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Authors: Diana Orgain

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Women Sleuths

Motherhood Is Murder (19 page)

BOOK: Motherhood Is Murder
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It was almost 5:00 P.M. and I hoped Alan would still be at his office finishing paperwork after his final appointment. I pushed open the door to the medical office and entered the waiting room. Joan sat behind the closed-in glass counter. She was in her uniform lab coat, her gray hair curled around her ears.
When I stepped up to the counter, she blinked at me, trying to place me.
I smiled. “Is Dr. Lipe available?”
She frowned. “He’s with a patient right now. How may I help you?”
“Will you kindly let him know Kate Connolly is here?”
She stared at me. Did she see a resemblance to my mom? She didn’t know I was Vera’s daughter. That was the ace in my back pocket should she not wish to cooperate.
Ha! I know you are gossiping about your boss. You better let me get my way!
She pushed herself away from the desk and rose, not hesitating to give me a look of contempt as she disappeared down the hallway.
A few moments later, she pulled open the connecting door. “He’ll see you in his office, third door on the right.”
She resumed her perch at the counter and I walked down the hallway.
Hmm, no patient, huh?
At the third door I peeked in and saw Alan at his desk. The office was no more than a desk with a computer on it, two chairs, and a bookcase along the far wall, which was actually so close to the desk it seemed that books would crash onto our heads in an earthquake.
He stood when he saw me. The last time I’d been at his office, he’d had dark circles under his eyes. Now the circles were even darker and his clothes were wrinkled, making him look like a train wreck. “Mrs. Connolly, what can I do you for?”
“Thank you for your time.” I offered him my hand. “Do you have a few minutes to answer some questions, Doctor?”
He nodded, indicating for me to sit. “Of course, of course. Uh . . . about your feet?” He stared at my Converse-clad feet.
“No.”
He clenched his fist then relaxed it and seated himself.
“It was brought to my attention that after Helene was killed, you asked for a full toxicology scan from the medical examiner,” I said.
He seemed surprised. “Yes. That night on the boat, I told the EMTs and the police to please request a full tox screen.”
“Can you tell me why?”
He rubbed at his face. “I thought her death was odd. I didn’t think the fall down the stairs had killed her. Her neck wasn’t broken, her skull hadn’t cracked. No trauma from the fall that I would deem severe or deadly. So, I reasoned that the medical examiner would call the cause of death an internal organ failure. Like, say, heart failure. While technically that may have been true, I wanted to know what caused the heart failure. I thought we at least deserved to know.”
“Were you close to Helene?”
“Sure. She was Margaret’s best friend.”
It was confession time, I needed to get everything I could out of Alan and I didn’t think confrontation would be best.
I titled my head and softened my voice. “You wanted to know because you were in love with her?”
Alan eyes opened wide. “What?”
“I have it on pretty good authority that you were having an affair with Helene.”
His face turned red. “What authority? Who said this? Who have you been talking to?” He jumped out of his chair. “Who’s saying I’m having an affair?”
Okay, maybe eliciting a confession wasn’t going to be as easy as I’d thought.
I remained seated. I couldn’t disclose that I had access through Galigani to things I shouldn’t have had access to.
An ugly vein was pulsating on his forehead. “And what about my wife? Did you mention this outrageous gossip to her?”
My hand involuntarily came to my throat, maybe because he looked like he could strangle me. It kicked up a self-protection instinct in me. “No. I haven’t been able to reach her.”
Suddenly my stomach clenched and I tasted bile in the back of my throat.
My God! Where was Margaret? Had something happened to her?
A bubble of anxiety crept along my spine and I did my best to suppress the shudder it was causing me. Alan, who was still hovering over me, suddenly dropped into his chair as though he’d just realized how physically imposing he was in this confined space.
“Margaret didn’t know about Helene. She suspected I was seeing someone, but she didn’t know it was . . .” He rubbed at his temple. “Please don’t tell her. She left me. There’s no point in her knowing now, is there? She took the kids and went to her mother’s. You can reach her there.”
“She hired me to investigate you. She thought you were trying to kill her.”
Alan’s hands dropped to his side. “What? That’s absurd!”
“I left several messages for her. She hasn’t returned my calls.”
Alan’s eyes narrowed. “I spoke with her yesterday. Let me give you her mother’s number.”
He proceeded to write the same phone number Margaret had left for me on her last voice mail.
“Do you have her mother’s address?”
Alan scowled, but jotted an address down for me nonetheless. “Look, I don’t know where this is going, but even though Margaret and I were having problems, I would certainly never physically harm her. I’m a doctor, for Christ’s sake.”
He glared at me, waiting for me to respond, but I simply closed my mouth and looked at him. He tapped at his desk. “Helene and I fell in love. Things weren’t working in her marriage. She wanted kids and we thought . . .” He sank his head into his hands.
“What about adoption? I thought Helene and Bruce were arranging for an adoption.”
Alan dropped his hands to the desk. He held on to the edge of the desk as though he were afraid it would run off on him. After a moment, he said, “We thought I could get custody of my kids. Margaret . . . well . . . she’s had some stability problems.” He moved his head from side to side, evaluating what to say next. “She was addicted to prescription painkillers for a long time. I’m sure any judge would give me custody. Helene was excited about the opportunity to raise my kids.”
He wouldn’t “harm” Margaret, but he’d take her kids away.
Might as well kill her.
I remembered Margaret asking me to keep quiet on Alan’s access to drugs. Now that I knew she had an addiction, this made sense.
I stood.
He stood with me, his face lined with sadness. “I need to know what happened to Helene. Do you have any additional information?”
I was furious. He was a cheat. Had practically destroyed his poor wife and was colluding to steal the kids from her. The entire thing made me feel sick to my stomach and I didn’t want to help him in any way.
And Helene?
What kind of person had an affair with her best friend’s husband and schemed to take her kids?
I shook my head. “You’ll have to speak with the homicide cops. Inspector McNearny is assigned.”
He nodded as I stepped to the door.
“Doctor, one last question. Can you tell me where you were on Tuesday the fifteenth?”
His eyes narrowed. “Here. I had appointments all day.”

CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

 

 

Praying

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I dialed Margaret from my car. I left her a bit of a panicked voice mail announcing that if she didn’t call me back shortly, I was driving to her parents’ house to find her.
I hung up and dialed Jim. “Is everything okay with you and Laurie? I want to follow a lead.”
“What lead?” Jim asked.
I explained to him my increasing concern about Margaret. He assured me that he could manage Laurie but made me promise to phone the police at the first sign of any trouble.
Margaret’s folks lived in Palo Alto, a short drive out of San Francisco. Night was falling quickly and I noticed the full moon rising. The sky turned orange and pink as the sun set on another day. I ran through my to-do list in my mind. Thanksgiving was fast approaching and I still needed to make a lot of preparations, starting with a detailed honey-do list for Jim.
I arrived at the address Alan had jotted down for me and parked my car at the curb near a large Dumpster. It didn’t appear as if anyone was home. There were no cars in the driveway or lights on in the house.
Maybe the cars were parked in the garage and everyone could be at the back of the house for all I knew. I walked up the jasmine-lined walkway. Only moonlight illuminated the path but I could identify the flowers by their sweet scent. It was the same scent as Laurie’s shampoo and it made me miss her terribly.
What was I doing here instead of home with her and Jim?
I waved my arms around hoping to trigger an automatic eye on the walkway light. Nothing came on. On the front porch was a tricycle with a baseball in the basket.
In the corner of the porch, I noticed a few shards of glass glinting in the moonlight. The glass from a small window on the front door was missing. It appeared someone had broken the window and made an attempt at cleaning up. Only they’d missed a few pieces.
I rang the bell and waited.
Please, Margaret, open the door.
Where could she be? And why wasn’t she retuning my calls? If she was fine, where was she now? She had two small children—where were they? And what about her parents? It was a cold Tuesday night, not like there was much partying going on.
I wrapped my jacket around myself tighter and rang the bell again, leaning on it so a continuous ring sounded.
I contemplated calling McNearny. But what would I say? I think my client is missing?
What about the shards of glass and the broken window?
Had someone broken in?
Could I reach inside the door and unlock it? Then what?
No.
The last time I’d gone into someone’s house who wasn’t answering the door, I’d found her dead. And that had resulted in a downtown interrogation and countless night-mares.
I released the doorbell and headed down the walkway away from the house. Maybe I could see something from the street. I walked passed the Dumpster and stood next to my car.
What was a Dumpster doing in this high-end neighborhood?
Maybe they were moving.
An uneasy feeling settled into my stomach—all my defenses on alert. Images of Margaret’s twisted and ravaged body surrounded by garbage filled my mind.
No! Kate, come on, don’t lose it.
She is
not
in the Dumpster!
A crackling sound emanated from some nearby bushes.
A mouse?
A squirrel?
A murderer hiding out?
I swallowed past the fear that was building inside me. Why had I come here alone? I should call McNearny, just dial him now. Who cared if I looked like a fool?
Instead, I pressed my car keychain’s automatic horn alarm. The car lights went on and the horn blasted alternately. With all the noise, I couldn’t tell if the scurrying crackling sounds from the bushes had ceased. I pressed the alarm button again to stop it.
The bushes were silent.
But what did that prove? If someone was hiding out, wouldn’t they be quiet now that I’d just blasted my horn?
Suddenly a light went on in the house.
Someone was inside.
I rushed up the walkway away from the bushes.
Wait.
What if it was an intruder?
I froze.
Maybe I should get into my car and call the police.
Nervous and not sure what to do, I spun around on my heel as the front door swung open and the porch light flooded the stoop. Margaret stood before me, her hair a tangled mess. She wore an oversized white button-down oxford shirt and black and white pants in what can only be described as a cow pattern. Nevertheless, probably because she was tall and thin, the ridiculous pants seemed to work on her.
“Kate! Oh! I didn’t realize it was you. I thought maybe it was Alan and I didn’t want to get the door. Then I heard the car alarm . . . is everything all right?”
I was standing with both hands clasped over my wildly beating heart, fearing it might pop out of my chest as in a silly cartoon. “Margaret! Thank God you’re okay! Why haven’t you returned my calls?”
