Read 2 Dancing With Death Online
Authors: Liz Marvin
Betty watched Earnest follow Miss Knolhart at a short distance, and shook her head. Miss Knolhart certainly didn’t seem smitten with her new beau. Ah well, she thought, to each their own.
When Betty turned back, Bill was scowling in the direction of the state patrolmen.
“Why are they still over there?” he asked angrily, gesturing to the prize table.
“They’re the policemen on duty, and she could’ve been seriously injured!” He scowled. “Come on,” he said, grabbing her hand. “Let’s find out what’s going on. And so help me,” he fumed, “if they don’t have a good excuse, I’m reporting them!”
“Hello Bill!” One of the policemen said cheerily as they approached. “Everything okay on your end?”
“What do you think you’re doing!” Bill said, keeping his voice low. His angry tone was unmistakable as he gestured towards the crowd that was beginning to disperse. “You should be out there helping!”
The patrolman looked at him, confused. “But you’re the senior officer, Sir. We thought you’d want us to stay at our post.”
Bill pressed the bridge of his nose between his fingers. “I’m not on duty,” he said. “I’m happy to help if you need it, but this is large crowd. We need to make sure everyone’s okay, and to take statements from as many people as we can tonight. We need as many people working as we have. And besides,” he continued, “there’s nothing left at the prize table for you to guard. So, please?” he said, gesturing to the dancers who still lined the walls. “Get to work.”
The patrolmen traded uneasy glances.
“Well,” one began.
“You see,” the other continued.
“We, umm…”
“Oh hang it all,” the first one said. “We don’t really know how to do any of that. Oh, we had the classes and all,” he continued when Bill looked about to protest. “But we haven’t done any of it in the field yet, and… well…” he hung his head.
Bill sighed. “So,” he said, “let me get this straight. You two have no idea what you’re doing in the field, and there’s no superior officer on duty with you?” The patrolmen nodded. “Well,” said Bill briskly. “There’s no time like the present to learn. So, if you need me to, I’ll take charge of the investigation until someone is able to make it up here through the storm. But you two are going to be doing a lot of leg work.”
The patrolmen nodded. Bill turned into the crowd. “Wes!” he yelled, gesturing at a blob across the room. The blob and another blob that Betty assumed was Clarise started to walk over.
After Bill explained the situation, the four decided that it would be best for Betty and Clarise to return to their rooms upstairs. Just taking statements was guaranteed to take quite a while, even with four policemen working.
~
In the hotel room, the first thing Betty did was sit on one of the chairs and yank her high heels off her feet. Red marks from where they’d cut into her circulation showed on the backs and tops of her feet, and Betty rubbed her feet a little to get the feeling back. Her feet might be throbbing now, but having them out of those shoes felt so good… sometimes, Betty wondered if women wore heels just for the feeling of getting to take them off. Next to her, Clarise was doing the same thing. They grinned at each other in understanding.
“Beauty is pain and all that crap?” asked Clarise.
“Exactly,” Betty agreed. She leapt up, ignoring her protesting feet. They’d feel better soon. “I call shower first!” she exclaimed, before grabbing her toiletry bag and running into the bathroom.
“You’d better hurry up!” Clarise called. “If you take too long, I’m coming in there with you!”
Betty laughed, knowing that Clarise would do no such thing. In fact, by the time Betty came out, Clarise would probably be too engrossed in a book of plays to bother with taking a shower right away. So, while she didn’t dilly dally, Betty certainly didn’t rush as she let the shower soak away her aches and stress.
True to her prediction, Clarise was curled up with on the bed nearest the window when Betty came out in her pajamas.
“Shower’s free,” she said. Clarise flapped a hand at her. “Five minutes. I’m almost at the end of the second act.”
Betty chuckled and flopped backwards onto the bed she had claimed earlier. When her head hit the pillows, Betty frowned. The pillows felt hard. Hard and lumpy. That wasn’t right. She sat up to adjust them, and froze as her hand brushed something that was most definitely
not
a pillow.
She lifted the pillow up.
“Um, Clarise?” she said, just enough panic in her voice to let Clarise know that something was wrong. Clarise leapt up and came over to see what Betty was looking at.
There, underneath Betty’s pillow, was a pile of money. One hundred dollar bills lay in neat packages still wrapped with paper straps from the bank. Betty was willing to bet that, if she counted it, it would come out to $100,000.
Someone had put the stolen prize money under her pillow.
CHAPTER 10
“Well,” Clarise said after a moment, “the way I see it, you have two choices. So, which is it? Las Vegas or a bank in Switzerland?”
Betty ogled her friend, unsure whether to laugh or smack her. “What’s wrong with you?” she said, her voice rising as some of the twisting in her gut tightened. “Someone was in our room! They came in, and… and…”
Clarise dropped her smile. “Would you rather I scream?” she asked. “I’m fully aware that someone broke into our room. That someone put the stolen money under your pillow and probably looked through all of our private things. I haven’t even checked to see if my wallet is still here yet! Though, I don’t know what someone who’d dump one hundred thousand dollars would want with my credit cards! If you’d rather I panic, I can and I will.”
