War and Peas (10 page)

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Authors: Jill Churchill

Tags: #det_irony

BOOK: War and Peas
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“Biological clock?" Jane suggested.
“Maybe. Or maybe she really did love him, but knew something about him that made her wary."
“Like a crazy wife locked up in the attic?”
“Jane, you're being silly!"
“And you're really stretching your imagination to the breaking point because you don't like Whitney Abbot.”
Shelley grinned. "No, I guess I don't. I wonder why that is."
“Because he wouldn't let you bully him.”
“Moi? A bully? Jane! Oh-ho," she finished, glancing past Jane to the door.
“Who have you been bullying now?" Mel asked from the doorway. "And where is everybody?”

 

Eleven
Having determined the rest of the day was ruined for working, Jane and Shelley left the Snellen, resolved to make up for lost time tomorrow.
Jane snagged her younger son as he was leaving for the swimming pool and made him go shopping with her for new school clothes instead. For the first time in history, he didn't object. She came out of the mall an hour later, blowing on her credit card as if it were singed.
“Thanks for the cool clothes, Mom," Todd said.
“They're not cool clothes. They're ridiculous and you'll probably get sent home from school to grow into them, but you're welcome anyway."
“Drop me at the pool?”
She nodded and turned the car in that direction. "So long as you're home in time for dinner."
“What's for dinner?"
“Tuna casserole."
“Yuck!" he said. "I mean, oh, yum!"
“You know perfectly well you love my tuna casserole. You're just programmed to say yuck.”
She dropped him off and went home, dragging his new clothes inside and dumping them at the foot of the stairs. Her daughter, Katie, ever alert to the sound of shopping bags, galloped down the stairs. "You went shopping without me!" she said accusingly.
“For Todd. You're this weekend."
“Mom, I can shop for myself. Why don't you just give me the money and save yourself the trouble of coming along?"
“Nuh-uh. Unless you can do it on fifty dollars."
“Fifty dollars! I couldn't even get decent shoes for that."
“That's exactly what I'm afraid of."
“Come on, Mom. You only want to buy me geeky-looking stuff."
“I thought only boys could be geeks," Jane said, perplexed. "And you're the one who wants all that clunky, no-color, ugly unisex stuff, not me.”
Katie rolled her eyes. "Yeah, you'd have me in perky little white sandals and pink dresses with matching ribbons in my hair if you could. Mom, you're okay, but your sense of style is twenty years out of date."
“But my checkbook's not," Jane said firmly.
This was such an old argument that either one of them could have recited her part and the other's in her sleep. Often Katie actually seemed toenjoy the familiar dispute. Today she wasn't in the mood. She followed Jane into the kitchen. "What's for dinner?”
Jane sighed. "Tuna casserole. And you like it, too, no matter what you say."
“I think I'll eat at Jenny's house."
“Jenny's mother might have an opinion on that."
“I'll call." But before she could pick up the phone, it rang. Todd, reporting that his friend Elliott had invited him home for dinner. After ascertaining that Elliott's mother theoretically knew about this, Jane put away the tuna and pasta. Next time they asked what was for dinner, she'd lie. Her older son, Mike, was working as a delivery boy for a fancy deli and usually got dinner as part of his pay, so there was no point in cooking for him. In fact, she'd order out from the deli as well, she decided, after giving the contents of the refrigerator a once-over.
She'd just settled down an hour later with a Reuben sandwich and the deli's special homemade potato chips when Shelley knocked at the kitchen door. Jane waved her in.
Shelley had brought her own enormous coffee cup and set it down across the kitchen table from Jane. "Well, you'll be glad to know I did a Good Thing," she said. "After you left the museum, I went back in and apologized profusely to Whitney Abbot for upsetting him. I was gracious. He was even more gracious. All is sweetness and light between us."
“But you still suspect him?"
“Of course I do. But I can't think of a good reason, except that he's a prig."
“And I still think you're on the wrong track. From all I've heard about Regina, she and Whitney Abbot were perfectly suited. Remote, formal, socially acceptable, ambitious—"
“But, Jane, that's precisely the point! If they were such an ideal couple, why the shilly-shallying on Regina's part about getting engaged and setting a date?"
