Murder In The Milk Case - Murder in the Milk Case Part 9
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Murder in the Milk Case Part 9

Max slipped into a chair, stretching his legs out, crossing them at the ankles. "Honey, you remember that self-storage convention in Chicago?"

I nodded, glad for the change of topic. After I put the flowers on my desk, I took a deep breath and sat down. The family had gone to the conference a few years ago when Max and his dad first started planning their self-storage empire.

"It's coming up in couple of days," he said. I nodded again.

He watched me. "Getting the kids taken care of, like their car pools and things, is hard with short notice."

"That's true," I murmured. Still, the thought of time away from here was wonderful. We'd have time alone together. We could really talk, and then, far away from the familiar, I could tell Max everything. I began making a mental list of phone calls I would make if we went.

"You should go," George said. "You gotta get things settled. With plans in the works for the new facility, you gotta get some good programs. Nothin' chases the renters away like not being able to get into their units or keeping their stuff in a facility that isn't secured."

Our gate program still wasn't working right, and we had to leave the gate open round the clocka"something that we had to take care of soon.

I glanced at my watch. Time had gotten away from me. I jumped to my feet. "I have to go. I have to find someone to watch Sammie. I, ah, have to go see Detective Scott this afternoon."

"Again?" Max frowned. "This is the third time. Why?"

I shrugged. "He has a few more questions. It's just standard procedure."

"I wouldn't think so. . .unless you're a suspect." He frowned. "Are you? Eric didn't say anything last night, but you were at the store, and you did find the body." He paused. "Honey, is there something you're not telling me?"

I tried not to choke.

George cleared his throat and stood. "I think it's time for me to head out."

Max was distracted for a moment, saying good-bye to George. That meant I had just a second's reprieve. My husband might be dense to certain subtleties of mood, but once he latched onto something, his mind was like lightninga"and he didn't let go until he had answers. I needed to figure things out quickly. Perhaps Max would pick up Sammie, and I'd have time for a quick visit to Abbie's.

I turned to my desk and picked up my flowers as the guys said their good-byes. Maybe I could distract him.

"Trish?"

I stuck my nose in the flowers. "Where did you get these? They're lovely."

"Glad you like them." I felt his eyes boring into the back of my head.

I reached for my purse. "Would you pick up Sammie for me, honey? I might like to visit Abbie before I go to the sheriff's office."

"No problem," he said softly.

I made sure my phone was in my purse. "I'll pick up something from the deli for dinner, okay? How about subs? And a movie? We can watch a movie tonight."

He cleared his throat.

I slowly turned around. Max had his arms crossed.

"I should go now," I said.

"I think you should tell me what's going on first." The only part of him that moved was his mouth. His eyes were slightly narrowed, and he looked a bit like a panther ready to pounce. I rarely saw Max's aggressive side. A hard-nosed businessman who had learned at the feet of his harder-nosed father. I didn't like it.

I clasped the handle of my purse until my knuckles turned white. "Detective Scott says that by talking to me over and over again, things I've seen but don't remember might come back to me." As much as the detective had annoyed me, I couldn't believe I was defending him.

Max studied me very much like the cops had. Then he took a deep breath and glanced at his watch. "Something's not right here, but I need to go pick up Sammie. This is the last time I'll allow you to go to the sheriff's office without a lawyer. I want you to tell Eric that, okay?"

Great. All I needed was a lawyer friend of the Cunninghams picking my brain. He'd be like all of Max's familya"Harvard educated and smart as a whip. That would be worse than talking to Detective Scott. And despite lawyer/client privilege, I'd wonder what the lawyer was telling the family.

"Okay." I didn't meet Max's eyes, just studied his very firm chin. He had a nice chin, with a tiny little cleft right in the middle.

"Is there anything else you need to tell me?" he asked.

My gaze snapped up to his. "Like did I murder him? Is that what you mean?"

