After she did this, she took a mold base and lined it up on top of the contact paper, so that the template, tile, and base made a sort of sandwich. She carefully flipped the stack so the mold base was on the bottom and the tiles were upside-down. She replaced the template with a styrofoam ring and set the completed mold on a shelf.
"One down, thirty-nine to go."
When Peter arrived, she was working on her sixth mosaic layout. "You look like you're feeling better."
"Much. Making art is so centering. Can I get you something? Water? Sweet tea? I remember you like it."
"Tea would be great."
She pulled a jug of tea out of her studio fridge and poured two glasses. She dragged another stool over to the table. "I hope this is okay, I don't have regular chairs here."
"This is fine. What are you working on?"
Lia described the garden she and Bailey were creating for Catherine and showed him the mosaics she'd already set up. "We're using jewel tone colors, like aura colors"
"What do aura colors look like?"
"Clear and intense, like a rainbow or prism, but more variety. In addition to Roy G Biv . . . ."
"Roy G Biv?"
"It's an acronym. You know, red, orange, yellow, green, blue indigo and violet. It's the order of colors in the rainbow."
"Never heard that one before."
"Anyway, along with Roy, you can also have, say, turquoise or peach and blues from royal to cerulean, spring greens, forest greens. Browns, black, grays, and muddy colors, too, if you're unhealthy. Anyway, that's what Bailey's aura-reading friend says, I wouldn't know. So the background of each symbol is meant to evoke aura energy without being obvious about it. Catherine wanted to do a repeating rainbow theme, you know one red paver, one orange, one yellow, all through the labyrinth, but Bailey and I talked her out of it."
"How did you do that?" Peter asked. "She seems like a determined sort of woman."
"Bailey's so funny. She'll say, 'Oh, that's such a great idea! And then she mentions some tacky place where she's seen it before and Catherine can't change her mind fast enough. I caught on, so now I do it, too. Say, should we be wasting your time talking about this?"
"It's not a waste at all. Anything that helps me understand the park crowd better is helpful. If I record this, will you be self-conscious?"
"Dunno. You can try."
He set his digital recorder on the table and turned it on. "You were telling me about Catherine."
"You want more of this stuff?"
"Sure. So she sounds like she's very concerned with her image."
"Pretty much. She's the sort who won't leave the house without make-up on."
"And this project, the aromatherapy labyrinth and koi pond, that's a big undertaking. So what's that about besides wanting to be the coolest kid on the block?"
"She said she wanted an 'island of serenity' and she's seen labyrinths and aromatherapy gardens. She wanted to put it all together." Lia gave him an earnest look. "I feel kind of sorry for her."
"Why is that?"
"When you're that socially competitive, when you're that focussed on material things, well, I don't think you can like yourself all that much because just you by yourself is not enough."
"So you're wise, as well as talented?"
Lia snorted. "If you say so."
"When did Catherine decide she wanted the garden?"
"Not long after she started coming to the park. Three months ago? She found out I was an artist and started having all kinds of ideas. I thought it was just talk, so many people like her dangle their money in front of you and never come through. Like talking about doing a big commission means you're going to suck up to them. But somehow the idea caught hold and she got serious, even if she does argue about every nickel. I might have to give Luthor credit for selling her on the commission. He kept talking about what a romantic setting it would be for her. I don't know if you've noticed, but she really eats up up male attention."
"I noticed. So was she interested in Luthor?"
"How could she not be? He used to play up to her. It was like a game to him. Or at least he said it was like a game to him. Now I'm not sure anything he told me was true." She moodily pushed some tiles around.
Peter wasn't sure either. There wasn't anything he could say to that, so he changed the subject. "How about your partner, Bailey?"
"We're not partners, except on this one project. She's a woo-woo queen."
"Woo-woo queen?"
