seeing.â
Another sour smile. âRoyâs full of shit. Melissa couldnât care less about that bimbo.â
âWhich bimbo might that be?â
âShana Eberle. Christ. Talk about a star-fucker.â
âYou know her?â
âEveryone in town knows her. Has known her, in the biblical sense. Sheâs humped everyone but Lassie.â Another smile. âAnd weâre not really sure about Lassie. Sheâs keeping mum.â
âYouâre saying Melissa isnât a jealous woman.â
âJealous of Shana Eberle?â Amusement and scorn showed in the wide red mouth, the dark green eyes. âShe thought it was a joke.â
âIs she normally a jealous woman?â
âNo more than most.â
âHow jealous is that?â
Her face tightened slightly in annoyance. âWhatâs jealousy got to do with anything? She was divorced from the scumbag, the marriage was over, she was getting on with her life. And then she found out what her asshole ex-husband was doing to Winona. It tore her up. It wouldâve torn anybody up. What Roy did to Winona was vile. But I can tell you one thing, she wasnât jealous of Shana Eberle.â
âAll right,â I said. âShe isnât a jealous woman.â But I assumed, from all the smoke Edie Carpenter was putting out, that she was. Perhaps she hadnât actually been jealous of Shana Eberle; but if she had been, I wouldnât learn about it from Edie. âWhat kind of woman was she?â
She frowned. âHow do you mean?â
âWhatâs she like? I donât know her, Mrs. Carpenter. I need to get some kind of a handle on her. I need to know who she is. Maybe then I can figure out where sheâs gone. The two of you were friends.â
âFriends, but not all that close.â
âWhatâs she like?â
âSheâs a do-gooder. Your typical kindhearted cheerleader. Very sincere, very sweet, and just a teensy-weensy bit boring.â
Friends, but not all that close.
I asked, âHow did you meet her?â
She smiled. A small, self-amused smile that told me she was keeping secrets, and didnât mind letting me know that she was. âAt a party.â
âWhat kind of party?â
She shrugged. âWho can remember L.A. parties?â But the smile, although diminished now, was still there. I was supposed to guess why, apparently.
I said, âShe was married to Roy at the time?â
She nodded.
âDid you ever meet her sister, Cathryn?â
She shrugged lightly, dismissively. âOnce. She joined us for lunch. Mousy little thing. A librarian.â
She said this as though the single word somehow encapsulated the womanâs entire life. As though it were an epitaph.
I started disliking her again. âYou do know,â I said, âthat she was murdered last week.â
Nodding, she said, âI read about it. This town is getting worse than Chicago in the thirties.â
âWere Cathryn and Melissa close?â
âThey were sisters. They kept in touch. But close? It looked to me like Cathryn wasnât close to anyone.â Abruptly she narrowed her green eyes. âYou donât think that Cathrynâs getting killed has anything to do with Melissa?â
I said to her the same thing Iâd said to Bradley, the homicide cop. âOne sister disappears, the otherâs killed a few months later. Itâs possible thereâs a connection.â
She looked off for a moment, thoughtfully. For the first time I believed that what she was doing was genuine and not a performance. Then she shook her head, looked back at me. âPeople are getting killed in Los Angeles all the time.â
âBut theyâre not related to Melissa Alonzo.â
âHow could what happened to Cathryn have anything to do with Melissa?â
âI donât know yet. Maybe it doesnât.â
âIt doesnât,â she
David Ashton
Sandy Vale
Zac Harrison
Syd Parker
Thor Hanson
Miles Swarthout
Chad Huskins
CD Hussey
Martin Ford
Nancy Kelley