chapter Eleven
“Uh-oh,” Death said.
Casey held her breath. Perhaps if she pretended she wasn’t there, the person would go away. But less than ten seconds later the doorbell rang again, followed by loud knocking. Death disappeared for a moment, then returned, trying not to laugh.
“She knows you’re in here.”
“Who?”
“Ricky’s neighbor, from across the street. And she is a picture, let me tell you.”
“Have I met her?”
“Can’t tell you that, sweetheart. But if you did, it was before you and I started hanging out together. Here.” Death pulled out a digital camera and showed Casey a photo of a very colorful woman on Ricky’s front step. As she watched, the photo moved, presenting an image of the woman leaning over the side rail of the front steps to try to see in the front windows, as Death had at Casey’s mom’s.
Casey sighed. “I guess I’d better go see what she wants before she falls on her noggin.”
She stashed the candy and biography back in the dustrag box and stopped in the office to put the Narnia series back together. She left the photo and the slip of paper with clichés in her pocket. The doorbell kept chiming all the while, alternated with vigorous knocking. Casey opened the door during one of the lulls to receive a view of the woman’s rather large backside as she again bent over the rail to see in the window. The woman almost toppled over when she heard the door, but righted herself and turned to Casey with her hands outstretched. Casey recoiled. The woman’s fake eyelashes were so huge and thick it looked like she had spiders on her face. Her hair had been dyed a brilliant orange, and her lipstick was the color of a ripe tomato. Her caftan-like blouse-dress thing was a mixture of the brightest colors imaginable, and her feet were bare, with several rings on brightly painted toes. It was like a circus has landed on the doorstep.
“Are you the cleaning lady?” she asked Casey.
Death laughed.
“No,” Casey said.
“Oh, I thought…” the woman gestured at Casey’s pale blue warm-ups and the dustrag she’d stuck in her pocket during her search. Casey had to admit she saw her point.
“Police?” the woman tried again.
“No, I’m—”
“Another girlfriend?”
“I’m Ricky’s sister.”
The woman stopped short. “His sister? He has a sister?”
“I haven’t been around much lately. I don’t live here.”
“And where do you live?”
Casey frowned. “Who are you?”
The woman clapped a hand to her mouth and laughed uproariously. “You must think I’m terrible. I am. I’m awful. I’m also Geraldine, and I live over there. I moved in last year, came from Vegas, can you imagine?” She pointed a long, crimson fingernail toward the house across the street, where pink flamingoes and oversized whirligigs filled the small lawn. The house would have been normal otherwise, except for the bright orange shutters and the life-sized buffalo statue in between the house and garage. “I’ve just been devastated about what’s happened, and wanted to know if there’s anything I can do to help. That’s why I came over. There hasn’t been anybody here since the police—those horrible people!—left yesterday. They took things out, you know. Ricky’s computer and his phone and sheets and who knows what else. Like they really think he could have done anything to that sweet girl.”
“You knew her?”
Geraldine opened her mouth to say something else, but then stopped and peered over Casey’s shoulder into the house.
“You know what she wants,” Death said. “Might as well go with it, if you’re thinking of getting any information out of her. If she has some, she’ll share it if the circumstances are right. Which basically means she needs to feel a part of things.”
Casey wanted to shut the door on the woman’s face, but instead she said, “Would you like to come in?” with what she hoped was a welcoming voice.
“I hate to impose,” Geraldine said as she shouldered past. She lumbered right through the foyer into the kitchen and around the side to the living room where she plopped herself down on the sofa. She situated herself where she had a view of the side and front yards, then crossed her ankles and placed her hands in her lap, like a genteel southern belle. “I only met the girl once, you see, and it wasn’t here. The two of them were at the grocery store, picking out fruit, and I went right up and introduced myself. She was a pretty little thing, wasn’t she, and Ricky looked so happy!”
“Did she tell you her name?”
“Of course, which is more than you’ve done.” She looked at Casey knowingly.
“Casey.”
“Well, Casey, Ricky introduced her as Alicia and said they were getting snacks for watching a movie that night. Now, isn’t that romantic?”
