One Deadly Sister (Sandy Reid Mystery Series #1) (24 page)

Read One Deadly Sister (Sandy Reid Mystery Series #1) Online

Authors: Rod Hoisington

Tags: #mystery, #women sleuths mystery series, #amateur sleuth, #free ebook mystery, #woman sleuth, #murder mystery, #women sleuths, #whodunit, #mystery romance, #female sleuth, #mystery series, #mystery suspense

BOOK: One Deadly Sister (Sandy Reid Mystery Series #1)
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Ten minutes later, they pulled in and parked behind the Coffee Spot. They got out, both laughing.

“Fun to be a cop for a minute. You get paid for playing this game? Where can I buy some flashing lights?”

“I was waiting for you to wave to the stalled drivers.”

They walked through the kitchen and headed for the usual back booth. The waitress was only a step behind with their coffee.

As they settled in, Sandy said, “So, Sonny Barner is alive, huh? Well, glad for that. I don’t have time to solve two murders. Was he at the apartment before or after Raymond?”

“I’m busy, Sandy. Get on with it. This better be good.”

“You’ll love it. First, I should tell you Joanna at the office in Philadelphia traced the ownership of the Jardin Café. It’s a Delaware corporation owned by Tampa interests linked to crime and drugs, she thinks. What’s going on out there?”

“Possibly drugs. What else is there?”

“If this were Philly, I’d guess a front for money laundering. Do you have that down here?”

“You’re talking to a small-town cop. What I know about money laundering wouldn’t fill that mug there. That’s your big news? Some shady corp owns the Jardin. Goodbye, got to go.”

“No, listen, you might get a call from Elena Duarte. You know, from the café.” Sandy related the conversation with Elena. She didn’t mention advising her to get a lawyer.

He was interested and impressed. “So, Norma Martin is tied into what may or may not be a crime family and very likely a pro-casino force. Furthermore, she’s the mother of Elena Duarte. You say Elena claims to be the one who actually had the affair with Towson?”

“You don’t believe her?”

“I have my doubts. Without prints or DNA, we can’t even put her in his apartment.”

“Of course, you can put her in his apartment. She told me she left a white leather jacket and some other clothes up there.”

“Why doesn’t she just run? Why come to you?”

“For help, she’s afraid the police are looking for her. And I just told you Pirro is chasing her. She doesn’t know what to do about him.”

“Maybe this Pirro was flat out ordered to kill Towson, and Elena’s weeping act is to cover it all up.”

“Well, she’s clever and obviously good at lying. Towson was no dummy and I bet she fooled him. Is she truly frightened, or did they send her to me for some purpose?”

“I don’t care about all of the other family stuff she told you...the threats and who wants to screw who. My concern is did she or one of her Tampa crowd, commit the murder. The election campaign gives her motive, and sleeping with him positively provides opportunity.”

“But why assassinate him if they can knock him out of the election with their Norma Martin rumor scheme?”

“Either way this is good, Sandy. Elena would never have talked with me. I would never have found out about that Tampa family angle without getting myself shot. You did it for me. You’re good, thank you.”

How delicious was that! “Gee, if I wore glasses they would be steamy right now.”

“There’s something else on this Tampa angle. You’ll probably learn about it anyway. Your friend Linda is using an alias. Her real name is Lynda.” He spelled it out. “She’s Cuban-American from Tampa, not Georgia.

“Oh, God, why did she lie to me about that? What’s she hiding? And she’s been stalking me, or she did at least once. That’s how she was able to show up on cue when Huress came at me. What does she say about it?”

“I’ve told you too much already.”

“Will it foul you up, if I confront her about using an alias?”

“I never told you a thing.”

“She lied to me about why she followed me, and she lied to me about her Georgia background. I don’t appreciate that stuff.”

“Time’s up, Sandy, got to run.”

“What’s the rush, you have something you want to attend to at home? Just one more little thing. The M.E. report said Towson dropped right where he was shot. Was there much blood scattered around?” She tried to make the question sound innocent.

