Twenty-Six

The next morning, I felt rather restless even after Pluckie and I had gotten to the Lucky Dog.

Would I like the rental unit Brie intended to show me that afternoon?

Would I be able to pounce on it if I did like it, or would someone else who’d expressed interest get it first?

And what about Gemma? If I liked it, could I be sure she would, too? Most likely, yes. We’d been friends long enough for me to feel fairly certain I knew her tastes as well as my own.

Did I care that the number seven was so associated with the place? Not really, I told myself. Not this superstition agnostic. And Gemma wasn’t any more sure of the reality of superstitions than I was.

Even so …

As usual, first thing before the store opened, I called Martha to make sure she was okay and that she’d be downstairs on time. Then I checked shelves and restocked those that needed it. I did a quick computer scan of what we’d sold yesterday and confirmed that all credit card purchases had gone through.

Millie came in a short while before we opened at ten. She headed upstairs to help Martha, as she often did. I waited for them to return and, once they did, I took their coffee orders.

I was going to Beware-of-Bubbles Coffee Shop—both because I wanted coffee and because I needed to take a walk.

And if I happened to run into Celia there interviewing the owners? That wasn’t my intention—not really—but it wouldn’t hurt.

I’d considered calling Celia to ask when exactly she was heading to the shop and whether she’d made an official appointment to talk with the Dresdans, but decided not to. I was stopping by there anyway. If she was there for her interview, I’d stay out of her way unless she indicated in some manner that she wanted me to join her.

And it might actually be a good thing if innocent little me happened to be there while nasty reporter Celia was browbeating the shop owners. My role as empathizer might appear even more natural than it had in some of the other instances.

Pluckie seemed overjoyed when I unhooked her leash from the counter. Her company on this walk would help me to chill out a bit—I hoped. The day was unusually warm for this time of year, but I wore a jacket over my Lucky Dog aqua knit shirt nonetheless. I figured I’d take it off soon.

The usual Destiny crowd populated the sidewalk, which was fine with me. Better than fine. Maybe some would be shoppers for their pets. And having them prolong my walk to the coffee shop was also fine with me.

Of course Pluckie added to the time, as usual, as she sniffed the ground and other dogs’ noses and butts and squatted once or twice.

But very soon, we were there.

I looked around first thing as I walked in and wasn’t at all surprised to see Celia sitting at a table in the corner with Marypat Dresdan across from her. Was she interviewing just the wife without the husband? Were they taking turns?

I’d find out later. Right now, I moseyed to the end of the usual line with Pluckie. No one I knew was ahead of me, which meant I didn’t have anyone to talk to, at least not immediately. I soon noticed Dan Dresdan storming his way through the seating area toward his wife. He immediately pulled another chair over to the small table where the two women sat.

That was when Celia looked up toward me, shook her head slightly in a negative manner, then got back to talking to Marypat as Dan joined them.

She didn’t want me butting in now. I’d find out from her later, though, what had gone on in this conversation.

And I definitely was intrigued.

I carried one of those small cardboard trays to the Lucky Dog, since I had not only my drink to transport but some for each of the others. When I got back to my shop, I was pleased to see it was crowded.

It was probably a good thing that I hadn’t joined Celia during her interrogation/interview. I would just return later to do my now-habitual commiseration with Celia’s targets, this time the owners of Beware-of-Bubbles.

I did get a call from Celia about a half hour later. Fortunately, I was in the storeroom again, alone, so I could talk.

“What the heck were you doing there?” she stormed over the phone. “You could have ruined everything.”

“How? Were you showing them sympathy for the vandalism Flora caused and indicating you believed I was the killer?” My own temper was a bit stoked.

“Not at all. I was pushing them. Demanding answers to stuff the police probably already asked them, like where they were the night Flora was killed, and had they recognized any merchandise from your shop that Flora had apparently stolen—without mentioning why I asked that. But they’d already heard about the toy rabbit’s foot in her mouth.

