Tinkie put her arm around me. “Sarah Booth can’t leave behind her PI ways. There’s something going on here, and we’re going to figure it out.”
“And the place to begin is with Estelle.” Federico brought his cell phone from his pocket and placed a call. When he got Estelle’s voice mail, he left her a terse message telling her to call him back immediately.
Jovan refilled his glass and wrapped her elegant arms around him. “Let’s finish shooting and get away from here. The sooner the better.”
That was a sentiment I heartily concurred with. But there were several key scenes up on the schedule for the next day, and I was in most of them. I’d checked myself in the bathroom mirror, and I looked like warmed over death. I had to get some rest.
I stood to excuse myself, and Graf was at my elbow. “Tomorrow I’d like to talk to Ricardo,” I said. “Tinkie, can you help?”
“You bet. Oscar can wait another day or two.” She picked up my hand and held it. “Millie and Cece have to go, but I can stay a bit longer.”
Millie hugged me around the waist and whispered in my ear. “I didn’t get any answers on the Internet research, Sarah Booth, but once I get to Zinnia and have access to my files and my contact list, I’ll be able to turn something up.” She kissed my cheek. “If you want me to stay, I sure can. You’re more important than a café.”
I hugged her tightly. “You don’t have a clue what the café means to people in Sunflower County. Aside from the good food, it’s a place to meet, a place to sit with a friend to worry through a problem. It’s the hub of the town, Millie. Zinnia can’t do without it, or without you.”
“I wish you were coming home with us, Sarah Booth. I don’t like this business about ghosts and phantoms hiding and jumping out.”
The only good thing that had come of my near demise on castle rock was the arrival of Jitty. My family haint had arrived on-scene just in time to keep me from panicking and drowning. Now I wondered if she’d reappear.
Millie would flip if she knew I had my own ghost in Zinnia. “I’ll be fine,” I assured her. “And before you leave tomorrow, Federico has a surprise for you. Robert Redford is stopping by the set. He heard about your lemon meringue pie.”
I thought I was going to have to hold Millie up. Aunt Loulane would have called it a swoon. Millie recovered and danced around me.
“I’ve got to roll out some pie crust and squeeze the lemons. I’ve got to-” She headed toward the kitchen.
“Have fun. I’m going to bed.”
“Sarah Booth, can I speak with you alone?” Cece asked.
She was unusually solemn, but I figured she wanted to give me a personal good-bye. Tomorrow would be hectic, and there was no guarantee we’d have time for a real parting.
I followed her to her room, and she closed the door. “You never asked what we were doing while you were chasing down the beach.”
“You were helping Millie cook,” I said. I hadn’t asked because I knew.
“We were. But before anyone realized you were missing, I found Sweetie and Chablis locked in a room on the third floor.”
I’d gotten over my terror of nearly drowning, but this bit of news sent goose bumps racing down my arms. “A room on the third floor? The costumes and makeup are in the ballroom, but all the other doors are locked.” I’d tried them while following the “ghost.”
“I had to get a hammer and screwdriver to let them out.”
I nodded, afraid that if I spoke my voice would quiver.
“They were both frantic. They nearly killed themselves getting to the front door, but I thought they had to go to the bathroom, that maybe they’d wandered into the room and somehow locked themselves in.”
I watched her face. Cece wasn’t the kind who worried, but a furrow between her eyebrows told me she was concerned.
“Once I opened the front door, the dogs were gone. Both of them. Like they were on fire. I yelled for Tinkie and Graf, and when Graf caught sight of them vanishing into the gardens, he ran after them.”
“So everyone was chasing Sweetie and Chablis instead of looking for me?”
She nodded. “Initially. But Sweetie was acting so bizarre, we knew something was bad wrong. And we knew it had to involve you. That’s when I got really frightened.”
“What did Graf say about the dogs being locked up?”
She shook her head. “I didn’t get a chance to tell him. Or Tinkie either, but I’m going to call the police.” She put her hands on her hips. “Someone set you up. This was premeditated and well planned. If we’d been ten minutes later…”
“I know it’s dangerous.” I took a deep breath. “But if this gets out, someone will leak it to the media, and it’ll be in every tabloid. This one thing-that the dogs were deliberately confined-is something only you, me, and the person who did it know about.”
Her head moved incrementally up and down. “I see what you’re doing, but Graf can’t protect you if he doesn’t have the facts. Federico’s daughter seems criminally deranged.”
She was right about that, but it didn’t change what I wanted her to do. “Just humor me.”
“Until something else happens. Then I’m spilling the beans. Dahling, you can’t be damaged before you rise to stardom. Without you, I’ll never get a press pass to the Oscars.”
We were giggling when there was a tap on Cece’s door. She opened it to find an excited Federico. He shifted from one foot to the other. “I finally tracked down one of Estelle’s friends here in Petaluma. Estelle left this morning for Los Angeles. She couldn’t have been involved.”
That information momentarily took me aback. I was pretty certain the woman I’d chased through the gardens and along the beach was Estelle.
“I’m concerned about her,” Federico said. “I’ve tried calling her place in Malibu, but there’s no answer.”
“Estelle has a house in Malibu?” This was news to me. “Where?”
“Not too far from Lettohatchie Canyon, where you and Graf were staying.” Federico seemed oblivious to the conclusion I’d drawn in a nanosecond.
“You never mentioned that Estelle lives in Malibu.”
He looked at his shoes. So he had jumped to the same place, and he was ashamed of himself.
“Suzy Dutton is dead, Federico. Joey was injured here on the set. I was almost drowned. Serious things are happening, and your daughter is linked to all of it.”
“She’s disturbed, Sarah Booth, but she isn’t dangerous. Besides, she couldn’t have harmed you. She’s not even in this country.”
Federico wanted so badly to believe that his daughter wasn’t someone who would murder. I understood that, but it didn’t make it true. So far, I could say that Estelle could easily have been in the vicinity of Suzy Dutton’s “fall” from a cliff. She could also have damaged the balcony where Joey fell, and she could have messed with the camera. It was possible she’d been in the house and pushed Jovan down the stairs. I’d seen her-or someone who looked a lot like her-before I was nearly drowned. And I knew for certain that Estelle had the means to slip in and out of the house undetected-and someone had locked up the dogs. The evidence was stacking up against her.
“Are you sure she left Costa Rica?” Cece asked.
“Regena says so. They share an apartment in Petaluma, so she would know.”
“And who is this roommate?” Cece followed through.
“Regena Lombardi. She’s a dancer.”
I made a mental note of the name. Once I was through filming in the morning, I intended to pay Regena a call.
“Thanks for telling me, Federico.”
He remained in the doorway. “Estelle has given me many problems, but she is my flesh and blood. She’s an unhappy young woman, but I can’t believe she would harm anyone.”
I had a goose egg on my head that was all the evidence I needed that someone had meant to harm me. But I wasn’t going to argue with Federico. Not now. Not in front of Cece, who was already worried enough.