“It’ll be a little too coincidental if I catch you wearing a jacket that looks suspiciously like cat fur, that’s when I’ll concede coincidence. Forget the house cat. What could a house cat have to do with a murder? We have enough big cats mixed into this case to make even Siegfried and Roy suddenly allergic to the species.”
After they left, Molina finished her too-strong, too-cold coffee, then headed for the women’s rest room, brooding.
The ethical line she was walking was fishing-line thin. If Raf was at the scene of another murder…he should be brought in and questioned. She could let Team Su-Alch do it. He didn’t have to see her at all. She could warn them not to mention her name…no, that would be out of character.
The door whooshed shut behind her the way rest room doors always do. She was alone in here, which wasn’t odd. Not that many women in a police facility even now.
Normally she didn’t check herself out in mirrors, but she glanced up while washing her hands. Granted even the brutal overhead fluorescent lighting, she looked haggard. Not good. Looking frazzled would generate questions, and questions would generate evasions, and then she was down the slippery slope and heading face-first into a tree….
A sound from one of the three cubicles interrupted her self-reflection. She hadn’t felt another presence. Sounded suspiciously like a sniffle. Someone with a cold, or one of the secretaries with a bum personal life.
While she considered how to graciously retreat, she realized that she had been frozen in silence for some time, first while studying her unlovely face, then while thinking…
A cubicle door swung open and Su emerged, stopping when she saw Molina.
Her eyes looked red.
“Merry?” Molina asked.
“Nothing.” Su stomped to the other sink and ran both taps full force, washing her hands with the furious energy of Lady Macbeth.
“Merry—”
“Never mind, I said!”
“It’s not, not Alch’s crack about the coat, the jacket, is it?”
“I just spotted it and tried it on.” Su lifted her hands and shook them, spraying Molina with ice-cold drops. She jerked a fistful of tan paper towels from the wall dispenser. “I didn’t even look at anything besides the price tag. I didn’t think.”
“That was Morey’s point, I guess.”
“Damn!” Su jerked another unneeded wad of paper towels from the wall. “I loved that jacket. Now what’ll I do with it?”
“Donate it to the homeless? They’ll wear it out using it for the right reasons, to keep warm, like the cave people, right?”
Su suddenly laughed. “Yeah, it’d look great on Crazy Clementine, wouldn’t it? She’s sure no size two on the streets!”
Molina smiled at the mention of one of the chief characters along the Strip. “It’s done. Move on.”
“Right. No one is going to wear a bunny in my presence scot-free from now on. Unless it’s Bugs.”
Su headed for the door, then stopped. She didn’t look at Molina.
“I hope it isn’t one of the animal people.”
It was almost seven by the time Carmen Molina slogged from the attached garage into the kitchen.
Something about the silence in the house alerted her.
She charged into the living room, alarmed, to find Mariah making like a hammock on the comfortable old couch, a book propped on her awkwardly swelling chest. A
“Where’s Dolores?” Carmen asked, carefully.
“I told her to go home. She’s got dinner to fix for her family.”
“Dinner.” Carmen sat on the nearest chair.
They had none.
Mariah’s head lifted from the sofa pillow. “You’ve been out all the time lately, even nights.”
“The workload—”
“Okay.” She shut the paperback book and sat up. “I’ll make dinner.”
“You’ll make dinner?”
“You don’t think I can?”
“S-sure, but—”
“It’s okay. You’ve been up late a lot.”
Carmen sat there, stunned. Her twelve-year-old daughter taking on a domestic chore? It would probably be Hamburger Helper and frozen pizza, but at this point…
She kicked off her low-heeled shoes. How did Temple Barr wear those spikes of hers? Carmen’s feet were killing her and she’d spent most of her day on her behind. Maybe it was all psychological. She flinched as she heard banging and rattling in the kitchen.
Leo.
That was the name of the MGM lion.
Mrs. Van Burkleo’s given name was Leo-nora. Or an assumed name? To match the face.
She was at home now. Time to restore the frayed synapses. Relax. Spend some quality time with her kid, who was starting to act like a responsive adult, hallelujah. Not like a