“And what did they say? What did they do?”

“Nothing unusual. They got aggravated that I’d dare ask them questions and consider including them in an article about a murder when they’d had nothing to do with it except for being vandalism victims of the murder victim. They’re innocent, or so they proclaimed over and over, especially when I kept suggesting that they had as much reason to kill Flora as anyone else. They did, in fact, point out and describe where she’d vandalized their place—it was right inside the area where drinks are brewed.”

“How did they react as they talked about it?” I could guess. What victim of this kind of crime could simply describe it with no emotion?

“Angrily, but they did keep it under control—and kept assuring me that it would take more than that, even peppered with broken mirror pieces and lots of grains of salt, to make either of them decide to harm anyone physically. Call the cops, yes. Kill a person, even Flora? No.”

“Did you believe them?” I had to ask, even though I figured I knew this answer too.

“Yeah, I did. And guess who they suggested I might want to interview next as a possible suspect?”

That had to be me. “Do you think they’ll be empathetic with me despite their supposed suspicions against me?”

Celia’s response didn’t really matter. It was the pattern we’d established. I’d have to at least try talking to them.

“They seemed like nice enough people. Maybe they’ll just figure I told you what they said so you felt you had to convince them of your innocence. But, yeah, might as well talk to them too.”

I decided that wouldn’t happen until tomorrow.

First of all, the established pattern required me to wait a day, and I really should stick to the established pattern.

Second, I didn’t feel in the mood to stave off the Dresdans’ accusations, or even pretend that I didn’t know how they felt.

Most importantly, I told myself, I’d already made an appointment to talk with Brie Timons about the possible new home for Gemma and me. And I intended to keep it.

After my call with Celia ended, I walked back into the store and blinked, trying to get my mind back on track.

I had pet items to sell. And there were, as was usually the case, a lot of customers here, some who looked like they needed assistance.

I complied after placing my coffee cup on a shelf under the sales counter. My mood lightened quite a bit as I introduced a couple of Chihuahua mixes to Pluckie. Their owners, a young couple, bought not only some dog toys but also a lucky hematite amulet, similar to my dog-face one, and the man presented it to the lady—his fiancée, they informed me.

The rest of the morning progressed similarly. Jeri had to leave to go help out at the Heads-Up Penny, and Martha took an early lunch break, possibly because she was tired. I was just happy to see her taking care of herself and relaxing for a while. She promised to be back downstairs from her apartment by one-thirty, though. I’d already told her about my two o’clock appointment with Brie, and she’d been delighted. It was, after all, another indication that I’d be staying in Destiny longer—even if we never talked much, or at all, about the possibility of my taking over the store someday.

Things didn’t really slow down at noon, but I nevertheless encouraged Millie to go out and pick up sandwiches for herself, Martha, and me.

She soon returned with a bag of food from Wishbones-to-Go, which was what I’d anticipated—as well as three wishbones. I let her go upstairs to eat with Martha as well as break a couple of those wishbones together. I’d save my wishbone but took some surreptitious bites of sandwich behind the counter while some of my customers made decisions on what to buy.

Millie soon rejoined me and helped out with our now slightly smaller client group. Martha arrived back downstairs right on time at one-thirty.

It was time for me to go.

I thought about calling Gemma to go over any specific thoughts she had about what I should look for in this supposedly special rental, but I decided not to. For one thing, I might wind up looking at more than one possibility today, and I most likely wouldn’t sign a lease without Gemma with me anyway. Although if I fell in love with the apartment associated with lucky number seven and had to jump on it right away, I might go ahead and do that and hope Gemma ultimately agreed with me.

I took Pluckie along, both for company and luck. As we went out the door she saw those two Chihuahuas walking by, and that delayed us just a little as the dogs all traded nose and butt sniffs again.

Pluckie also needed to make a couple of stops along the way. She’d been a very good girl, as always, but I hadn’t had a lot of opportunity to take her out after our return from Beware-of-Bubbles.