Betty could see that, the more Clarise talked, the more panic really did seem to be setting in to her friend. Clarise’s breath was coming in huge breaths. If she didn’t calm down soon, she’d start to hyperventilate. Betty swallowed her own panic in the face of her friend’s.
“Oh, fine,” Betty said, steering Clarise into one of the chairs by the window. “If I have to pick, Las Vegas. I can go to the Swiss bank later, after I’ve hosted my own Elvis impersonation contest at the MGM Grand. Sit.” Clarise sat. Betty almost said “Good dog. Now roll over and play dead,” but one look at her friend’s pale face made her decide against it. “Do you need me to get you any water?” she asked instead.
“I’m fine,” said Clarise.
“Mmmhm. Sure you are. Take deep breaths and wait here. I’m going to go call Bill.”
“And Wes,” Clarise reminded her, seeming to perk up at the thought.
“Absolutely,” Betty agreed. “And Wes. I’ll be right back.”
Betty went over to her purse and rifled through it with shaking hands until she came up with her cell phone. It was only after she had fumbled through finding and pressing Bill’s number that Betty realized she had no idea what she was going to say. What was there to say? “Hi Bill, guess what? You know how all that money was stolen? I found it under my pillow. Isn’t that wonderful? Take me away to the big house, and I’ll see you in ten to twenty years. Less if I get out early on good behavior!”
There wasn’t much she could do about it now. His phone was ringing. And, Betty reminded herself, Bill would know she hadn’t done anything. He’d been with her during the whole blackout! Everything would be just fine.
“Betty?” came Bill’s voice. Betty couldn’t quite fight back that slightly hysterical laugh that had bubbled up without warning. A half second of it managed to break through. “Betty?” Bill asked. Now he sounded worried.
“Um…” said Betty. “I know you’re busy with statements, but you and Wes might want to come up to the room.”
“Why? What’s going on?”
She’d just have to come out and say it. Betty squeezed her eyes shut and tried not to think as she blurted out, “Someone put the prize money underneath my pillow!”
There was a pause on the other end of the phone conversation, and Betty imagined that she could hear all the gears in Bill’s mind grinding to sudden halt.
“Can you repeat that?” Bill asked, carefully and clearly speaking each word as Betty imagined he would speak when calming a person in a straitjacket. Maybe she should be in one.
“Absolutely,” she said, fighting the panic that was starting to rise again. “I’ll even enunciate. Someone… put… the… stolen… prize… money… under… my… pillow.”
“Ah.” There was another brief pause before Bill’s voice came again. “We’ll be right there. Don’t leave, and lock your door. Don’t open it for anyone else, no matter what they say.”
Betty heard a click as he flipped his cell phone shut.
Well, she thought, that was that. Bill was coming up. She made sure the deadbolt was across the door and poured herself and Clarise glasses of water before going to join Clarise in the chairs by the window.
“The boys will be here soon. We’re to sit tight until they come.” Clarise nodded.
“You know,” Clarise said, looking out the window at the snow. The flakes were still falling heavy and fast. They couldn’t see through the whiteout to anything beyond the hotel, but Betty knew the view was probably breathtaking.
“I didn’t want to be at the center of another investigation this soon.”
Betty reached out and took Clarise’s hand in hers. “Listen,” she said firmly. “We did nothing wrong. “Wes and Bill know us. And,” she continued firmly, “they were with us during the black out and after. There is no way we could’ve taken the money and made it up here to stash it without them knowing.” She laughed. “Our alibis are the men in charge of the investigation! So relax, would you?”
Clarise sighed. “I know, it’s silly. It’s just…”
Betty remembered the way her friend had looked after the last crime she had stumbled upon purely by chance. First the shock of seeing a friend dead, and then the hurt and betrayal as most of the town she’d lived in for years became convinced she was a killer. Clarise’s normally cheery and open face had been ashen, her eyes wide with panic. Betty couldn’t blame her for not wanting to be in the same position again.
Thud! Thud! Thud! The door shook in its frame as someone on the other side knocked loudly.
“Open up!” came a voice from the other side. “Police!”
Clarise’s eyes were wide with panic. “Is that how they act when they believe you’re innocent?”
Betty squeezed Clarise’s shoulder as she stood. She was about to open the door before she remembered Bill’s warning. She looked through the peephole, to see a strange man in a police uniform standing in front of her door. She thought he looked like one of the state patrolmen who had been guarding the prize table, but she couldn’t be sure. She cleared her throat of its sudden tightness.
“Are Bill and Wes with you?” she asked.
The man looked to the side. “They are,” he said.