Then Chief Baca spotted her and ordered her to “watch Ms. Hart.”
I needed watching? Did he think I would head upstairs again after he’d practically had to carry me down? I still felt too stunned and sick to my stomach to do much more than sit here.
When Candace turned and saw me in the parlor, her blue eyes widened in disbelief. “What are you doing here?” she said as she took a spot beside me on the very uncomfortable gold satin settee.
The chief had put me here, and I suddenly wondered if maybe he thought I wouldn’t faint again if I sat in the most uncomfortable spot possible. “I already told your boss, but you need to know, too. First, though, I understand I never should have come inside this house. But Syrah was here. I found him outside in the driveway and then he ran back inside. I couldn’t help myself. I had to follow him.” As I spoke, I was again consumed by worry. Tom had let Syrah go, and I could only hope my boy hadn’t slipped out an open door. He surely would have had the opportunity, since this place was crowded enough to remind me of a departure gate at Houston Intercontinental Airport.
Syrah’s disappearance wasn’t a priority to anyone except me, and my emotions had been running wild—I was glad I’d found him, but now I was desperate to find him again. Plus I’d gotten the distinct feeling as I’d related what had happened to the soft-spoken Baca that he actually suspected I might have had something to do with the murder.
I was more at ease explaining the situation to Candace. She seemed receptive and kind as I summarized the morning’s events.
“You’re trembling,” she said when I’d finished. She placed a hand on my forearm and said, “You gotta calm yourself.”
“If I promise on Syrah’s life not to leave this poor, unfortunate seat, will you look for him? I’m going crazy wondering where he’s got to now. He might be in the closet with the Persian. I could show you—”
“No way,” she said. “We’re waitin’ on the coroner’s deputy and her investigator before any of us disturb the crime scene any further. That means we’re stuck here.”
“But I didn’t kill that man,” I said. “So why do you need to practically sit on me?”
“Because I have to follow orders. Besides, you can’t be wandering around this house like you did earlier,” she answered.
“Look at me, Candace.” I twisted in my chair so I could see her face. “I didn’t mean any harm going upstairs.”
She said, “Don’t you see how this looks? Flake Wilkerson had your cat, and I know how much you love that little guy. By the way, how did you recognize Flake Wilkerson on that video? That’s why you came here, right?”
Uh-oh. That visit here yesterday was about to come back and bite me. “I’ve been talking to people, trying to figure out who would want to steal my Syrah. Mr. Wilkerson was known to have an interest in cats—especially purebreds. But you don’t suspect me of anything more than coming into a house uninvited, do you?”
“No, but exactly who have you been talking to? Shawn?”
“Yes. Is that a problem?” I said.
“You’re dodging the question. How did you recognize Wilkerson? No one sees him much, except at Belle’s Beans. Is that where you met him?” she said.
“No. Shawn told me about Wilkerson, and I came here yesterday. Needless to say, the man didn’t admit to stealing my cat.” I wasn’t about to mention that Shawn had come here, too, not before I knew if they’d enlisted Shawn to take care of the imprisoned cats. But I had a renewed uneasy feeling in my stomach. Shawn hated Wilkerson, and I was guessing Candace knew as much.
“You came here
“Nothing. You have to know I would never kill another human being in a million years,” I said.
She sighed. “I do, but these other folks don’t. Our training as officers of the law makes us think the worst of people.”
“So you don’t believe I killed him?”
“Of course not. But you say anything to Morris about that and my cred is gone. I’m the evidence queen, remember?”
For the first time in the last hour, the knot in my gut loosened. Seemed I had one human friend after all. “That means a lot. Thanks.”
This tender bonding was interrupted by the arrival of a woman who hollered, “What we got here?” so robustly that her words lifted me an inch off my seat. I resisted the urge to cover my ears. She gave
“That’s Lydia Monk,” Candace whispered from the side of her mouth. “Deputy coroner.”
“Why are you whispering?” But I’d toned it down, too. Maybe we were both compensating for her.
“ ’ Cause she’s in charge and I don’t want her hearing me talk to you. That might not look good for either of us.”
“A deputy coroner’s in charge? Where’s the coroner?” I asked.
Candace quickly explained that the county had an elected coroner. He was an administrator and pretty much stayed in his office. This woman was the county’s investigating officer when there was a suspicious death.
“But she’s a doctor, right?”
“No way. She went to the community college, I think. Now hush, okay?” Candace squared her shoulders and looked straight ahead.
This was so different from big-city life. Houston had a pathologist as a medical examiner and a highly trained forensic unit.
Unlike Candace, who was intent on looking like my official watchdog, I had no problem checking out this flashy woman now in charge. If I thought the low-cut shirts women wore on shows like
Candace glanced at me and whispered, “In case you’re wondering, she’s the product of one too many pageants.”
“Beauty pageants?”
“Yup. You are lookin’ at Miss Upstate Winnebago 1999,” Candace said.
“You’re kidding, right?” Lydia Monk may have had the fading glory of a beauty queen—a tall, bleached blonde with chin-up posture—but that voice? My cousin was a pageant junkie, and she practiced not only her walk but a sweet voice, too.
“Nope, I am not kidding. Word around town is that the judges might have been drunk when they crowned her.”
Lydia had been conferring with Baca but now started talking to the crowd again, and it was impossible to ignore her.
She said, “Now that I have been briefed, ladies and gentlemen, we can officially classify this as a homicidal death. Any suspects?”
“We’re still investigating.” Baca glanced my way.I stared right back, feeling defensive. But I
Lydia’s hands were on her hips, one bright blue spike-heel tapping the oak floor. “Glad you left me the body, seeing as how it’s my job to coordinate this investigation and purserve the evidence.”
“Huh? Why wouldn’t they leave the body?” I whispered to Candace.
“Quiet,” Candace answered from the side of her mouth.
I caught Baca rolling his eyes. “We know what your job is, Lydia. Where’s Bob?”
“He went over to that house fire. You folks got more stuff happening here in Mercy than we’ve had in the entire county all year,” she said.
“No one died in that fire, so what is your assistant doing over there?” Baca wasn’t bothering to mask his irritation anymore.
“Are you telling me how to allocate my resources?” She’d moved close enough to him that her breasts were