You Have the Right to Remain Puzzled (15 page)

BOOK: You Have the Right to Remain Puzzled
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D
OWN AT THE
station Chief Harper and Dan Finley took the handcuffs off Cora Felton and offered her her one phone call. Since Becky Baldwin had been present when she was arrested, Cora didn’t need it.

Becky looked across the visiting-room table. “I feel funny about this, Cora. Benny was my client.”

“He’s dead. Doesn’t that resolve the conflict of interest?”

“Not if you killed him.”

“I didn’t kill him.”

“That’s going to be tough to prove.”

“Whoa! Hold on a minute! You’re a defense attorney. You don’t have to prove I didn’t kill him. The prosecution has to prove I did.”

“They can. Which throws the ball back in our
court. Once they prove you killed him, we have to prove you didn’t.”

“Maybe I should hire another lawyer.” “Feel free. They’re just going to tell you the same thing. Your fingerprints are on the murder weapon. You took pictures of the stolen chairs. As if the pictures aren’t damaging enough, the chambermaid’s caved in and admitted you were the one who took them.” “The pictures, not the chairs.”

“The boy from the front desk saw you take the chairs. Even if I could shake his testimony, they can prove you took them, because you gave them to Harvey Beerbaum yesterday afternoon. Which is double-plus-ungood, since it means you took ’em right around the time the doctor says Benny was killed. According to the chambermaid, you photographed the chairs around eleven-thirty, the guy from the Photomat says you dropped off the film around noon, and Harvey Beerbaum says you called him at three-thirty and came over by four.”

“The guy from the Photomat’s pretty dreamy, isn’t he?”

“I beg your pardon?” “He ask you out yet?”

Becky blushed. “Cora, you’re charged with murder.” “Yeah, but I didn’t do it. Just between you and me, isn’t the guy a hunk?”

“How can you even think about such a thing?” Cora shrugged. “Be a nice break for Sherry. Get you out of Aaron’s way. Head off any pass the guy might make at her.”

“You think he’d hit on Sherry?”

“You didn’t see the shot of her in a bikini.”

“Cora, stick with me here. You’re in jail.”

“Yes. You will get me out, now, won’t you?”

“I don’t think you understand how serious this is.”

“Oh, yes, I do. I’m charged with murder. Unless Benny Southstreet turns out to be a police officer, it’s as bad as it gets. Can you arrange bail?”

“It’s not easy in a capital case.”

“Oh, come on. I’m not a flight risk.”

“I’ll certainly raise the issue. Right now I’m trying to get the puzzle.”

“What puzzle?”

“The puzzle found on the body. The police think it’s yours. Please tell me it isn’t.”

“Hand to God.”

“Are you sure? Did you get a good look at it?”

“I haven’t seen it.”

“Then how do you know it isn’t?”

“Becky, trust me on this. I had nothing to do with the puzzle found by the body.”

“What if it’s the one you gave that housewife?”

“Becky, honey, in that context,
housewife
could be seen as a pejorative term.” Cora hoped it was. It sounded like something a linguist might say.

The phrase rang no alarm bells with Becky. Though other things did. “If it’s the same puzzle Benny claimed you stole from him, that would make a pretty tough case.”

“I thought it was pretty tough anyway.”

“You’re not being very helpful.”

“I don’t know anything that will help. Stop torturing me with what-if-it’s-the-same-puzzle, and go find out if it is.”

“I can do better than that,” Becky said. “I’m gonna get a copy and bring it in here for you to solve.”

“Oh, for Christ’s sake! You think I wanna sit in jail solving a puzzle?”

“Maybe it will get you
out
of jail.”

“Yeah, yeah, right. The guy died with a crossword puzzle by him, and when you solve it it says, ‘Cora didn’t do it.’ Gee, Becky, come back to planet Earth.”

“You don’t wanna see the puzzle?”

“Give it to Sherry. She’s good enough at solving them.”

“I thought she was busy with her matrimonial problems.”

“What’s more important? Her wedding, or my murder?”

“Your loopy logic is hard to follow, at best. Do you have anything practical to add in your defense? Aside from the bald assertion that you didn’t do it?”

“I’d take a good hard look at Chuck Dillinger.”

“How come?”

“Southstreet may have ripped him off for some money.”

“What makes you think so?”

“Evidence would indicate.”

“What kind of evidence?”

“Circumstantial.”

“How solid is this circumstantial evidence?”

“Actually, it’s more of an inference.”

“Cora.”

“What do you care? You’re not presenting this to a jury. I’m just telling you how things are. There is a strong possibility, which I can’t begin to prove, that Benny Southstreet may have ripped Chuck Dillinger off. Chuck Dillinger might be a perfectly good suspect.”

“That’s not very promising.”

