Read Death By A Dark Horse Page 15

Chapter Fifteen

  At three o'clock I sat in a cold, hard chair, in a cold, hard conference room at the Snohomish County Sheriff's Office. Detective Thurman was late. My attorney, Jacob Green, held the newspaper message I'd handed him by a corner and read it while tapping an index finger against his thin lips. He exhaled abruptly and waved the paper like a flag.

  "You said this was on your front door?"

  "Yes."

  "Any idea who left it?"

  "No."

  "Any idea what, specifically, the message is referring to?"

  "No."

  "Well, we'll let the good detective deal with it." He slid it into his briefcase and resumed the pacing I interrupted when I arrived.

  Jacob Green was not what I expected, not even close to the image I formed from our first phone conversation. Rail thin, tall, and middle-aged, the attorney pacing a new track in the worn linoleum was straight out of Central Casting's supply of used-car salesmen. Right down to the ancient, ill-fitting suit and the I'd-rather-die-than-lie-to-you brown eyes.

  He stopped pacing all at once and hit me with a narrow-eyed stare.

  "You left out some information when I talked to you yesterday."

  "I did?"

  "I don't like hearing client information that my client should have told me from someone who is not my client."

  "What do you mean?"

  "Frederick Parsons. Stopped by for a little chat with you on Monday."

  That startled me. "Oh. I thought it was irrelevant."

  "It's not irrelevant unless I tell you it is. What did he say?"

  "He called you?" Maybe I was naïve, but it struck me as out of line for the father of a murder victim to call the attorney of a person of interest.

  "Yes. What did he say?"

  "How did he know you were my attorney? Didn't he tell you what he said to me?"

  "I want to hear it from you."

  I related our conversation, verbatim, and mentioned the really big guy in the dark glasses -- just in case he wasn't irrelevant. Mr. Green grimaced, shook his head, and muttered something about not realizing Joey was out of prison. Then he resumed pacing.

  Great. I was being watched by a felon -- or ex-felon. Maybe an escaped felon.

  "I want to know how Frederick Parsons knew to call you," I said. When Green didn't answer, I persisted. "I didn't tell him the name of my attorney."

  "Someone told him. I expect someone who heard it from you." Mr. Green's comment was off-hand, as if unimportant. "Now," he said, throwing on the brakes, "what about the phone call I dodged today? What was Parsons going to tell me that you should have?"

  "Oh, uh, well, I kinda ran into Joey today out at Valerie's."

  Mr. Green ran a hand across his comb-over and blew out a lungful of air.

  "What were you doing out at Valerie Parsons's place?"

  "Looking for clues."

  He tugged an earlobe. "Did you find any?"

  "Well, that's the funny thing. It's more what I didn't find. It looked like she wasn't expecting any horses at all at her place." Mr. Green gave me a long, silent look, adjusted his shirt cuffs with a quick jerk and set his feet into motion again. True, I was new at this, but why was he acting like my observation was unimportant? "Well, don't you think that's odd? I was thinking Valerie meant to have Nachtfeder picked up instead of Blackie -- that Blackie's theft was a mistake made by someone she hired. But now I don't know what to think. And, by the way, Joey is spending a lot of time parked outside my house."

  "No. Is he really?"

  I'm positive that was sarcastic.

  The door swung open and Detective Thurman strode in, threw himself into the chair across from me, and slapped a file folder on the table. He pulled out a sheet of paper and slid it toward me. I reached for it, but Mr. Green snatched it up first. I scowled at him, but he didn't give any indication he noticed. He read it as he paced, then stopped abruptly to address Thurman.

  "A word with my client, please."

  The detective heaved himself out of his chair. "Two minutes," he said and left the room, closing the door behind him.

  Mr. Green handed me the paper. I opened it, read it twice, and fought the urge to throw up.

  "What is this, a joke?" Fury radiated to my fingertips.

  "You don't recognize the bill of sale?"

  "No, absolutely not."

  "Is that your signature?" He paused long enough to point to the bottom of the page.

  "No."

  "You're sure?"

  "Of course I'm sure." My answer was shrill. I pulled my wallet out of my purse and handed him my driver's license. He compared the two signatures and handed the license back to me.

  "There isn't even an attempt at forgery," he said with a dismissive wave of his hand.