“Come in.” She stepped aside and let me enter the enormous family room.
The room was dark with a cathedral-style ceiling, exposed beams, and glossy hardwood floors. Margaret turned on a small side table lamp. The décor was casual with a wide-screen television that hung from the main wall and some bean bag chairs thrown across the floor.
She motioned for me to take a seat in a brown leather wing-back chair that faced the bean bags.
“Have you been calling me?” she asked. “I thought I left you a voice mail on . . . oh, the other day . . . when was it?” She scratched her head. “I don’t know. Sorry, I’ve been kind of out of it. Have you learned anything?” she asked.
I semicollapsed into the chair, hoping my heart would slow down. “Margaret, what happened to the window? I was worried sick about you!”
She glanced at the front door. “Oh. My two-year-old threw his baseball into it.”
Well, at least that was one mystery solved.
I leaned forward in my chair. “Can you tell me where you were on the fifteenth?”
She sank into one of the bean bags. “What?”
“Last Tuesday the fifteenth. Do you remember? That was the day Celia and I ended up in the hospital. Can you tell me where you were?’ ”
“I’m sorry I didn’t visit you.” She folded her skinny spider legs under her. “So much is going on here. My mom took the boys to dinner at Chuck E. Cheese tonight, just to give me a little breathing room. Since leaving Alan, I’ve been . . .” She waved her hand around and appeared distracted.
I must have woken her. She seemed out of it. That or . . .
Was she using again?
“Did you go to Bruce’s house that day?”
“No.” She looked thoughtful as she ran her hands through her hair, trying to smooth over the tangles. “I don’t think so. The fifteenth was the day I left Alan. It’s the day I came here.”
“Can you retrace your steps for me?”
“I think so, why?”
“It’s important. Please.”
She scratched at the nape of her neck, then smoothed down her hair. “Let’s see. I went grocery shopping. The nanny came to watch the boys and help me pack. Then I came here.”
“Did you see Celia that day?”
Margaret’s expression changed.
My heart dropped.
She sat a little straighter. “I did see Celia, as a matter of fact. I saw her at the little sandwich shop near my house.”
Darn!
I had been hoping that Margaret would have been nowhere near Celia. Now she’d had access to both Celia and Helene. Although since she had so readily admitted seeing Celia, she could hardly be guilty, could she?
“Celia was with Howard,” Margaret continued. “You know Sara’s husband, right? I thought it was strange—them being together, but I remembered she hired him to do the midwife center. So they were probably having a follow-up meeting.”
I covered my mouth with my hand.
Could Howard be the married man?
Did Miss No-Nonsense know about or suspect his infidelity? I recalled her outrage about Alan cheating on Margaret and her outspoken opinion that Margaret should leave the “two-timer.” I wondered how she would feel now that the shoe might be on the other foot.
“Margaret, that day outside your house I told you I was going to speak with Sara, and well, it might have just been me, but it seemed like you didn’t want me to talk to her.”
She sighed. “I figured you were going to ask her if she knew about Alan’s infidelity and . . .” She shrugged. “I guess I was embarrassed. You know airing dirty laundry in front of the neighbors.”
I glanced at my watch. “When are you expecting your mom?”
I dreaded telling her about Alan’s affair with Helene and wanted to be sure that I didn’t leave her alone and vulnerable to taking anything. I wanted to be sure someone would be with her before I left.
Margaret glanced at a handsome cuckoo clock standing in the corner. “Maybe in about fifteen minutes, why?”
“You were right. Alan was having an affair.”
Margaret nodded, her eyes welling with tears. “I knew it. I knew it.” She bit her fist and her eyes glazed over.
I waited for her to look at me. When she seemed to have collected herself, I continued, “Margaret, this is going to be difficult to hear but I found out he was seeing Helene.”
Her mouth opened and closed. One leg shot straight out as if she wanted to get up then she seemed to rethink it and fell back deeper into the bean bag. “What? No, no! That can’t be right! Why would you say such a thing?”
“I heard it straight from Alan. He told me he and Helene were going to move away together. She was canceling plans for her home extension.”
“He was going to leave me? They were going to move away together?”
I couldn’t bring myself to tell her about their plans to get custody of her children. What did it matter now anyway? She’d been through enough.
Instead, I said softly, “That’s what he said.”
Margaret wept silently.
I listened to the ticking of the cuckoo clock.
