ANNIE SMILED AS she walked up the stairs. From the game room came the cheerful click of billiards as Pudge and Max played a rousing game with cries of anguish and whoops of triumph.
On the second floor, Annie stopped at the door to the first guest bedroom. She tapped lightly.
“Come in.” Rachel’s voice was sleepy and contented.
Annie poked her head in the door. “Just wanted to say goodnight.”
The room had been a favorite of Laurel’s when she first visited the island, rose walls, white wicker furniture, a rose comforter. In the soft glow from the night-light, the room had a sweet warmth. Rachel’s dark hair was loose on the pillow. One small hand was tucked beneath her chin. “Good night.” Her eyes wavered, closed.
Annie gently shut the door. She walked slowly down the hall to their room. She heard Max and Pudge climbing the stairs. Pudge’s room was across the hall from Rachel.
Annie was slipping into pink shorty pajamas—rather lacy for winter, but Max liked them—when Max opened the door to their room and stepped inside. He looked at her appreciatively. He closed the door firmly. “Everyone is snug in their place.”
“I wish that were so.” Annie walked slowly to the sofa, dropped onto it. “Max, what if Rachel has to go back to that house? What if Swanson didn’t kill Happy and Alice?”
Max looked at her soberly. “I know. I’ve been thinking about it. The more I consider Swanson’s story, the more I’m torn. It’s so damn nutty, it may be true.”
“Which means”—Annie’s eyes were wide—“that Marguerite Dumaney is in danger.”
Max shook his head. “Nope. Swanson’s arrest took care of that. As long as she doesn’t make any move to siphon away the money, she’s okay.”
Annie shoved a hand through her thick blond hair. “Is she? Maybe somebody who’s already committed murder won’t hesitate to kill again. After all, waiting for an inheritance isn’t quite as satisfying as claiming one.”
“No.” Max tossed his shirt in the laundry hamper, hung up his slacks. “No more murders. That would prove Swanson’s innocence, reopen the investigations. The murderer has a goat. He’ll sit tight.”
“He?” Annie admired his smoothly muscled shoulders and legs.
“He or she.” Max turned toward her. His eyes brightened.
Annie sat cross-legged on the sofa, her pink pajamas a bright contrast to the green-and-blue-plaid fabric of the cushions. She looked across the room at the table in an alcove of the sitting room. A notebook rested there beside a pile of file folders. Maybe they should start over, go through that record, sift every word. If Swanson was innocent, they had to find the murderer. Rachel must not return to live in a house with a killer. That must not happen and, yes, if Swanson was innocent, he must go free. He might well be an unprincipled con man, but that crime was far short of murder.
Max dropped onto the sofa beside her, but his gaze was focused on a portion of a slender length of leg, specifically a creamy thigh. His hand reached out.
Annie absently picked up his hand, moved it aside, dropped it.
He reached out again.
Annie shifted position, but with unexpected results. “Max!”
He grinned happily. “You know”—his tone was conversational, but he slipped his other arm firmly around her, pulled her close—“often ideas come to you when you are asleep, and I know just the thing to help you relax….” The last few words were indistinct as his lips found hers.
The cheerful whistle brought her awake. Max pushed open the bedroom door, carrying a tray. “They’re still asleep. I made apple muffins and left a note about the coffee for Pudge.”
Annie slipped out of bed and padded toward the white oak table that sat in a bay window overlooking the backyard and the lagoon. “Max, look! Hurry!” She stretched out her hand.
He joined her in the alcove. A winter visitor, a sharp-billed woodcock, rose against the pale blue sky, spiraling higher and higher, fifty feet, seventy-five, a hundred, a hundred fifty. After a final spiral, the game bird’s body went limp. Max opened the window, stepped out on a balcony. Making a three-note whistle, the bird drifted down like a falling leaf until almost to the ground, when he zoomed into a grove of pines. “What a guy will do…” Max mused. He was smiling as he unloaded the tray, a bowl of papaya for him, orange juice for Annie, muffins and butter. He put the notebook and file folders on the windowsill.
Annie poured their coffee. “I’m sure she is very appreciative.” Max always took a deep interest in courtship rites. In the summer, he had been known to urge bullfrogs to bellow a little louder, just in case she wasn’t listening or had moss draped over her ears.
“I’ve been thinking.” Annie picked up the still-warm muffin. Mmm. Whipped sweet cream butter. “I don’t buy two murderers.”
Max dropped into his chair. He speared a piece of papaya. “Does anything else make sense? Why would any of the Ladsons want to murder Happy?”
Annie said tentatively, “Maybe Happy knew that someone planned to kill Marguerite.”
Max slapped his hand against his temple. “I know. They saw it in a crystal.”
She gave him a cold look. “Look, two murderers is nuttier than Swanson’s story.” She reached over to the windowsill, retrieved Max’s notebook and tore out a couple of sheets. “We can figure this out.” She wrote industriously for a moment, then pushed the sheet to him.
Max ate and read.
HAPPY’S MURDER
Possible suspects, alibis, motives:
ALICE’S MURDER
Possible suspects, alibis, motives. Note bene: Killer thought the victim was Marguerite so motives evaluated in terms of Marguerite.
Max sipped his coffee. “If both murders were committed by the same person, and assuming the alibis stand up, the suspects are limited to that cheery group of inheritance-assured Ladsons: Wayne, Terry, Donna, and Joan.”
Annie tapped Wayne’s name. “After I heard the shot, I checked on Rachel and called the police before I went to his room. You’re right, there could have been time for him to come inside and get to his room. Let’s think about Alice for a minute. Remember, she’s convinced Swanson is guilty. She’s looking for a backup. She certainly couldn’t go to Marguerite. Who would she pick?”