  "I don't understand this," I said to his back. Dammit. I wanted to tie him to a chair.

  "Neither do I. Shall we see if Detective Thurman can enlighten us?" He went to the door and opened it.

  Detective Thurman wasted no time in returning. He, at least, sat down. Mr. Green pushed the paper back to him and made a flicking motion with his hand from my purse to Thurman. After a moment's confusion I understood it as a command for me to display my driver's license. Thurman compared the two signatures and flipped my license back to me.

  "Is this your horse described here?" He tapped the paper.

  "If it is, it's a poor description." I crossed my arms. "Wrong color. He's not black. The name's wrong, too."

  "It's not," he read off the paper, "'The Black Bishop'?"

  "No. His registered name is, 'The Black Queen's Bishop.'" I cringed and glanced at Mr. Green, realizing I'd probably said too much. Sweat prickled in my arm pits.

  "Funny name for a horse, but aren't they all?"

  I didn't comment.

  "Is this Valerie Parsons's signature?" He showed me the paper again.

  "I wouldn't know. I've never seen her handwriting, much less her signature. You must realize if this were a legitimate bill of sale my horse's breed, registration number, sire, dam, detailed description of height, markings, and other information would be included."

  Detective Thurman scratched his nose, thinking. I glanced at my attorney. He stopped pacing and instead fidgeted with the change in his pants pocket.

  I hated this silence.

  "What's this all about? Where did you get this?" I tapped the table top near the folder harder than I'd intended.

  "It was dropped off at our office this morning."

  "By whom?" I leaned forward and our eyes locked. After a moment Thurman cocked his head.

  "Is it important?"

  "It might be." I tipped my head, imitating him. "Someone sure seems determined to drag me into this murder investigation."

  "Why would someone want to do that?"

  I sat back, staring at him in disbelief. "Gee, you're the detective. I would think you could figure that one out with one hand tied behind your back."

  "What's your theory?" He acted like he hadn't heard the insult.

  "Theory?" I squeaked. "Isn't it obvious? Someone is trying to frame me. If that fake bill of sale isn't enough, just look at this." I turned to Mr. Green and held my hand out. He picked up my hint, produced the folded sheet of newspaper, and slid it across the table to the detective.

  "What's this?"

  "My client found it taped to her front door this afternoon."

  Thurman unfolded it, looked at both sides and frowned briefly. "'Stoping ions ask quest'? 'Stoping' is spelled wrong."

  "Read it top to bottom, two words in each column," I said.

  His eyes flicked back to the page then settle back on me. "So, someone wants you to stop asking questions. Why is that?"

  "I don't know. I haven't even started asking questions."

  "Is that right?"

  "Yes. What are you going to do about this?" I pointed at the message.

  Thurman appeared to mull over my question. "Throw it out?"

  "It's evidence. In fact, it
sounds like a threat."

  He scrutinized it again, at such length I knew he was mocking me. "You think so?"

  "Yes, I do." My voice trembled with frustration. I was surrounded by idiots. "I have some questions I would like the answers to."

  "Ask away." Thurman leaned back and calmly folded his hands on his stomach. This particular chair didn't creak like the one in his office.

  Mr. Green sat down and stared at me, steadily jiggling one leg.

  I wanted to rub away the headache these two were giving me, but I didn't want to appear weak. Bad enough I had to clear my throat twice before any words would come out. "Are you looking into any 'persons of interest' other than me?"

  "Like who?"

  "Like whoever forged this bill of sale. Like any of the people who knew Valerie and might send me this?" I tapped the newspaper. "And do you always have to answer me with a question?"

  Thurman raised an eyebrow but otherwise didn't budge. I sat up a little straighter and set my jaw. He was deliberately trying to make me nervous.

  "'Yes' to your first question, 'no' to your second." One edge of his mouth rose.

  "So, of those people, who would benefit from her death?"

  "Benefit how?"

  I gave him a hard look. "Financially, I have to assume, since she was wealthy."

  Mr. Green coughed, but I ignored him. He stopped jiggling his leg.

  Detective Thurman shrugged his answer.

  "It seems to me you should be looking into these things," I said. "After all, isn't money often a motive for murder? And what about relationships she had? Aren't you curious to find out who was close to her? Maybe somebody close to her wanted her dead. There's some significant statistics that support that line of inquiry, you know."

