"Desiree?"
"Why do you have to know?" Her response held a touch of petulance. She pulled out a cutting board and started slicing lemons. She still didn't look at him. Peter gave her a moment.
"It's really important."
"Why is it important? He's dead! He shot himself. What else matters?" Tears gathered in her eyes. Peter knew better than to let her emotionalism distract him from the fact that she wasn't answering him.
"We need to know why, and everything matters." He kept his tone even.
She sighed heavily, giving up. "Look, there was this one night. He hung around after closing. We all have a few drinks after closing. He was wasted. I was a bit toasty. They'd broken up. We wound up necking in the parking lot and I took him home with me. He came around for a few weeks and then I found out she had her claws in him again. I couldn't deal. So I told him 'no more.' I wasn't going to be the Other Woman, and if he didn't know what he wanted, he'd have to figure it out. He tested the waters every once in a while, but after that he started to drift away. Stopped coming in so much, like that."
Peter privately thought Luthor did know what he wanted, and it wasn't to be stuck with one woman. Further questions revealed Desiree hadn't seen him for several weeks, and he hadn't called. She'd been working until closing the night he died. Whatever happened that night didn't appear to involve her.
Desiree provided names of some of the regular crowd but she didn't have numbers. He'd have to come back on a Thursday or Friday night to catch everyone. Desiree said she didn't think Luthor saw any of his drinking buddies outside the bar. Not much hope that interviewing them would reveal anything important, but it had to be covered. Maybe he could get Brent to do it.
His trip to the Northside Tavern turned up a waitress. Sharon was a black haired, dark-eyed waif who swore they'd been friends, but nothing more. According to Sharon, Lia was making him crazy, he kept trying to leave and she wouldn't let him go. He was too good for her. Lia had some mental problems and he couldn't break up with her until she was stabilized on meds.
Sharon had been out of town for her sister's wedding on Saturday night. She said she'd seen him on Wednesday, but hadn't spoken to him since.
No joy there.
By the end of the afternoon, Peter was convinced writers were being literal when they called themselves professional liars. He'd grab an early dinner and look at Luthor's phone records. Right now that looked like the only way to establish what he did Saturday night, if he did anything besides harass Lia.
~ ~ ~
Peter had never experienced anything like it. He'd brought home an Edgar Allen Poe from Dewey's Pizza. (He didn't know what garlic and olives had to do with Poe, but who really cared about a name?) And now Viola sat exactly eighteen inches away from him, her eyes tracking every bite, drool intermittently hitting the floor. After eating two slices, he closed the box, pulled out his notebook and looked up a number.
Lia answered on the third ring, thank God.
"What can I do for you, Detective?"
"I have a dog problem."
"Oh?"
"I'm trying to enjoy a nice pizza and Viola's staring at me and slobbering all over the floor."
Lia laughed.
"It's not funny. I can't eat like this."
"Well, Detective, you'll have to distract her."
"Distract her? With what? She acts like pizza is a tractor beam."
"Oh, it is, Detective, it is. You distract her with the crust, and she'll take it to some corner where nobody can take it away from her. And if you're lucky and the pizza is not too hot, you might make it half way through the next slice before she's back."
"Can't I just give her some kibble?"
"She knows the difference. She's not stupid. You'll have to share."
"And that's not bad for her?"
"It's better for her than a lot of dog foods. No chicken beaks in pizza."
"Ugh."
"Don't give her onions, chocolate, or grapes, and very little sweet stuff. She loves apples and carrots, and she especially likes avocado."
"Avocado?"
"Her favorite outside pizza and liver treats. Some people say dogs shouldn't get it, but in small amounts, it's fine."
"You know a lot about this. Sure you can't take her?" Peter hoped the desperation in his voice would engage her sympathies.
"Three dogs is very different from two. You ever try walking three dogs at the same time?"
"Um, no, and don't want to."
"Exactly. Any other Doggy Daddy advice you need?"
"Now that you mention it, I don't think she's house-broken. I take her for long walks and she does nothing, then as soon as we get home she'll find some corner and do her business."
