure. Whatever you say.”

  “I didn’t mean to discount your very creative ideas,” he said. “But have you considered the much simpler possibility that Ben owed someone some money and was murdered when he didn’t pay that person back? I’d say that’s much more plausible than your speculation about Charlie and Ben’s relationship.”

  “Are you implying Ben was a mob hit? Aren’t they more into assault weapons and concrete? I can’t remember the last victim they rubbed out with poisoned spaghetti, can you?”

  He raised both hands. “Obviously you’ve abandoned common sense completely.” Willis turned his attention to the lime sliver floating in his drink.

  “Common sense was never her strong suit,” said Aunt Caroline from the arched doorway. She’d gone from underdressed the other day to looking as if she were ready for dinner at La Reserve in her black crepe pantsuit.

  “What’s this? Gang-up-on-Abby night?” I could tolerate Willis chastising me. He meant well. But Aunt Caroline had as much right to talk about common sense as about the benefits of monogamy.

  “Let’s have a drink before dinner and forget this for now,” said Kate.

  “Sounds great to me,” I said, anxious to get away from the check search for today.

  We retreated to the family room, where Aunt Caroline sipped white wine and prattled on about how well she would protect the paintings and sculptures we’d entrusted to her. Then she pumped Willis for information on the insured value of every piece of art she’d confiscated, making sure to point out that she planned to will everything back to us. That was when I had a chance to extract a small measure of revenge.

  “Good. We wouldn’t want anyone else to get his ‘Hans’ on our things when you die, Aunt Caroline,” I said.

  Her eyes sparked with anger, and I had to turn away to hide my grin.

  Whenever Diva disappeared, which wasn’t all that often, I usually had trouble sleeping. By one A.M. I was still awake, my eyes focused on the interlocking circles in the plaster ceiling of my bedroom.

  Where did cats go when that urge to wander hit them? Did they have prearranged meetings with each other in the night? Hold little cat conventions to reaffirm their independent spirits? I closed my eyes with a renewed effort to find sleep, and that was when I heard her faint but distinctive meow. I sat up and strained to hear more, then realized where the sound was coming from.

  How in the world did she get into the attic? It was only accessible through the back of a closet.

  I left my bed and crept down the hall, not wanting to wake up Kate. She had to be at school early tomorrow.

  When we were kids, she and I had plotted our escape from the world into our “secret room” in the very attic Diva now inhabited. But once we’d dragged a few prized possessions up there, prepared to disappear from the face of the earth, we immediately realized that anyone who spent more than a few minutes in those stifling confines would shrivel up and die from the heat. Poor Diva was probably melting.

  I went into the guest bedroom, pushed aside the clothes in the closet, and opened the door. A rush of hot, humid air threatened to suck me in.

  “Diva!” I whispered into the darkness. I reached over my head, trying to locate the ceramic pull for the light. “Here, kitty-kitty.” I found the chain, but after several tugs I realized the attic bulb was burned out. Meanwhile, I could hear plaintive cries in the blackness beyond.

  The bedroom light would have to suffice, but though I waited awhile for my eyes to adjust, I still couldn’t see her. I needed a flashlight, and on my way down the hall to find one, I asked myself why all important cat business had to be conducted in the dead of night.

  Wiping my sweaty hands on my boxers, I tiptoed toward the stairs, certain I’d seen a flashlight in the kitchen drawer not too long ago. But about halfway down the front stairway, I stopped abruptly.

  I’d heard something. A squeaking sound. Did it come from outside? I couldn’t tell, so I called out Kate’s name, thinking maybe I’d woken her. No response. And no more noises.

  I grasped the banister, slowly followed the railing down to the foyer, and flipped on the lights. I walked down the hall to the kitchen and started clawing through the catchall drawer. No flashlight there, so I stooped and looked in the cabinet beneath the drawer, mumbling, “If and when I move, half this stuff is getting thrown in—”

  I heard another noise. Behind me.

  I spun in time to see the back doorknob slowly turning.

  15

  My heart thudded against my chest, and I was about to grab the phone or scream for Kate when Steven opened the door. My whole body went limp with relief. “Steven Bradley! You gave me a mouthful of my own heart!”

  “Sorry,” he said. “Thought I could sneak in and out without waking you.”

  “I know I locked that door. And the alarm was on.”

  “No alarm, babe. You musta forgot, as usual.” He then held a key with a sheepish grin. “Found this a month or two after the divorce. Couldn’t sleep, thanks to all the Dr Pepper I drank, so I thought I could sneak in and pick up the blueprints for the Victorian. I saw them in Charlie’s study one time.”

  “Give me that key. Seems it’s slipped your mind that you don’t live here anymore.”

  He walked over and placed it in my outstretched palm.

  “You smell like a wet hog, by the way.” I waved my hand in front of my face.

  “Huh?” He was focused on my T-shirt, which read, Let’s put the fun back in dysfunctional—a phrase that I realized might well have been Steven’s motto.

  “You stink, Steven. Have you taken to living in a ditch these days?”

