“I am certain this dog belongs to a friend of mine,” I said. “How much will it cost me to spring him from jail?
“It’s $62.50.”
I handed her my VISA card. “Sold.” At least someone was getting her pet back today.
I jotted my number down on a scrap of paper and handed it to the woman. “Call me if a big fluffy gray cat comes in.”
She nodded, and resumed her close inspection of whatever it was on the computer screen, so close her nose was nearly touching the monitor. It was probably a video of a cat playing a piano.
Luckily, I already had Gumdrop’s carrier in the car, so I jammed Tito inside, making sure I didn’t lose any fingers in the process, and drove straight to Aztec Beads.
TWENTY-ONE
Tracy wasn’t at her usual station by the front door when I arrived at Aztec Beads with Tito. Not knowing what else to do, I took him out to the small yard and released him from the carrier. I was glad he decided not to attack me. Instead, he ran off to mark his territory in the dense greenery around the patio.
As I stood under the balcony, I looked up and saw a thin wire hanging down between the floorboards of the deck above me. It looked like the kind of cord that had held Rosie’s necklace together. I decided to take a closer look. Maybe this wire or something else on the balcony could give me a clue about what had happened the night before.
There was a jewelry workshop going on in the classroom, and no one was in the shop. Tracy was probably still at the hospital with her mom. The coast was clear. I could go upstairs and take a look around without anyone wondering what I was doing.
I crept up the back stairs and onto the balcony. The thin beading wire was wedged between two planks near the top stair. It didn’t look like anyone from the police department had spent any time here looking at this as a crime scene. There was no crime-scene tape or fingerprint dust. That must have meant Detective Grant was still trying to decide if Rosie’s near-fatal strangulation was simply an accident that didn’t need any investigation, or if it was an attempted murder. I looked to see if there were any beads from Rosie’s necklace lying around. I didn’t see any, but I did see the scrapes on the stairs where Rosie had struggled to get her feet back underneath her.
I decided to be bold and see if I could look around the apartment. Maybe something in there would help me discover whether Tracy was involved in her mother’s “accident” and perhaps help me determine if there was any reason to think Tracy would want Misty dead.
One of the best things would be to discover something that would clear Tessa as a suspect. I tried the sliding glass door, but it was locked. I pulled a pen out of my handbag and used its lid to see if I could pop the lock on the door. No such luck. I simply wasn’t as competent as MacGyver, from the eighties television show, when it came to improvising tools. If MacGyver were here, he’d have had this door open in about thirty seconds, using only a piece of dental floss and the lint from his pockets. I decided I could at least get the wire out from between the floorboards with my pen, and I knelt down at the bannister to see if I could get it free. I had just grabbed hold of the end of the string and was giving it a good tug when the sliding glass door behind me flew open.
“Get out of here!” It was Tracy, standing in the doorway, her body silhouetted by the lights in the living room behind her. She looked much stronger than I’d seen her before, hands held tightly, elbows bent, like a boxer, right for a fight.
I jumped up. “Hey, wait, Tracy. It’s Jax,” I said, trying to calm her.
“Wh- wh- what are you doing here? I thought you were trying to break in. We’ve had some trouble with that before, people coming up from the alley and trying to unlock the sliding glass door.” Had she seen me only seconds before, I would have been one of the people she caught trying to do just that.
“I wanted to check around up here. About your mom’s accident.”
Tracy was still wound up. “Why would you want to do that, Jax? Coming back to the scene of the crime?”
“No, I dropped off Tito—did you know he was missing?” I said, grasping at anything that might turn her away from the idea that I had anything to do with Rosie’s injury. “Look, I saw some beading wire stuck between a couple of the boards up here. I wanted to check it out and see if it might be a clue.”
“Well, you can stop snooping around and get out of here.” Tracy’s voice trembled.
“Hey, slow down, I’m not doing anything wrong here. I’m trying to help. I’d like to figure out who hurt your mom.”
