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“Typical of my daughter to try intimidation,” Hannah had said. “I hope you didn’t cower.”

“It’s not my style.” And then she’d left.

With Lou behind the wheel, Casey had time to read the remaining letters, which mainly covered Jeremy’s development and her pets. She’d also written about Paval’s helpfulness.

Casey took another look at one of the pages. “In some letters she’s really positive. Writes about what good friends Wesley and Noel are, and her infatuation with Roberto.”

“Is that what she called it?”

“No, but she didn’t use the word love either. Here she says, ‘He’s the coolest, friendliest, most fun guy I’ve ever gone out with.’”

“Sounds like something a teenager would say.”

“Part of her was naïve and immature.” The other part was sarcastic, critical, and just plain mean. Casey scanned another sheet. “She trashes a couple of tenants and parishioners over petty issues, and does the same to some Mainland staff.”

“Which ones?”

“Me and a few administrative staff, all of them women. I think she saw them as competition, especially where Roberto was concerned.”

“Hannah asked you to read the letters despite what Jasmine wrote?”

“She’s more shrewd and open-minded than her daughter was.” Casey continued reading. “Jasmine apologizes to her mother for venting, then writes ‘You’re the only one I can talk to.’” Casey paused. “She must have been lonely.”

Lou nodded. “And insecure.”

“Jasmine’s disputes and complaints didn’t seem serious enough for someone to want to kill her. Unless something else was going on, something she didn’t want Hannah to know.”

“Did she write about Eisler?”

“Yeah, she said he was an annoying jerk who wasn’t getting enough at home.” Casey scanned more lines. “She tried searching the Gallenskis’ bedroom for her pendant when she picked up Jeremy one afternoon.” Casey turned to Lou. “When Marie and I went to Jasmine’s apartment, I saw a red feather boa hanging in her bedroom closet. Ursula was wearing a red boa when we met her at the Silver Groove.”

“She could have owned one as well.”

“Or stolen Jasmine’s.” Casey returned to the letter. “Jasmine had planned to keep searching for her jewelry. Oh, and she hated Ursula. Said she was nothing but a cheap tramp . . . Whoa. Here’s something: she says that both Gallenskis have stepped over the line and that she’d phone Hannah about it later.” Casey looked up. “Hannah’s last chat with her was Sunday morning, but Hannah said that Jasmine hadn’t seemed especially bothered by anything.”

“Maybe Jasmine had decided not to worry her.”

“Or something happened after that call.” Casey noticed the date at the top of the page. “She wrote this Monday, the day after her confrontation with Gabrielle. Must have mailed it right away. Interesting that she never mentioned Gabrielle’s visit.”

“Like I said, she didn’t want to upset her mother.”

“Maybe. So, what if Jasmine told Paval about the theft and he didn’t believe her?” She watched the Queen of Coquitlam dock. “Maybe Paval was doing a little snooping and stealing himself. The Gallenskis have a master key to every apartment and Paval seems unnecessarily friendly with tenants.”

“It’s possible, I guess; though it could all be Ursula’s doing. Maybe Jasmine didn’t actually say anything to Paval, but confronted Ursula instead. Ursula might have been worried about losing her husband and going to jail.”

“If a tenant had accused either Gallenski of theft, Paval could have lost his job.” Casey folded the letter. “Paval would have known Jasmine’s schedule because he babysat Jeremy, which means Ursula could have found out from him, or she could have just followed Jasmine to the church that morning.”

“What about your work schedule?” Lou asked. “How would she have heard about it?”

“By calling the office and posing as a friend. Witnesses said the shooter was a man, though.” Casey watched people return to their vehicles. “I can’t picture Paval doing that, but I can picture Ursula hiring someone to take a shot at me.”

“Wouldn’t the cops have checked everyone’s alibi in the building?”

“They would have asked most of them where they were that morning, but I doubt there were enough officers to follow up on every alibi unless they had a good reason to.”

“I’m thinking the Gallenskis should move up on your suspect list.”

“Definitely.” Casey glanced at cars driving down the ramp from the ferry’s upper parking level. “If Jasmine complained about Ursula to Paval, he might have threatened to evict her. Maybe that’s what prompted her decision to move.” Casey’s eyes widened. “The photographs!”

“What?”

“The ones I found in Jasmine’s locker of her sleeping, and Jeremy in the tub.” She looked at Lou. “What if Paval or Ursula took them?”

“Why would they do that, unless they were kinky?”

“Maybe they are. The guy spends his days babysitting and pet-sitting for tenants, and he talks about them like they were family. It’s a bit strange.”

“Not if it means extra income. Apartment managers don’t make much, and he has a baby on the way.”

“Somebody should interview the tenants,” Casey said. “See if they’ve had photos snapped or items missing from their suites.”

“Give the cops the letters; let them figure it out.”

She opened her mouth to say something but stopped. Things were good between them again. Why jeopardize that? Still, the answers were close. She could feel it.

“Thanks for riding back with me.” Casey placed her hand over his. “Your company’s made the trip so much fun.”

“Thank my sister for teaching over here and offering to drive my truck back this weekend.” Lou stared past Casey. “Shit, is that who I think it is?”

Casey turned and spotted Gabrielle walking through the lanes of cars. “Oh, my god.”

Gabrielle stopped at a vehicle three lanes away and one car ahead of theirs.

“Holy crap, she drives a small silver car.” Casey stuffed the letters in her purse. “I wonder if that’s the vehicle Corporal Lundy’s been looking for. We need to get the plate number.”

“Why is she heading for the mainland on a Thursday afternoon? Didn’t you say she was a secretary?”

“Yep. Last night’s chat probably freaked her out, which means we’re going to be riding with a murder suspect.” She retrieved her cell phone. “I need to make sure Summer’s okay.”

“Tell Mom to watch for Birch’s brown Dodge Dart. Maybe she can get my brothers to check out the neighborhood.”

Casey listened to the phone ring. No one was picking up.

TWENTY-SIX

THE MOMENT CASEY SPOTTED WINIFRED’S Buick at the back of Rhonda’s house, tension shot through her shoulders and knotted her stomach. Why was the old bat still here? She parked next to the Buick. After yesterday’s chat with Gabrielle, the last thing she needed was another confrontation. Still, Casey had told Winifred to leave and she bloody well meant it.

She yanked her overnight bag out of the trunk, wishing Lou hadn’t had to return to work right away. After dropping him off at Mainland, she’d rushed over to Barb’s to see if everything was okay. It turned out that Summer and Barb had left for school early to grab breakfast at McDonald’s, and Barb had forgotten to bring her cell phone, which was why Casey’s call hadn’t been answered.

Casey trudged up the steps to the kitchen door, skirting a bag of garbage on the top step. It wasn’t like Winifred to leave garbage sitting around. Inside, the kitchen was spotless. The coffee maker hadn’t been turned on. The house was silent. Maybe Winifred had gone for a walk or was taking a nap. Maybe she was hiding in a closet waiting to ambush her with legal documents.