Sounded pretty normal to Casey, but what did she know?
“I never saw her here,” Geraldine continued. “I’m not sure why. I pretty much know everything that happens on this block, and why Ricky never brought her home is a mystery to me. They were holding hands and looking at each other all lovey-dovey when I ran into them at the store. It’s not like she was hideous or deformed or anything. She looked like a nice, normal girl.”
“Most girls do.”
“Well, that’s true. But the things I’ve seen!” She fanned herself with her hand. “Delivery men staying longer than they should, girls out running with hardly a stitch on, people, you know, doing it, in their yards at night. It’s enough to make a grown woman blush.”
The thought of this woman adding one more color to her palette made Casey shudder.
“But Ricky and his girl—woman, I suppose I should say, you know, to be what they call politically correct—they acted in love, not in lust, if you know what I mean. Very sweet, actually. It made me remember my young days, when I first met my Arthur.”
Casey groaned inwardly. Was this woman really going to go on about her past? But no…
“I saw Ricky come home that night, you know. The night the girl was murdered. Late, of course. But he looked completely normal. At least, what I could see through his car window, and when he got out of the car before the garage door closed. I really think I would have noticed blood or torn clothing or even if he looked upset.”
“What did he look like?”
Geraldine smiled, her expression going all dreamy. “Happy.”
It was like a punch to Casey’s solar plexus. Her poor brother. He might have been happy then, but the next morning it was like his world had exploded. But that’s how life worked. One moment you were content, feeling like nothing could touch you, and the next…
“Relaxed,” Geraldine said again. “Like those nights when Arthur and I had been, you know, intimate—”
“Aah!” Death screamed.
“Is there something I can do for you, Geraldine?” Casey said, hoping she didn’t sound as desperate as she felt.
“Oh, you don’t need to do anything for me,” Geraldine said, not even fazed by the interruption. “But I think there’s something I can do for you.”
“And what’s that?”
She smiled mysteriously. “I can tell you about the man who showed up here at your brother’s house the day after she died.”
Casey gripped her chair’s arms. “What man? And do the police know about him?”
“Of course they do. I told them right away. He was a bad man, I could tell. He had that look in his eye.”
“You saw him up close?”
“Of course I did. He was over at Ricky’s house after Ricky went to work. This was before we knew anything had happened to his girlfriend, you know. The man was wearing a uniform, like from a home repair place or something like that. Hometown Interiors, the patch said. I wasn’t able to find them anywhere in the phone book, but you know how things are these days, with cell phones. If you don’t have a landline you have to move heaven and earth to get your name in the yellow pages.”
“What did the man say?”
“Well, I watched him go right around the back of the house, and when I didn’t see him for a while I went over. He was just coming out, and I asked him what he was doing. He was very polite, I must say, but like I said, his eyes were all wrong. He said he was fixing something in Ricky’s bathroom, that Ricky had left the back door open for him, which I suppose could be right because we live in a very safe neighborhood, and people do that sort of thing.”
“What did the police say?”
“They checked on him, said it was a legitimate business, and there was paperwork and on-line correspondence to corroborate what he said.”
Ricky hadn’t said anything about a repairman. But then, when Casey had seen him that afternoon he wasn’t exactly in the state of mind to be talking about his bathroom. And she hadn’t known to ask.
“I called again the next day to ask the police about the man,” Geraldine said, “but they brushed me off, said they’d already gone down that avenue. I told them—”
Casey got up and walked to the bathroom on the first floor. Geraldine skittered along behind, watching over Casey’s shoulder. There was no sign of any recent work. No stickers on the window, no unmatched wood or fresh paint. And when she had cleaned the room there hadn’t been any sawdust or dirty footprints. Nothing but regular bathroom grime and fingerprint dust.
They trooped upstairs, but there were no signs of new repair or construction in that bathroom, either.
“That man wasn’t working on anything,” Geraldine gushed. “But he spent quite some time in here. What do you suppose he was doing?”
There was no way to be sure, but Casey figured she had a good idea. He was planting things. Things like bloody shirts and paper trails.