“None," Shelley admitted. "But I want to know. If Mel's right, it's most likely someone in the neighborhood. Someone who needs to be scooped up and put in jail."
“I'm not so sure," Jane said. "There were a lot of people driving by and gawking at the Johnson' house."
“But how many of them do you suppose said to themselves, 'Hey, there's Lance King, my lifelong enemy, on a roof. Think I'll just give him a shove'? Besides, nobody driving by could have seen the ladder in back, much less guess that the guy on the roof was Lance King in a Santa suit.”
Jane nodded. "You're probably right. Mel's probably right. I couldn't sleep well last night trying to remember who was where and when,' she said. "It was all just a blur though. I was sc flurried that I hardly remember where I was, much less the rest of the guests.”
Shelley sipped her tea. "I'm not sure it would have taken long enough for anyone to be missed. If somebody was trailing him, all they had to do was slip outside, wait until he had gone up the ladder, then follow him. One quick push was all it took, I assume.”
Jane said, "But why would someone be following him just at that time? Surely he didn't mention that he was going to go climb on a dangerous, slippery roof. And he might just as well have gone to the television van with the other guys."
“Maybe somebody saw him climbing the ladder. Or just saw him going between the houses. You can see that area from the side window in your dining room. No, I think alibis are going to be useless. It's the motive that's going to count and a lot of people had good reason to wish him dead."
“You're thinking about Bruce Pargeter?"
“Not seriously. But his name does come to mind."
“Only because he told us something about his background," Jane said. "Just think how many other people may have been hurt by the man and just don't talk about it.”
Shelley glanced at her watch again. "I think maybe we better get going. You don't want to miss your own cookie party."
“Wanna bet?" Jane asked.
Thirteen ·;·,
When they got home, Mel's MG was parked in ': the street and he was sitting in it, reading a report, which he hastily put away. "Was that the autopsy report?" Jane asked when he joined them at the kitchen door.
“Just a preliminary. Nothing unexpected. The metal support in the reindeer horn pierced his aorta. Death was nearly instantaneous. Other minor injuries that wouldn't have been life‑ threatening."
“How could anybody count on that happen‑ ing?" Jane asked, taking off her coat and gathering up Shelley' s and Mel's to put on the temporary rack.
“I don't suppose they could," Mel said. "This doesn't look like a well-thought-out plan just someone taking advantage of a situation. Maybe it didn't matter if he died, just so he was injured enough to back off and leave someone alone.”
“But what if he'd seen his attacker — and sur‑ vived?" Jane asked. "Wouldn't it just make things that much worse?"
“I don't have the answer to that yet. I'm not sure we ever will unless we get an honest confession. It looks to me, from what little we know so far, like a sudden-impulse crime. Somebody who hated King, saw an opportunity to do him damage, and leaped at the chance without looking at the options."
“Sort of like that time you bought those stiletto heels, Jane," Shelley said with a grin. "No thought of the future or of the quality of the decision."
“Stiletto heels?" Mel asked.
“Never mind. I just meant we all do idiotic things on a whim occasionally."
“I'd hardly call murder a whim," Mel said.
It wasn't like Mel to be so stuffy, Jane thought. This case obviously wasn't going well for him. "No, what you're saying is that it was an act of passion, which is usually even more idiotic than a mere whim," Jane said.
“Speaking of whims," Mel said, "what have you done with my mother?"
“Dropped her off at the airport," Shelley said under her breath so he couldn't hear her, but Jane could.
“We invited her to lunch with us, but she said she didn't like Chinese," Jane replied. "I imagine she's still upstairs."
“It's the MSG that gets her," Mel said. "I guess I better take her someplace for lunch." He paused, waiting for them to let him off the hook.
Jane and Shelley smiled benevolently at him. Jane was tempted to say there were lots of leftovers they could eat, but kept quiet. She wanted Addie out of the house for a while. Just longenough to briskly move the sewing room furniture back to the way it had been before.
“Did you talk to Bruce Pargeter?" Shelley asked.
“Yes, at some length. He told me about the sinkhole, his father's decline and death after the scandal."
“And did he have an alibi for last night?" Jane asked.
“Sort of," Mel replied. "He says he told his mother about Lance King possibly being in the neighborhood and they decided to keep the lowest possible profile. His mother's bedroom and sitting room are at the back of the house. They turned off all the front lights, the mother went to her room, and Bruce spent the evening in the basement."
“In the basement? Hiding or what?" Shelley said.
“No, he's got a terrific woodworking shop down there. Said he was making a jewelry box for his mother's birthday next month. There were plans from a magazine and a half-done box. Incredibly fine work, by the way."
“So it wasn't something he whipped up this morning as an alibi?" Jane asked.
“Nope, but it doesn't prove anything. He could have done it a week ago and just said he worked on it last night. He's a nice guy, it seems, but I have nothing to convince me that he couldn't have been peering out a darkened upstairs window, saw Lance on the roof, and hared up the block to give him a push. His mother, without even being asked, admitted that she's a little hard of hearing and had the television in her sitting room turned up pretty loud.”
“So he's a suspect?" Jane asked.
“Jane, at this point, everyone's a suspect. I've already been to do first interviews with all the people who were here, getting their impressions and asking them to make lists of times and people. By the way, 'Lance King' was a stage name."
“Was it? Who was he really?" Shelley asked. "Harvey Wilhite."
“Wilhite?" Jane asked. "One of the neighbors is named Wilhite."
“Sharon Wilhite," Mel said. "Right. And she's his wife — ex-wife, rather."
“You're kidding!" Shelley exclaimed.
But before they could ask anything else, Addie VanDyne called down the stairs, "Mel? Is that you, dear?”
He went to meet her and a hurried, hissy conversation took place. Jane and Shelley strained their ears to overhear it, but couldn't get any sense out of the few words they could discern. "I'm going to run Mom out for lunch," he announced as he returned to the kitchen. He didn't look very pleased, Jane thought. Was it just that he resented taking precious time off the murder case or because of the content of their little whispered chat?
The minute Mel and his mother were out of sight, Jane and Shelley galloped upstairs. They put the bed back on the other wall and scooted the small worktable to the place it had formerly been. "Did she explain why she moved the furniture?" Shelley asked, neatly aligning the wastebasket under the table.
“No, neither of us mentioned it. I was too surprised to say anything that wasn't criminally rude.”
They took a last look around and closed the door on the sewing/guest room.
“I feel just like a teenager who has just successfully TP'd a house!" Shelley said gleefully.
Suzie Williams was the first to arrive for the cookie party. She looked fabulous in an extremely well-fitted and well-underpinned green suit. The color made her greenish-blue eyes even more gorgeous than usual and her hair had been freshly platinumed. Suzie was a generous-sized woman with a sort of Mae-West-in-her-prime style. And the vulgar sense of humor to go with it. "I'm early. Sorry. But when you're in the girdle business, you've got to get while the getting is good."