Tears streaked Tracy’s face. “It was you, Jax!” she shouted.
“How could that be?” I said, shocked. “I tried to save your mom. I was right there with you, trying to save her!” I was shouting now, too, so frazzled from the last two days of craziness that I couldn’t keep myself pulled together.
“I didn’t see anyone with my mom when I first found her choking. You could have pushed her and left her to die,” Tracy said. “Then you came back to finish her off.” Her shouting decreased as she wiped the tears from her face. Tracy was afraid. I couldn’t tell if she was afraid of me, or if it was the thought of losing her mom that frightened her more.
“Tracy, look, I wouldn’t do that,” I said, forcing myself to relax. My hands were balled into fists, and I opened them, palms out, trying to show her I meant no harm to her or her mother. But she wouldn’t let down her guard.
“Jax. Get out!” she demanded. “Just leave before I call the police!”
TWENTY-TWO
I sat in the Ladybug, my heart pounding. I needed some answers and there was one person who I knew might be able help—if she was well enough to talk to me. I headed for the hospital. I hated going back after having been there late last night. Hospitals give me the heebie-jeebies.
I hoped Rosie would finally be conscious, and help sort this mess out. If she said she had simply tripped or fallen, then we could all take a big step back and stop pointing fingers at each other about who had tried to murder her. We could instead focus on who killed Misty. Better yet, we could let Detective Grant figure out what happened, and all of us could get back to some semblance of a normal life.
I found Rosie’s room and knocked quietly on the closed door. I nearly jumped out of my skin when a big guy with a beer belly hanging over his belt yanked the door open. He looked like he was expecting someone else.
“Hey, you here to see Leona?”
“Is Rosie here?” I asked in my quiet voice reserved for hospitals and libraries. But, as I heard the ruckus from inside the room, I realized there was absolutely no need to be quiet. There was a slew of people in the room—all family and friends of Rosie’s roommate Leona. They had spread a big picnic across the hospital bed, and everyone was diving into fried chicken and coleslaw. Was that a cooler on the floor?
“That grumpy, bossy woman?” Leona’s friend asked. “Yeah, she’s here, but she’s not talkin’ so much since they gave her a shot. She’d gotten all up in my face about us bein’ so loud.”
I could imagine. Rosie was an expert at “up in your face,” although I couldn’t see how she could have done it while wearing an oxygen mask.
“Well, you guys are being a bit loud,” I said, but Leona’s friend wasn’t paying attention to me anymore. He was opening a giant bag of chips with his teeth and checking to see if he could find a baseball game on the TV.
I sat down next to Rosie’s bed. She wasn’t moving, but she wasn’t really asleep. If you’d asked me, she looked like she was pretending to sleep. My sister Connie and I used to pretend like that when our mom came to our room and accused us of playing instead of sleeping. I hoped Rosie was just pretending.
“Rosie?”
Silence. All except for Leona’s party going on about eight feet away.
Rosie’s hands, looking remarkably small, rested on top of the blankets by her sides. I put a hand on top of hers, glad to feel its warmth. I’d never seen her so calm, but right now I’d love to see her yelling at someone, to
see she was back to her version of normal: high strung.
She had a gauze dressing around her neck, a clear plastic oxygen mask over her face and mouth, and all sorts of tubes and wires attached to her. Next to the bed a machine beeped and buzzed, and a read-out showed all sorts of things: heart rate, oxygen levels, temperature, and possibly any recent seismic activity.
Her eyes fluttered and opened. She brought her finger up to her mask and tapped on the side of it. Her lips parted. She was trying to communicate. I pressed the nurse’s call button. It was a major miracle when someone came in right away. The nurse looked more like a bouncer than a medical professional, but what we needed at that moment was a bouncer, so it worked out perfectly. The nurse’s nametag said Edward. Not Eddie. Not Ed. Edward. Edward was one big, serious dude in aqua scrubs.
