CHAPTER 30

An’gel thanked her sister for the cup of hot tea. After she had a few sips, she said, “I’ve never seen someone die like that, and I hope I never do again.”

“Do you feel up to talking about it?” Dickce asked.

An’gel shuddered. “It’s probably better if I do.” She looked at her sister across the kitchen table, then at Jackson and Benjy on either side.

“I went there to ask her some questions,” An’gel said. “I was determined that she was finally going to talk to me. I wanted to know about the antique wedding gown.” She recounted her finding of the scrap that led her to search for the intact gown and its discovery in Mireille’s bedroom. “Estelle knew that the gown Sondra destroyed was a fake. I asked her if she put Sondra up to destroying it as a joke, and she said she didn’t.”

“Did she know who did?” Dickce asked. “That is, if anyone did put the idea in Sondra’s head.”

“I think she did know,” An’gel said. “She told me once before there were things she knew that others weren’t aware of, and I got the impression from that conversation that she expected to use that knowledge to her advantage.”

“She was nosy,” Jackson said. “Always poking her nose into everything. I told her once, she kept doing that, somebody was going to bite her nose off.”

“Somebody did, so to speak,” An’gel said grimly. “While we were talking, she poured herself some whiskey, several fingers in fact, then she knocked it all back at one go.” She paused as the mental image of Estelle’s death rictus flashed through her brain. “Then she started shaking and grabbing at her throat like she couldn’t breathe. Next thing I knew she was on the floor, dead.”

Dickce shuddered. “How awful.”

Benjy nodded. “Poor woman. She didn’t deserve that.”

An’gel told them about the figure she had seen earlier near Estelle’s apartment.

“Could you tell who it was?” Benjy asked.

“No,” An’gel said. “To be truthful, I’m not completely sure I really saw a person. It was only a fleeting impression, out of the corner of my eye, and by the time I looked, whatever it was had gone.”

“You think it was the person who got into Estelle’s place and put the poison in her whiskey,” Dickce said.

An’gel nodded. “I think it’s a distinct possibility. What I’m wondering is, what poison would work that quickly.”

“Likely it wasn’t poison, Miss An’gel.” Jackson frowned. “Miss Estelle was deathly allergic to peanuts. All somebody had to do was grind up some peanuts real fine like and put ’em in her bottle.”

“How awful,” Dickce said again.

“Did everyone know about this allergy?” An’gel asked.

Jackson nodded. “Oh, yes. Miss Estelle talked about it to everybody. You know how she was about complaining. Wouldn’t ever cook nothing with peanuts, and wouldn’t have no peanut butter in the house.” He shook his head. “Little Miss Tippy loves peanut butter, and Miss Jacqueline has to sneak it into the house for her.”

There was a knock at the back door, and Jackson got up to answer it. He opened the door and stood aside to allow Officers Bugg and Sanford to enter the kitchen.

Bugg looked straight at An’gel. “Ma’am, I need to talk to you about this unfortunate event. You reckon you feel up to telling me about it?”

“Yes, Officer, I do,” An’gel said with more conviction than she felt. She knew she had to do this. Best to get it over with. “Would you like to talk here? Or we could go to the parlor?”

“Here’ll be just fine, ma’am,” Bugg said. “But I’d prefer to talk to you by yourself.” He glanced at Jackson, Dickce, and Benjy. They took the hint and excused themselves, though Jackson paused long enough to offer the policemen something to drink. Bugg declined, and Jackson followed the others from the room.

Bugg plopped down across from An’gel in the chair Dickce had vacated. Sanford sat to her left in Jackson’s spot. He pulled out his notebook and pen.

“All right, ma’am,” Bugg said. “Why were you there in the deceased’s apartment? Was you in the habit of visiting her there?”

“No, I wasn’t. I had never been in her apartment before today,” An’gel said. “I went there to ask her a few questions about odd things that have been going on in this house.”

“Like what, for example?” Bugg put his arms on the table and leaned on them, focused intently on An’gel.

An’gel had to think quickly about what she could tell him without violating Jacqueline’s confidence. She didn’t want to tell him some things without her goddaughter’s permission. As soon as Jacqueline returned from town, she vowed, she would urge her goddaughter to tell everything to the police.

“Ma’am?” Bugg prompted.

“Sorry, just putting my thoughts in order,” An’gel said. “The main thing was the incident with the wedding dress that caused my cousin to collapse and have to be rushed to the hospital. I believe I mentioned it when you first came to Willowbank to investigate Sondra’s death?”

Bugg looked annoyed. “Yes, ma’am, you did indeed mention it as I recall. The young woman was pitchin’ scraps from the wedding dress over the railin’.”

“Yes,” An’gel replied. “Or so we thought at the time. Mireille collapsed and was rushed to the hospital, where she died.” An’gel felt rage all over again at Sondra’s nasty trick, and she took a moment to calm herself.

“That Sondra was a hellcat sometimes,” Bugg said. “Still, it’s hard to believe she’d do something like that to her own grandma. But you said, ‘so we thought at the time.’ Does that mean it wasn’t the real wedding dress she tore up?”

