I always babble when embarrassed. And it only embarrasses me more.
Kori said, “I thought you were trying to catch me smoking a joint. So you could rat me out to Susan. Again.”
“I never meant to rat you out! I don’t even like Susan!”
“Really?” Kori was wary, but I thought she might be warming to me.
“Really! You’ll never guess what I just caught her doing.”
“Making out with Matt Koniger? Yeah. I saw them when I went out the door. So did everybody else.”
Susan Davies had seemed so… Junior League. And yet she must have known that people would see her kissing the handler.
So that was Matt Koniger-Kori’s favorite handler-mentor and Brenda Spenser’s young stud, the one Susan had made the catty remark about just before breakfast. My, my.
“Whiskey, may I speak with you privately?” MacArthur’s brogue broke through my reverie.
“Uh, sure. In a minute. First, I’d like to ask Kori a couple questions.”
“I’m due in the ring.” She tapped her bright pink watch.
“This will only take a few seconds,” I said. “And it’s not about you. Or him.” I nodded toward MacArthur. “It’s about Sandy Slater.”
“What about her?”
“Any connection to Mitchell Slater?”
“What do you think?” Kori shot me a look that said I was a moron.
“Well, it’s kind of a common name,” I said defensively. “And you did tell me his ex-wife was in London.”
“His latest ex-wife, yeah.”
“There’s more than one?”
Kori held up several fingers.
“Four ex-wives?” I asked.
“Amazing! You can count.”
I probably deserved that. “Was Sandy the first?”
“Numero Uno. And the only one who never went away. No matter how hard Mitchell tried to push her. You already know she kept his name.”
“They’ve been divorced a long time?”
“Long enough for Sandy to have had a kid as old as Matt!”
“That would be more than twenty years,” I guessed.
“Try twenty-six. Matt’s a little older than he looks.”
“Is her kid around here?”
Kori snort-laughed and shook her head. Not in a way that meant “no,” but in a way that meant I was a dumb-dumb.
“Matt’s her kid! I thought you got that!” she said. “Matt’s father, legally, was a guy named Koniger. He died when Matt was a baby. He wasn’t into dogs, so none of the Afghan fanciers ever knew him. But judging from the way Matt turned out, Mr. Koniger donated his name only. No sperm.”
When I didn’t take the bait, Kori added, “Doesn’t Matt remind you of somebody? Somebody you just met?”
As brief as my time with Mitchell Slater had been, I could see the resemblance: same eyes, same jaw line, same mouth.
Interesting. Neither Matt Koniger nor his mother was grieving today.
Chapter Eighteen
While groping and kissing MacArthur, Kori had managed to never let go of Silverado’s lead. She also never stopped chewing gum. I couldn’t imagine deep-kissing around a rubbery wad, but maybe that was because I’d never tried it. Maybe there was an art to passing it back and forth, and that was what turned MacArthur on.
I didn’t want to think about it.
Now Kori popped her gum and the leash at the same time. Silverado gave her his full and eager attention. She may have been a lousy handler in the ring and a genuine thorn in Susan’s side, but she seemed earnestly connected to the stunning dog.
“Come on, boy. It’s show time!” she said.
He woofed softly and wagged his curled whip of a tail.
“I’ll cheer you on,” I told her.
“Yeah, that’ll help. The judge will be impressed that you’re on my side.”
Kori blew a kiss to MacArthur; then she and Silverado loped gracefully away.
That left me in the awkward position of making conversation with the cleaner, a man who earned his living by erasing the mistakes of others. Who erased his mistakes? Making out with one woman while shacking up with another seemed like kind of a whopper.
“I have one thing to say, Whiskey, and one thing only. I hope you’ll give me a wee moment of your time.”
His burry brogue melted my defenses. I could too easily imagine its effect on Avery and Kori… and who knows how many other women.
“What?” Try as I might to sound annoyed, the question came out innocently curious.
“Please do not try to find me while we’re here at the show. I do my best work when I keep a low profile.”
That was not remotely what I had expected. I said, “You think I was looking for you, and that’s why-?”
“No time to chat now! You need to trust me.”
Like Avery should trust him?
“But how can a bodyguard do his job if nobody sees him?” I said. “Nobody but Kori, that is…”
MacArthur brushed a lock of black hair from his forehead. “I didn’t say nobody sees me. And now I must get back to work. We have a killer in our midst!”
“Before Mitchell Slater died, you thought we had a messenger in our midst.”
“Indeed. And now we know what the message was.”
“What was it?”
“Somebody was going to die. Somebody close to Susan Davies.”
“But not Susan Davies,” I said. “Does that mean she’s safe?”
“It’s too soon to tell. Fortunately, I’m here to protect her and those close to her.”
“Especially her niece.”
I couldn’t resist. But my comment had no effect on MacArthur.
“I’m watching out for you, too, Whiskey.”
“Really? If last night’s bullet had gone six inches to the right, that would have been me face down in the parking lot!”
“But it wasn’t you, was it? Because I’m on the job. And now I need to get back to it.”
He started toward the cornfield behind the exhibit hall.
“Can I call you?” I said.
MacArthur raised a brawny arm in what I assumed was an affirmative gesture.
“I check voicemail three times a day.”
With that he vanished among the drying cornstalks like the ghosts of young ballplayers in Field of Dreams.
When I re-entered the exhibit hall, nobody was smooching near the side entrance. In the show ring, I counted seven hounds with handlers. They had attracted at least fifty onlookers. Some sat in folding chairs; others stood around the circle. With “Bad Example” Kori in the competition, there was an added incentive for watching.
Kori’s hot-pink ensemble flared like neon next to the subdued outfits of her peers. The judge, a tall stately man with thick white hair, showed no reaction to her attire. He fixed his full and concentrated attention on the hounds, as was his duty. After scrutinizing them, he flashed a few hand signals appreciated by everyone except me. Bursts of applause and a flurry of movement followed. Hounds and handlers dashed around the ring, some exiting, some staying. Apparently, the judge had narrowed the field, excusing those dogs not selected to continue.
Across the ring from me, Susan stood alone, closely watching the competition. Matt was in the ring showing a dog the same size as Silverado but reddish colored with a dramatic black face. The Two L’s were there, too, each leading a blonde dog that reminded me of Abra, if only Abra had manners.
When Kori and Silverado got the nod to remain, I saw Susan’s face fold-for just a moment. Then she perked up and applauded.
So the Bad Example was not the worst handler, after all. Or, if she was, she knew how to show Silverado well enough to keep him in the competition.
Matt and his dog also remained. So did the Two L’s. I caught Matt and Kori exchanging grins. The Two L’s made a deliberate show of ignoring Susan’s niece.
As the action continued, I inferred what was happening: the judge was evaluating the “survivors” to determine their order of finish. Each handler showed his or her dog and then circled the ring again to a fresh round of applause. When it was Kori and Silverado’s turn, the applause was sparse and forced. Except for mine. I clapped hard and added a whistle as they ran past. That earned me a distinctly dirty look from Susan.