Read Bob Moats - Jim Richards 01-03- 3 for Murder Box Set Online

Authors: Bob Moats

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Bob Moats - Jim Richards 01-03- 3 for Murder Box Set (16 page)

BOOK: Bob Moats - Jim Richards 01-03- 3 for Murder Box Set
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Trapper said, “She must have the tapes with her. I don’t know why, unless she knew we were on to her and took them. Becker, bag and tag everything here.” He walked out of the room. I guided Penny out. She was shaking a little.

 

Penny and I went out to tell Buck about the find. Trapper came over to us and pulled me aside.

 

“Listen, Richards, I just want to say, off the record, that I appreciate your help in this. Now, do you have the address for this Morgan guy?” he asked.

 

I gave him the paper with the address that Penny acquired for me. Trapper said Morgan was probably the half-brother she mentioned on the tape.

 

“That’s my guess, too. She found him and dragged him into it,” I said. “Penny called Joy in the booking office on our way up here, and Morgan hasn’t returned. Joy said she called his apartment under the pretense to see how he was feeling and got no answer.”

 

“Since this guy lives in my jurisdiction, it will make life easier to get a warrant, and these tapes will help. Don’t go doing anything till then, you got that?” he warned. I agreed.

 

I figured that since the heat was on, both Waters and Morgan would be lying low for now. They still had Grolich to contend with if Waters wanted to continue her vendetta. And Penny. I went back to the van. Everyone was standing around, and I said we might as well head back. It was now after three, and there was nothing more to do here.

 

The ride back would take an hour, and I had to get my mind set for my nightly dad duty. I was going to take Penny with me this time, but use her car since Waters knew mine. I felt that Waters probably would back off to regroup for now. Besides, it would thrill Mom to meet Penny and get Penny away from her house for a while.

 

We drove back while trying to work out the time line of all that happened the last three days. Penny was quiet most of the trip back. We returned to Penny’s house, and Deacon went in, followed by Buck, to make sure there were no uninvited guests. They signaled that it was clear, so Penny and I went in.

 

I jumped and yelled when something attached itself to my ankle. Everyone looked down at the cat that was straddling my ankle, and Deacon said, grinning, “You still have a problem with cats.”

 

 

 

*

 

 

 

Chapter Thirteen

 

 

Penny pulled Shadow off my leg and scolded him. I glared at Deacon and said that I loved cats, and cats loved me. He said he could see that by the way the cat was humping my leg. I just snorted and followed Penny into the kitchen where she was opening a can of cat food. I went to pet Shadow, but every time I reached, the cat moved a couple of inches away. I gave up trying to pet him as he went over to feed. Penny laughed and said that I could pet her anytime, and she wouldn’t move away.

 

We had another hour before I had to go, so we sat on the porch and relaxed. Buck and Deacon were out wandering around the house, talking cars, I imagined. They both came in through the porch door a while later and sat with us. I told them I was taking Penny with me, so they could relax and watch TV or whatever. Buck said that he would probably run home to get a fresh change of clothes. I looked at Deacon and said he could just sit here and pet the cat. He used his middle finger to scratch his forehead. He said he would run home, too, and change. Buck smiled and said that Deacon was getting a bit ripe. Deacon scratched his forehead again for Buck. We all laughed.

 

Penny and I went to her car and left. On the way I gave her the rundown on my mother.

 

I asked her not to mention the events of the last few days and explained my concern. She understood. We came up with a devious story of how we met and what we’d been up to.

 

We got to the house without trouble, but I was on the lookout for suspicious activity. I took Penny up to the house. My Mother threw the door open and welcomed us in, but mostly Penny. I just stood back as Mom gushed over her. She had us come into the kitchen and wanted us to visit. I said we had to do some errands, but maybe this weekend we could stop to visit for a while. She accepted that. She took Penny in to meet my dad. He acknowledged her barely. Then I had Penny wait in the living room while I got him into bed. After that was done, Mom came out with me and talked for about ten minutes, then she said she had to get my dad comfy and tucked in. Penny gave my mom a hug and said we’d be back. Mom told her she watched her show almost every day. Penny smiled and said she’d give her a wave on her next show.

 

We left. I didn’t feel like going back to her place yet, so I drove to a nearby park where we sat on a picnic table, watching kids play. She asked about my son, and I told her a little about him. She looked wistful and lamented about not being able to have children of her own. She had problems internally when she was young and had lost her ability to reproduce. I told her I would share my son with her. She smiled and got a little teary. I kissed the tears, and she put her head on my shoulder. We sat there for about a half hour more, then headed back.

 

Buck was already there, and Deacon drove in about ten minutes after us. Penny called the studio, but the staff had gone for the day since it was after 7 P.M. She did manage to track down Joy at home. Joy said that Morgan never came back, and that they had a nutritionist as guest tomorrow. Joy was concerned about Morgan, but said she would keep the guest roster up and running. Penny thanked her and hung up.

 

I was sitting with the A-Team in the family room when she came back in. She had found the cat along the way and brought him over to me on the couch. Shadow moved over to my lap, made a circle then plopped down. I smiled at Deacon.

 

“See, cats do like me,” I said with a smirk, just as Shadow started to claw at my leg. I winced in pain. Penny picked him up and laughed. I grinned. “OK, they like me too much. Now I’m a scratching pole.”

 

The rest of the evening was uneventful. We sat, talked, watched TV, and by 11, Penny’s head was drooping. I laid her out on the couch and got a blanket to cover her. Sleepily, she grabbed my hand and kissed it, saying good night, sweet prince, sex later, and drifted off. Buck and Deacon were turning on lights and checking around the house. All seemed quiet, so we settled in for the night.