“Nice try. So, you read the M.E. report?”

“Sure, the defense has access to it.”

“You know I can’t discuss it, even if I did trust you, which I don’t. We are legal adversaries remember?”

“The prosecution must eventually disclose their evidence to the defense anyway.”

“Not all of it. There are always things we don’t disclose about evidence, alternative suspects and theories. Anyway, it’s not for the investigating detective to decide. Obviously, I must keep my mouth shut. Sorry, I can’t discuss the murder scene.”

“Then just listen.”

“Sandy, I don’t have time for your games. I know what you’re up to. You’re going to spout off a bunch of theories while you watch my face. Any time I blink or clear my throat you’re going to say, gotcha.”

“No, I was just going to explain why I think you’re making a wrong assumption. I doubt there was sex in that apartment that day in spite of how it looked in the bedroom. I could be more certain, if I knew about the blood spatter.”

“Did Elena tell you no sex?”

“No, Linda told me about the bedding on the floor. Would you care for a woman’s point of view?”

He shook his head.

“Well you’re getting it anyway. I think the murderer staged the messy bedroom after Towson was shot. Otherwise, we’re supposed to believe that after sex the woman gets dressed and leaves. And he
didn’t
get dressed. I don’t think so. Remember, he was expecting Tony Hackett later. A king bed has a hellava lot of bedding, and they left it on the floor? I don’t think so. If you don’t want to make it, then at least pile everything back up on the bed and stop stepping around it. I’m ruling out afternoon sex, which means the scene was staged.”

“If no sex, then how do you explain the wine glasses?” Chip asked.

She blinked hard. Wine glasses. What wine glasses? Obviously, the detective had slipped up. She had no idea what he was talking about. She took a guess, “You mean in the bedroom?”

He nodded.

“I’m still working on my wine glass theory.”

He went on, “What if he was shot before he had a chance to pick up the bedding?”

“Then there would be blood spatter
on
the bedding. If there’s no blood spatter, then the bed was made up, and the killer pulled the bedding to the floor.”

“Can’t comment. I can tell you it’s a big bedroom, and the shooting wasn’t that close to the bed.”

“There’s
always
microscopic blood spatter. Another thing, was his robe nearby? I mean was it away from the body, on a hook in the bathroom or something, or was it found near his body?”

No comment.

“If his robe wasn’t nearby then I don’t think there was a woman up there. He’d never open the door in his shorts for a woman without his robe.”

“I won’t discuss the crime scene.”

“Okay, so anyway you have my thoughts, no robe the shooter was a man;
if
a robe nearby then could be either man or woman.”

“Maybe there wasn’t sex up there the day of the murder, yet we do know he was having an affair.”

“Geez Louise, I’ve already told you the affair was with Elena Duarte! If you have unidentified prints, they’re Elena’s, period. What more do you want me to do, hand you her DNA?”

He saw the smirk on her face and slowly said, “What?”

She opened her purse and took out a small brown paper bag. She held it up high with two fingers, swinging it back and forth like a treat held above a pet. “What’ll you give me for it, handsome?”

He reached for the bag. She pulled it away, out of reach.

“What’s in there?”

“A tissue with her tears on it and most likely some of my DNA as well. You can put mine among your souvenirs, no extra charge.”

That brought him straight up in the booth. “My God, you’re a genius. Give it to me.”

“What are you going to give me for it, big boy?” She moved it farther away.

He leaned back. “Her DNA might not be on there even if she cried. And, there’s been no chain of custody. It’s not usable as evidence—.”

“And blah, blah, blah, but you’d like to have it just the same, wouldn’t you? But if you don’t, I’ll just wipe up this spot here on the table.” She started to move her cup, enjoying the look on his face.

He lowered the tone of his voice, “No, I want it. Now hand it over. If you withhold—.”

“Oh, shove it, Detective!”