“Okay, Leona, time for everyone to go,” said the nurse. All of Leona’s friends and relatives looked disappointed. Their party was going to have to move. “All of you. Right now. Out of here.” Edward was holding the door open for the group of picnickers. Grudgingly, they each picked up something and headed out the door.
“She was pointing to her mouth,” I told Edward. “I didn’t want to take off her mask without you here.”
“Good thinking,” the nurse said. “People come in here and think they’ve seen enough medical shows on TV that they know what they should do, but they don’t.”
Edward reached down and gently pulled the mask away from Rosie’s face.
“Hello there, beautiful,” he said with a big smile.
In her weak state, she beckoned him closer to her.
“Thanks for getting rid of those assholes,” Rosie whispered.
I had trouble keeping a straight face. One thing I knew for sure: Rosie was going to survive. Edward was a true medical pro, and he helped Rosie get comfortable, propped her up in bed, and gave her some juice. He checked her monitors and then left us alone. Leona was still on the other side of the curtain, but since all of her guests had left, the room was absolutely silent except for the machines humming quietly.
“Do you feel like talking?” I asked.
Rosie nodded her head.
“I need to tell you I found Tito at the pound today and brought him back to your house.” It was probably not the best move I’d ever made, but I wanted Rosie to know it had happened, and that her dog was safe. I thought it was better to tell her about that, rather than mentioning that Tracy had found me lurking on the balcony of her apartment, and was ready to call the cops before I bolted out of there.
Rosie sat up in bed, the wires and tubes straining against her. She looked ready to jump out of bed and go check on Tito to make sure he was fine.
“It’s okay. He’s happy now that he’s home. It sounds like you didn’t know he was missing.”
“I didn’t. Thank you, Jax, for saving him,” Rosie said, her voice stronger than I expected. Even so, I could tell it was hard for her to speak.
“Rosie, what I need to know,” I said, “is what happened last night. Did someone try to strangle you? Did someone push you down?”
She was quiet for a while before answering. I’m sure she was trying to piece her memories together, as I had tried to do when I was talking with Tessa about what had happened.
“I was standing at the railing, looking down at the party below, and I was trying to relax after getting angry with Tracy. I was upset with myself for exploding.” Rosie swallowed hard, either from physical pain or from the memory of the fight with her daughter, but probably a little of both. “I heard someone come up from behind me. The person grabbed my necklace and started to pull it tight around my throat. After that, I’m not so sure what happened. I think someone pushed me, and I remember hitting the stairs hard, or maybe I tripped. I can’t remember. It’s all a blur.”
“Oh, Rosie,” I said, now holding her hand with both of mine.
“I was choking, choking, that’s all I can remember before everything went dark.”
“Do you remember anyone there with you?” I asked.
“You were, Jax, you were there.”
“Right, right, I was there helping you get the necklace off and cutting you loose.”
“I don’t know who else was there. All I remember is you.”
“Do you remember Tracy being there?”
“Oh, Tracy was there, that’s right. I don’t remember seeing her. But I could hear her crying and screaming.”
I heard a cell phone vibrate. It was on the nightstand, wedged between an institutional box of tissue and one of those pink trays shaped like a kidney bean—I have always wondered what those trays were for. Rosie reached for the phone, and I grabbed it, glancing down at the screen as I passed it to her.
Six voicemail messages from a phone number that looked like the one Detective Grant had scribbled on a scrap of paper and handed to me, and had popped up on my phone early today. When Rosie finally talked with him, she’d tell him someone grabbed her necklace and pushed her. And she’d tell him that what she remembered when she was being strangled was that I was there.
Rosie let the call go to voicemail. I only had a short time to sort things out before she talked to the detective.
And then I was going to be in big trouble.
TWENTY-THREE
Back in the Ladybug, I sat staring out at the rain, big drops plopping on my windshield and skidding down the glass. Good thing I’d remembered to put the convertible’s top up.
