“Mike crawls through a great many extremely expensive new houses built by new people. Because they don’t understand our ways, they’re vulnerable. Their first impulse is to sue. Right?” Everyone nodded in agreement. “It stands to reason that an outright bribe might not be the wisest policy for Mike.”
“What do you mean?” Big Mim was fascinated.
Harry replied. “However he did it, Mike was putting the squeeze on Carla by finding things wrong in the house.” She paused. “He couldn’t come out directly and ask for a payoff or he’d find himself in court.”
“How does this relate to Taz?” Paul’s purpose was single-minded, as befitted a man in love.
“I don’t know.” Fair put his hands together. “I wish I did, but I do know she didn’t kill Carla.”
“Could a woman have slashed Carla’s throat?” Little Mim asked.
“Why not?” Harry shrugged. “You can slice the jugular without hitting the neckbones.”
“It’s not as easy as you think,” Fair said. “It takes force. Muscle is thick, especially living muscle. It’s not like cutting into a steak. But a woman could surely do it.”
“According to Ned, who asked the Bedford County sheriff, Carla faced her attacker. The blood covered her bosoms, the front of her dress, her left arm. But he said, and this surprised me, her right arm was untouched.” Susan paused. “She didn’t defend herself Didn’t throw her arm up.”
“Maybe Carla didn’t have time to defend herself.” Big Mim thought of the seconds of terror Carla must have felt.
“Possible.” Jim seconded his wife’s opinion.
“Or she knew her attacker and discounted him or her,” Harry added. “She may not have liked whomever she was talking with but she didn’t fear him.”
A long silence followed this.
“Question Folly, Penny, and Elise Brennan. They’ve all built huge houses in the last year or added onto what they have,” Aunt Tally suggested.
“Why would they tell the truth?” BoomBoom spoke at last. She’d been drinking in everything, as had Alicia.
“Why not?” Aunt Tally held a hand palm up.
“No one likes looking the fool,” Big Mim countered.
“What if what he asked for wasn’t money, wasn’t material?” Alicia surprised them.
“Influence peddling?” Jim thought in political terms.
“Sex.” Alicia was brisk.
“What?” Fair couldn’t believe it, but then again, women had thrown themselves at him ever since puberty. He couldn’t fathom men who had trouble with women—well, trouble attracting them.
“Happens all the time in Hollywood. At least, it did when I was there. I escaped because I was protected, first by Mary Pat and then by my first husband.”
Mary Pat Reines had been Alicia’s first lover, who taught her manners, diction, foxhunting, and quiet grace.
“But these women are—” Susan stopped herself.
“What?” Harry found herself suddenly irritated, angry, really.
“Why would they? They’re rich, all quite good looking, looks on which they’ve spent a small fortune. Why?” Susan finished her thought, glad that Harry had interrupted her, because Big Mim had certainly made use of plastic surgery’s advances. She hadn’t wanted to insult Big Mim in any way.
“It’s not what they have and how they look, it’s how they feel.” BoomBoom knew women very well. “Doesn’t seem to me that any of them are in very happy marriages, and Elise is divorced. No one would be the wiser if they paid Mike off in the oldest way possible.”
“You know, that’s really, truly disgusting. I’d tear his face off,” Harry blurted out.
“You would.” Fair smiled.
“Most women lack your self-regard, Harry.” BoomBoom looked levelly at her. “I don’t mean conceit, I mean regard. And you are very strong, as am I. Most women purposefully keep their upper bodies weak because they think that’s attractive to men. Obviously you’ve never been to a gym where women working out with a trainer fret that their muscles will get too big. Can you imagine a poor farm woman in Nebraska in 1880 worrying about muscles?”
“Or a poor woman in Virginia or a slave woman working in the fields. All our ideas of female beauty are based on privilege. I should know. I’m very privileged.” Aunt Tally had often thought such things but had not discussed them, so BoomBoom’s remark triggered hers.
“If Mike leaned on them in some fashion, threatened them physically or because he knew, say, Carla was having an affair, he’d get what he wanted,” Alicia said, steering them back on track.
“Money would be easier.” Jim noticed Gretchen out of the corner of his eye and nodded slightly.
She came in, took the tray, soon replaced it with another.
“I wish Herb were here. He hears things.” Little Mim sighed.
“He won’t be free until late afternoon. Not on a Sunday. And even though he hears things, he often can’t tell us.” Big Mim pressed her lips together. “It could be that Mike killed Carla, if this theory holds water.” She turned to her aunt. “I know you don’t think he has the courage, but if he was frightened of exposure, he could kill. Most people could.”
“It’s possible,” Aunt Tally agreed, although not convinced.
“And Tazio had the bad luck to find Carla right afterward,” Paul half-moaned.
“There’s something so wrong, so bizarre, and I can’t even imagine what it is.” Harry was dumbfounded.
“We’ve got to get Tazio out of jail,” Paul pleaded.
With some tenderness, Big Mim counseled, “Paul, we all understand your distress. For someone of Tazio’s breeding and sensibility to be in such an environment is outrageous, but,” she waited for a dramatic moment, “she may be safer in there for now. If Mike really did kill Carla, Tazio could get in his way. You know she’s sitting in that cell trying to put the puzzle together, and she may not come up with all the jigsaw pieces we have, but she’ll come up with a few. We have to root this out first. We don’t need two murders.”
“We already have two.” Aunt Tally gleefully took the martini that Blair had made for her.
His mother-in-law’s eyes had watched him as he rose and walked to the bar, but Blair had learned by living close to Aunt Tally that it was better to keep her happy.
“How can we find out if Mike took bribes or forced women into sex?” Susan was ready to go to work.
“I think Rick can look into his bank account without arousing opposition. Mike doesn’t have to know. It’s not kosher, but, well…” Jim’s voice trailed off.
“What about a safety-deposit box?” Alicia asked.
“That might be more difficult. His accounts can be called up on a computer,” Blair told them. “And there is the problem of the second key for a safety-deposit box.”
“They have skeleton keys,” Aunt Tally posited.
“No doubt, but one step at a time. He’s not accused of a crime, and if he’s tipped off, we’ll never get to the bottom of it, at least where he’s concerned.” Fair comprehended the delicacy of the situation.
“You think after what happened, if it is Mike, that Folly, Penny, and Elise aren’t nervous? They might be ready to talk.” Harry was hopeful.
“If so, I’d hope they’d go to Rick,” Big Mim said.
“That’s just it. If they go to Rick, they let their cat out of the bag, don’t they?” Harry began to feel that odd tingle when she’d get hooked on a problem. “Susan, let’s go back to Poplar Forest tomorrow and look in the daylight.”
“We’ll go with you,” BoomBoom volunteered.
Monday was one of Fair’s operating days, so he wouldn’t be making the trip.
“Ears open. Come back to me with what you learn,” Big Mim requested. “Susan, have they set bail yet?”
“Tomorrow.”
Big Mim turned to Paul. “The bail will be very stiff. A couple of hundred thousand, I think. I agree that we need to get her out of there but, as I said before, not right away. It will take time to raise the bail, and then we have to secure her safety. This could get a lot worse before it gets better.” She then addressed her aunt, who was visibly improving from the effects of her martini, the little olive resting comfortably at the bottom of the glass. “You’re right, there have been two murders, but Will’s killer is in jail and he’ll never see daylight as a free man again.”