Lia sighed. "I should have thought of that. Sorry. Viola's a complicated little girl. She was abandoned at an early age, and she gets anxious, especially in new situations. She feels especially vulnerable when she's using the bathroom. I think that comes from her Border Collie intelligence. She thinks more like a human than other dogs. You like anyone watching you in the bathroom?"
"Good point. What do I do about it?"
"She'll get over it as she feels more comfortable, but she's always had a shy bladder. Luthor would take her to the park and she'd find some nice, private bush to violate. You really have to watch her to pick up after her. You might get some disposable training pads from the pet store. She knows what they are and she'll use them. If you want, I'll teach you a little song we would sing to her on walks. It's a signal she knows."
"Are you saying she won't pee because I don't sing to her?" His incredulity was apparent.
"Viola's very special. Dogs are like people. They all have their quirks."
"Huh."
"It's a big change, having a sentient creature around all the time. They have needs and personalities, but they're still easier than children. Viola's been spayed, so she'll never come home pregnant, and while she may want to drive, she can't reach the pedals. She'll never wreck your car."
"You have a point. But you're scaring me. You sound like you think I should keep her."
"No, Detective, I think she's going to keep you. It's okay, you'll like it. Bring her up to the park sometime if you need some pointers. Dogs are easy and fun if you keep a few things in mind. Otherwise they can run your life."
"I just may do that."
~ ~ ~
Peter used the crust from his two previous slices to give him a head start on the next one. The pizza had lost much of it's heat by the time he'd gotten off the phone, but the advice had been worth it. He pulled out the Morrisey file.
The autopsy report set time of death between 2:00 a.m. and 3:00 a.m. Luthor had been shot by a nine millimeter gun that had been held against his right temple, according to stippling left on his skin. He had gun shot residue on his right hand.
All this was textbook for suicide, except for Mrs. Morrisey's insistence that her son had been left-handed. She stated he had no interest in guns and hadn't even researched them for the book he was writing. "He said he didn't need to because all the guns in his book were from an alternate universe and didn't operate like Earth guns." Her even tone over the phone made it impossible to tell how Mrs. Morrisey felt about her son's ingenuity.
These two tidbits had been enough to delay ruling on the death, and in the interest of clarification, Peter had been asked to continue investigating.
Peter read further. Toxicology was negative. Nada. Zip. Clean as a whistle. Peter frowned. Usually when a man eats a gun, he has a few drinks first. Cold steel is hard to face sober, and everything he'd learned about Luthor indicated that he was not brave or stoic, more like the type who can't look when he gets a shot. How does a guy like that pull the trigger?
None of this was impossible, but it wasn't comfortable. He might have been acting the obsessed and wounded lover but he had two other women in the wings.
He picked up the report on Luthor's phone. First was the contact list, next was the list of
calls. He skipped to the last page. Saturday evening was one long list of outgoing calls to a number Peter recognized as Lia's. The last one was 12:57 a.m. Sunday morning. After 1:00 a.m., a new set of calls appeared, to Lia's cell phone. Twenty over a period of thirty minutes, again all outgoing. Peter wondered what Morriesey's other women would think about the way he was hounding the woman who "had her claws in him."
Then, at 1:35 a.m., an incoming text from Lia's cell.
Huh.
Looked like the two phones traded texts. He looked at the bottom of the report. There were no texts stored in the phone for the wee hours of Sunday morning. Whatever they had been, they were gone now.
He was going to have to buy flowers for Cynth in IT for pulling all this off the phone. In the old days, it would have taken a court order to get it from the service provider, and even if they'd had sufficient cause, they might not have bothered. Hooray for technology.
Lia said her phone was lost. Maybe it wasn't lost. Maybe it was stolen. If so, someone else used the phone to text Luthor, pretending to be Lia. Did that person set up a meet?
If Lia had lied, then she was hiding something. But what? Whatever it was, he didn't think she was at the park when he died. The woman had been in shock after finding him. If her two friends hadn't taken such good care of her, he would have called for EMTs and sent her to the Emergency Room.