“Maybe she had a secret dream of a dashing reprobate sweeping her off her prim feet. Not such a bad dream, or an uncommon one."
“Are you telling me you're turning Mel in for a pool hustler?”
Jane laughed. "Not quite. Have a potato chip.”
Shelley pointed at the shopping bags heaped at the bottom of the stairway. "What's all that?"
“Clothes for Todd. Nasty clothes. Cost a fortune and none of them fit. The trousers all fall down in folds around his feet, the shorts bag halfway down his calves, and the pullover shirts all look like I bought them at a Big and Tall store. Waste of fabric and he looks like a bag lady in them. Not only that, they're all brown or gray or black. I tried to slip a slate-blue item past him, but failed."
“He'll be right in style and look exactly like the rest of his friends."
“I always thought one of the primary things about human nature is that we'd all like to look better than our friends — if ft's not too much trouble."
“Not for teenagers. Frankly, I like the baggy stuff. At least for the girls. I don't want Denise inflaming the hormones of some gropey boy.”
Jane nodded. "I remember quite a lengthy discussion a couple years ago with Katie about a pointy-boobed corset she actually thought I was going to let her wear over her clothes. I guess this baggy stuff they all wear is an improvement. But Katie wants me to spend a fortune on combat boots. Real combat boots! Jeez!”
There was another knock at the door and this time Jane went to open it. Mel stood on the step, a grin on his face and a paper bag from Burger King in his hand. "Can I eat here?"
“Sure. If I'd known you were coming, I'd have ordered you some real food.”
Shelley and Jane were bursting with questions, but knew better than to interfere with his meal. He polished off the burger and fries and looked longingly at the remaining quarter of Jane's sandwich, which she turned over to him.
When he was done and had put his plate in the sink, he sat down and said, "You two look like vultures. Very attractive vultures. What do you want to know — that I'm free to tell you?"
“Everything," Jane said.
“The gun was from the museum — a.41-caliber percussion pocket pistol, made by Henry Deringer in Philadelphia, probably in the 1850s."
“How far away was it fired from?" Shelley asked.
“Can't tell. It wasn't too close because there weren't powder burns on her clothing, except some on her sleeve, nowhere near the wound. That was, we assume, from a reenactor who shot a blank past her, but close up."
“I thought forensic people had formulas and things to figure out how far away the gun was," Jane said.
“Not in this case. They don't see derringers involved in homicide cases much anymore. The last one that comes to mind is Abe Lincoln. You see, this old gun didn't fire cartridges. The way it works is that you pour loose gunpowder down the barrel and then ram a round lead bullet wrapped in a piece of cloth down on top of the powder. Then you put a small copper percussion cap containing a mercury fulminate on a nipple under the hammer. When the hammer falls, it detonates the mercury fulminate and a flame flashes through a hole in the nipple into the rear of the barrel. That sets the gunpowder off and sends the bullet on its way."
“So if you don't know how much gunpowder the murderer used, you can't tell how hard the gun shot, so the modern formulas don't work?" Shelley asked.
Jane looked at her with amazement.
Mel nodded. "Exactly. And they don't know much about spherical lead bullets anymore, either."
“I thought things were supposed to be simpler in the olden days," Jane said.
“They probably were," Mel said. "A modern firearm is a lot more complicated. You just don't have to know as much about it to fire it. Think of them as more 'user-friendly.' "
“But only a 'gun nut' would know how to fire the old one," Jane said.
Mel shook his head. "You'd be surprised how many people know about guns. Anyone who works in a museum, probably. And a lot of other people, too."
“What about the second reenactment?" Shelley asked. "The one that was filmed."
“No help at all. And before you ask, we've run down nearly everyone who was watching the first time and nobody had a video camera. One woman had a still camera and took a few pictures, but they're all of the soldiers, not the civilian reenactors."
“Go back to the gun," Jane said. "Could it have been fired from the woods instead of on the field?”
Mel nodded. "Afraid so. And nobody admits to having been in the woods except the reen-actors, if that's the next question."
“It was. What about the museum case the gun was in?"