  “Sorry, the truck needs Freon and it’s about ninety degrees outside.”

  “Do you happen to have a flashlight, by the way? Diva is stuck in the attic.”

  “How’d she get in there?”

  “How would I know? Have you got one?” I said impatiently.

  “Got what?” He had renewed his interest in my chest, and not because he was a slow reader.

  I crossed my arms and whispered hoarsely, “A flashlight!”

  “Sorry. Yeah. In the truck.”

  He left.

  I grabbed a quick drink of water and was just about to get those blueprints when I heard voices outside. Now what?

  I walked to the door, the sound of raised male voices carrying from the back driveway. Though not exactly dressed to meet the neighbors, I went outside, and the night immediately enveloped me in its sticky August embrace.

  I jogged in the direction of what was now a considerable commotion, considering the possibility that all the residents in this particular zip code might be congregated in my yard. But I stopped dead when the glow from the small lights that marked the drive revealed only two men—Steven and someone else—locked in a struggle.

  The assailant’s back was to me, and, figuring I had the advantage, I ran up behind him.
Maybe I could stick my fingers in his eyes or pull his hair, but instead my hands slid down his sweaty cheeks. The guy’s elbows flew out, and one strong arm tossed me off his back like popcorn.

  I landed hard on my tailbone, legs flailing. Steven, meanwhile, had freed himself, and his fist was drawn back.

  “Don’t hit him!” I hollered, realizing who the assailant was. “He’s a cop.”

  For once Steven listened.

  “You know this bozo?” said Kline between gasps, brushing his clothes, then dabbing the cut near his eye. Blood wound in a thin trail down his cheek.

  “Yes, I know him.” I stood. “Sorry for scratching you, but I am immunized against most diseases.”

  As usual, Sergeant Kline was in no mood for jokes.

  Nor was Steven, who took a menacing step forward. “I’m no bozo.”

  Even in the dim light, I could tell the tips of Steven’s ears were scarlet, and that meant trouble. Several guys at the Frontier Club, where we used to party before I became acquainted with the term codependent , knew what sort of trouble.

  “Why don’t we go inside before we wake the neighborhood?” I said. “Besides, I’m half-naked.”

  Those words got their attention. Despite preoccupation with fistfights or territorial disputes, most men remain on full alert for a less-than-adequately-clothed female.

  As I started walking toward the house, I said, “I don’t recall inviting either of you for this two-man square dance.”

  Neither of them responded. They followed in silence up the walkway and into the kitchen. I hated to leave the two of them alone, but I couldn’t comfortably converse in my underwear, so I said, “Make coffee, Steven,” hoping that would keep him occupied.

  I took the back stairs two at a time, and Webster raced past me in the opposite direction, barking frantically, tail wagging.

  “Better late than never, Wonder Dog.” I glanced back as he trotted down to greet the guests. “Better go see if you can lick those intruders to death.”

  Sleepy-eyed Kate was coming out of her room when I entered the upstairs hallway. “Did I hear people yelling?”

  “We had a little Pecos promenade on the lawn. One of the yellers—Steven—is making coffee, so join us, if you’re so inclined. And by the way, do you have a flashlight?”

  “In my nightstand. But who else is downstairs?”

  I explained about Steven and Kline as we walked to her room. Kate did have a flashlight—exactly where she knew it would be.

  “Would you mind rescuing Diva from the attic while I get dressed?” I asked. “Then I need to play referee downstairs. Those two might not be able to stay in the same room together without doing severe damage to each other’s faces.”

  Kate agreed to find the cat, and I went to my bedroom and quickly pulled on shorts and put a bra on under my T-shirt. When I arrived back downstairs, well armed with questions for my policeman friend, I realized I might need a meat cleaver to cut the tension.

  I smiled. “So maybe we can have introductions now. Or have you two already done that?” I glanced back and forth between them and was rewarded with a surly grunt from Steven and an “are you nuts?” look from Kline.

  I took a deep breath. “Okay, then. Guess you’ve already exchanged names.”

  “Not exactly,” said Kline. “He’s not talking. Since you obviously know him, why don’t you enlighten me as to who he is and what he’s doing here?”

  “Uh, sure. Sergeant Kline, this is Steven Bradley, my ex-husband.”

  “Oh,” said Kline, his tone frosted with sarcasm. “Did I stumble in on one of those kinky ‘ex-spouse’ things?”

  Steven was on his feet faster than a prairie fire with a tailwind. He grabbed Kline by the lapels of his sports jacket.

  This set Webster to barking and racing around the table.

  “Who the hell do you think you are, asshole?” Steven said. He was spraying bits of spit into the cop’s face, but Kline had no trouble turning the tables. Within a millisecond, he had Steven restrained.

  I jumped up. “Stop acting as if this is recess at elementary school. He could arrest you, Steven.” I focused on Kline, trying to contain my anger. “What Steven and I do in private is none of your damn business, so I suggest you let him go.”

  Kline pushed Steven away and straightened his jacket. Both of them sat back down.

