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Temple smiled at Electra’s joie de vivre. Now that luxury brand Céline had made an octogenarian Joan Didion their ad icon and Yves Saint Laurent had done the same with septuagenarian singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell (who’d written a song on the Magdalene asylums), Temple could revel in the idea of someday being a hip little old lady. She hoped to live long enough to be seriously removed forever from the “small and cute” and young category, like a lapdog.

Darn those Fontana brothers, their antique gallantry somehow got women feeling empowered! Of course the entire family fortune was based on Grandmama Fontana’s Italian sauce empire. Sauce equals sauciness.

“Now.” Aldo was evidently the chief prosecutor. “We have consulted family archives back to a time in which the Fontana escutcheon was slightly tainted in the public knowledge by the aura of Family connections not quite within the strict confines of The Law.” He turned, his double back-vented jacket swaying as gracefully as if on a Milano runway. “As some would say, not ‘legit’.”

Temple could hardly stop from laughing. Any minute now, she expected the assembled Fontana Brothers to form a Broadway musical chorus and break out singing the “Sit down, sit down, you’re rockin’ the boat” chorus from Guys and Dolls.

She conjured a paraphrased second line, tailor-made for Fontana, Inc.

“And the Devil will drag you under by sharp lapels of your Emanogildo Zegna coat. Stand up, stand up, you’re shakin’ the boat.”

Meanwhile, Ralph Fontana, his single diamond ear stud twinkling like a wink, hurried around the roomy patio to ensure the laptop computer projected the right image, a photo of the forlorn empty building.

“First,” Aldo said, “I wish to notify those not acquainted with police photos of crime scenes and the like, that some images may be hard to take. Happily, we start with an architectural long shot of the building in which the gruesome discovery, Mr. Jay Edgar Dyson’s dead body, was found.

“We Fontanas have been asked to research some of the possible perpetrators who might have what is called ‘mob’ corrections. Of course, we all know—” he pushed his impossibly stylish Italian sunglasses atop his head so his face was an open book, “—the FBI drove out all mob factions from Las Vegas by the end of the nineteen-eighties.”

Nicky Fontana cleared his throat. Loudly.

Temple knew mob activity remained alive and well in offbeat areas like controlling meat sales rather than the more glamorous gambling violations.

“Anyway,” Aldo went on, “we have learned that Mr. Dyson owned, as did his ex-wife, Miss Electra Lark, quite a bit of land surrounding this, what I can only call an abandoned hulk, on a nameless side street. Mr. Dyson, we learn, was lured to Vegas to discuss selling this vintage edifice, most recently a purveyor…” Here images passed in succession. “…of wigged-out old dolls (nothing personal to the older lady among us), chipped metal-painted toys and Depression glass, which I believe is called that because it is so depressing to look at, being all moss green and yellow colors, and often chipped besides.”

Temple cringed as the dolls with their balding wigs and cracked China faces passed by, looking like escapees from old horror movies.

“And,” Aldo added, “several hundred amps of rhinestone jewelry that Miss Temple Barr no doubt would covet.”

Since all the illustrated pieces were either G-strings or showgirl bras, Temple doubted that, particularly since she was a 32 AN. All Natural. Still, she was flattered Aldo thought she might be interested in something other than crime scenes.

“This building looks innocent of everything but urban blight,” he said. “Now we will segue to the Unusual Suspects.”

Aldo flipped the screen image to images from old photos to present film clip as easily as his suit jacket vents fluttered in a Vegas breeze.

“First, the understudies.” He clicked to a jail intake photo of a tough-looking guy. “In these shots, the suspects’ ‘performance’ names are noted,” Aldo explained. “Punch Sullivan did just that—punch and get punched—until taking too many ‘dives’ in fixed fights ruined his profile. Kat with a K was ‘Cathy’ with a C when she was assisting Vegas’s lowest-level con men and street magicians off the Strip, and hooking on the side. Naturally, they were soon ready for bigger money-making ventures. After they got together and shifted their focus, they became a Team around Town. We are looking at a pair of known adult entertainment figures, two of dozens in Las Vegas. You gonna open a strip club, you need sexperienced overseers to keep strippers and patrons in order.”

“Those two sound like something out of pulp novel,” Matt whispered to Temple. “You actually met this odious pair?”

“Sort of.”

Aldo went on. “In the Most Interesting Personality Involved category…” he said, bringing up a mug-shot photo. “The one, the only Leon Nemo,” he finished with a flourish.

“My money is on that guy.” Electra sat up and dumped her soggy paper umbrellas on a side table. “He’s a bad ’un. He could railroad a weakling like Jay Edgar. I’d bet my instincts about my last, and late, husband on that.”

Ernesto grabbed some copies of Nemo’s photo and marched around the assemblage to pass them out. The letters and numbers under Nemo’s photo were impressive, too, especially since they were in black and white.

“This jailhouse portrait was taken before nineteen sixty,” Temple said. “Nemo is old enough to have been active in the heydays of the Vegas mobs.”

Aldo’s long, buffed forefinger nail pointed to Temple. “A dollar to the little lady on the money! His dyed black hair aside, Nemo is as old as the dessert dirt that hid Ten Binion’s multimillion-dollar buried safe. He knows where the bodies as well as the booty in Vegas are buried, and if he’s involved in the Lust ‘n’ Lace takeover, it ain’t for the G-string dollar bills.”

Temple smiled modestly as he confirmed her suspicions. “Then what?” she asked.

Fontana brother padded shoulders lifted in unison. “To be determined later.”

“Having hit an impasse with the cast of crooks,” Nicky said. “I suggested we look into the strange scene of the crime.”

“And the bizarre manner of death, I hope,” Temple said.

“Our sources on the Vegas scene are impeccable,” Ralph stepped up to say. “For one thing, we have a bit of living history in our Uncle Macho Mario.”

“A bit? He is the entire Old Testament,” Julio said. “Problem is, he is a bit reluctant to testify against his old acquaintances. A matter of honor.”

“Surely,” Matt said, “such upstanding nephews can persuade an uncle to clear his conscience? If not, I could step in as a confessor. I still have the purple stole.”

“My blushes,” Aldo said. “We cannot have you assuming the mantel of a man of the cloth when you are so close to committing marriage. And also, by my admittedly old-fashioned uncle’s lights, if you would hear his confession, you would need to be committed to eternal silence, or death.”

Matt sighed. “Those are both pretty eternal. Temple might have objections.”

“I would,” she said. “If the dramatis personae are missing links on some fronts, what about the building in question? It’s as old as Las Vegas, apparently, and had a racy history before ending up as an antique mall.”

“That is easier to trace,” Nicky said. “On my request, Van sat Uncle Mario down with a bottle of Tia Maria liqueur and his bouncing baby youngest grandniece, Cinnamon Angela Fontana. Maria, I should mention,” Nicky addressed the company, “was the first name of our sainted and saucy matriarch and Mucho Macho Mario’s sainted mama, Maria Guadalupe Fontana. And ‘Angela’, of course, speaks for itself.”

“Between the oldest and the youngest of our Vegas line,” Aldo said, “Uncle Mario was soon teary-eyed and reminiscing for a concealed recorder about his arrival in Vegas as a lad, when Bugsy Siegel was losing sight of the ‘take’ and getting the visionary stars in his eyes blasted to smithereens.”