He didn't like the idea that she might be more involved in this than she was saying. It didn't play with the person he'd met. But he had to admit he was a sucker for green-eyed women with long legs, and his BS meter might be malfunctioning.
Well, nuts. He'd been hoping for a tidy resolution that would allow him to find out more about Ms. Anderson with a clear conscience. He scratched Viola absently on the head. There was a silver lining to this. If Lia was feeling guilty about driving Morrisey to suicide, she could stop.
Unless she was the one who killed him.
Chapter 5
Wednesday, May 11
"Lia, darling, how are you?" Catherine neatly inserted herself between Lia and Jim on their bench. The hug she gave Lia had Lia's coffee tipping precariously. "How terrible for you. I wanted desperately to be here for you Sunday, but the police wouldn't let me through. I hope they told you; that young detective said he would. I made him promise. You wouldn't know, I'm sure you were in shock." She turned to Jim and touched his shoulder. "Jim, did he tell you?" Lia rolled her eyes so only Anna could see and resolved to ask her later if Catherine was batting her eyes. She swore she could hear lashes fluttering.
Lia had decided to rejoin what she called the General Population. (And didn't the mad scramble on this side of the park resemble a prison yard sometimes? A prison yard with barrel racing?) Mostly people were giving her space. Except Catherine.
"I really wanted to bring you a casserole so you wouldn't have to worry about food but I just had so much company, there was no way I could do it. I'm so sorry about Luthor, but you know, I never thought he was right for you. What an awful, awful thing for him to do. You must be devastated." She turned to Jim. "I heard you saw him, too. Was it awful?"
This time she paused in expectation of an answer.
"It was grim, Catherine. You wouldn't have wanted to see it."
"I'm sure it would have destroyed me to see something like that. I don't think I'd ever be the same again. I don't know what the world is coming to. I've got to run Caesar and Cleo to the groomers. She took Lia's hands in hers and pressed them. "Don't you worry, we're all going to take care of you. Caesar, Cleo, come baby cakes, it's spa day! Jim, you must walk me to my car." Jim obligingly escorted Catherine and her yapping Poms across the park.
Anna raised her eyebrows, looked sideways at Lia, and announced sotto voce, "She came, she saw, she conquered."
Marie snorted.
Bailey shook her head. "Is she always like that?"
Anna, Marie, and Lia replied in unison. "Always."
"Don't worry, Sweetie," Anna said. "She's done her good deed for the day. She can go to lunch with a clear conscience now. Tell us, what did Detective Peter want to know? Bailey, have you seen Detective Peter? He's quite handsome."
"Anna, you go for it," Lia said. "I can't deal with being fixed up right now."
"Seriously, why was he interviewing you? Surely there's no question how Luthor died?"
"Not at all. He said they were just trying to understand why, so he wanted to know who Luthor might have been talking to, if he was having problems. Aside from me breaking up with him. That sort of thing. Oh, and he called me later. He wanted some advice about Viola."
"Did he now?" Anna gave Bailey a knowing look.
"You can stop with the eyes, Anna, he's just not used to having a dog."
"So why haven't you taken her?" Marie asked.
"I don't think I could stand having her give me the 'Where's Daddy?' look. It's your fault, Bailey. You introduced me to that animal communicator. Now I know she's missing him and wondering where he is and if I took her, she might blame me for taking her away from him. I'd feel guilty every time I laid eyes on her. Besides, she likes men better."
"You know," Bailey offered, "calling Luella might not be a bad idea. She could explain it to Viola."
Marie considered. "You think a detective would go for the woo-woo stuff?"
"So maybe we don't tell him," Bailey offered. "He'd let you have visitation, wouldn't he? And Luella could ask Viola how she likes the detective."
Lia gave Bailey a look. "So devious. I never knew that about you. I'll think about it."
~ ~ ~
Thursday Night, May 12
Peter was exhausted when he finally returned home Thursday evening. His bar interviews had turned up one dead end after another. Likewise interviews at Luthor's job. While he was sure the Cincinnati Art Museum was a pit of seething passions, Morrisey, in his position as a part time art installer, appeared well out of it.