“Yes it is. We’re way ahead of the police on this one. We know the chairs had nothing to do with it. I stole the chairs, and I didn’t kill him.”

“What if he was killed for
not
having the chairs?”

Cora whistled. “Whoa, Becky, you surprise me! What a great idea!”

“You think it’s right?”

“No, I think it’s dead wrong. But it’s a
great
idea.”

“Thanks a heap. What’s all this about Chuck Dillinger?”

“He filed a report with the police that his study was broken into. The person who broke in was probably Benny Southstreet.”

“You got anything to back that up?”

“Not a thing.”

“Well, what do you expect me to do about it?” Becky said irritably.

“Get me out of here.”

Becky took a breath. “Cora, you’re not making any sense. You’re spewing out a lot of unrelated facts that don’t add up to anything. This isn’t like you. You may be a little nuts, but you’re generally smart as a whip. Now, is there anything you want to tell me? You haven’t fallen off the wagon, have you?”

Cora’s face hardened. “Well, that’s a hell of a thing to say. No, I am not drunk, thank you very much. Do I smell like a brewery? Do I look like a lush?” She realized she was wearing her Wicked Witch of the West outfit, complete with cigarette burns and liquor stains. “Okay, scratch that. The point is, Miss Smarty Pants, I’ve never been arrested for murder before. There’s been men I’d like to murder—my fifth husband, for instance—but I’ve never actually done it. Or been suspected of it. I’m in jail charged with murder, and it
isn’t very nice. And the facts are so jumbled and sketchy I don’t know how to explain it. What the hell am I going to tell Chief Harper?”

“You’re not going to tell him anything,” Becky said. “You’re not talking. You’re not talking to the cops, you’re not talking to the prosecutor, you’re not talking to the media. The only things you’re saying are ‘No comment’ and ‘See my attorney.’ ”

“Then how do I explain to the police—” “You don’t. You don’t go near the police. I’m not even sure you should tell Sherry. Because she’ll tell Aaron Grant, and he’s a reporter.”

“Aaron wouldn’t do anything to hurt us.” “Probably not a great time to test that theory. What you tell your niece is your business. What you tell the cops is mine. You tell ’em nothing. Not a damn thing. When I get you out of here, you stay away from Chief Harper. He comes near you, you walk away. He calls you on the phone, you hang up. He asks you a question, you just smile. You don’t give him the time of day. Do you understand?”

Cora nodded. “Perfectly.”

C
HIEF
H
ARPER BANGED
his coffee cup down on the counter. “Are you kidding me?”

“Not at all,” Cora told him. “That’s the facts of the case as I know them.”

“But it makes no sense.”

“You think it makes more sense I killed the guy to get some chairs?”

“And protect yourself from a plagiarism suit that could cost you your career.”

“Then I’m not very bright,” Cora said, “trading a plagiarism suit for a murder rap.”

“Well, you didn’t expect to get caught.”

“Of course not. Not when I was clever enough to leave my fingerprints on the murder weapon. It was the perfect crime.”

Chief Harper took a sip of his coffee, grimaced, and
glanced around the grungy diner. It was your typical greasy spoon, with glare lighting and Formica table-tops. He and Cora were the only customers. They sat opposite each other at a booth in the back. Cora wore a conservative skirt and blouse she’d picked up at the mall. The Wicked Witch of the West getup in which she’d been arrested was in her drawstring purse on the seat next to her. Harper was in uniform. Otherwise, they could have passed for illicit lovers involved in a low-rent affair.

“Why are we having coffee here?” Harper asked irritably.

“We’re hiding from the media. So they won’t hear me confessing.”

“You’re not confessing. You’re telling me you’re innocent.”

“I’m glad to hear you take that attitude. Some policemen might quibble about the theft of the chairs. Which isn’t really a theft, it’s a retheft, stealing stolen property back. Is there a law that covers that?”

“There must be a precedent somewhere. At the moment you’re not charged with that crime.”

“That’s why I was careful to say ‘hypothetical’ when I told you about it. I did say ‘hypothetical,’ didn’t I?”

“I don’t remember.”

“Well, this whole conversation is hypothetical. Like, ‘Suppose we discuss the crime.’ ”

“You mean, suppose I listen to your ideas? All right, I’ve listened. And I’m no wiser than when I started. In fact, I’m even more confused. Tell me again why you went to the motel.”

“I hoped to find some evidence of Benny Southstreet breaking into Chuck Dillinger’s apartment.” Cora had adopted that version of the story, so she wouldn’t have
to mention breaking into Wilbur’s Antiques. There was no reason to bog Chief Harper down with too many details.

“Instead you found the chairs he had stolen from Harvey Beerbaum.”

“That’s right.”

“Which Harvey had advertised for sale on eBay.”

“Absolutely not.”

“Oh? I thought you said he did.”

