Anna started to speak again. “I don’t think he could have—”
“I told you to be quiet!”
Vi threw the rolling pin to the ground, reached into her bag, and pulled out a spool of twine.
Oh. She was going to bind them. Vi tossed the twine to Chase. “Tie her up,” she commanded. “Wrists first.” She flicked a piece of twine off the spool and returned the knife to Anna’s neck before Chase saw that she’d missed a chance.
She wouldn’t miss the next one. Now, tying Anna, she’d be close enough to Vi to try to get the knife away from her.
Chase took the length of twine and bent close to Anna’s wrists. She lunged into Vi to throw her off Anna.
Anna’s cry pierced Chase’s heart.
FORTY-ONE
A thin stream of blood, dark in the low light, trickled from the knife point down Anna’s throat.
Chase drew back. She’d been too clumsy. She hadn’t knocked Vi over at all, had only caused her to drive the sharp point a fraction of an inch deeper.
Another car cruised past on the road above them, slowing as the last one had. It had come from the other direction. Could Chase hope that the police had arrived and were searching for her, up and down the dam?
“I’ll do it,” Chase said. “I’ll tie her up.”
“Never mind.” Vi drew an ugly black pistol from her own purse. It looked too heavy for her delicate hand, but she didn’t have any trouble holding and aiming it. “I was hoping I wouldn’t have to do this. It’s so noisy.” She discarded the knife, dropped it onto the ground next to the rolling pin, and stepped back. Vi made sure to stay out of reach as she trained the gun on Anna. “Get next to her,” she said to Chase. “Both of you, against the car.”
Chase crowded next to Anna and grasped her hand. It was cold and shook with tremors.
What could Chase do to appease Vi at this point? It was too late to agree to sell to a couple of dead men. Or to offer her job back. Vi would never believe that Chase and Anna would keep quiet if she let them go, or give her time to get away and disappear.
“Start walking.” Vi jerked the gun up and down. “To the water.” She stood aside to let them pass.
The knife and the heavy rolling pin lay between them, forgotten by Vi after she’d switched to the pistol.
Chase motioned for Anna to go first. When Anna was a few feet from her, Chase pretended to stumble, stooped to catch herself, grabbed the rolling pin, and heaved it at Vi.
Her aim was good. She hit Vi on the side of the head and this time Vi went down. She clutched her head with both hands.
Anna swooped and grabbed the gun from the ground.
“I guess you ladies are doing all right,” said a male voice behind them.
Chase turned to see Detective Olson, his own gun drawn, flanked by several uniformed policemen, all aiming at Violet Peters.
“You heard?” Chase asked.
“I heard every word. It was very clever of you to guide us here. Ms. Bjorn was reinterviewed an hour ago and she told us that the woman she’d seen at Gabe’s condo was ‘that other nice girl’—not the owner, the other one, she said.
“The lab has already checked out the buttons. Ms. Peters ordered them, always from the same place, so they’re quite distinctive. And she must not sew them on very securely, because they apparently tend to fall off easily. We found at least one at each crime scene.”
Vi was helped to her feet, then handcuffed. The hot glares she was throwing the policemen, and one policewoman, were almost enough to melt their metal badges.
“They said they’d pay me,” Vi muttered, to no one in particular. “They never paid me for anything. It was hard putting those rats there. After all the risk I took, they acted like they didn’t have to do anything for me. They owed me. They owed me money and a job. They both cheated me!”
• • •
Julie, Anna, and Chase sat on Chase’s balcony, each wrapped in a thick woolen blanket. The old-fashioned globe streetlamps glowed, casting golden pools on the sidewalk below them, where shoppers, wrapped in heavy jackets, hurried through the chilly night. The three women sipped goblets of dark red wine and nibbled Anna’s latest creation, dessert bars that tasted like donuts. She hadn’t decided what to call them yet and Julie said she hadn’t decided if she liked them. To help make up her mind, she reached for a third one from the copper tray on the low table next to her.
Quincy nestled in Chase’s lap, purring so loudly that some of the pedestrians below glanced up when they passed by.
Anna ran her hands over the smoothness of the new blue marble rolling pin Julie had surprised her with tonight. She laid it on the table next to her with a smile.
“What do you think of Inger?” Chase asked. She had hired the young woman while Anna was in Woodstone, Connecticut, for a rest and recuperation, visiting her old friend Alice Slocum. Alice was the secretary for the police department there and had a friend named Gigi who furnished them with delicious meals from her Gourmet Delite catering service.
“She seems capable. I’m sure she’ll do well.”
“I feel bad about it, but I asked Niles how to run a background check on her. She checks out fine.”
“Niles? You’re on a first-name basis now?” Julie smiled. “What happened to Mike? Is he Dr. Ramos now?”
Chase hesitated. “Nooo, not exactly.”
“You’re stringing both of them along?”
“Not stringing along! I’m just not dating either one exclusively.”
“It doesn’t hurt to take your time,” said Anna, “or to keep your options open.”
“At least neither one of them is anything like Shaun Everly.”
“Is he still around?” Julie asked. “I never got to meet the cad.”
“No, he’s gone back to Chicago. I found the deposit slip, finally. I sent a note to his uncle, accompanied by a copy of the evidence that he was the one stealing from the restaurant, not me. His uncle is bringing charges. Last I heard, he was in jail and no one had posted bail for him. Detective Olson has a friend on the force there and he said he’d keep me updated. I can’t wait to find out the outcome of the trial.”
“Sometimes the justice system does dispense justice,” Anna said.
Julie nodded in agreement. “You were talking about keeping your options open, Grandma,” she said. The light from inside Chase’s apartment caught Julie’s mischievous smile as she turned her head toward Anna. “Is Bill Shandy still on the fence?”
“I thought you’d never ask.” Anna reached into her pocket and fumbled under the blanket for moment. When she brought her left hand up, a brilliant diamond winked in the light on the ring finger.
Quincy raised his head as a shard of reflected light from the ring ran across his face. He gave the ring a glance, then, seeming content, lowered his head and resumed purring.
RECIPES
Hula Bars
Oven: 375
Yield: 36 small dessert bar squares or 18 dessert bars
Crust:
½ cup melted margarine
½ cup brown sugar, firmly packed
1 cup all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
½ teaspoon coconut extract
Filling:
2 eggs
1 cup brown sugar, firmly packed
2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
½ teaspoon coconut extract
¼ teaspoon salt
1⅓ cups (1 package) walnut chips
½ cup dried pineapple
½ cup coconut, lightly packed
Topping:
¼ cup powdered sugar
Preheat oven to 375 degrees F (190 degrees C).
Spray Pam on sides and bottom of 8x8 baking pan.
Melt the margarine. You can use a glass measuring cup and the microwave.