second day, and you never suspect he's a bad apple.'
'Enough with the bad apples!' Fran snapped. 'If you're talking about Yancy Grayson, say so.'
'Melodie, tell them what you know,' said Ariana. Her voice had none of its normal authority. I looked over at her and our glances locked.
I didn't say 'Are you all right?' aloud, but the love and concern I felt must have been obvious to her, because she nodded slightly and gave me a faint smile.
This was Melodie's limelight moment. I'd bet a motza she'd spent ages rehearsing for this performance. She scanned the room, apparently to assure herself that we were all paying attention, took a deep breath, and began, 'Yancy is-was-the principal receptionist at Norris Blainey's offices. Because of the volume of important calls coming through the switch, he had a designated relief receptionist, so that there was always a trained professional to answer the phone.' She paused to reflect. 'You know, not enough companies understand the impact of the first voice a client hears.'
'Get on with it,' Fran snarled between clenched teeth.
'I am getting on with it,' said Melodie with dignity.
Lonnie groaned. 'I'm hungry. Is this going to take all morning?'
'As I was saying before I was interrupted'-Melodie broke off the glower at Lonnie-'Yancy had Merle, a relief receptionist. She's fairly new at the game, but she has promise.'
'Steady, Fran,' I said. 'Melodie will get to the point any day now.'
Melodie ignored this and went on, 'As often happens when professionals sharing vital responsibilities are thrown together, Yancy and Merle became more than colleagues, they were friends and confidants. Merle had nothing much to confide-she's young and leads a simple life.'
The real Melodie broke through when she added, her green eyes wide, 'But Yancy had lots to tell her and it was
Quip put his head in his hands. Ariana said, 'Cut to the chase, Melodie. Now.'
'Yancy told Merle that he'd been passing info about Blainey to Quip for his tell-all book. Yancy did it because he wanted a career in show business and he was hoping Quip could open doors for him.' She shook her head. 'I could tell, even on the phone, that Yancy didn't have that glow, that star quality. It's real tragic, really.'
At this point a concentrated group glare speeded up Melodie's delivery. 'OK, this is how it went down. A few days ago Norris Blainey found out what Yancy was doing. Blainey went off his head. He said he'd have Yancy's knees smashed, his fingers broken, and his face slashed if he didn't follow instructions exactly. Yancy had to set up a meeting with Quip here, on Tuesday night, and make sure someone witnessed it. Then he had to persuade Quip to go to a certain unit in the self-storage place by telling him he had much more stuff on Blainey there.'
'This guy believed in fairy tales, did he?' Bob said. 'He thought Blainey would simply let him go?'
'That's what Yancy told Merle.'
'And what did this Yancy think would happen to Quip?' Fran demanded.
'He didn't know.'
'It's a good thing he's dead-I would have killed him myself,' Fran muttered.
'If she hasn't already, this Merle has to tell her story to the cops,' Lonnie said.
'Merle won't,' said Melodie. 'She's terrified of Blainey. When the police interviewed people in the office, Merle told them she didn't know anything. She trusts other receptionists, but no one else.'
'Can't blame her,' said Harriet. 'She's seen what happened to Yancy.'
'I certainly
Quip reached up to put his hand on Fran's arm. 'Sweetheart, calm down. Harriet's father should interview her. If the worst happens and I'm charged with murder and there's a court case, she'd be a witness for the defense.
Fran's militant stance deflated. I was surprised and almost embarrassed to see Fran bend her head and kiss his fingers. Fran never was demonstrative that way.
Before the meeting broke up, Ariana allocated tasks. Ariana herself would liaise with her contacts high up in the LAPD and Bob would investigate Blainey's movements on Tuesday and Wednesday to establish if he had an alibi for the time of the murder-estimated as somewhere between ten and twelve on Tuesday evening. Harriet, whose relationship with her father was still very tentative, would monitor developments in Quip's defense through her father's personal assistant. Melodie was to report any further information her network could glean. And Lonnie would carry out an in-depth background search of Blainey's staff, concentrating particularly on relief receptionist, Merle.
'What about me?' I said. 'What do I do?'
'Kylie, it's not necessary for you to do anything,' said Bob with a grin. 'It's quite extraordinary, but you're what I call an event magnet-things just seem to happen to you.'
For some reason this amused everyone. Even Ariana smiled.
'Is that a compliment, Bob?' I asked.
'Absolutely,' said Bob, laughing. 'Life before you was quite boring, in retrospect.'
Ariana said to me, 'You've got your hands full with Dingo O'Rourke and the missing dingo. When that's resolved, you can get involved with Quip's case.'
The meeting over, Lonnie helped me carry chairs back to respective offices. 'About Pauline…' he said.
Uh-oh! There was no way I was going raise the subject of Lonnie with her again.
'Thing is, Kylie, I've decided to win her hand.'
'I beg your pardon?'
'I'm rising to the challenge, not giving up. I'm going to woo Pauline, sweep her off her feet, show her the inner, romantic me.
'Blimey,' I said, 'do you think she's ready for this?'
Lonnie's face was flooded with eager enthusiasm. 'I'll be the love train coming down the tracks. Pauline won't know what hit her.'
I was afraid he was right.
I was in my office learning my lines for the afternoon shoot when Dingo called on my cell phone. Lonnie had said the cell wasn't secure, but I didn't want to scare Dingo off, so I didn't mention this.
'Jesus, Kylie,' he said, 'I'm screwed. Blainey's hung me out to dry. You saw the reward for Darken is a quarter of a million?'
'It was on the news. And so were you, Dingo.'
'That bastard, Blainey! He set up the scheme in the first place, but now he's out to get me.'
Blainey had engineered Darleen's disappearance? 'So Darleen wasn't in any danger at all?' I said.
'Of course she was! That's why I took her.'
'You've lost me, Dingo.'
He gave an exasperated sigh. 'It's too bloody complicated to give you all the details, but Blainey had this scheme to get the maximum publicity in order to bump up the ratings of the show. The story would be that Darleen had been kidnapped and held for ransom and that I, being a fair dinkum Aussie from the Outback, would use my ancient tracking skills to find Darleen and rescue her.'
'So what went wrong?'
'It was me put Darleen in harm's way. I had something on Blainey, and when I tried to collect, he turned on me.'
'You tried to blackmail Norris Blainey?'
'The bastard didn't take it well,' said Dingo. 'And then he decided to punish me by having Darleen killed.'
'He also sooled the Homeland Security blokes onto you. What was that about?'
'There's a lot you don't know. I've got to have insurance, or I'm dead meat. I mean it, Kylie. Blainey wants to get rid of me. Permanently.'
'Go to the police.'