"She hasn't suggested we hold a seance for Luthor, not yet, but she's into just about every other New Age thing. Chakras, aromatherapy, herbs, acupuncture, energy healing, animal communicators, astrology . . . . She's at least tried it. She's a great landscaper. She only started coming to the park recently. I've known her for years through library events."
"You sound a bit skeptical of her inclinations."
"I really don't know much about all of it. She says she's seen auras a few times. Maybe if I saw an aura or two I might be more interested. But it's a huge market, and she can talk the language. She's interested in the healing potential of plants, both in the herbs and in what she calls 'High Vibration Gardening.'"
"What's 'High Vibration Gardening'?"
"It's a new concept she came up with, using specific plants to create an environment that encourages certain mental and emotional states. I get lost when she talks about it. She says it's like the music woo-woo people who claim listening to Mozart aligns chakras, but with plants."
"Huh."
"Anyway, when we're done with Catherine's garden, we're going to take pictures and shop it around on the internet and at New Age fairs and see if we can drum up some business."
"Why gardens? I thought you had a good thing going with the paintings."
"I do, but this is fun because it's physical in a way that painting isn't. And it will be like a painting you can walk through. When I get Catherine's bench done, it'll be a painting you can sit on." She grinned at the thought.
Peter smiled back. "Sounds nice."
"It will be. Catherine bought the house next door to her last year and tore it down, said it was an eyesore and she didn't want to look at it anymore. You know the old neighborhoods around here, showcases next to dumps. If you ask me, she was just as happy to get rid of the neighbors. She didn't like their 'breeding.' Anyway, she's been dying to do something showy with the lot, and this is it."
"So what's someone like her doing hanging out at a dog park?"
"Good question. She doesn't seem like the type, does she?"
"Not to me."
Lia crinkled her eyebrows as she considered this. "Well, some of us are arty, and she likes that. When I'm being cynical, I think she comes because her husband won't come anywhere near the park. Too much poop for Leo. She can flirt as much as she wants and none of it will get back to her society friends. When I'm not being cynical, I think it's a relief to be around people who don't care how she's dressed or how much money she has. But that could just be me. If I was around her crowd all the time, I'd go bat-shit crazy and I'd be rolling in the mud for relief."
This created an interesting visual for Peter, which he chose not to share. "So, how does Jose fit in?"
"He's doing the parts that require machinery. Right now he and Bailey are roto-tilling."
"What's his story?"
Lia smiled. "Jose is Jose. Though, now that I think of it, he's not really Jose."
"How so?"
"Jose is a nickname his family gave him when he was a baby. He says when he turned two, the thing he said most was 'no way.' So they started calling him Jose, for No Way Jose. He won't tell us his real name. He does say that he's Italian. He's your basic good-guy, who works with his hands and loves his wife. He's a maintenance supervisor. He knows how to fix most things and he does minor construction jobs on the side. He's always helping somebody with something, and if a dog fight breaks out, he's first to jump in to stop it. He probably played football in high school, but I don't know fo
r sure."
"So how does he get along with everyone?"
"As far as I know, he gets along great with everyone. He gets frustrated sometimes when he's running a crew. Some of the young guys can be punks, and there was a guy who was stealing materials from a job last year. That just comes with the territory when you're a boss. Oh, yeah, he was really pissed at one of his neighbors for neglecting his dog, so he stole the dog."
"Really?" Peter's eyebrows shot up.
"The guy was such a jerk. He said, 'If you want to feed him so bad, go ahead and keep him.' Mostly, he's a teddy-bear. Have you seen his bumper sticker?"
"No, why?"
"It says, 'Mean People Suck.'"
Peter laughed. "I take it that's his outlook on life?"
"Something like that." Lia pulled a pre-cut square of contact paper off of a pile and peeled the back off. She expertly laid it on the tile design. Peter watched as she went through the process of setting up the mold and put it on a shelf with the others.
"And how many times are you going to do that?"
"Three hundred. But not all today." She lay the template back on the table, sat back and stretched. "I have some finished pavers if you want to see the end result." She pulled the plastic sheeting off the stacks of pavers in the corner.
