done anything that required that much effort;  she'd have tried to enlist someone else to do it for her.

  No, I couldn't see either parent as a  murderer. But then, I was a biased witness. For  that matter, like most children, I had a hard time seeing my parents as sexual beings, despite  the evidence of Pam, Rob, and myself. Perhaps I  was missing all the telltale signs of a  passionate geriatric love triangle being  played out in front of my nose.

  I glanced over at suspect number one.  She was looking at me with a faint frown of genuine  concern on her face.

  'Are you all right, Meg?' she asked.

'A little tired,' I lied. 'The weather, I'm  sure.'

  'Perhaps you should stay here this afternoon, where it's  cooler. Jake and I are going over to have tea with  Mrs. Fenniman, so you'll have some quiet. Or  you could come with us; Mrs. Fenniman's  air-conditioning is working.'

  I was touched by her concern, but realized in that  instant that I had other plans for the afternoon.

  'No, I have a few things to do.' With Jake and  Mother safely out of the way, I was going to play  detective. After all, if Dad could do it, why  not me?

  I waited until Mother and Jake took off.  Then I grabbed an unfamiliar-looking dish--one that I could plausibly claim I had  mistaken for something of Jake's--and trotted over  to his house. Quite openly; just one neighbor  returning another's pie plate.

  I knocked, in case someone was there. Then I  reached out, heart pounding, to open the door.

  Which was locked. Unheard of. People in Yorktown  don't lock their doors.

  Searching Jake's house was going to be a little  harder than I thought. I wandered around to the back  door, calling 'yoo-hoo' very quietly. The  back door was locked, too.

  But he'd left the window by the back door  open.

  I had pried open the screen and was halfway in  the window when I heard a voice behind me.

  'Lost your key?'

  I started, hitting my head on the window  frame, and turned to find Michael behind me.  Holding Spike's leash.

  'I know what this looks like,' I began,  turning to look over my shoulder and lifting the  tips of my sneakers out of Spike's reach.

  'To me, it looks very much as if you've been  reading too many of the same books your dad has.  And why Jake? Isn't he the one local who's not a suspect? Or is this only one in  a series of clandestine searches?'

  'He's not a suspect, but he has a whole  roomful of the victim's stuff. I want to see  Mrs. Grover's stuff.'

  'Surely the sheriff took any important  evidence?'

  'The sheriff wouldn't know important evidence  if it walked into his office and introduced itself.  Look, either call the cops or go away; I'm  getting very uncomfortable hanging half-in and  half-out of this window.'

  'I have a better idea,' Michael said.  'I'll give you a cover story. Here.' He  picked up Spike and, before the little beast could  react, tossed him over my leg into the house.  Spike shook himself, looked around, and then ran out  of sight, growling all the way.

  'You were helping me retrieve Spike,'  Michael said, offering me a leg up and then  jumping nimbly in after me. 'Don't ask how  he got into Mr. Wendell's house. The place  obviously needs to be vermin-proofed.'

  Now that I'd succeeded in getting in, I  felt temporarily disoriented. I had a whole  house to search, and I had no idea what I was  looking for.

  Of course there wasn't that much to search. It was  a rather bare house. There seemed to be even less  furniture and fewer decorations than the last time  I'd seen it, just after Mrs. Grover disappeared.  I reached under the sink and fortunately found a  pair of kitchen gloves.

  'Here,' I said, handing them to Michael. 'You  wear these. I brought my own.'

  'So where do we start?' he asked, following me  from the kitchen into the living room.

  'I'll look in the guest room,' I said, more  decisively than I felt. 'You search his  desk.'

  'What am I looking for?'

  'How should I know? Discrepancies.  Anomalies. The missing will. Blunt objects  still bearing telltale traces of hair and blood.  We're working blind here.'

  Michael chuckled and sat down at Jake's  desk. He began deftly rummaging through the  desk, whistling 'Secret Agent Man' almost  inaudibly.

  'Smart aleck,' I said, and went into the guestroom.

  It wasn't a complete loss. I continued  to be amazed at the number of small, portable  valuables Mrs. Grover had appropriated  while at Jake's. I did find an envelope  containing two thousand dollars in cash, mostly in  hundreds. Perhaps evidence of a blackmail  scheme, although it must have been a penny-ante one  if this was all she had collected. Still, perhaps she  had been stopped before she'd hit her stride. Then  again, perhaps she just didn't believe in traveler's  checks. And I found nothing else of interest.  No diary with a last entry announcing her intent  to meet X on the bluff before dawn. No list  of suspects' names with payoff amounts jotted beside  them. No incriminating letters or photos. Nothing  out of the ordinary.

  Well, one thing out of the ordinary. I found the  late Emma Wendell. What remained of her,  anyway. I opened a rather nondescript box  marked Emma, expecting to find another piece of  silver or china bric-a-brac and found something  greatly resembling Great-Aunt Sophy, only  slightly less lumpy.

  'Yuck!' I said, rather loudly. Michael was  at my side in an instant.

  'What is it?' he asked eagerly.

  'The first Mrs. Wendell.'

  'I see,' he said, showing no inclination to do so.  'Is this significant?'

  'Not that I know of.' Although it began to give me  ideas about why Dad had borrowed Great-Aunt  Sophy.

  'Let's leave her in peace, then. What  else have you found?'

  I showed him the cash, which he agreed was poor  pickings for a blackmailer. He showed me his  findings. Sales receipts, complete with the date  and time, that tended to confirm Jake's alibi rather  thoroughly. A bank book and other papers showing  that Jake was in no danger of starving no matter  how many valuable little knickknacks the late  Jane Grover had purloined. An envelope  marked Jane containing a key to a self-storage  unit and a neatly itemized list of oriental  rugs, antique furniture, and other objects  that were certainly more than knickknacks. Another  envelope marked Safety Deposit containing a  key and an impressive itemized list of  jewelry. I made a mental note to suggest that the sheriff see who inherited Mrs.  Grover's estate. A framed certificate of  appreciation on the occasion of Jake's  retirement from Waltham Consultants, Inc.,  whatever that was. Neat stacks of promptly paid  bills and perfectly balanced bank books.

  'Commendably businesslike,' Michael said.

  'But not very illuminating,' I said. I stood  up and looked around. 'Something's missing here.'

  'Like any sign that the man has a  personality.' Michael had wandered over to the  shelves on either side of the fireplace. They were  largely empty, except for a few pieces of  bric-a-brac that were presumably either too large  for Mrs. Grover to hide or too cheap for her  to bother with. There were maybe two dozen books,  all paperback copies of recent  best-sellers.

  'Doesn't he have any more books?' Michael  asked.

  'Good question.'

  We looked. Not in the guest room. Not in the  bedroom, which looked more lived in than the rest of the  house but still depressingly tidy. Not in the dining  room or the upstairs bath or the kitchen. Not in  the basement, where Spike lay in wait for us under  the water heater, growling. Not in the attic.

  'Depressing,' I said. 'Irrelevant, but  depressing.'

  Just then we heard a car go by, and peering out,  I saw it was Jake's.

  'We'd better leave; Jake may drop  Mother off and come back soon,' I said.

  We lured Spike out from under the furnace and  left the way we came.

  'That was a bust,' Michael said.  'Well, we do have corroboration for his  alibi.'

  'I thought we had that already.'

  'The sheriff had it,' I said. 'Now that I've  seen it myself, I believe it.'

Вы читаете Murder With Peacocks
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