  I reclaimed my seat as well, my hands shaking as I raised the coffee mug Steven had set on the table for me.

  To his credit, Kline said, “Sorry. I was way out of line.” He pulled out a handkerchief and dabbed the bright slash on his cheek produced earlier by my fingernail.

  “Why were you in my driveway in the middle of the night, Sergeant Kline?” I asked. “I thought you said you were finished with the surveillance.”

  “Thought I was.” Kline offered his pack of Big Red to Steven and me. It was definitely the worse for wear.

  I declined, and Steven ignored the olive branch.

  Kline put two sticks in his mouth and chewed for a second before continuing. “As I waded through the paperwork on my desk after you left the station this morning, I came across a fax from Galveston Police Department. Why didn’t you tell me about the break-in on P Street, Ms. Rose?”

  “You didn’t ask. You had other priorities, remember?”

  Kline flushed.

  My turn to gloat. “But I like a man who can admit when he’s wrong.”

  Steven perked up at this exchange. “Maybe I ought to leave the two of you alone so you can like each other in private.” But he didn’t budge from his chair.

  That figured. He wasn’t about to leave me alone with Kline. I said, “You didn’t exactly call at a reasonable hour, Steven, so don’t pull that ‘poor me’ stuff.” I turned back to Kline. “Tell me, Sergeant. How does a break-in on P Street lead to this fight with Steven?”

  “I was working late on a case tonight, another surveillance, and after my partner took over I decided it wouldn’t hurt to swing by and make sure everything was okay over here. What went down in Galveston concerned me. The report said someone dinged your ex-husband and—Wait a minute. I guess that was you, huh, hero?” Kline smiled.

  Gosh. He could actually do more with his mouth than chew gum tonight.

  “It was only a scratch,” said Steven, staring intently into his coffee.

  “Anyway,” continued Kline, “seemed like a good idea to keep an eye out here until I figure out if that break-in is connected to the murder. But what do I see when I get here? This jerk—excuse me—him”—he thumbed at Steven—“creeping away from the house. How would you expect a cop to react?”

  “I wasn’t creeping,” said Steven with undisguised contempt. “I was doing Abby a favor.”

  “And I was watching out for the lady, okay, Bradley?”

  The knuckles on Steven’s clenched fists grew white. “The lady already has someone to—”

  “Hey! Abby!” Kate called from the back stairs. She appeared seconds later and stopped in the doorway, pulling her robe around her. “I didn’t realize you still had company.”

  “You remember Sergeant Kline, Kate?”

  “Yes.” She nodded at both of them. “Listen, I need help. I can hear Diva, but I need more than a flashlight before I step inside that attic. I think a lightbulb and some reinforcements are in order. I remember the last time she pulled a stunt like this, she nearly shredded my arm during the rescue attempt.”

  And that was how we all ended upstairs five minutes later—and discovered that rescuing Diva from the box where she was trapped was the least of our problems.

  Someone had done the P Street number all over again. The small attic was a ransacked wreck.

  I slept late the next day, with Diva harbored once more in her usual place, purring contentedly each time I reached out to stroke her. She wouldn’t be visiting the attic again in the near future, judging from the amount of food and water she’d consumed after rediscovering the kitchen.

  Last night, Sergeant
Kline—his first name was Jeff, I’d learned—had called for reinforcements to dust the attic for fingerprints and to determine if we’d been a victim of vandalism or theft. They couldn’t decide, and neither could we. I hadn’t exactly done an inventory prior to the ransacking. The police left around four-thirty in the morning, and then Kate and I had dragged the contents of the attic into the guest room so we wouldn’t have to pull things out tomorrow in the daytime heat to reorganize the mess. We had a huge pile of old clothes, picture albums, and household rejects, as well as more proof that Daddy’s need to save things had bordered on psychotic.

  Last night, and now again this morning, I wondered whether this assault on the attic was somehow connected to Ben’s murder. Or could it be related to that safe-deposit box key? After all, I had found the hidden key right after a similar incident at the Victorian. Of course, I had no proof the key was even what the P Street vandal had been looking for.

  Before I could think of any other possible reason for people tearing into our old belongings, the phone rang. I turned on my side and picked up the phone.

  “Ms. Rose? Jeff Kline.”

  “Oh, hi.” I sat up.

  “I’m sorry, did I wake you?”

  “No,” I said.

  “We found no identifiable prints last night. Lots of smudges on those dusty boxes, but my fingerprint expert thinks the perp wore gloves.”

  Diva crawled into my lap and climbed halfway up my chest, rubbing her head on the hand holding the receiver. “Why would anyone be interested in a bunch of old family mementos?”

  “Maybe they were looking for something else. Did you give any thought to the question I posed last night about how this person found the attic?”

  “As far as I know, that attic could have been messed up for months. I haven’t been up there since right after Daddy died.”

  “I checked the reports, thinking maybe my crew made that mess after Ben’s murder, but the person assigned to search upstairs said everything was in order that day.”

  “So,” I said. “This must have happened in the last week.”

 

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