While George rambled on, Sawyer leaned closer to me and pulled the pipe out of his mouth. “I think you should wear a mustache all the time. It looks really good,” he joked with a sly smile.
I stared straight ahead. Sawyer is joking with you. Be funny. Be funny or so help me.
I stroked the fake hair above my lip and turned to him. “That monocle doesn’t look so bad either.”
“How long did it take you to grow that cool ‘stache?” he asked.
“About ten seconds,” I joked. “What’s in the pipe?”
“Just some manly tobacco or something,” he said, repositioning his monocle so that it wasn’t poking him in the eye.
We were joking, right? So why did it actually feel like we were flirting with each other?
“Are you the murderer?” I asked with a smile.
He laughed, shaking his head. “Wow, Detective, you’re really straight forward. There hasn’t even been a murder yet.”
Oh right, I’d forgotten how the game actually worked. Maybe I should have been paying attention to George after all.
“Okay!” George said, clapping his hands and walking over to the doorway of dining hall. “I’m going to flip this light switch and then the game will begin. Does everyone understand the rules?”
There were still a few murmurs in the crowd, and a few random words were thrown around, like “dentures” and “fiber”, clearly indicating the level of confusion felt throughout the room (were we all still on the same topic?), but George chose to ignore them and flipped the light switch anyway.
When the lights cut out, Sawyer’s hand brushed mine and I glanced over to try to see him in the darkness. There was no use; my eyes hadn’t adjusted to the dark yet.
“This monocle doesn’t have night vision,” he whispered next to my ear.
I burst out laughing, ruining the seriousness of the scene.
“Get into your characters!” George bellowed across the room before flipping the light switch back on a moment later.
When he did, we found not one, but two bodies, lying on the ground.
The game had taken a dark turn.
Gwyneth Fitzgerald, aka Catwoman Sandy, was lying on the ground with her limbs artfully spread out around her. She’d been murdered and we were supposed to be concerned about that, but everyone was focused on the fact that a random audience member, Beatriz, was also lying on the ground, blinking her eyes and staring up at the ceiling.
“Uh, Beatriz?” I asked, stepping forward.
“What’s going on? Were there two murders? This is confusing,” Anne asked, glancing back and forth between the bodies.
George flew into action, practically fuming. “Beatriz, why are you lying on the ground? You aren’t supposed to be dead. You aren’t even a character in the game.”
Beatriz propped herself up on her elbows, her dyed red hair now sticking up all over the place.
“Oh, I was confused about the rules,” Beatriz began to explain in an old, scraggly voice. “I played a game once when there were random murders and then we had to guess—”
George cut her off with a wave of his hand. “Beatriz! This is not that game and there was only one murder tonight.”
“Stop trying to steal my thunder, Beatriz,” Sandy said, temporarily breaking her character.
Even in death, Sandy was a bully.
“People! Let’s focus. Beatriz, please take a seat and we’ll keep going as planned,” George said, dabbing the sweat from his forehead. He was losing control of his cast, and I could tell it was stressing him out. “Everyone take our your cue cards and read what you’re supposed to do first.”
I pulled out a note card that had a #1 printed at the top, and read the first instruction: Detective Maverick, you arrive on the scene after Hannah Fitzgerald calls you. Make sure you examine the body for clues.
I turned to Anne, Hannah Fitzgerald, and waited for her to read her cue card.
“Oh dear,” Anne began, with mock seriousness, as she read straight from the card. “Gwyneth Fitzgerald has been murdered in her own home during her own dinner party. We have to call the police!”
I had to bite my hand to keep from laughing while she read the words. But when Sawyer nudged me forward, I realized everyone was waiting for me to start reading from my card, considering I was the police.
“Don’t worry, I’ve arrived!” I said, only remembering that my character was supposed to have a thick Scottish accent after I started, so I quickly worked it in. “Don’t fret, lads and lassies. I’m here to solve the case!”
“I couldn’t understand any of that,” Sawyer said with a laugh.
“You didn’t sound Scottish, Ruby, you sounded like you were from the Middle East,” George said, rolling his eyes.
I pressed my mustache back into place and tried again.
“Heeelllooo evverryonnee, I’m Deteccttivvee Mavverriickkk.” I mostly, sounded like a drunk version of Shrek.
“Nope. No. Now you’re just talking really slow, Ruby,” George said, interrupting me. “Damnit, just scratch the accent all together!”
I shrugged and stepped forward to examine Sandy’s body. It was kind of awkward since she wasn’t actually a dead person and she was blinking up at me while I circled around her. Her character’s blonde wig was still on straight, a strand of pearls hung around her neck, and a big fake, diamond ring hung on her bony finger. Nothing seemed out of the place except for the fake knife lying directly next to her head with blood on it. At least, I thought it was blood. It smelled like ketchup. I pretended to be horrified either way.
“No!” I gasped, pulling out the gloves that I’d spied in my packet earlier and slipping them on so I could pick up the knife and hold it up for everyone. “She’s been stabbed to death!”
Everyone gasped and Sawyer even screamed “Nooooooooooo,” for emphasis. George applauded him for being committed to his character. I laughed until our eyes met, and then I quickly looked away like a nervous school girl. You’d think my badass detective outfit would have helped with my nerves. I really thought I was pulling off the mustache look rather well, but still, one look from Sawyer and I was like a shy three-year-old.
After I confirmed that there weren’t any more clues surrounding Sandy (Gwyneth), we all looked to George for our next piece of instruction. He shoved his hands into his argyle sweater and sighed. “You’re supposed to put together the clues and figure out where to go next.”
“Oh right,” I said, glancing back down at the knife in my gloved hand.
I frowned at my lack of intuition about where to go next. I wasn’t an actual detective, people.
“Is there a card that tells us where to go next?” Sawyer asked, stepping toward me and kneeling down so that I caught a whiff of his cologne. Let me tell you, it was not that cheap stuff that makes your nose fall off. It was light and masculine and it made me forget that we were in the middle of a nursing home.
“No! You have to think,” George replied, enunciating “think” like we were a couple of simpletons.
“Alright well, we have a knife, and…” my sentence trailed off as I realized I had nothing else to contribute.
“And where do you get knifes from?” George gestured in a circle with his arms, trying to get us to fill in the answer.
“The kitchen!” Sawyer and I yelled in unison, smiling at each other as we got to our feet.
“Okay, let’s go check the kitchen for clues,” I said to the other characters in the game.
“How about you two go check it out and we’ll all hang back here and search for more clues,” Anne suggested. I glanced toward her, trying to decide if she was being sly in trying to get Sawyer and I alone.
“Yeah, that’s a good idea,” Sawyer said, looking toward me to lead the way.
I nodded silently, heading toward the kitchen, but not before looking back at Anne. The little devil winked at me.
Sawyer caught up to me as I exited the dining hall. “This is better,” he said. “They’d just slow us down anyway and we’re on the trail of a murder.”
I laughed. “A made-up murder.”