He burst out laughing. “Okay, you win. I owe you.”

She set the bag down in front of him.

He took the bag and stood to leave. “Actually, I enjoy talking with you. I wish we had more time.”

“Like after you convict my brother there’ll be more time for us to talk?”

“No, the circumstances of our first meeting would have had to be different.”

“We’re in a bookstore and I accidentally drop a book. You pick it up. Our eyes meet. Your knees go weak. You stagger back helplessly and knock over a cart of books. With a sheepish look on your face, you realize you’ve forgotten your own name, which doesn’t matter because you’re unable to speak anyway.”

“I’ll wait for the movie,” he replied.

“I’ll go look for a bookstore.”

She could feel the trust building between them. Chip Goddard was getting hooked. It also occurred to her that perhaps she was as well.

 

 

 

Chapter Twenty-four
 

S
tate Attorney Moran was waiting in the chief’s office when Goddard arrived. The chief was checking days off on his wall calendar. “It’s the start of the second full week on this case, gentlemen.”

“Do you suppose this might be the week we stumble across something important,” Moran said.

Goddard assumed he was the target of the sarcasm. He closed the door and held up some papers. “Been waiting for this follow-up on a fingerprint report. An interesting development.”

The chief explained to Moran, “Some nine-year-old was rummaging through a dumpster over on Ocean Drive, yesterday afternoon. Found a shiny new box with the picture of a gun on the lid and showed it to his mother. Go ahead and fill us in Chip.”

“No gun in the box, but the mother called police anyway because it looked scary as she put it. We’re interested because the box is obviously brand new and once contained a Smithy .38.”

“Big deal, an empty box in a dumpster,” Moran said.

“The dumpster is behind Tammy Jerrold’s place.”

“Same caliber as the murder weapon,” the chief said. “Either that box once held the murder weapon or it’s an amazing coincidence.”

“What does this mean?” Moran was thinking aloud. “Found in Tammy’s dumpster? She bought a gun and threw the box away? You might not find her prints on it. It will be covered with a hundred prints from the factory, the store, the kid and his mother.”

“Well, that’s the surprise in this report. The box was recently wiped clean. We found only four sets of prints. The prints belong to the kid, his mother, our jailed suspect and Tammy.”

“Evidence found without prints is always suspicious,” the chief noted.

Goddard continued, “Doesn’t make sense for Tammy to buy a gun, wipe the box clean, then touch it again and toss it in her dumpster. If somebody else placed the box conspicuously to be found in Tammy’s dumpster, then how did her prints get on it?”

“In any case, the box connects Reid and Tammy.” Moran made a low whistle. “Reid told us in his statement Loraine Dellin showed him a gun box containing a small revolver at the motel. Later he went to meet Tammy. But if it’s the same box that was at the motel, why didn’t we find Loraine’s prints on it?”

Goddard answered, “She could have been the one who wiped it clean. Then Reid touched it. Then Tammy touched it.”

“Talk to Tammy again,” Moran ordered. “See how she explains it. Don’t wait, I want her in here now.”

“We’ve already called her, she’s on her way,” the chief said.

Goddard said. “Also I have new evidence on who Towson was having the affair with.”

“You already told me, Norma Martin,” Moran said.

“That was because we had her DNA from a cigarette butt, and it matched the DNA found in the bathroom. Now I have her daughter’s DNA from a tissue she used and it also matches.

“Of course,” the chief said, “the mother-daughter relationship would give us a preliminary match.”

Moran said, “So, tell the lab to do deeper DNA probes. Until then, we won’t know which of them was up there in the apartment. In fact, both of them could have been up there.”

Goddard continued, “The mother is married, sixty-something and spends her life in an apron. Towson would likely go for the daughter, Elena Duarte, who is footloose and twenty years younger. An absolute knockout.”

“And to think, our mastermind here came to that astonishing deduction all by himself,” Moran said. “How did you find all this out?”

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