“Yes. Mireille had apparently had a replica of it made some years ago, and it was the replica Sondra destroyed. In the heat of the moment, though, Mireille and Jacqueline didn’t realize that.”

“So you went out there to talk to the deceased about this. Why? Did you think she had something to do with it?”

Bugg was more astute than An’gel had earlier thought. “When I told Jacqueline I had found the original dress, we talked about the incident. She swears Sondra wouldn’t have done something like that unless someone else put her up to it. I thought Estelle might know something about it.”

“Did she?”

“I think she did,” An’gel said. “I was trying to get her to tell me what she knew, but she was stubborn. I think she intended to blackmail whoever it was. Then she drank some whiskey and collapsed. She died without ever saying another word to me.”

She hesitated for a moment but decided she had better tell the officer about the figure she thought she had seen earlier in the day.

When she’d finished, Bugg stared at her. “You say you don’t know who it was, or even if it was a man or a woman. Just an impression.”

An’gel nodded. She knew how insubstantial it was.

Bugg was still staring. “Tell me, ma’am. Do you wear glasses? Or contacts?”

Taken slightly aback, An’gel said, “No contacts. I do have glasses I use sometimes for needlework or reading.” Then she realized why he was asking about her eyesight. “My distance vision is fine, Officer.”

“All right, ma’am.” Bugg held up a hand in a placatory gesture. “Had to check. You’re sure you saw something, right?”

“Yes,” An’gel said. She had seen something move. She just couldn’t swear that it was a person. Given what had happened to Estelle, however, she felt it likely she had seen the murderer leaving after poisoning the whiskey.

“You got all that?” Bugg said to Sanford. The junior officer nodded.

“I reckon we got two murders, then,” Bugg said to An’gel. “Coroner’s pretty certain now that Sondra was dead before she ever went off that gallery.”

“Do you have any idea who’s responsible?” An’gel asked, curious whether Bugg would share anything of consequence.

“I got my ideas,” he responded lugubriously. “What about you? I checked your bona fides with the police and the sheriff’s department over in Athena, ma’am, and they tell me you was involved in several murders a coupla months ago.”

An’gel nodded reluctantly. She preferred not to think about those events if at all possible. “Yes, Officer, unfortunately murders were committed in our home.”

“That lady deputy in the sheriff’s department thinks an awful lot of you and your sister,” Bugg said in a tone that to An’gel sounded slightly incredulous. “Told me I should ask you what you think is going on here.”

That last sentence sounded like a challenge, An’gel thought. While she appreciated Kanesha Berry’s expression of confidence, she did not know Officer Bugg well enough to talk to him as candidly as she had always done with Kanesha. He seemed bright enough, but she didn’t want to send him haring off on the wrong tangent by anything she said.

She decided there was one thing she could safely tell him, and let him make of it what he would. “In my opinion, Officer, it’s all about money. You figure out who needs money desperately, and you’ll find the person who killed Sondra and Estelle.”

Bugg looked disappointed, as if he had expected more from her. His words confirmed that. “I ain’t dumb, ma’am. I know there’s a lot of money in this family. Shoot, Terence Delevan was probably the richest man in this parish. Heck, richest man in several parishes. That means his wife and his daughter both got a lot of money when he died. We know all about that here in St. Ignatiusville. I was hoping you was going to tell me something I didn’t know.”

An’gel felt justly rebuked, but she wasn’t ready to concede. “If you know all that, then you probably also know whose business is on shaky ground and could use an infusion of cash.”

Bugg nodded. “Yes, ma’am, indeed I do. Already working on that angle.” He stood. “I reckon that’s about all I need from you at the moment. If you don’t mind, ask Jackson to come in.”

An’gel also rose. “Certainly, Officer. I hope I have been of some help.” She walked away from the table and out of the kitchen. She found Dickce, Benjy, and Jackson in the front parlor. Jackson was dusting, while Dickce and Benjy sat quietly on the sofa.

“Officer Bugg wants to talk to you now,” An’gel informed the butler.

Jackson nodded, dropped his dust cloth on a table, and left the room.

The moment he was out of the room, Benjy said, “I have some things to tell you.”

An’gel chose the armchair nearest the sofa. “I’m all ears.”

Benjy related the conversation he had overheard while bringing Peanut and Endora back to the house.

An’gel and Dickce looked thoughtfully at each other.

“Sounds to me like Horace and Thurston are in cahoots over something,” Dickce said.

“Exactly when was this?” An’gel asked.

Benjy thought for a moment after he glanced at his watch. “At least an hour ago, maybe a little more. Say an hour and a quarter.”

“That was around the time that I saw someone ducking around the side of Estelle’s apartment,” An’gel said.

“So both Horace and Thurston were on the property,” Dickce said.

They were startled by a loud noise, the forceful closing of the front door. A moment later, Horace strode into the room.

“Can somebody tell me what in the world is going on out back? Why are the police here?” he demanded.

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