  He pursed his lips and nodded at me, looking for all the world like he'd never had the idea before. He was starting to irritate me. I looked at Mr. Green. I was already irritated with him. He looked at the table and rubbed his forehead. Well, hell. Was I the only one with any ideas?

  "Oh, for crying out loud. Did you even think to look for jewelry on her? Maybe she was killed in a robbery attempt."

  "It did occur to us, but nope, I don't think that was the motive."

  "But she always wore big diamond stud earrings and a Rolex watch. If those were missing it could have been robbery."

  "Expensive stuff to be wearing around every day."

  I rolled my eyes. "Valerie had the best and most expensive of everything. She had to be better than everyone else, all the time. If Valerie saw that someone had something wonderful, then she had to have it. And if she wanted it, she got it.

  "Except your horse."

  "Except my horse."

  "Why?"

  "He's not for sale. He never will be."

  "But didn't she want him?"

  "Look, he's not the only nice horse in the world. I don't think she wanted him as much as she enjoyed pushing my buttons." Crap. Thea, you're saying all the wrong things. What's wrong with you? Can't you think at all? My heart pounded against my ribs and I dripped sweat. I was sure Detective Thurman would love to arrest me for being too stupid to keep from running off at the mouth and implicating myself. Mr. Green laid a warning hand on my shoulder. He had quit fidgeting.

  "Is that right. Did she make you mad?" Thurman asked.

  "No." I said, rigid with indignation. "She made me avoid her."

  "I think the interview is over," Mr. Green said.

  "One more question." The detective was still leaning back in his nonchalant pose, yet his intense scrutiny was as devastating as any dressage judge's.

  "What's that?" Ask it already and let me go home.

  "Where were you Saturday afternoon between three and six?"

  "That's when she died, isn't it?"

  He didn't respond to my question -- no doubt expecting me to answer his. But the king-sized monkey wrench he'd just tossed into the gears of my pet theory grappled for my attention. It was clear Valerie had nothing to do with Blackie's theft. Yet, despite the lack of proof, I knew Blackie's theft had to be connected to Valerie's murder. Thurman's bullet-like stare and Green's ominous silence reeled me back into the conversation.

  "I was at my aunt and uncle's doing their taxes. I went there at a little after one and stayed until about five when I went home to get ready for dinner with Jonathan. I told you that already."

  Thurman rose and leaned across the table, his weight on his hands. "It seems to me that this bill of sale makes a pretty decent motive for murder. Combine that with a witness who places you driving your car in the area at the approximate time of death and I think we've got a case against you, Miss Campbell."

  My jaw dropped. "What?"

  "Red Ford Escort. Woman driver with short dark hair." His smile belonged on a shark.

  My mouth went dry. Was this where he pulled out the handcuffs and read me my rights?

  "It seems to me," Mr. Green said with a calm I wouldn't have suspected he possessed, "that if you actually thought you had decent evidence, you would arrest my client." He was motionless.

  The two of them had a brief staring contest, while I sat holding my breath and sweating. Detective Thurman blinked first. He straightened, walked to the door and stopped, but didn't turn around.

  Did I dare hope he wasn't going to arrest me?

  "Don't be planning any trips out of town, Miss Campbell."

  I could have guessed he'd say that.

  "What do I do now?" I asked my lawyer, as we walked to our cars. I still reverberated with the shock of the accusation and so-called evidence against me.

  "Nothing," he said, tossing his keys into the air and catching them in rhythm with his stride.

  "Nothing?" My voice hit an octave higher than usual. "They're on the edge of arresting me for a murder I did not commit and you're telling me I should do nothing?"

  "Calm down, you're only a person of interest. You haven't been charged. Let them do their work and call me if they want to talk to you again. Oh, and in the future, don't try so hard to make yourself look guilty. You might want to refrain from cross-examining the detective, too." He got into his ancient blue and white Chevy and slammed the door. It didn't latch, so he gave it another mighty heave. "Gotta get this thing fixed," he said through a half-opened window I was fairly certain wouldn't close, either. Giving me a friendly wave, he drove off in a cloud of blue smoke.

  Do nothing? Doing nothing was out of the question.