Authors: Don Bruns
“And that's all it took.”
He nodded, and I could see tears on his cheeks.
“Actually, I thought she was getting used to the idea.”
“That you were sleeping with Amanda Wright?”
“He was.” The short, squat woman walked into the doorway, a deep frown on her face. “I caught them in the shower one night after we had closed.”
Bouvier bowed his head and nodded.
“Keep an eye on them, and I'll take care of the burners.”
She walked toward the kitchen.
“What are you planning to do with us?”
The little guy opened his knife chest, reached inside, and pulled out a Wüsthof nine-inch knife. Studying the blade for a moment, he approached Em, reclining on the floor.
“No, it does you no good to kill us. They're still going to print you and Sophia, and they'll know.”
“I'm sorry. About everything. This has to be done, and I should have done it half an hour ago.”
With a flick of his wrist, he cut the tape on Em's hands, then her legs. Moving swiftly, he sawed at the thin cord holding James, then cut me loose.
Standing there with knife in hand he motioned to the doorway.
“Go. Now. Get the hell away from here.”
“And what happens to you?” I wanted to escape with my life, but I needed to know.
“She killed my child. She said if her child was dead, I could not have one either.”
Em stepped into the hallway. “Your child?” She glanced at me, her eyes wide open.
“Amanda was carrying my, our child.”
The brutal stab wounds to the abdomen. The calls for reports on the autopsy. I was right. It had all been about Amanda being pregnant. I just had fingered the wrong Bouvier.
“Get out. Before she comes back.”
I could smell the gas, the sulfurous rotten egg odor they add to natural gas. As we stepped out of the office, I heard her coming.
“What have you done?” She stood there screaming at Bouvier, waving her hands in the air. “No, no, go back.”
James was running and the two of us were right behind him. This was crazy town. I looked over my shoulder and caught Bouvier shoving Sophia into the cramped office. He pulled the door shut and appeared to lock it.
She was screaming at the top of her lungs.
“What have you done? What have you done?”
With long strides for a short-legged man, he followed us to the door.
“Drive. As far away as you can.”
We didn't have to be told twice. James and I jumped into the truck, Em got into the Jag and we drove out of the lot, two blocks before she called me on my cell and said to pull over.
“I called Ted again,” she said when we were all standing in the 7-11 parking lot.
“Again?”
“I called him from my condo, Skip. I told him that something was going on at the restaurant, but he was on another call. Somebody has to go back in there andâ”
“And what? They're crazy people.”
“Did you smell the gas?”
We'd gotten out of our vehicles and were looking back at the catastrophe we'd avoided.
“Hell, yes.” James was looking back down the road toward the eatery.
“She was going to blow the place up.”
“Chef Jean locked her up in the office,” I said. “I think he's got it under control.”
The explosion rocked the block, shaking the very foundation we were standing on. A huge ball of flame shot into the sky, and we could feel the blistering heat from where we stood. Within seconds ashes and soot came pouring down, small pieces of metal and debris raining from the sky.
I think all three of us were numb. We stood there and watched the fire spiral higher and higher as the blaze found more fuel to feed on. Thirty-foot plumes of black smoke billowed from the restaurant and the roar was almost deafening.
An old Dodge came wheezing down the road, and the driver pulled over, window rolled down.
“Is that L'Elfe?”
“It was,” James said.
“Damn.” The dark-skinned man watched with us, his car still running and sputtering like it needed a tune-up.
“You know the place?” James asked.
“I do, man. I was just on my way to see if I could get my old job back. I was a dishwasher there.”
We'd finally met Juan Castro.
“We'll never know. They're both gone, and the bodies incinerated. We can only guess what happened.” Conway sipped his coffee, gazing out at the bay from Em's balcony. He'd called the meeting to finalize the information we shared. It was difficult since there was no corroboration.
“What appears obvious is that she replaced the murder weapon with James's knife before Chef Jean missed it.”
“What a waste.” James shook his head. “The man had an empire, he was the king.”
“Who couldn't control his kingdom.” I stated the obvious.
“When he picked Amanda to run his restaurant, Sophia knew that she was not right for the job.” Em had finally rationalized her feelings about Amanda Wright.
“Everybody else thought the same thing, but Chef was a big celebrity and he carried the big stick,” James said.
“He also signed the paychecks.” I waved the envelope. A check for six thousand dollars, this one signed by Bouvier's accountant. Don't ask me how, but we'd been one of the first in line to be paid.
“So Sophia starts snooping.” Conway's manufactured story. “She shows up one night when they are in the locker room, showering. That had to be a shock. Anyway, she waits until he comes out and they have a real blowup. How long has this been going on? How could you put our business relationship in jeopardy? She probably told him to fire Amanda and never see her again. Somewhere, Bouvier gets some backbone and tells her that Amanda is going to be the mother of his child. She's pregnant.”
“That didn't go over so well.” It wasn't the first time she'd made that claim.
“So,” Conway continued, “I'm guessing she has this epiphany. She's lost her kid to violence, her last shot at an offspring, and she certainly wasn't going to let Jean have another child.”
Em jumped in, “Amanda was being paid off with a fabulous new job, and when Sophia called her out to the parking lot she obviously was worried. After all, she told her it was a matter of life and death. Remember? She told me that on her voice message just before she was killed.”
“So,” Conway went on, “she went out to meet Sophia, but Sophia wasn't there. The chef's wife had told her to wait by the Dumpster. Very ominous. I find it hard to believe Amanda didn't tell Chef Jean. And maybe she did. We saw him leaving on the security camera so we know he had been in the building.”
