Read Progressive Dinner Deadly Online
Authors: Elizabeth Spann Craig
Blanche didn’t pretend not to know what Myrtle was talking about. “Much better. It’s like night and day. I talked to my doctor and am going to get some treatment for the prescription drug problem. And—it sounds awful to say it, but life really started looking up as soon as Jill died.”
“It doesn’t sound awful at all, considering she was blackmailing you. You couldn’t exactly be expected to be sobbing at her funeral.”
Blanche took a deep breath. “And then things crashed downhill again last week. Cullen called me over to the house and I knew what must be on his mind if he was asking to see me. It’s not like we were friends.” The idea of a friendship with Cullen made Blanche look revolted. “Sure enough, as soon as I knocked on his door, he was asking for money. I guess that was the only way he could think of to make some money, since he sure wasn’t going to haul his lazy rear end out to look for a job.”
“What happened?”
“I was just fed up. He planned on keeping up with Jill’s little blackmailing gig and thought I’d just pony up the money like a little lamb. But I’d had it. Besides, I was already getting treatment. I was already recovering—it was old news. And, like you mentioned, Myrtle, everyone pulls for the underdog—it’s not as if I were still an addict. So I told him off. Told him I didn’t care who he told—and wasn’t it the pot calling the kettle black for an alcoholic to blab about a prescription drug addict?”
Blanche looked just as furious now as she must have looked that evening. Then she settled down. “But I didn’t kill the man. He didn’t have any more power over me, so why would I? Besides, the dog started going berserk so I looked at it as a good time to leave.”
They pulled up in Myrtle’s driveway and Myrtle said as she stepped out the door, “I’m really happy for you, Blanche. I know how tough it’s got to be to get better from an addiction. I’m pulling for you.”
“Myrtle, believe me, things are really starting to look up.”
After a little
reading and a short nap, Myrtle started feeling a little hungry. She realized that in her concentration to produce a wonderful casserole for the Caulfields, that she’d forgotten to feed herself. Myrtle peered doubtfully into her fridge, then opened her pantry. Not only did everything look unappealing, the assorted ingredients didn’t seem like they’d add up to a meal. Every recipe she could think of was missing at least one major component. She was even out of cereal and grits. She sighed. Maybe cheese biscuits and grapes would make a decent supper. She’d get Red to take her to the store tomorrow.
The mind-boggling thing to Myrtle was that the Caulfield’s kitchen was in much the same state. Libba would never ordinarily allow her supplies to get so low. And she wouldn’t be the horrible hostess as she’d been earlier. Maybe Puddin was actually right for once and Libba was losing the use of her mind. She definitely hadn’t been this bad off when she’d been sick several years ago. You’d hardly have known she was ill with cancer at all—she was so on top of things, even when she was in the bed. Jotting down who’d brought in casseroles, or come by for a visit. And you’d always get the nicest, most well-bred thank you note from her.
Simon’s behavior wasn’t all that normal, either. And what was the deal with the huge gash on his leg and his secretive manner?
Myrtle heard dogs barking outside and looked out her window. She hoped Pasha was okay. Funny how that cat was growing on her.
The dogs continued barking in what seemed like a domino effect from one yard to the next. It was like the Hounds of the Baskervilles out there. Myrtle gave a gasp. What about Kojak? Now that Cullen was dead, there wasn’t anyone over there to take care of the poor dog. Willow was in jail and she’d said that Kojak hated Simon, so the dog couldn’t go to the other Caulfields. Maybe she should call up Red and see if the police had taken the dog to the shelter.
Myrtle frowned. Wait a minute. There was something in that line of thought that she needed to explore. What was it? Kojak. It all came together quickly.
Her thoughts were rudely interrupted by the acrid smell of smoke coming from the direction of her kitchen. The biscuits! Myrtle hurried into the kitchen, shoved open a window, turned off the oven, and pulled out the biscuits, which now strongly resembled lumps of charcoal. Shoot! Now what was she going to eat?
The knock at her back door made her jump. She hoped whoever it was wasn’t hungry. And that she could get rid of the person quickly so she could make her victorious phone call to Red and let him know she’d solved the case.
She opened the door a crack. “Miss Myrtle,” said Simon Caulfield, “I thought we could talk a little about that suicide note now.”
“I know I said I’d talk to you about it later, Simon, but it’s going to have to wait. I’ve got this important phone call that I’m making.” She firmly pushed on the door to close it again, then desperately shoved at it as Simon applied his own considerable strength to the other side.
With another shove, he’d pushed his way through. “No, I think now is a good time to visit,” he said in a hard voice. And Myrtle realized he held a knife in his hand.
M
yrtle swallowed hard.
“I suppose so, If you really want to visit, Simon. How’s that leg of yours doing? That’s a nasty bite Kojak gave you.”
Simon growled, “Stupid dog. I knew you’d figured out I killed Cullen when you were looking at my leg.”
