“Allison Korthase.” Aunt Frances shook her head. “She had so much potential.”
She’d had it all, as far as I could tell. Intelligence, beauty, money—yet that hadn’t been enough for her. She’d wanted more, much more, and had murdered to get it.
Eddie bumped me on the back of the head. Absently, I reach up to pet him, wishing that I’d been smart enough to figure out before Roger had been killed that Allison had had the capacity for murder. How, I didn’t know, but if, for instance, I’d known that—
“Hey!” I saw Eddie’s white-tipped paw snaking down to the popcorn bowl. I batted it away. “This is not cat food. Your bowl is in the kitchen.”
He turned around and sat on the back of the couch with his hind end against my head.
Aunt Frances laughed. “You should see his face.”
“Oh, I have a good idea of what it looks like.” If Eddie had the power to disintegrate me on sight, I would have been a small heap of powder months ago. “You know what else Stephen said?”
My aunt did the one-eyebrow thing. “About the bookmobile or about Eddie?”
“Neither,” I said, then reconsidered. “Or maybe both.”
Aunt Frances looked at my cat. “It’s a pity she can’t be more clear.”
“Mrr,” he said.
“Do you want to hear or not?” I asked.
“Yes, please.”
“Mrr.”
So I told them about Stephen’s not-so-imminent retirement and about his plans for my future.
“You don’t sound overly excited,” Aunt Frances said.
I plunged my hand into the popcorn. Becoming a library director had been my career goal for years. In college, I’d often fallen asleep while dreaming about the library I’d one day direct. Even since moving to Chilson, I’d thought about the changes I might make as director. But in the past year, I hadn’t thought about it much. Hardly at all, as a matter of fact.
“I’m not sure,” I said slowly, “that I want to be library director, if it means giving up the bookmobile.”
Eddie’s tail thumped against the back of my head.
“You are so weird,” I told him.
“Well.” My aunt used the napkin on her lap to wipe her fingers clean of butter. “You don’t have to make the decision today.”
“Not even this month.”
“So no need to worry, right?”
“None.”
“Then I say it’s a perfect time to pop another bowl of popcorn. Just because it’s Monday night doesn’t mean we shouldn’t celebrate.” She stood. “Eddie, you staying or coming with?”
A furry tail whacked my ear.
She squinted. “Was there an answer in there somewhere?”
“Only if you want one.”
She snorted. “You two are a match made in heaven. No, don’t get up. This way, I get to use as much salt as I want.”
Eddie slid down to my lap. “How nice to see you,” I said. “It’s been so long.”
He rotated one and a half times and settled on my left leg. “Why can’t you spread yourself more evenly?” I asked. “You know your weight is going to cut off all circulation to my leg in ten minutes. Do you want me to have to lop off my toes?”
Eddie looked partway up to me and opened his mouth in a soundless “Mrr.”
“Okay, you’re right. I might have been exaggerating a teensy bit.”
He settled onto my lap a little deeper and started purring. Yet another argument won by the cat.
Aunt Frances laughed and picked up the empty bowl. “Back in a minute.”
I gave Eddie long strokes along his back and thought about what Detective Inwood had told me that afternoon when he’d called.
“She’s made a full confession,” he’d said, satisfaction oozing out of every word. “A couple of nights in jail, and she was ready to tell everything.”
Allison had told him that she’d used snowshoes to get to the spot where she’d shot Roger, and she’d admitted to tampering with Denise’s car. “Her intention,” the detective said dryly, “was to cut the brake lines, but she knows nothing about cars. She just popped the hood and stabbed at the biggest hose, figuring it was so big because it was important, and what could be more important than brakes?”
I’d frowned. “Why didn’t she get on the ground and cut the lines from down there?”
“Because,” he said, “Ms. Korthase had just left a meeting. She said she was dressed in dry-clean-only pants and didn’t want to get them dirty.”
The detective then told me that Allison had been following Denise’s tweets and Facebook posts all Saturday. She’d cross-referenced those with the bookmobile schedule I’d posted on the library’s Web site and had calculated when we’d be at the road washout.
“The road commission had put up a Road Closed barrier,” Detective Inwood said, “but she dragged it out of the way just before you came along.”
“I’m glad no one else drove down that road while the barrier was gone.” I winced at the idea. “Someone could really have been hurt.”
“Yes,” the detective said, his dry tone back in full force. “Someone could have.” There was a slight pause. “It was becoming clear that the evidence we’d been gathering against the hunter wasn’t going to be sufficient for prosecution. In all honesty, we were at a loss for new suspects.”
While he wasn’t exactly oozing with gratitude, this was probably as close to a thank-you as I was going to get. “You’re welcome,” I said.
The detective had cleared his throat. “Deputy Wolverson spoke highly of you. He said it was due to your efforts that Ms. Korthase didn’t wound or kill Ms. Slade. He said you kept calm in an emergency situation and, if not for you, things could have turned out much worse.”
What could have been worse was I could have charged up that hill and been shot, something I wasn’t about to tell my mother. Ever. This was definitely a case in which what she didn’t know wouldn’t hurt her, and Aunt Frances, who had known my mother long before I came along, had already made a pinkie swear not to share that particular bit of information.
Heavy, male-sounding footsteps came across the front porch and were followed by the double stomp of boots shedding snow and a knock on the door.
“I’ll get it,” Aunt Frances called, hurrying to the entryway. “Minnie, don’t you dare get up and disturb that cat.” She opened the door. “Tucker! I didn’t realize you were stopping by tonight. Come on in.”
“Thanks,” he said, smiling at her and hanging his coat in the closet.
Aunt Frances made her way back through the living room. “Next bowl of popcorn, coming up fast.”
Since I hadn’t known Tucker was stopping by, either, I wondered what was up. “Eddie’s right here,” I said, once again seeing that female hand reach across the cafeteria table. “And so is all his hair and dander.”
Tucker sat next to me. And started petting Eddie. With his bare hand. “It’ll be fine,” he said. “I dosed up before I left the hospital.”
“Oh. Well, if you’re sure.”
“You’re mad, aren’t you?”
I shrugged.
“Listen, I’m really sorry about the other night, but I was having a conference call with some med-school friends of mine, talking about a fellowship opening they thought I should know about.”
“And a fellowship is what, exactly?” I’d heard of them but wasn’t clear on the details.
“It’s more training,” he said. “Specialized medical training that you can get after your residency.”
I frowned. “This is something you want to do? I thought . . .” I’d thought he was happy doing what he was doing. I’d thought he was content.
“It’s a great opportunity,” he said.
“You’d do this in Charlevoix?”
“Well, no. This is a fellowship for sports medicine.” He paused. “At the University of Michigan.”
“But that hospital is in . . .” I tailed off.
“Ann Arbor,” he said. “I could stay with my parents; it’d be a long commute, but it’d be a lot cheaper for me.”