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Alex Cross: Cross Justice Part 27

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Drummond said, "Don't bother with menus, Althea. Just bring us what you think we should be eating. Some of it should be fish."

That seemed to make her happy, and she went off.

"You'll be ruined for Jamaican food for life," Drummond said. "I'm not kidding. Half the customers are from the Caribbean."

"I won't be able to tell my wife," I said. "She loves Jamaica. Me too."

"Yeah?" Drummond said. "I'm fond of it myself."



I looked at Johnson, wanting to include him. "You ready to be a dad, Detective?"

"I don't know."

"Were you?" Drummond asked me. "Ready?"

"No," I said. "All I knew was I didn't want to be like my father."

"That work out?"

"Pretty much," I said, and turned back to Johnson. "Don't worry. You just sort of grow into the job, day by day."

The beers came. So did small bowls of what Althea called fish tea, which was delicious, along with a basket of fresh zucchini bread, which was also delicious. No way I was telling Bree about this place.

"So, did you see anything we missed, Dr. Cross?" Johnson asked.

"Call me Alex," I said. "And I don't think you missed anything, but there are a few things I'm not clear on and a few things you might consider."

"Okay ..." Drummond said.

"Just to make sure we're all on the same page," I said. "You've got Lisa Martin and Ruth Abrams, wealthy socialites killed within a week of each other and made to look like suicides."

"That's right," Johnson said.

"Friends?"

"Apparently so," the sergeant said.

"Beyond that, they shared the same maid, Francie Letourneau, who stole jewelry from both women before being murdered herself."

"Correct," Johnson said. "We got confirmation from the husbands on pictures we showed them of several jewelry pieces found at Francie's apartment."

"Francie told the bar owner in Belle Glade-"

Althea returned with a tray. Fried plantains. Rice and black beans. Oxtail stew. And a whole steamed and spiced grouper. Definitely not telling Bree.

We dug in. The oxtail was simply incredible. So was the grouper. So were the second and third Red Stripes. I'd forgotten how easily they go down.

Once we were into second helpings, I said, "Francie told the bar owner in the Glade she was coming to Palm Beach for a job interview the day she died."

"That's right," Drummond said. "Only we haven't found a d.a.m.n thing to say she ever made it to Palm. She just disappears."

"No phone calls?"

"Her cell phone's missing, but we found the account," Johnson said. "I made a request yesterday for all calls in the last three months. We'll probably hear tomorrow sometime."

"Other thoughts?" Drummond asked.

"Yes. I think you should focus on the links and chains between the victims, and extrapolate from there."

Johnson looked confused, so I said, "You want to isolate each thing that connects them. So, say, focus first on Francie as the common-denominator link in what we'll call the socialites chain. Under this scenario, the maid could have killed them both to rip off their jewelry and then was killed herself by a third party who got wind of the jewels she was holding."

"I could see that," Drummond said, dis.h.i.+ng a third helping of oxtail onto his plate.

"What's the second link?" Johnson asked. "Or chain?"

"The socialite friends.h.i.+p," I said. "Maybe Francie was working for a third socialite, was in the process of robbing her, and someone caught her, killed her, dumped her."

Johnson shook his head. "From the files I went through at her apartment, Francie had been on hard times, lost all of her cleaning jobs."

"Before she hit the Lotto?"

"Correct."

"So maybe there was no Lotto hit," I said. "Maybe the jewels were the explanation behind her newfound money. And maybe she wasn't going to Palm Beach for an interview on the day she died; maybe she was going to kill someone and steal more jewels."

CHAPTER 58.

SERGEANT DRUMMOND THOUGHT about that, said, "We'll call the Lotto."

"I'd be calling past clients too," I said. "See if any of them are missing jewelry. I mean, there were jewelry pieces the Abramses and Martins couldn't identify in your photographs, right?"

"True," Johnson said between mouthfuls.

Drummond's cell phone rang. He pulled it out, looked at it, said, "Sorry, gentlemen, but I have to take this."

He got up, leaving me with Johnson, who said, "There's another possibility, you know."

"Go ahead," I said.

"Maybe Francie was the jewel thief, but she wasn't the killer," the young detective said. "Maybe she went to rob someone and surprised the killer."

