“Anne, do the police have any suspects?” Capo asked.
“None that they’ve reported.”
But they soon would, he thought and Detective Charlotte Le Blanc would uncover them all. He was sure of it. Smiling again, he turned off the set and gathered up the file he needed. Karma had brought her to him for a reason, he decided. And once she had served her purpose, he would kill her.
Six
“This is Stratton. Leave a message and I’ll get back—”
“I’ve already left three messages,” Charlie said and slammed down the telephone without waiting for the rest of the recording. Dinner with her parents had been lovely but after Anne had gotten the call from the TV station ordering her to report on location for a story, she’d had to forgo dessert. So Charlie had skipped the bananas Foster as well and left their parents’ home. Too wired to relax, she’d known going home was pointless. So she did what she often did when a case was nagging at her, she headed back to the station.
It was after eight o’clock when she’d arrived. And as was usually the case for a Saturday night during carnival season, business at the station was brisk. Most uniformed officers were pulling double shifts to handle the crowds and the problems generated by the party fever that engulfed the city for two weeks each year. When she made her way back to the Homicide Department, she hadn’t expected to find Vince there working. But then she hadn’t been surprised to find him, either. With the murder rate quickly approaching triple digits, there was always work that needed to be done, leads that needed to be followed up on, paperwork to be processed. They had other open cases that required attention. But the word had come down from the top that the Hill case was priority. That was fine with her, Charlie admitted, because from the moment she had seen that black silk stocking, the case hadn’t been out of her thoughts.
She went back to the list of people who had visited Francesca Hill the previous night. The odds were one of them was the killer or had seen the killer. She ran her finger down the list. J.P. Stratton. Aaron Stratton. Danielle Marceau. The Reverend Homer Lawrence. Cole Stratton. Plus the two mystery guests—the crying female and the camera-shy guy with the shades. She made a question mark, knowing it was possible that whoever had monkeyed with the surveillance tape was none of the above. But for now, she had to work with what she had and what she had were a lot of people visiting Francesca Hill on the eve of her wedding. She needed to find out why.
Going back to the top of the list, she skipped past J. P. Stratton and Aaron Stratton. She had spoken to them once already and doubted she would learn much more from them tonight. Danielle Marceau hadn’t been at home or at work, so she tried again and once again left a message. Next on the list was the reverend. Given the lateness of the hour, she decided to wait until tomorrow to pay him a call. Since they had yet to identify the mystery lady and the guy with the shades, that left Cole Stratton—who obviously wasn’t returning her calls. Deciding to try his home number again, she had just punched in the first three digits when she heard a whoop of excitement from Vince’s desk across the aisle from her. She put down the phone.
“Got it! Thanks, pal. I owe you one.” He hung up the phone and swung around in his chair to face her. Holding up a slip of paper, he said, “Guess what I’ve got here?”
“A hot stock tip?”
“Funny,” he said dryly. “It’s the name of our mystery girl on the surveillance tape. I’ll give you three guesses.”
“Kossak.” She growled out the word.
“Holly Stratton. I had the new kid, Mackenzie, take a copy of the photo we had printed from the tape over to the Mill House Apartments and show it around. The desk clerk identified her.”
“Another ex-wife?” Charlie asked.
“Daughter. According to the clerk, she and the vic used to be friends. But they had a falling-out when Hill took up with the father.”
“I can’t say that I blame her,” Charlie responded, empathizing with Holly Stratton. Having your father marry a woman who couldn’t have been more than a year or two older than you would have been tough for anyone to swallow. But having him marry one of your friends had to be ten times worse.
“It gets better,” Vince continued. “Hill took out a restraining order against Holly Stratton a couple of weeks ago. She showed up at last night’s rehearsal dinner and she and the vic had words. Ms. Stratton ended up throwing a glass of wine in her soon-to-be stepmother’s face. Apparently all hell broke loose and Hill threatened to have her arrested for violating the restraining order.”
“I bet that went over real big with daddy.”
“Sensitive guy that he is, daddy had hotel security escort his daughter off the premises.”
Charlie flinched inwardly for Holly Stratton. She could only imagine the other woman’s humiliation. “If you ask me, she should have thrown the wine in his face.”
“She might have if the security guards hadn’t hauled her out when they did. According to the waiter, Ms. Stratton didn’t go quietly. She told the Hill woman she was going to regret what she’d done.”
Charlie sobered at once. “Then what was she doing at the victim’s apartment last night?”
“I was wondering the same thing,” Vince said. “Why don’t we go ask her?”
When they pulled up in front of Holly Stratton’s apartment building, Vince let out a whistle. Charlie understood her partner’s reaction. The address itself was a calling card that read, For Rich People Only. She’d seen advertisements for the luxury apartments located on Saint Charles Avenue when they’d first come on the market. They had started at a half-million dollars. And that had been several years ago before property values had skyrocketed.
Вы ознакомились с фрагментом книги.
Приобретайте полный текст книги у нашего партнера: