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“Abyss. I get it.”

“Look, I didn’t do it, all right?!” the homeless guy—or hipster—exclaimed.

“That’s what they all say,” growled Gran.

“So what was Chris Ackerman’s wallet doing in your pocket?” asked Uncle Alec.

“Yeah, okay, so I stole it. Sometimes I steal stuff. It’s a disease. I’m seeing a doctor about it but so far the therapy isn’t working. We’re still fine-tuning. You can ask Dr. Freggar. He’ll tell you all about it.”

“Wait. Let me get this straight. You’re telling us you stole Mr. Ackerman’s wallet but you didn’t kill him,” said Uncle Alec.

“That’s exactly what I’m telling you—and please note for the record that my disease compels me to steal stuff. It’s not like I’m a thief or anything. It’s a sickness. Like, um—like cancer. Or boils.”

“Boils,” grunted Uncle Alec.

“Yeah,” grinned the man.

“We found Mr. Ackerman’s wallet on you,” said Chase, “as well as his diamond watch, a monogrammed money clip containing no less than five hundred dollars, a monogrammed money pouch with fifty bucks in loose change, and a monogrammed gilded iPhone also belonging to Mr. Ackerman and you’re telling me you had nothing to do with his murder.”

“He was dead when I found him!” cried the man, spreading his arms.

Uncle Alec pounded the table with his fist.“You’re lying, Mr. Drood.”

“Sasha,” said the man. When Alec stared at him, he added with a genial smile, “My friends call me Sasha.”

“You decided to rob Mr. Ackerman but he caught you. You struggled and you killed him,” said Chase. “That’s the truth, isn’t it, Mr. Drood?”

“In an alternate reality maybe it is,” said Sasha, settling back in his chair. “But in this reality I read somewhere that Chris Ackerman, the world’s bestselling writer, was coming to Hampton Cove. Oh, I said to myself, the world’s bestselling writer, I said. That probably means he’s rich, I said. And if he’s rich, he won’t mind donating some of his money to a deserving sick person like myself. So I head on down to the library to have a conversation with Mr. Ackerman about his donation—only when I get there he’s sitting all by his lonesome on stage. Dead as a dodo! So mydisease tells me that since he’s dead already he’s not going to miss his pocket junk so I took it.” He shrugged. “There’s no law against that, is there?”

“Oh, this guy is good,” Gran muttered. “Maybe I should get in there and slap him around some. Practice a little police brutality.”

“You’re not going in there, Gran,” said Odelia. “Uncle Alec and Chase have got this.”

“Why didn’t you take his briefcase while you were at it?” asked Uncle Alec.

“Briefcase? He had a briefcase?”

“Yes, he did. So why didn’t you take it?”

Sasha Drood tsk-tsked for a moment.“Dang it. I must have missed that.” He held up a finger. “I mean, mydisease must have missed that.”

“The fountain pen you stabbed Mr. Ackerman with,” said Chase, “is worth three thousand bucks. Why didn’t you take that?”

“I told you guys already, I didn’t stab—hold on, three thousand bucks?”

“At least.”

“You’re joshing me, right?” He darted amused glances at the two cops. “Now you’re just yanking my chain. No pen is worth three thousand bucks.”

“This one is. A genuine Graf von Faber-Castell fountain pen. Eighteen-carat gold nib.”

Sasha was laughing out loud now.“You guys!” he cried. “And they say cops don’t have a sense of humor!”

Chase and Alec were staring at the crook, not a flicker of a smile on their faces.

“Let me get in there,” Gran said. “I’ll teach this punk a lesson.”

But Uncle Alec proved he was up to the task by slamming the table once again.“Just tell us the truth, Drood!” he snarled. “You killed Ackerman and you robbed a dead man!”

Sasha’s laughter died away, as if turned off at the tap. He eyed Alec seriously. “Do you really think I’d leave a three-thousand-dollar fountain pen behind? You’re crazy, Chief. No, I didn’t kill that man. I only robbed him—correction, mydisease robbed him. And if you don’t believe me, Dr. Freggar will confirm everything I’ve just said. I have his number in my phone, in case you’re interested.”

Alec stared at the man.“Boils, huh?” he said.

Sasha Drood smiled widely.“Boils,” he confirmed.

“You know? He doesn’t look like a killer,” said Odelia.

“Oh, but he does,” said Gran. “Just look at his eyes. Dark pools of evil. I stared into eyes like that once, and I’ve never forgotten it.”

“Leo?”

“Your dad when I told him I was moving back in.” She smiled at the memory.

Chapter 13

“We must really love our human,” said Dooley, slightly huffing and puffing.

We’d been walking for a while now, as there’s only one McDonald’s in town, and it’s located in a strip mall on the main road into town, a little ways away from the library, which is in the heart of town.

“Why is that?” I asked, also puffing.

“Look at us walking a marathon! Just to please Odelia.”

“You don’t walk a marathon, Dooley. You run a marathon.” But I got what he was saying. Clarice would have made fun of us if she’d seen us. Then again, we hadn’t lied. Odelia was good to us, and so were Marge and Gran. Even the men in the family weren’t too bad. Uncle Alec and Tex and Chase had installed a cat flap not so long ago. It had taken them several attempts before I managed to pass through without getting stuck but they’d done it. So it was understandable we should return the favor by being the best sleuths we could be.

Cars zoomed past us, and I couldn’t help but wonder where they were all going. It was way past human bedtime, after all, and the only creatures who should be stirring were us cats. And maybe owls. And bats. And mice. Oh, and coyotes, of course. Just then, a loud howl rose up from the bushes nearby, and Dooley and I put a bit more pep in our step.

The first coyote had yet to be spotted on Long Island but you never knew. And I certainly didn’t want to be the first one to spot it and be eaten by the darn thing!

Soon the strip mall’s bright neon lights beckoned us and we headed straight for the McDonald’s restaurant which, much to our surprise, was still open for business!

“Let’s hope we find this Big Mac,” I said as we headed straight for the dumpster parked on the McDonald’s parking lot.

“I could use a Big Mac right now,” lamented Dooley. “I’m starving.”

“I’m pretty peckish myself,” I admitted.

We’d been at this detecting business for hours now, and I could use some food. But duty called, and it wasn’t as if I was going to starve to death by skipping a meal. Or two.

The McDonald’s dumpster appeared pretty much deserted when we arrived, and my heart sank. Had we really come all this way for nothing? That was just sad. And a testament to the learning curve we were on as junior feline sleuths. This wouldn’t have happened to Aurora Teagarden. When Aurora Teagarden went someplace she always found fresh clues. Or maybe the people making those Hallmark movies simply cut out all the boring parts.

“I think I hear something,” said Dooley as we approached.

“A rat probably,” I said, trepidation making me halt in my tracks. There are cats that eat rats. And then there’s me and Dooley. We don’t like rats. In fact rats scare me to death. They’re big, they’re mean, and they have some really sharp teeth. You get the picture.

“Who goes there?” suddenly a voice rose up from the dumpster’s innards.

“It’s a rat!” Dooley hissed. “Every cat for himself!” And he scooted off to hide underneath a parked Toyota Land Cruiser!

Suddenly a head appeared over the dumpster’s edge. I stared at the head. The head stared back at me. Clarice had been right. It was like looking in a mirror. The head belonged to a blorange cat with a gorgeous set of whiskers and a pink-colored little button of a nose.