“And, we saw Sophia leave shortly thereafter,” James said.
“It turns out he was getting the car. Sophia knew how long that would take, and we'd already seen her enter his office, where she probably had taken the knife from the chest. She walked over, said âhello' to Amanda and stabbed her in the stomach.”
“Over and over and over.” Em was dealing with it.
“The object wasn't just to kill the home wrecker,” Conway pointed out. “The object was to kill her unborn child, just like the one that had been stolen from Sophia.”
“Only Amanda had been up to her old tricks.”
“She wasn't pregnant,” Em said. “She was going to tell him that she lost the baby, but not until the head chef job was solid.”
“Sophia then hid the knife, maybe in her purse, got in the car with Jean, and they left. He had no idea. If there was blood on her, it was dark outside, and he'd never see it. If he did, she'd tell him she cut herself somewhere. The timing was such that it was almost seamless. Bouvier got the car, she came out, and got in with him. Only she took maybe ten, fifteen seconds to kill someone first.”
We all knew that the Bouviers had an aversion to organized law enforcement. So it made sense they would hire an outside firm.
The detective kept going, “Sophia embraced the idea of hiring you guys because she could keep tabs on the investigation. We weren't going to tell her anything.”
“But she didn't. I mean, she didn't really keep tabs on us.” The lady had very little interaction with James or myself.
“She did. In her own way. She probably had her husband grill you, and then she'd check with him. She did confront you guys a couple of times, trying to see if anyone was investigating Bouvier.”
She had. Telling James that Chef Jean couldn't possibly be the killer, when she was really fishing to see how James would respond.
“Purely speculation here, but I'm guessing this lady didn't think the chef had paid enough for his indiscretion. So the next day, after James was hired, she walked into the locker room, did the simple combination, and staged an apron with some catsup from the laundry basket. I think Sophia was going for the drama here, and she stuck the murder weapon through the apron. She wanted someone to find that knife with Jean's prints and Amanda's blood down the tang.”
“Why James's locker?”
“I don't think it had anything to do with James. He was using a house lock, and she could get the combination for that one. Everyone else had their own locks. Makes sense to me. As much as any of this makes sense.”
“But her prints would have been on it too.”
“She may have worn gloves. We don't know. We're dusting their home, and maybe we'll pick up identical prints, but we certainly can't print her now.”
“Why didn't you print her in the first place?” James asked.
“In hindsight we obviously should have, but there was really no reason. She came and went as she pleased, and she was under everyone's radar. Technically, she wasn't an employee of the restaurant.”
“So she wanted Jean to get arrested for the murder.”
“I think so. One minute she did, one minute she didn't. She was hot and cold, drunk and sober. She had second thoughts. She was throwing away everything she'd worked for, and she must have decided that was a bad idea, so she goes back to the locker, takes the apron and knife and hides them in the Dumpster.”
“Did she know that the bin had already been searched?”
“Maybe,” he said. “But she lucked out, because we searched every bin in the neighborhood the night of the murder. Not the second night.”
“She thought she'd taken care of the evidence, underestimating James's determination to find the knife.” He lucked in to almost everything that happened to him.
“She was so irrational.” Em stood, and walked to the railing, staring out at the cruise ships docked half a mile away.
“You think? What's that line, hell hath no fury like a woman scorned. A cold, calculating killer would have been methodical. She was anything but methodical. She took James's knife out of his locker while she was there, to replace the one she stole. Bouvier didn't check his knives every day or probably even every
week. So her goal was to slip it back in the red tool chest when she was alone. Bouvier would assume it was his. And apparently he did.”
“James.” I nodded to him. “If you hadn't pushed the idea of opening the knife chest, we'd never have figured out where your knife went. Em, I think an apology is in order.”
She gave him a thin smile.
“All right, you're not an idiot all of the time.”
“There were little things,” I said. “Like when you were pushed, James, you said someone put their hands on your waist. It hit me that a guy or even a taller woman would push you at the shoulders. Now I get it.”
“But, Skip, why was Sophia trying to kill James? She was in the clear at that point.”
Conway weighed in. “Again, we have no way of knowing, but I think the constant presence of the two of you reminded her that someone was possibly going to figure it out, and in the end she decided that killing you was one way to avoid that.”
We were quiet for a moment.
“Oh, yeah, we finally got a trace on those autopsy calls. They came from Bouvier's home and the restaurant. Both of them thought Amanda was pregnant, and both of them were calling to see if there was any mention of the fetus. That's the best guess we have.”
Conway stood up, put his cup on the counter, and walked to the door.
“What was Vanderfield doing at the restaurant when we broke in?” I never had figured that one out.
“He said he couldn't sleep and he was going to experiment with some sauces.”
“And why wouldn't you let us see your copies of the video? We knew the players, yet you refused. We had to steal the originals.”
“Some evidence has to go through a procedure before it's released. Just one of the processes that sometimes slows down an investigation. You guys found a way around it, didn't you? At the risk of being arrested for breaking and entering.”
“So much of it doesn't make sense,” Em said.
“In crimes of passion, it seldom does,” he replied. “Give me a planned, calculated murder every time. Point A leads to point B to point C. In matters of the heart, anger issues, the killer is all over the place. We got lucky on this one, if you can call it luck. The killer confessed before we solved the crime. It happens. Thank God, it happens.”