Viola wriggled and wagged as he opened the door. He knelt down to ruffle her fur and she gave him frantic kisses. Not a bad way to arrive home. He let her out the back, twisted the cap off a Beck's and sat on the stoop, watching her sniff her way around the yard.
The more he thought about it, the more it made sense that Morrisey's death had something to do with the dog park. The dog park parking lot was an excellent place for a rendezvous. The long, narrow lot was blocked from view on two sides by trees and on the third side by the hill. You could only see the lot from the street if you looked in when you were exactly abreast of the drive. If you didn't use the lot, you might not know it was there. It was unlikely anyone but a dog park regular would think to use it. If one of Morrisey's bar pals had suggested a meet there, it would have seemed odd. The place was perfect for ambush; a public place nearly invisible from the street, buffered on three sides by hundreds of acres of forest. It might not have occurred to Morrisey that the most used six acres of Mount Airy Forest were going to be deserted and isolated at 2:00 a.m. Familiarity may have made him careless.
The dog park also appeared to be the one place where Morrisey and Lia intersected. Lia was the obvious suspect. A woman would have to be nuts if she didn't want to kill him after all his hounding. But that didn't feel right. While Lia was remorseful about events, he didn't feel she had the passion for Morrisey to kill him. She just seemed ground down by him and over it.
This crime had taken obsessive planning to set up and if Morrisey had not been of a small percentage of the population who preferred to use their left hand, the crime would have been labeled suicide. This type of staging took detachment. The woman he interviewed in the park was stunned, not detached.
Procedure dictated he interview her again, and hammer her about the phone. But since she or someone close to her killed Morrisey, all the interview was likely to accomplish would be to tip off Morrisey's killer that the death had been reclassified as murder.
Meanwhile, as long as he had Viola, he had the perfect excuse to hang out at the park and get a feel for who was who. He was
sure Lia would introduce him around. If she didn't, from what he saw during his one visit, Viola would draw anyone who knew her master. And he could ever so casually ask Lia if she found her cell. So far, no one knew this was a murder investigation. If he kept it that way, maybe he could catch his quarry off guard. Whoever it was.
~ ~ ~
My first removal was the hardest. Not the doing of it, I was quite glad to put an end to a life that exuded such misery that it spoiled the perfect peace of my existence. It was the pretense of grief afterwards I found hard to maintain. I decided never to remove anyone so close to me again.
But the doing was easy. My target was conveniently asleep in a hospital bed with an IV drip. So simple to use a hypodermic to load the line with potassium chloride at the end of visiting hours. When his induced heart attack occurred, I was in a very public restaurant booth with friends. That was the first time, and it was in the restaurant that I most struggled, to keep still, to stay calm, to wait for events to unfold while pretending nothing had changed. The call came, ruining a very nice Snapper Almondine. I had to abandon this treat and also forgo the Creme Brulee I had planned to order for dessert.
I learned much that night. I learned to use my own stress and tension to fuel the appearance of grief. I learned that at certain times people will forgive you if you pretend not to hear them and don't respond to them. And I learned that while it is a good thing to be visible and accounted for when the removal actually occurs, it is also good if you can be alone when receiving the news. Schooling one's voice over the telephone is much easier than also considering one's facial expression and mannerisms in a face-to-face conversation.
The first one was easy because the plan was simple and I did not over-think it. But the more removals I do, the more aware I am of how many things can go wrong, how much danger is in each step along the path once the event is in motion. As the years go by, technology is increasingly my enemy. Surveillance cameras, time stamped receipts, GPS devices, all become my enemy and must be accounted for. It becomes harder to obtain what I need to carry out these events without leaving a record. It is no longer enough to simply dispose of evidence; you have to obtain items in such a way that not a single kilobyte betrays you ever had a connection to them. I've learned to anticipate possible scenarios and obtain the necessary tools ahead of time as part of a legitimate purchase. My painter's coveralls I bought two years ago when I repainted the living room. I bought them along with two gallons of paint and other supplies, at an old store that didn't use a scanner. I paid cash. There was no camera.