“No fingerprints whatsoever. A few fibers of paper towel stuck in the edges. Somebody went to considerable lengths to clean it up. And that might not have been deliberate. The volunteers say they often go around with a glass cleaner and paper towels when they're not guiding tours. With so many cases and so much glass, it's a constant job. One of the tour guides thinks she might have cleaned that case last Friday, but can't remember if the gun was in there or not. She had no reason to pay attention."
“Doesn't firing a gun leave powder on your hands?" Shelley asked.
Mel nodded. "It does. But by the time we had an idea of what had happened, almost all the museum people who participated had gone to that mobile home, taken showers, washed their hair, and so forth. We didn't even test anyone. If we'd tried to bring in a case on the basis of traces of gunpowder, we'd have been laughed out of court. Everyone who participated probably had some powder on their clothes and hands."
“So much for science," Shelley said. "What about alibis?"
“Just as bad," Mel said. "Babs, Sharlene, Lisa, and Tom Cable were right there on the field. No alibi at all, but all four of them didn't do it. Georgia says she was buying cotton candy, which seems so out of character that I almost have to believe her. Derek says he was in the museum's mobile home by himself. He didn't like admitting it. I think he was up to something he shouldn't have been, like pawing through the women's clothes left in the mobile home. Or maybe he's lying."
“What about Caspar Snellen?" Jane asked. "Vague. Looking around the fair," Mel replied. "Could be true."
“And Whitney Abbot?" Shelley asked sharply.
Mel smiled. "Your personal favorite, I take it?”
Shelley shrugged.
“Says he arrived a few minutes before the reenactment, but had misunderstood the time it was to happen and sat in his car doing some paperwork. Had the engine running, windows up, and air-conditioning on full blast. Says he didn't even hear the battle. Claims the first he knew there was something wrong was when the ambulance and police cars arrived. And that, too, could be true."
“I must say I'm surprised at how well you're taking all this," Jane commented.
“I'm only second in command," Mel said. "It's nice for a change."
“The guy with the food poisoning's back on the job?" Jane asked.
“Home. Sticking close to his bathroom. Trying to run a murder investigation by phone. I wouldn't trade places with him for anything."
“What about the incident today, with Regina's office?" Shelley asked.
“Don't know much of anything yet. Babs and Sharlene are trying to put everything back together and figure out if anything's missing. I've got to go back there in a little while. But Sharlene said there wasn't anything obviously gone. Regina's most important papers were accounted for before I left."
“What could someone have been searching for?" Jane mused. "Or was it a search rather than plain old vandalism?"
“Looked to me like a search. There were lots of things that could easily have been broken or torn up, but weren't."
“It must be connected to her murder," Shelley said.
Mel shook his head. "Not necessarily. Maybe someone saw the fact that the office was unoccupied as an opportunity to grab something they didn't want anyone else to know about."
“Like what?" Shelley asked.
“Oh, suppose someone had written a letter of complaint about one of the employees or volunteers. Regina might have called the accused person on the carpet and said, 'Straighten up or I show this to the board.' “
Shelley nodded. "I guess that's possible. So who could have been in there, unnoticed?"
“Nearly anyone," Mel said. "The last time anyone admits to being in that office was Sharlene, first thing in the morning. She says nothing was disturbed then and she's fairly certain she locked it back up, but not positive. And even if she did, the keys were hanging on that board all day. Makes you wonder why they bother with keys."
“Still, it must have taken nerves of steel to go in there during the day with people roaming around," Jane said. "If somebody had walked in on the search, how could it have been explained?"
“At least one person involved with the museum has already proved to have pretty good nerves," Mel reminded her. "Committing murder in front of an audience.”

 

Twelve
Jane and Shelley
arrived at the museum
early
the next morning, determined to accomplish a lot of work. Sharlene was the only one there. Today she wore a hot-pink floral dress that turned her hair to glorious flame. "Wow!" Jane said. "You're gorgeous. I'd give anything to have your coloring!”

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