Wayne, Terry, Donna or Joan.
Max’s tone was thoughtful. “But not a motive among them to kill Happy.”
“There has to be a reason we don’t know about.” Annie reached over to the sill, scooped up the folders. “Are these the dossiers on the Ladsons?”
“Be my guest. If there’s a pointer to Happy’s murder in those files, I missed it.” He flipped to a fresh page in the notebook and began to write.
Annie skimmed the dossiers. She knew that the Ladson siblings were born in Beverly Hills. After Claude’s divorce, their mother moved with them to Laguna and they grew up there. It was no surprise to learn that Wayne excelled in school all the way through postgraduate studies, Terry barely made it through high school and Donna went to an elite, expensive junior college for rich girls with no career aspirations. Joan Ladson née Lewis was a superior student whom Wayne met at Stanford while working on his doctorate after his return from Vietnam in 1974.
Annie wasn’t interested in the bones of their lives. She wanted the flesh. One fact was common to all four: They needed money. Wayne wanted the Dumaney house. Donna’s antique store was strapped for cash and so was she. Terry was in arrears in paying the note on his boat. Joan lived modestly, but she had high ambitions for her children.
The need for money may have led one of them to commit two murders. Annie pushed away the niggling inconsistency that Happy’s murder was of no financial benefit to this group. It was time to narrow the focus, grab what was possible, and it was abundantly clear that someone had seized an opportunity to shoot Marguerite and that someone had to be Wayne or Donna or Terry or Joan.
Annie stacked the folders. Max was right. There was no hint of disagreement between any of the Ladson family and Happy. Maybe that didn’t matter right now. She saw other pointers. Maybe figuring out who might kill would get her and Max started in unraveling the crimes. After all, the cast of possibilities was limited in the gazebo murder. If she focused on that crime, she had a good idea of the killer. “We need someone who’s smart, impulsive and tough. Terry’s impulsive, Donna’s tough, Joan is smart. But only Wayne is impulsive, tough and smart. Max, he’s the one.” She put the folders back on the windowsill.
Max pushed his notebook toward her. “You keep focusing on the murder at the gazebo. It didn’t start there.”
Annie picked up the notebook.
MAX’S TIMETABLE
Thursday:
Friday:
Saturday:
Sunday:
Monday:
Annie went back to the top of the timetable. Max was right. It all began with Happy’s murder. If the murders were linked (and this wasn’t Shakespeare with Enter First Murderer, et al.) and the alibis were real, Emory, Rachel, Mike, Marguerite and Alice were innocent of both crimes.
So? Annie felt a tingle of excitement. Yes, that moved them forward because finally they could believe what these people said. Most especially and most importantly, this validated Rachel’s claim about papers that could keep the Ladson fortune from going to Swanson and it validated Rachel and Mike’s report of their meeting in the gazebo on Thursday night.
“Max”—she tapped the first page of the timetable—“Mike thought he saw a light near the maze Thursday night.”
Max looked at her inquiringly.
“Don’t you see? If Swanson’s innocent, there’s no reason for a light in the garden. Anyway, the maze isn’t on the way to the house, either from the boat dock or the lane. So why the light? And why there?”
Max shrugged. “How could Mike be sure where the light was?”
“He works there part time as a gardener. He said the light was near the maze. He was definite about that.” Annie’s eyes glowed. “So who was in the maze? Not the murderer, whoever the murderer is. There would be no reason. But if you wanted to hide something and you didn’t want to put it in the house where it might be found…”
They parked in the side lane and slipped quietly into the garden.
Annie glanced toward the house, an interesting mélange of colors in the early morning sunlight, the metal tower shiny as a space saucer, the art-glass windows glittering like rubies and emeralds, the yellow stucco soothing as fresh cream. They would easily be visible from the terrace room or from the windows overlooking the garden. But why should anyone care if they entered the maze? Annie had her story ready: Rachel had asked them to drop by and look for a book she’d left in the maze.
At the opening of the maze, Max squinted at the six-foot-tall glossy-leaved walls of boxwood. “Happy could have pushed something in the center of a hedge wall anywhere and there’s no way we’ll ever find it.”
Annie moved eagerly ahead. “Duct tape, Max. Happy got duct tape from the kitchen. Come on.” She wrinkled her nose. She didn’t like the rank, sour smell of boxwood. They walked forward, hesitated at an opening, took a left turn, ran into a dead end. They came back, took a different turn, found another dead end.
“Let’s go back,” Max suggested. “Somebody once told me that if you followed the hedge without a break, you’d get to the center.”
After two false starts, they found their way back to the beginning. Max put his hand on the hedge and followed the wall of greenery that had no breaks. Leaves rustled beneath their feet. A crow cawed. A red-tailed hawk, its wings outstretched and still, circled above the maze, which was likely a nice hiding place for mice and rabbits. Annie shivered and walked faster. The hawk was looking down with eyesight eight times better than theirs. Suddenly the hawk zoomed down out of sight. They came around a corner into the center of the maze just as the hawk rose, a rabbit gripped in its talons. If only they could see as well to capture their quarry.
Max looked toward the house, but it wasn’t visible from the center of the maze, the view blocked by the spreading limbs of a huge live oak. “Happy picked a good place. She could use a flashlight here and no one would see.” The hedge walls would block light from the ground, the live oak from the house.
The open space was about twelve feet square, the gray dirt hard-packed. Two marble benches flanked a sundial.
Max walked to the far bench, Annie to the near. Annie reached beneath her bench, gingerly ran her fingers against the smooth, cold stone. “Max!” She pulled, tugged, wrenched the taped packet loose and held it up for Max to see.