After a moment she wiped her eyes and said, “Helene never . . . why? How could she do that to me, Kate? How could he do that?”
The weight of the betrayal was stifling the room.
“I also was able to confirm that Helene was indeed poisoned,” I said.
Margaret sat straight up. “Alan did poison her? But why?”
“I don’t think Alan did it. No. I don’t think it was Alan,” I said.
Margaret searched my eyes. “Who else then? Was it Bruce? Did he know about the affair? I feel so stupid. Was I the only one buffaloed?”
I was silent. A car drove by, filling the room momentarily with light. As the car passed, the room was covered in dark shadows again, lit only by the table lamp beside me.
“Do you think Bruce killed Helene?” she pressed.
I opened my palms to her, inviting her theory.
“Why would he kill her?” Margaret asked. “He was barely home—practically never even noticed her. Was it pride?” She rose off the bean bag and started pacing. “Let me guess: Killing her was a cheaper solution than divorce. She would get half of everything and my husband, too.”
She stopped pacing and stood before me. “Why did she do it, Kate? She could have had anyone. She was pretty and desirable and unattached—well, I mean, relatively. I know she was married but they didn’t have any kids. She could have just started over with someone else. Someone who wanted kids. Why did she have to take
my
husband?”
“You think Bruce didn’t want kids?” I asked.
Margaret nodded. “Well, I don’t know but Helene wanted them so much and he just didn’t seem to be interested.”
“What about the adoption then?”
Margaret frowned. “What adoption?”
“Celia was helping Helene and Bruce coordinate an adoption from Costa Rica.”
Margaret’s face went blank. “She was? Helene wanted to adopt? I never knew—she never said anything to me. I guess she was full of surprises . . .” Margaret’s lips puckered with bitterness. “She never said a word.”
I watched Margaret carefully, not even certain what I was looking for.
She seemed very emotional and was continually wiping her eyes and nose with the back of her hand.
Could she have known about the affair all along?
How could she not know her best friend was sleeping with her husband? What if she had killed Helene out of retaliation and all this pacing around was just an act?
She was standing directly in front of me—practically on top of me. I realized my shoulders were hiked up to my ears.
Was I expecting her to pounce on me?
I forced my shoulders down and stood, reclaiming my personal space. Margaret took a step back.
She lumbered over to the other wing-back chair and rearranged it to face mine.
I seated myself again and crossed my hands in my lap, trying to look professional and unimposing. She was my client, after all.
After a moment, I said, “These are the facts as I understand them. Helene was poisoned with fentanyl and died on the dinner cruise. Celia was given the same drug. It’s used for extreme chronic pain. It’s a class II narcotic. Do you know anything about this medicine?”
She shook her head.
I watched her eyes. She didn’t fidget or glance around the room. She just stared at me straight on. She didn’t look nervous in the least, only sad.
Finally, I said, “It’s mostly prescribed to terminally ill cancer patients.”
She nodded her understanding.
“Do you know anyone who could have been on fentanyl recently?”
She turned her lips down and shook her head.
“We were all on the cruise, so everyone—you, me, Sara, Evelyn, and our husbands—had access to Helene, including her own husband, Bruce. But only a few people saw Celia on the day she was poisoned—you, me, Bruce, and Evelyn.”
Margaret’s eyes shifted almost imperceptibly. “What about Alan?”
“No. Not that I know of. He says he was at the office all day. So he didn’t have any contact with Celia and also he requested the toxicology screen for Helene from the medical examiner. If he had poisoned her, he wouldn’t have pushed for that.”
Margaret crossed her legs, leaned back into the chair, and contemplated what I’d said. “I was so sure he had done something with those drinks.”
We sat in silence.
“So you say that leaves us with who? Evelyn and Bruce?”
And you!
I watched her nervously swing her foot forward and back, but said nothing.
“Evelyn or Bruce, huh?” she repeated. “It’s got to be Bruce. Evelyn had no reason to kill Helene. I mean, I know she was a little bitter about being kicked out of the group, but that’s no reason . . . she can’t be that petty, right?”
“No. That kind of motive doesn’t make sense,” I said. “And what about Celia? Why would Evelyn try to poison her own midwife?”
Margaret nodded.
“I understand Bruce may have had access to the fentanyl. His grandmother passed away recently from cancer.”

BOOK: Motherhood Is Murder
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