All Rosie remembered from last night was that I was there. And Tracy, too. I knew I hadn’t tried to kill Rosie, but I couldn’t be sure about Tracy. It was hard to believe such a sweet young woman would try to harm her own mother, but Tracy’s spirit seemed crushed by Rosie’s domineering behavior. Could Tracy have snapped and decided to kill her overbearing mother? When I arrived on the balcony last night I’d found Tracy standing over Rosie. It looked as if she was trying to help her mom, but she just as easily could have been the one who pushed her. Tracy seemed the most likely candidate to kill her mother—she was there at the right time, and she had a reason to commit the crime.
Did Tracy also have a reason to kill Misty? Tracy didn’t know Misty, as far as I could tell, so I couldn’t think why Tracy would want to kill her. If Tracy killed Misty because her mother had told her to, then I suppose she had a motive. She was at home in the apartment all night, giving her the opportunity. The only thing that didn’t make sense was how the same person could commit both of these crimes. If Tracy were angry enough with her mother she tried to kill her, then why would she be willing to kill Misty on her mother’s behalf? That didn’t make sense to me. But murderers were not always the most sensible people. If they were, then I suppose fewer people would end up dead.
There were too many questions, and I needed some answers. I called Tessa.
“Tessa, we’ve got to talk.”
“Where are you?”
“Sitting in my car in the hospital parking lot.”
“Well, you better get over to Aztec Beads right away.”
I wondered what the newest crisis was.
“Dylan’s jewelry workshop starts in ten minutes.”
“Oh no, I’ve got to be there to support him.”
I drove as fast as I could to the shop, and arrived as Dylan was setting up.
“Hey, Jax. How’s it goin’?” said Dylan, in his usual casual tone.
“Great,” I lied. “I wanted to make it back in time for your presentation.” That part was true.
“Cool. Well, I’m just about to start. I’ve got these beads that I made. I’m gonna show how to braid these leather strips to make a bracelet. I hope the bead ladies don’t think it’s too rustic or manly.”
“Nonsense,” said Tessa, joining us at the front of the classroom. “Rustic is in fashion right now, and besides, we like to be able to make things for the men in our lives now and then.” I knew she was fibbing. First, the little Tessa knew about fashion she learned from the Lands’ End catalog and from watching Pro
ject Runway. Neither of those sources gave her any authority to judge what was fashionable. And, the only two guys I knew she gave gifts to were her husband Craig, who didn’t like anything beady, and her son Joey, who liked beads, but mostly to throw instead of rocks.
I noticed one of the leather strips Dylan was using for class had fallen on the floor. As I reached to pick it up, Tito snapped it up and dragged it away. I followed, and found him hiding under a chair in the classroom chewing on his prize. I decided there was plenty of leather to go around, and let Tito keep that piece.
Dylan got started showing the class what to do, and as I watched his demo, all I could think of was that Misty died by being choked with a strap—like the piece of leather Dylan was using in his demo. Why would Dylan want to kill Misty? And if he killed Misty, was there a reason to suspect he would also have tried to kill Rosie? Dylan had met Rosie at the party when I’d introduced them. I remembered they acted strangely when they saw each other. Then again, neither of seemed to be coping well with the crowded party scene. I couldn’t be certain I’d seen anything strange at all.
After Dylan’s class, he stood next to his display, speaking with some of the people who were gathering the supplies they needed to complete the bracelet project. Dylan did a great job of talking about his beads and how he made them. There were several bead ladies standing around him, holding his beads.
“Oh, Dylan, what about this one? It’s so light. Is it hollow?” asked a plump woman trying to get his attention, her chandelier-style earrings hanging so low they skimmed her shoulders as she pressed in close to the display.
Another woman, who was wearing a giant dragon necklace made entirely of tiny seed beads, elbowed her way in front of the plump woman, “Dylan, ohhh, do you have any more of these? I love the swirls.”
High Strung: A Glass Bead Mystery (The Glass Bead Mystery Series) Page 13