“Before you leave, Aunt Caroline,” I said, “could I ask you about something I found?” I took the safe-deposit key from the antique sideboard, deciding that if anyone would recall anything to do with a bank, Aunt Caroline would.
“You’ll make me late, Abigail,” she said impatiently.
“Do you recognize this?” I held out the key.
Her eyes flickered with interest. “Where did this come from?” She plucked it from my hand.
“Daddy’s house in Galveston.”
“But I went through the files and boxes down there after he died. I never saw this.”
“You went there?” I said, surprised.
“I wanted to make sure Charlie hadn’t, well... that something important hadn’t been overlooked for probate.”
Hmmm. Could things have disappeared from P Street that Kate and I knew nothing about? “So you had access to the Victorian?” I asked, thinking maybe Aunt Caroline broke the padlock and that was how the intruder got in.
“Your memory’s failing you, Abby. I added the padlocks after Charlie’s funeral. The old locks were flimsy, making that vacant house an easy target for a break-in. Don’t you remember? I gave you the keys the day we met to go over Charlie’s will.”
“Forgive me for forgetting. I was distracted that day. I think it’s called grief.”
“That’s why I put things in order down there. To spare you from having to confront the memories I knew you’d find.”
“Right. And I’ve got some swampland in Antarctica I’d love to sell you. Did you take anything?”
She blinked. “Certainly not. Despite our differences, I do love you, Abby, and would never betray you in that fashion.” She handed me the key. “But I expect you’ll share the contents of that box when you open it, since I, too, am an heir. Now, I absolutely must be on my way.”
She left, and I sat there wondering if she’d made more than one trip to Galveston—and more recently than right after Daddy died. I wouldn’t put it past her to bash Steven over the head if she thought she could benefit financially from assault and battery.
The phone rang and I picked it up. Willis was calling to say his secretary would be dropping him off so he could pick up his car. After I hung up, I showered and dressed. By the time he arrived, I’d even managed several calls to locksmiths in hopes of finding out who had made the key and what bank they worked for, but I’d had no luck.
“Have you forgiven me for making you ride in a hearse?” I said, after letting Willis in the back door.
“Yes, silly. I’m always willing to help you.” He immediately noticed the police report on the table and went over and picked the paper up, his lawyer eyes sharp with interest. “What are you doing with this?”
“Research.”
“Research?” he asked.
“On Ben’s murder.”
“And the police gave you one of their reports?” he said, surprised.
“Well, not the Houston police.” I went on to explain what had happened since Willis left Shade in a hearse.
“As your lawyer, I have to advise you in your best interest. And what you are doing, or intend to do, is not in your best interest. No, not intelligent in the least.”
“So you think I’m stupid to pursue the truth? You think I’m stupid to want to know who killed Ben? You think I’m stupid to—”
“Abby, I’m worried about you. Ben’s killer hasn’t been caught.”
“And that’s my point. So I don’t care whether searching for the truth is in my ‘best interest.’ ” I held up the safe-deposit key. “I found this at the Victorian. Look familiar?” I pushed the key across the table.
He picked it up and turned it over. “No. What bank is this from?”
“I have no idea. That’s the problem.” I noticed his tanned face was looking a little yellow, and a tiny line of sweat erupted above his upper lip. “Are you okay, Willis?”
He laughed, handing the key back. “I’m fine. Sorry I can’t help.” He stood, ready to leave.
“Thanks for the loan of your beautiful car. No hard feelings about your transportation back to Houston yesterday, right?” I walked around the table and put an arm around his shoulder.
“No problem,” he said. “No problem at all.”
10
Once Willis left, I headed to Galveston, now very late for my lunch appointment with Steven. We had planned to meet and talk about the renovation. When I turned onto P Street an hour later, I saw an exterminator’s vehicle parked in the driveway. Steven was paying the uniformed man, and when the truck left, I pulled the Camry in.
After I slid from behind the wheel, Steven said, “You were supposed to be here at eleven-thirty.” Without waiting for a reply, he turned on his heel, climbed the porch steps, and stomped into the house.
“Sheesh. Just what I want to do. Spend the afternoon with an alligator with chapped lips,” I mumbled, following him.
Once inside, I saw he’d been hard at work. The scent of pine welcomed me when I entered, and the ceiling fan in the parlor was spinning furiously. The wooden shades were all open, revealing gleaming windows.
Steven was in the kitchen watching a few roaches squirm in the throes of chemical death on the tile floor.
“Looks like a different place. I’m impressed,” I said, nodding in appreciation.
My reaction seemed to soften him up a little, because he almost smiled. “I paid the cleaning crew a hundred and the exterminator fifty. My treat. But where in hell have you been?”
“Sorry, but I had a few visitors this morning.”
Steven pointed to a spray bottle on the counter. “While I remember, the bug man left extra juice in case a few critters need an extra push to roach heaven.”
“There’s always some who hang on. Have you eaten yet?” I asked.
“No, and I’m pretty darn hungry. Let’s head for the beach and the shrimp. These chemicals may be odorless, but I don’t like to hang around right after the exterminator has done his business. Stuff is pretty potent.”
“How did you know I was craving seafood?” I said as we walked out through the back door.
Stan’s Shrimp Shack, a tiny restaurant off Seawall Boulevard, had few customers, so we had our choice of tables. We sat in the corner farthest from the bar. Between mouthfuls of crab salad, I filled Steven in on what I had learned about Ben after the funeral yesterday and how I hoped to find answers.
“So you talked the county mountie out of his paperwork, huh?” He peeled a shrimp and dunked it in hot sauce. “I knew you couldn’t keep your pretty nose out of this mystery.”
“Hey, I can do what I want with my pretty nose.”
“And how I love it when you remind me. Let’s talk about the house. That’s what I’m doing in Galveston, right?”
“I know the place is in bad shape,” I said.
We spent the next thirty or forty minutes discussing the needed renovations, and by the time he finished, I wondered if we might be better off tearing the place down and starting over.
Steven, who could still read my mind as well as ever, said, “And don’t even think about razing the Victorian. I contacted the city, and the house is more than a hundred years old. You don’t tear down hundred-year-old houses in Galveston without dealing with reams of paperwork and getting multiple stamps of approval.”
“Okay. But this sounds like a huge undertaking. Can you handle this project alone?” I asked.
“No way. But I will get the house in good enough shape to last through hurricane season. Fix the roof, replace windows, that kind of stuff. Meanwhile, I’ve arranged to have a more experienced renovator come by and take a look.”
I nodded. “You’ve impressed me twice in one day, Steven. Sounds like I hired the right man. But we haven’t discussed your fee.”
He stiffened. “I don’t want your money. I got enough when we divorced.”
“That’s not what you told the judge.”
“Hey, I was knee-walking, spit-slinging drunk the day we finalized. You can’t hold me to anything I said back then.”