“Willow told me that Kojak hated you. And I knew you were lying about cutting Cullen’s grass because I saw Tiny Kirk doing yard work there the day of Cullen’s murder. But you’re wrong—I didn’t put it all together until right before you walked through my door.” She summoned up the old schoolteaching voice that used to have a quelling effect on Simon in the classroom. “This is stupid, Simon. Put that knife down. You’re only adding to your problems.”
He shook his head, emphatically. “Math never was your strong suit, Miss Myrtle. I’m thinking if I get rid of you now then I’m actually subtracting from my problems. Everyone thinks Cullen killed Jill, either in a drunken rage or because he wanted to be free to marry someone else and couldn’t afford a divorce. And then Cullen conveniently killed himself out of guilt. But you…” now his voice snarled, “had to start nosing around. Why’d you care? What possible difference could it make to you?”
“The police already knew it was murder,” said Myrtle, shifting her weight onto her cane. They knew right away, because of the note you wrote. None of this is my fault, Simon. It’s your fault for writing the suicide note you did. It’s your fault for being on bad terms with Kojak. And it’s your fault for killing your brother.” Myrtle was going to talk as much and as long as she could. The more she talked, the better a chance she had at getting out of this fix.
“My brother.” Simon laughed brokenly. “Half-brother by blood and never a real brother to me in any sense of the word.”
“I remember when you were both in school together,” mused Myrtle. “You were always the dutiful older brother, weren’t you? Always doing your homework, making good grades. And Cullen….”
“Cullen was a loser. As always.” Simon’s voice was harsh. “He never did anything he was supposed to do. He cheated his way through school, and people always,
always
liked him. Our dad
loved
him.” He stopped abruptly. Myrtle looked closely at him. It looked like he was choking back tears.
“Surely he loved you, too?” said Myrtle, leading him on.
“No! He never did. And when dad got sick, Cullen got to him with his lies. He told Dad that I…”
Myrtle’s mind whirled. What kind of lie was guaranteed to upset Joel Caulfield the most about his son? Drugs? That he’d gotten some girl pregnant? That he didn’t want to join the family business? Then she had an idea. “He told your father you were gay. That would have been the unforgivable sin for Joel Caulfield, wasn’t it? To him that would have been a direct slap at
him
. It would have undermined his own masculinity, and that was very important to him. I remember he was a big athlete and outdoorsman.”
Simon’s eyes glittered. “It was all a lie. Cullen knew Dad would disown me and he could take the inheritance for himself. And that’s what happened.”
“And it’s been eating away at you for years,” said Myrtle. “You hated your brother for that, didn’t you?”
“Not only did he turn my father against me, but he took the money that should have been mine and drank it away.” Simon spat the words out.
“Did your wife know you felt this way?” Myrtle did want to know. But she was even more interested in stalling Simon. Was there any way she could use her cane to dislodge the knife?
The mention of his wife erased some of the lines on Simon’s face. “Libba didn’t know anything about it,” he said. “She would just have been upset about Cullen’s lies. She just knew I couldn’t stand him.”
“It must have been hard on you,” mused Myrtle, “that your wife, who has had so many health problems, needed the money so much more than your brother who wasted it.”
“I thought the money was gone, or I would have found a way to get some of it a year ago,” said Simon. “I thought that since Jill was working so hard that they must be totally out of cash. I didn’t know about the lottery ticket.”
“I suppose,” said Myrtle thoughtfully, still watching the knife, “that it was an easy decision to kill Cullen. He’d double-crossed you, fixed it so you couldn’t even talk to your father at the end of his life. He’d basically stolen the money from you—money you could have used to treat your wife’s cancer. And, once you found out that Jill
did
have money and she was so conveniently murdered, all it took was for you to knock off Cullen and the money would finally be yours.
What I don’t know,” Myrtle continued, “is how you knew you were in Cullen’s will. Why were you so sure he wouldn’t send the money over to a far-flung relative or a charity or something.”
Simon snorted. “Cullen? Charitable? Please. Willow had mentioned before that Cullen was too lazy to even make out a will. She was worried about Jill being taken care of. She said that
Jill
had actually made a will and left everything to Cullen. And I’m Cullen’s next of kin. It would have taken a while to work its way through probate court, but the money would have finally ended up where it needed to be.”
Simon moved restlessly toward Myrtle and she babbled hurriedly. “So you put gloves on and went into your brother’s house. You knew where he kept his gun because Jill has talked about it often enough. You made sure your fingerprints weren’t on the gun at all and, of course, Cullen’s would have been all over it.”
Simon smirked. “Well, it
was
his gun.”
“And you made it appear that he’d killed himself. You grasped his own hand around it. Had Cullen pull the trigger on himself. He must have been pretty drunk. That was quite a chance you took, wasn’t it? What if you’d gotten there and he’d been completely sober?”
“I would have come back later. But I wasn’t taking much of a chance, considering Cullen’s pattern of drunkenness the last couple of days.”
“But you made a mistake when you typed out a suicide note.”
“As far as I knew, Cullen
had
killed Jill. And, I figured if he
hadn’t
, nobody was going to come forward and correct the police and admit to the crime. It seemed like a good way to reinforce the fact that it was suicide.”