“No. Benny
thought
they were the chairs on eBay. They weren’t. They were simply Harvey’s dining room chairs.”

“What made him think they were?”

“What made him think I ripped off his puzzle? The man was simply weird.”

Harper frowned. “Come on, Cora. You know better than that. You don’t dismiss a suspect’s actions on the grounds they must be crazy.”

“Benny Southstreet’s a suspect in his own death? You’re telling me it’s a suicide?”

Harper ignored that. “So you went out there while the chambermaid was making up his room and peeked in the door?”

“Well, I didn’t have a key.”

“You saw the chairs?”

“Yes, I did.”

“We don’t even need that admission. We have photographic evidence.”

“You say that as if it were a strike against me. How many murderers photograph the crime scene beforehand and drop the film off at Photomat?”

“If you want to argue you couldn’t be that dumb, it would help if you started showing even the least bit of sense. Selling chairs on eBay, for God’s sake.”

“Hey, who asked who to investigate Mr. Wilbur’s robbery?”

“I said investigate, not set up some crazy Internet sting.”

“What do you mean, crazy? It worked, didn’t it?”

“Like a charm. You got Benny Southstreet to steal Harvey Beerbaum’s dining room chairs. What could be better?”

“I also got Wilbur to bid on them.”

“So? The guy’s been trying to find his stolen chairs for months. Of course he’s looking for someone to put ’em up for bids.”

“Yeah, but Benny Southstreet wasn’t. What the hell was he doing in the picture?”

“Getting killed, mainly. With your prints on the gun.”

“Well, if you’re gonna make an issue of that.”

“I’m not the one making the issue. It’s in Henry’s hands now.”

“Henry Firth? That twerp?”

Chief Harper choked on his coffee. “Hey! That’s the county prosecutor you’re talking about.”

“He’s still a twerp.”

“You shouldn’t take this personally, Cora.”

“It isn’t personal. I thought he was a twerp
before
I got arrested. Can you talk him out of prosecuting me? For his own good. He’s gonna make a fool of himself.”

“Not if you get convicted. It’ll be like busting Martha Stewart. He’ll be the prosecutor who put away the Puzzle Lady.”

“You’re not cheering me up, Chief.”

“Well, I would strongly suggest you come up with some evidence in your favor. Right now, everything
works against you. What time were you at the motel? Hypothetically, of course.”

“Right around three o’clock.”

“That when you saw the gun?”

“The hypothetical gun? Yeah, it was right there on the nightstand.”

“You picked it up?”

“I wanted to see if it had been fired.”

“You picked it up and sniffed it?”

“So?”

“Isn’t that the sort of thing they do in detective stories?”

“That doesn’t make it wrong.”

“In the detective stories do they usually leave their fingerprints on it?”

Cora didn’t dignify that with an answer.

“Had the gun been fired?”

“No, it had not. The gun hadn’t been fired. Benny wasn’t in the motel room. I took the chairs and left. Sometime after that Benny Southstreet came back to the motel room, the killer came to the motel room, took the gun, and shot Benny in the head. By which time I was long gone.”

“Not very long, according to the medical examiner. There’s a rather small window of opportunity for killing this guy. Autopsy report puts the time of death between noon and four. If you left around three, there’s only an hour this could have happened. And that’s pushing the edge of the time limit.”

“I can’t help that. The facts are the facts.”

Chief Harper eyed Cora as skeptically as he’d regarded the diner’s coffee. “Are they really? Why do I get the feeling you’re selling me snake oil?”

“You’re a cop. You have a suspicious nature. It’s too bad. I’m giving you the straight goods.”

“Then the straight goods don’t help you much. You’re in the soup, and everything you say just makes it worse.”

“Okay. You got anything that makes it
better?”

“I beg your pardon?”

“Come on, Chief. I told you what I know. You got anything that helps me?”

“Not really.”

“Thanks a heap. Let me put it this way. What do you know that I don’t?”

Harper scowled. “I shouldn’t be telling you this.”

“You’re not. We’re talking hypothetically.”

“There wasn’t a lot of blood. Which would indicate the shot was muffled by something that soaked it up.”

“Was there a towel or pillow missing from the unit?”

“No. And there were powder burns around the wound which there wouldn’t have been in that case.”

“What if he was killed somewhere else and the body moved?”

“With the gun you were playing with in his motel room
after
the time the medical examiner says he died? The gun you claim
hadn’t been fired?
He was killed somewhere else with
that
gun?”

“Am I correct in assuming you don’t think much of that theory?”

“You see the problem? I wish I could tell you something that helps. But nothing does. All the evidence we turn up indicates you killed the guy.”

“Great. I’m so glad we had this little talk. So what do you advise me to do?”

“Keep a low profile.”

BOOK: You Have the Right to Remain Puzzled
8.11Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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