He closed his eyes for a second, rubbing the bridge of his nose. Then he crossed the room in three steps and pulled me into his arms. "No, honey. I know you didn't kill him. I just love you so much. The thought of something happening to you makes me crazy. I'm sorry."

Well, I'd succeeded in distracting him, but now I felt worse. With his words, he heaped red coals of shame upon my head. How much more could I take? I had to find my answers and fast.

Chapter Nine.

With my arms full of yearbooks, a bag from the drugstore, and my purse, I brushed past a surprised Abbie at her front door. I was out of breath from running up the stairs. She lived above an antique shop in the middle of town, and I didn't know how she could stand walking up and down those stairs everyday.

I dumped everything on her taupe leather sofa, whirled around, and faced her. "I have another interview with Detective Scott today." I glanced at my watch. "In exactly ninety minutes. I need you to help me prepare. I hope you have some time. If you'd answer your phone or get a cell phone, I'd be able to get in touch with you."

She shut her front door and faced me. "I was in the shower, so I didn't hear the answering machine. And I hate cell phones."

"I brought bribes." I pointed at the stuff I'd dropped. "I also brought a notebook to make notes in. And I have all of Russ's yearbooks. I need to make a list of things to distract the police so I have more time to check into Russ's past and see who was blabbing to Jim Bob."

"Have you talked to Max yet?" she asked.

"No." I met her gaze. "I tried. Then Karen walked in and started talking about her mother. I couldn't do it after that."

She studied my face a moment more, then she glided to the couch and fished through the plastic bag, pulling out two plain stenographer's pads and six Cadbury eggs. She grinned and bounced an egg on her palm. "My very favorite. You're serious about bribery, I see. Are they all for me?"

I nodded.

She waved a pad in the air. "Couldn't you have gotten notebooks that were a little more decorative?"

I took it from her. "This is serious business. I didn't want to show up at Detective Scott's office with something that had pink and purple fairies on the cover."

She continued to bounce the egg in her hand. "Okay. Here's the deal. I'll help you if you promise to talk to Max within the next week."

"I want to. I'm trying." I crossed my arms. "Why are you so insistent about this?"

"I don't want anything to happen to you guys. Remember my short marriage? My ex was keeping secrets."

"Yeah, but his secret was two women on the side. He betrayed you."

"Don't you think Max will feel betrayed by something like this?"

I raked my fingers through my hair. "Yes. Yes, he will. I know that. That's what makes this hard. But if Russ is guilty, then my stepkids are going to hate me. And. . .I don't know how Max will feel. I mean. . ." My throat closed up, and tears filled my eyes.

"Oh, hon, I'm sorry." Abbie hugged me. "I don't think you're giving everyone enough credit, but I don't know for sure."

I sniffled into her shoulder for a minute until I got hold of myself.

"Let's get to work." She motioned to the dining room table. "I can try to help you, but I have my doubts that you'll be able to distract Eric."

Once again, I sensed the edge in her voice when she mentioned his name. Abbie's ex-husband had been a police officer. As we sat down, a thought occurred to me. I glanced at her. "Is the reason you don't like Detective Scott because he reminds you of your ex-husband?"

Abbie raised her chin, and her eyes like flint. "Eric went to the academy with him. They were friends. He has a lot of nerve judging me when he and his wife split up, too." She huffed. "I don't want to discuss it, okay?"

"Okay." That was answer enough, and I knew better than to ask anything else. She'd tell me in her own good time.

I opened a notebook and pulled a pen from my purse. "I think Jim Bob was a blackmailer. He was trying to blackmail me. And he tried to pull something on George."

"Well, most everyone agrees he wasn't a nice guy." The corner of Abbie's mouth twitched. "Which could explain why Stefanie did what she did."

I eyed Abbie. "What did she do?"

"Well, at the hairdresser yesterday, I heard whispers about her and Daryl."

I remembered Shirl's comment about sneaky men. "You're not saying that Daryl and Stefanie. . ."

Abbie raised an eyebrow. "The Bible calls it adultery."

"That's hard to believe." I shuddered. "I mean, we're talking about Daryl."