 

 

 

~~*~~

 

 

 

Twelve miles to the southwest Linda Grolich sat at a desk typing on the laptop that the Bloomfield police allowed her to bring to the safe house. She was busy sending out emails to her friends and family saying she was taking a short vacation, location unknown, as she wanted privacy. She had a detail of three police detectives who sat around the apartment playing cards. Linda was not happy with the arrangements, but she saw the video that Waters had made when Trapper stopped by around 9 P.M. and played it for her and the detectives. It made her think again about protection.

 

She did some exploring on the internet for Julia Waters and couldn’t believe the prestigious lawyer would stoop to murder for something that happened over forty years ago. She underestimated Waters and her deathbed promise. Linda hadn’t changed in all those years. She still was arrogant and above everyone else, but this brought her down a bit.

 

She told the detectives that she was going to take a shower and turn in. They couldn’t watch her in the shower but told her to keep the door open a bit so they could hear anything that wasn’t right. She agreed, but closed the door anyway. She showered and pampered her body with lotions and creams to keep her good looks. She dressed in her nicest silk pajamas and headed to her bed. She lay down on the aging bed in the safe house, probably used by criminals, she thought, and shivered. After a half hour of counting her blessings and good fortunes, she finally dozed. In the dark of the room, the closet door opened slowly, and a dark figure crept out.

 

The knife in the hand of the figure poised over her heart as the other hand picked up a towel from the chair next to the bed and slowly covered her face and mouth. That same instant the knife plunged into her chest, through the ribs and into her beating heart. She struggled for only a moment, and then went still, heart beating no more. The figure went over to the window, opened it and crawled back out to the rope ladder that was attached to the roof. The figure climbed up and over, pulling the ladder up, then exited through a stairwell and back down to the rear entrance of a service room. Out by a waiting car in the alley, Julia Waters opened the door for her dear half-brother, Davey. He just said, “It’s done, one to go.”

 

 

 

~~*~~

 

 

 

The next morning we all stumbled around getting ready to go to the station. We ate a hurried breakfast that morning since our regular meals were sadly neglected the past twenty-four hours. We piled into Buck’s van and headed to the TV station. We got to the gate, and the guard recognized Buck and me from the smoking attack. He gave a grim little smile and passed us through. We entered Penny’s dressing room, and the groupies all hustled to make her happy. The hairdresser still flirted with Deacon who now wasn’t turning red. I think he was enjoying the attention. The floor manager brought Penny her guest sheets and said they hadn’t located Morgan, but they would watch out for him. Word travels fast.

 

Penny looked radiant as she stepped up to the stage and met with Dr. Cheryl Stopelmoor, the health and beauty consultant that came in at the last minute when the nutritionist canceled. I asked John, the floor manager, if this woman was checked out and he said she had been on the show a couple of times before, so she was good. I relaxed, and Buck took point on the same stool he was on yesterday. Deacon was back stage again and made a point of having the stage crew check and re-check the lighting rigs. He asked a couple of the men to stay there and yell if anyone popped up who didn’t belong. They kept a man up there.

 

The show started, and Buck and I watched carefully every movement in the room. Penny interviewed the guest who must have used the beauty products on herself as she was as stunning as Penny. Penny opened up the segment for questions from the audience. It went well. Penny thanked her guest, gave a shout out to my mother, “Hi to Mrs. Richards,” waved, and the end credits rolled. The guest politely left, and Penny came to me and grabbed on.

 

She whispered in my ear, “I was so frightened something would happen. I don’t know how much more of this I can take.”

 

I hugged her tight, to the point of making my ribs scream, and said “I here for you. So were Buck and Deacon. My mother will cast you in bronze for the greeting.” That made her smile, and we went to the dressing room. We had just settled in when my cell phone rang. Caller ID said private number. I said, “Hello Trapper.”

 

““Richards, bad news, Grolich is dead.”

 

My heart stopped for a second. I turned away from Penny and asked what happened. He said, “Someone got in and stabbed her through the heart. Three cops didn’t hear or see a goddamn thing. They were playing cards in the living room, Grolich went to bed and this morning she didn’t come out. They went in, found her. Six stories up, and only one door into the apartment. Fucking amazing. They found signs of movement on the roof. They think he came down, into the window and back out that way. I really put my butt in a sling spouting off at the chief. He blamed the Bloomfield cops. Asshole. I still can’t get any extra men for Wickens. I can’t figure how they knew where the safe house was.”

 

“Waters is a lawyer. She may have used her connections to find out,” I suggested. Trapper agreed, said he’d check it out and hung up.

 

Buck came down the hall. I stopped him at the door of the dressing room, pushing him back out into the hall. I told him about Grolich. He cursed loudly.

 

“You gonna tell Penny?” he asked.

 

“She deserves it. She is the last one left,” I said.

 

Buck thought a minute and said, “Well, they won’t kill her right away. Waters wants her on video, remember?”

 

I looked at him for a second, then said, “That’s hardly cause to celebrate.”

 

I had the same thought, but how would they get her on tape now? Kidnapping would be the only option. I related my thoughts to Buck. He agreed.

 

“We have to button her down so tight, no one will get near her,” I said.

 

We went back into the room. I asked all the groupies to leave. It was just the three of us. I sat next to Penny and held her hand.

 

BOOK: Bob Moats - Jim Richards 01-03- 3 for Murder Box Set
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