Bücher online kostenlos Kostenlos Online Lesen
A Killer Plot (A Books by the Bay Mystery)

A Killer Plot (A Books by the Bay Mystery)

Titel: A Killer Plot (A Books by the Bay Mystery) Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Ellery Adams
Vom Netzwerk:
expressions on their faces they had already guessed as much.
    “Another murder ?” Harris’s voice was hushed.
    Laurel reached over and covered his hand with her own.
    Millay stood and slipped her purse onto her shoulder. “Can you just skip the extraneous details and hit us up with tomorrow’s headline?” She shrugged her shoulders self-effacingly. “Sorry, but I’ve gotta go.”
    Olivia was untroubled by the younger woman’s bluntness. “Apparently, our visiting real estate mogul, Dean Talbot, fell down the steps at the community park. His neck was broken and he’s dead. That’s all I know,” Olivia said.
    The writers exchanged anxious glances. Millay glanced at her watch and moved to the door. “Was there a poem?” she asked, her hand on the knob.
    “Rawlings didn’t mention one. It looks like an accident at this point,” Olivia stated reassuringly.
    Millay looked dubious. “I need to motor. Text me if you find out anything more. Otherwise, I’ll have to wait for one of the customer’s wives to call in with the news and that version will be so exaggerated that I won’t know what really went down.”
    Olivia gathered her own purse and keys and signaled to Haviland. “I’m going to the park to see for myself. The chief wants to talk to me and he’s sure to be tied up until late tonight.”
    Harris cocked his head, reminding Olivia of Haviland when the poodle sensed something wasn’t quite right. “You don’t think he fell, do you?” He hurriedly picked up his loose papers, pen, and journal and gathered them to his chest. “I’m coming with you.”
    Laurel’s eyes widened. “Well, I’m not . Sorry, you two, but I do not want to lay eyes on a dead man. Even a rich and famous one. I still can’t sleep after . . .”
    Olivia patted Laurel’s shoulder. “ I’m not going to the park out of morbid curiosity, let me assure you. I need to know if Dean’s ‘accident’ has anything to do with Camden’s death, and if I can observe the chief while he’s still gathering information, he might let a valuable insight slip.”
    “Chief Rawlings doesn’t think Dean tripped?” Laurel began to look a little pale.
    “Publicly he does. Privately, who knows? I’m just looking at the situation logically,” Olivia said. “Camden discovered some unsavory connection between someone in the Talbot family and their proposed development, and I believe that information cost him his life.” She reached down, her hand searching for Haviland’s soft head. “Now Dean Talbot, a shrewd, ambitious, and possibly dangerous businessman lies dead. And I don’t think he tripped.”
    “If Talbot was killed,” Harris said as he fished his car keys out of his jeans pocket, “the murderer isn’t acting like he did before. If it’s the same person, he’s really sly. It’s like he’s created two different—what’s the word?—signatures. Camden’s death was obviously a murder, but Talbot’s death looks like an accident. No blood, no poem, and I’m assuming no witnesses ...” Harris fell silent as he continued to ponder the possible differences.
    “ If this is his second murder, then yes, the killer is both intelligent and crafty. He is also not Jethro Bragg. After all, Jethro’s in jail. If Talbot was ‘helped’ down that flight of steps, then Camden’s murderer is still at large,” Olivia remarked with soft anger.
    The fear they’d all been able to suppress since their friend had been killed resurfaced with renewed strength. Wordlessly, they gathered their things and avoided one another’s eyes. It was no comfort to see the dread they felt echoed in one another’s faces.
    Olivia opened the cottage door and mutely led the shaken writers into the descending night.
     
     
    Olivia and Harris took separate cars to the park, but neither of them was allowed to step foot beyond the entrance sign. An officer stood, hands on hips, and informed them in a tone that allowed no room for argument that the park was closed until further notice. When Olivia stretched the truth by insisting the chief had requested her immediate presence, he gave her and Haviland a quick once-over and then spoke into the radio attached to his shirt.
    “I’ll come to her,” Rawlings’ voice crackled through the speaker.
    “You’d better go,” Olivia told Harris. “I’ll call if there’s a need for us to get involved.”
    Harris glanced at the massive policeman straddling the pathway leading into the park.
    “Are

Weitere Kostenlose Bücher