We soon made our way from Destiny Boulevard onto Fate Street, then west on Luck Street, and down a few blocks till we were outside the charming old-style offices of Rising Moon Realty. Pluckie and I walked up the six wide outside steps and through the door. Like the last time, when I’d been here with Gemma, only two of the four inside desks were occupied, and both occupants, the same man and woman, were on their phones.

I glanced around. As far as I could tell, the photos of houses and apartments and townhouses were the same as when I’d been here before, and I gathered they were for decoration rather than to demonstrate available places.

I figured I’d have to wait for someone to let Brie know I was here, but she came through the door at the back of the large room as if fully aware I’d arrived. Hey, she was into real estate–related stuff, so maybe she had a camera aimed at the front door so she could monitor who came in on a screen in her office.

She wore a robin’s egg blue pantsuit today with a navy blouse, and her graying hair looked tamed behind a blue headband. “Rory!” she exclaimed. “So glad you’re here. Gemma said she’d rely on you to look at the property to determine if it’s right for the two of you.”

“That’s right,” I said.

She gave Pluckie a quizzical glance, as if wondering if my dog would behave herself, but she didn’t ask. Instead, she motioned for me to follow her out the front door. “My car’s outside in the parking lot,” she said.

Her car turned out to be an upscale, new-model Mercedes Benz. The real estate business must pay well, I thought. Either that or wealth was the impression Brie wanted to convey, whether or not she could actually afford this car.

She opened the doors and motioned for me to put Pluckie in the backseat, and then I got into the passenger side. “It isn’t far,” Brie said.

As she drove through town, past some shops and toward the main residential district, we chatted a little. I asked her how long she’d lived in Destiny as well as how long she had run Rising Moon Realty.

Both were about four years. Before that, she’d lived in San Bernardino, which was where she’d obtained her real estate license and become not just a salesperson but a broker, too.

“I’d imagine that people with businesses here aren’t inclined to sell them, at least not very often. Do you make as much money from sales or rentals of commercial property as residential?”

Okay, I was being nosy. But she’d sort of asked about my salary, so it was fair to be inquisitive about her income. Or so I thought.

“Oh, I’m only in residential.” We’d reached a stop sign and she looked briefly toward me. “Commercial property is a whole other ballgame around here, and you’re right. It seldom comes on the market. There are a couple of other real estate companies with offices in town and they take care of them when anyone’s ready to deal in commercial.”

As we started off again, I continued to look at her, feeling a bit puzzled. “But I understood that Flora was talking to at least one business owner in town about either buying or selling commercial property.” I could have been mistaken, but I was fairly certain that Brad Nereida had mentioned that. Not that I’d tell Brie, or she might start bothering Brad about it, too.

“No, she couldn’t have.” Brie shot a quick glare at me now, her light brown eyes fiery. “You must be mistaken.”

“I don’t think so,” I said.

“She was my employee.” Brie’s voice was loud and shrill in the car, and her hands gripped the steering wheel tightly. “I was training her. We talked about that, and she—never mind. She’s gone now.”

She seemed to have almost gone ballistic for a minute, but then calmed almost immediately. Or was she? I didn’t know what Brie was thinking, but her eyes stared fixedly at the road.

I wondered, then. I hadn’t focused much on Brie as a possible murder suspect, but she had certainly known Flora, perhaps better than anyone else around here, and she had even seen the body. She’d certainly gotten emotional at my suggestion that her former employee had done something she hadn’t approved of.

It might have been a stretch to speculate about it, but what if Flora had wanted to go to work for one of those other real estate brokers in town—one dealing with commercial property? Or maybe even open up her own office, although from the little I knew about her, she seemed only recently to have gotten into the real estate business and might not have been qualified.

In any event, had Brie learned about Flora’s ambitions and gotten so upset about it that she’d killed her employee?

Hardly likely.

Yet my mind kept sliding around the possibility that Brie was a better murder suspect than anyone else I’d chatted with so far.