She shrugged. "If you didn't know him like you do, you'd think he was quite good-looking."

The Dweeb? Good-looking? I couldn't get past the gross little boy I'd known in grade school.

"Right there are some mighty good motivations." Abbie crossed her legs. "You've got lust and anger and greed."

"I get the lust and anger part, but greed?"

"Sure. Maybe Stefanie thought Daryl could get a piece of his wife's fortune."

If I'd been a cartoon character, there would be a lightbulb over my head. "Of course. She was looking for her next well-to-do guy. Or at least one with the potential." There weren't many in our area, really. Daryl, Max, although his family didn't have as much as Daryl's wife's. . .oh. . .Max. I clenched my fists. "She's been flirting with Max, trying to get into Jim Bob's storage unit. Do you suppose she wants more than that?"

"From what I've heard, I'd say that if Max succumbed she'd jump in with both feet."

I couldn't speak.

Abbie looked at me with a tiny grin. "Trish, close your mouth. You'll catch flies."

I snapped my jaw shut and said nothing. Though some of my suspicions about Steffie were vindicated, Abbie's words triggered my latent insecurity. I, Trish Cunningham, redneck and the daughter of a struggling farmer, had married Maxwell Cunningham the Third, third child and only son of a wealthy family. No one could have predicted such a match. He was way out of my league. Something his mother had hinted at on more than one occasion, making it difficult for me to forget. Now, if my brother had been responsible for Max's first wife's death. . .well, I would never live that down.

I forced my mind from the Cunninghams and back to the problem at hand. "Okay, so Daryl and the not-so-grieving widow could have been in cahoots. I know she wasn't at the store that morninga"at least not as far as I knowa"but Daryl was. And Gail says that Daryl was at the doctor's that afternoon. He needed stitches."

Abbie nodded. "Make a note of that. And what about Frank?"

"You heard about the embezzling?" I asked.

"Yes, but he hasn't been charged yet."

"He's still a tattletale like he was in school. He told Detective Scott about me and Jim Bob. I also wonder if he's the one who said something to Jim Bob about Russ."

She scooted next to me. "Let's check out Russ's friends."

We opened the yearbook for his senior year. The front flap had a dedication to Daryl's little brother Tim, who had drowned the summer before.

"That was so sad," I said. "Russ and Tim were good friends, you know. Tim was a bad influence. He always got away with stuff because his folks and Daryl doted on him."

She glanced at me. "Then put his name on your list."

I did. Then feeling a little like a voyeur, I glanced at all the inscriptions that Russ's friends had written. I tapped a finger on one. "I had forgotten this. Russ dated Peggy Nichols."

"Really?"

"Yep. He broke her heart."

"We'll ask her some questions on Saturday, then." Abbie flipped through more pages. "I had forgotten that Lee Ann's husband, Norm, hung out with Russ."

"Me, too."

Abbie glanced at her watch. "You need to go. Cops don't like to be kept waiting." She grinned ever so slightly. "However, they do like to keep you waiting. Be prepared to sit in the lobby. It's a tactic to keep you off guard."

Abbie's warning served me well. I arrived fifteen minutes early. Fifteen minutes after my scheduled appointment, Corporal Fletcher walked through the door into the lobby.

"Sorry to keep you waiting, Mrs. C."

I narrowed my eyes. How many people called me Mrs. C.? Shirley? The people who worked for me and Max?

"Come on in." He held open the door to the inner sanctum of the sheriff's office as though inviting me into his home. "You want something to drink? A Coke? Some water?"

"No, thank you, Corporal Fletcher," I said through stiff lips.

He had the nerve to smile at me as he directed me toward some stairs and motioned for me to go up ahead of him. "Detective Scott is waiting for you."

"Is he now?" My irritation level rivaled my nervousness.

The corporal said nothing else, just directed me to the same interview room where I'd been questioned before. Detective Scott was already there and stood as I entered. I noticed several files on the table, as well as a notepad and a pen.