"Pretty. What's the symbol mean?"
"This one is 'joy.' Today I'm working on 'peace.' I thought I could use it today."
"So what about Anna and Jim? Are they part of this grand enterprise, too?"
"You'd think this was a dog park project, wouldn't you? Anna, she's a good friend of mine. I couldn't have her working on Catherine's garden, she'd be making jokes about putting land-mines under the pavers. It would totally skew the whole 'higher vibration' thing."
"Bad blood there?"
"Well, sort of. Have you ever noticed how Viola gets jealous?"
"Jealous?"
"Sure. You pet another dog and she's right there, squeezing in?"
Peter thought back. "Never realized that was jealousy."
"Oh, sure. Catherine does it, and she does it a lot with Jim, and it tends to ruin whatever we might have been talking about when she butted in. She doesn't just join the group, she cuts him out of the herd, so to speak."
"So what does Jim do?"
"Nothing, really. Jim was married for more than thirty years before his wife died a few years back. He says he always does what women tell him to do. He seems to think that will keep him out of trouble. I figure it only works if only one woman is telling you what to do."
"And what does Anna do?" Peter asked.
"Make catty remarks, mostly. I think her deal is that eventually people will catch on to Catherine's games and if they don't, they deserve her. Bailey says that's because Anna's a Scorpio."
"What does being a Scorpio have to do with it?"
"Bailey says Scorpios love to sit back and watch people hang themselves."
"And what's Anna's story?"
"Let's see. Never married."
"Any guys around?"
"Just Jim, in a really casual way, just friends. She seems to like being single. She and Luthor didn't like each other much. I guess because she was right about him and maybe he knew he couldn't charm or con her . . . like he conned me," she finished softly.
"What did she think about Luthor?"
"Luthor liked to get milage out of being a writer and Anna was never impressed by him. She kept saying 'when is he going to buy you a meal that doesn't come on a bun?' and 'There's no romance in going dutch.' For all her advice, I don't think she's ever dated much. She lived with her dad for years. She took care of him until he died, then a few years later she sold the house and moved to Cincinnati. That was ten years ago."
"Where'd she come from?"
"Somewhere around Pittsburgh. If it was me, I'd have traded in the hills for some flat land."
"Does she work?"
"Sure, she used to be an administrative assistant at this high-powered ad agency. Now she works part time for a private foundation that funds projects in children's education. Surely this isn't relevant, all this stuff? I feel like I'm boring you with nonsense."
Peter reassured her. "People are never boring, and I never know what might be relevant. Every detail helps to create a picture."
"But don't you do background checks, that sort of thing?"
"Sure, but that's places and dates. You're giving me the heart. VICAP hasn't popped any 'murder disguised as suicide' cases. So I'm going to have to solve this the old-fashioned way."
"VICAP? Isn't that the violent crime data-base? You think the guy who shot Luthor did it before?" Her eyes widened as she set her nippers down.
"I have to say it was slickly done. If Luthor's killer had realized he was left-handed and gun-shy, we would have taken it as suicide and we wouldn't be looking at it at all."
"So we could be talking about a serial killer?" Shock warred with disbelief on her face.
"You see the problem, don't you?" Peter asked earnestly. "If this is his first mistake, there's no telling how many times he's gotten away with it before. Donald Harvey killed dozens before anyone realized patients were being murdered. Right now, we don't have a clear-cut motive. It could have been the money. If Luthor was blackmailing someone, maybe it was because he knew they killed someone."
"Blackmailing a murderer doesn't sound too smart."
"No, it doesn't does it? "
"Detective Dourson, you are just one surprise after another. I don't know what to say. How are you going to find this person if they're so slick?"
"It's a good question. Look at people who know the park, know you and Luthor had a fight and had access to your purse that day to steal your phone."
"Why did they have to steal my phone that day?"
"Because they timed this with your fight. The fight had to happen first."