“Except that Willow had already been arrested for Jill’s murder and confessed to having done it.”
“Except for that. Yes. But I had no way of knowing that Willow was going to be discovered the same night I killed Cullen. It was a
good
idea at the time.” Simon sounded petulant.
Myrtle raised her eyebrows. He actually needed a pat on the back
that
badly? From someone he was going to murder?
“Jill had left him money. A significant
amount
of money.”
Simon gave a short laugh. “And how long would
that
have lasted? Remember, he was drinking liquor all day long and had no income whatsoever. He would have burned through that money fast. And it would have been a total waste. How much better would it be to use that money to help Libba? And to maybe do some good for once?”
“Plus, you succeeded in making Cullen look weak. Weak enough to take his own life and as weak as you thought he made you look to your father.” Myrtle pressed her lips into a thin line as Simon advanced with his knife. “There’s nothing you’re going to solve if you kill me. Now you’re even using your own knife. You’re going to lead Red right to you.”
Simon said, “This knife? There’s nothing special about it—except it came from Jill and Cullen’s house. I thought it might come in handy one day, so I took it with me the other night. And murdering you
will
solve some problems for me. I’ll have my freedom still and the money to enjoy it for the first time in my life.”
And at that very moment, a miracle happened. From the corner of her eye, Myrtle glimpsed that the arrival of her savior, in the unlikely form of Pasha the feral cat. Pasha had crept through the open kitchen window (thank God for the burned biscuits) and was making one more determined effort to show Myrtle how to hunt and kill. Myrtle thanked her lucky stars. This time, she carried her most unusual prey yet—a live bat.
Simon, so focused on
his
prey, and still gabbing exultantly about getting away with murder, was completely unaware of Pasha’s gift….until the bat, dumped on the floor by the cat, flapped awkwardly up and flew smack into Simon’s head.
Simon looked stricken, eyes wide open, mouth agape and flapping as he dropped the knife to wave his arms frantically at the bat. Myrtle—a lot less worried about the bat than she was about Simon—picked up her cane in both hands and, with the new-found strength courtesy of fear and the new gym membership, cracked it over Simon’s head.
He crashed to the floor in a heap and Myrtle quickly stooped and picked up the knife with shaking hands and backed up to the telephone to call Red. Pasha looked at the unconscious Simon curiously. She seemed impressed by the size of Myrtle’s prey. And so ended Myrtle’s hunting lessons from Pasha.
The police were also impressed with Myrtle’s prey, who cooperatively remained unconscious until their arrival.
“I’m not sure
why you keep opening the door to killers, Mama,” said Red. “I’d have thought you’d have learned your lesson after Willow.”
“I had no idea that Willow was a murderer until later in her visit, Red, as you well know.”
“Okay, but you apparently knew that Simon killed Cullen. If you go around killing your own siblings, it’s not likely that there’s much in the way of morals holding you back from murdering snoopy old ladies.”
“He forced his way in! And held a knife on me.” said Myrtle. “What else was I supposed to do? I was planning on calling you right before he pushed into the house. I had no thoughts of confronting Simon Caulfield, I promise you.”
Lieutenant Perkins quickly stepped in to prevent the spat going any farther. “Well, whatever you did, we owe you some gratitude, Mrs. Clover. Again. You’ve gotten a very dangerous man off the streets.”
“Pasha was really the hero,” said Myrtle, an uncharacteristic tear trickling out of her eye. She quickly wiped it away, frowning in irritation with herself. “Trying to share her bat with me. What a little love.”
Detective Perkins could think of other descriptions of the cat that were a lot more apt. His guys had had a hell of a time capturing the cat
and
the bat. Since Mrs. Clover had mentioned that the cat needed its shots and to be spayed, they’d tracked it down and finally gotten the hissing, spitting creature into a cage to be taken to the vet. The bat had been easier, in comparison.
“It certainly looks as though Pasha deserves a medal,” he said, soothingly. “I know how everything ended, but I’m not sure how you pegged Simon Caulfield for his brother’s murder.”
Myrtle beamed. She was always most pleased when being asked how she’d unraveled the case. “Simon was always a likely suspect. After all, I’d seen Cullen and Simon get into a fist fight at Fit Life. There was obviously a lot of old anger and resentment there.”
“Not only did anger provide a motive, but when Puddin was cleaning my house the other day, she noted that Simon and Libba had fallen on hard times. That’s something that was news to me. They’d never been wealthy people, but they’d always gotten by fairly well. But Puddin said that her cousin said that the Caulfields were even having trouble paying their grocery bill and had to let Puddin go as a cleaner. And Tiny Kirk said that he didn’t think Simon was going to be able to pay him for the yard work at Cullen’s house.” Myrtle ignored Red’s eye roll at the convoluted third-hand gossip.
“So Simon needed the money,” said Lieutenant Perkins.
“He was Cullen’s only living relative, so he knew the money would come his way at some point. And he knew that there
was
some money there because Georgia Simpson kept complaining about the lottery money she thought she’d been cheated out of.”
“There was definitely motive,” said Red. “But how did you determine he was the killer?”