"You mean in the act of trying to murder a third socialite?"

"Why not?"

"Any reports of a.s.saulted socialites?"

"Not that I know of," Johnson said.

"Dessert?" Althea came over and said.

"I'm stuffed," I said.

She frowned at me, said, "I make it from scratch."

I held up my hands. "I'll make room."

"Sweet potato pudding," she said, smiling. "Coffee? Tea?"

"I'll take a coffee," I said.

"I will too, Althea," said Drummond, sliding back into his chair.

"I have to be going," Johnson said. "Can we get the check?"

"Don't worry about it," Drummond said. "I've got you both covered."

"Let me take my part of it," I said.

"Visiting dignitary, I don't think so," the sergeant sniffed.

Johnson got up, said, "Again, it was great meeting you, Alex."

"Likewise," I said, getting to my feet and shaking his hand.

"See you in the morning, Sarge."

"Bright and early," Drummond grumbled.

Our coffee and pudding came. I didn't know sweet potato pudding could be decadent, but it was.

The sergeant took a sip of coffee, said, "So all we've been doing is talking about our case. What is someone like you working on these days?"

I hesitated, then started telling him about my cousin Stefan, and Starksville, and all the strange twists the case had taken in the few days we'd been there. Through it all, Drummond listened intently and quietly, sipping his coffee and eating pudding.

It took me the better part of an hour to tell it all, and with the beers in me, I probably said more than I should have. But Drummond was a good listener, and it just seemed natural.

"And that's where we are," I said.

After several beats, the sergeant said, "You like this guy Marvin Bell for killing that kid, but I don't hear anything that says you got him involved."

"Because we don't have him involved," I said. "Like everyone in Starksville says, he's a slippery guy."

Drummond s.h.i.+fted his jaw left and nodded, lost in thought. Then he said, "I've known my share of slippery guys. Trick is to let them get so slippery they get overconfident and they-"

His cell phone rang. He looked at it, shook his head, said, "Sorry again."

The sergeant got up and walked away, and I finished my coffee, thinking that I'd better find a place to stay the evening. Althea brought the check, which was incredibly reasonable considering the quality of the meal.

"I'll handle the tip," I said when Drummond returned.

The sergeant smiled. "I think you're going to want to handle the whole bill once I tell you about those last two phone calls."

"How's that?" I said.

"The first call was from the Belchers' funeral home," he said. "They handled your Paul Brown's embalming and delivered his body in a pauper's casket to a church that isn't in Pahokee anymore. Closed fifteen years back."

I frowned. "And the second call?"

"From the minister who used to run that church," Drummond said. "The Belchers called her. She evidently knew Paul Brown and says she's willing to meet you out in Pahokee tomorrow around six p.m. to tell you about him."

I grinned and s.n.a.t.c.hed the check off the table.

CHAPTER 59.

Starksville, North Carolina

BREE FLIPPED OFF the headlights and coasted the Taurus to a stop diagonally across the town square from Bell Beverages. The Bronco was parked in front. Finn Davis had gone inside. She was beginning to doubt her instincts.

When she'd seen Finn Davis leave Marvin Bell's place in the slouchy clothes driving the beater four-by-four, she figured it as some kind of disguise, or at least a way of moving under the radar. She and Pinkie had made it to the rental car two minutes before Finn drove out of the compound.

Finn Davis had never seen Bree, to her knowledge. While Pinkie slouched down, she faked a cell phone conversation until Davis had driven by her, heading south toward town. She'd U-turned once he'd rounded a curve and had been following him at a distance ever since.

"Just looks like a man tending business, probably collecting the daily take, which explains the workman's getup," Pinkie said. "He doesn't want attention."

It did look a lot like that. Finn had stopped at the p.a.w.nshop, the dry cleaners, and both car washes before heading to the liquor store. Maybe her instincts had been wrong.

Bree checked her watch. Eight thirty. She'd texted Alex to see how his day had gone almost an hour ago but heard nothing back so far. And she was starting to get hungry. Nana Mama said she'd hold dinner for- "You think Alex will find what he's looking for down there?" Pinkie asked.

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