"Oh."
"Then think about personalities and look at past histories, see if anyone has a pattern of deaths around them, but that's going to be hard to find."
"How come?"
"With Donald Harvey, all the deaths happened at nursing homes where he worked. There was an increase in the death rate at every job he had. Once somebody started looking, the pattern was there. If Luthor's case is one of a series of multiple deaths, the connections could be difficult to spot. We have no idea what kind of pattern to look for. It won't be anything as obvious as multiple dog park gun-shot suicides. The only connection I have is you."
"Me?"
"And your phone. Has anyone else died around you in the past few years?"
"My grandfather died about five years ago in Georgia. Cancer. Nothing weird about it, and no connection here."
Peter sighed. It couldn't be that easy. "Whoever took your phone might return it. If it turns up, don't touch it, call me immediately."
"Why?"
"It might have trace evidence. I doubt it, but we could get lucky. Anyone else at the dog park with deaths around them?"
"Most of the morning crowd at the park are over forty, some are retired or nearly there. By the time you're that age, people have died around you. I'm still having a hard time accepting that someone killed Luthor. But a serial killer? At the dog park? That's mental! So are you looking at single males between the ages of thirty and fifty? Isn't' that the profile? There's plenty of those at the park."
"Doesn't have to be a guy. Women kill, too, and they have more subtlety. Whoever it is, isn't impulsive and is very organized and detail oriented. I suspect they're very intelligent.
Lia sighed. "So we can't blame this on the homeless guy who's been sleeping in the picnic shelter."
"Afraid not. Unless you let him get near your bag."
"Are you kidding?"
"Didn't think so. Look, I know you don't like the idea of saying any of your friends could be a murderer. But serial killers are often really good at acting normal, so you might not be able to tell. How about this. Who in that group couldn't have done it?"
"W
ell, Jose."
"Why not?"
"When he gets mad, he puts it right out there. He's too straightforward about everything. If he got mad at you, he'd punch you in the nose, then he'd forget about it. And I don't think he could keep a secret to save his life. His wife Carla says she's got to put a cap on his poker money because he's always losing." She thought for a moment, "And he's too good-natured to keep his mad on long enough to plan something like this."
"Good. Who else?"
"Jim's retired. He was an engineer, so he's smart and organized. He does this 'Mr. Cranky Pants' routine, but it's mostly for entertainment value."
"So how does that work?"
"If you tell him he should have done something a different way, or if Terry dumps too much Republican propaganda on him, he gets blustery, all out of proportion. But he's not nearly as irritated as he seems. At heart, he's the guy you go to if you want to talk about something that's bugging you. He's also the most consistently spiritual person I know. He's Catholic and makes a real effort to live according to his faith. He doesn't make noise about it, he's not preaching or showing off. You wouldn't know that about him unless you got to know him well, so I can't believe it's an act."
"Okay." Peter filed that away for further consideration. It wouldn't be the first time piety hid a murderous nature.
"Catherine . . ." Lia twisted her mouth and nipped a corner off a violet tile while she considered the dog park diva. "Anyone who dyes their hair to match their dogs has to be detail oriented. And she's narcissistic enough to not care much about other people. I don't know if she's smart enough."
"How so?"
"Well, she's really obvious in her little games at the dog park, and I think she believes she's being subtle. Wouldn't your serial killer have a more accurate perception of how people are responding to them, if they're going to fool everyone?"
"Maybe, but not necessarily."
"Besides, she doesn't get her hands dirty. If she shoplifted as a teen-ager, I'm sure she paid the maid's kid to do it for her. She pretty much wallows in not knowing how to do anything practical. I'd think a killer like you're describing would need to be self-reliant and resourceful. Catherine is neither."
"Huh."
"Aside from that, I think underneath everything, Catherine really wants to be liked. I think a lot of her posturing comes from insecurity. I know that doesn't quite sound narcissistic, but that's Catherine. I don't think you off people when you're looking for attention."