The Dead Play On. Heather Graham

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The Dead Play On - Heather  Graham

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flags, weapons and more. She knew she was good at creating wonderful window displays and that the shop was as much a gallery as a showroom, to the point that sometimes people came just to look around rather than buy. She wasn’t sure if that was good or bad. It was obviously less than ideal if they didn’t buy, but having such wonderful word-of-mouth reviews had to be good.

      “May I help you?” she asked as the man continued to stand just inside the door, looking around the room.

      He met her eyes at last. “Danni? Danni Cafferty?”

      “Yes,” she said. “Forgive me, but...do I know you?”

      He nodded. “You may not remember me. I’m Tyler Anderson. I was a few years ahead of you in high school.”

      “Tyler—yes!” She remembered him now. She hadn’t thought of him in years. He’d graduated before her, and she hadn’t seen him since. But she remembered. He’d been part of what a number of the magnet-school music students—who had been “adopted” by a Garden District school during the aftermath of Katrina—had called the Survivor Set. As an art student, she’d been dragged in as something of an honorary member.

      It was good to see him again, and she smiled. He really was a beautiful man—he always had been. Almost like a golden god with hazel eyes.

      She walked around the counter. “I haven’t seen you in forever! It’s wonderful that you found me. How have you been?”

      “Fine...good. Mostly,” he said awkwardly.

      “I heard you playing earlier,” she said. “You’re incredible. You always were, but now...wow. You’re really good.”

      “Not that good.”

      “No, trust me. I just heard you, and you are.”

      He shook his head impatiently. “No, no, I...” He paused, looking around the store. “Is anyone else here?”

      “Well, Billie—you remember Billie—is in the kitchen. And Quinn is due home soon.”

      “Quinn... Michael Quinn? The Michael Quinn we knew back in school?”

      “Yes.”

      “Are you two married?”

      “No, no. I mean, one day. Maybe. He lives here. Mostly. Not always.” Danni stopped speaking; she was never sure how to describe her complex relationship with Quinn. But then again, she didn’t really have to explain. She added lamely, “We’re together. A couple.”

      “So is it true?”

      “Is what true?” she asked carefully.

      “That he was a cop and then became a private investigator. And you guys look into things that are...different. Bad things, odd things.”

      Danni shrugged uneasily. “I try to collect things that people think may be evil or haunted in some way. You know how people can be. Superstitious.”

      “Is it just superstition?” he asked.

      “People can be wonderful or evil. I think we both know that. But things are just...things. Why? What are you talking about?” she asked.

      “Murder. I think my friend was murdered—and that the saxophone he left me is haunted.”

      She stared at him and murmured, “Okay. Can you...?”

      “Do you remember Arnie Watson?” he asked quietly.

      She did. She remembered his incredible talent, and she remembered seeing a piece written about him by a local columnist just a week or so ago. He’d died on the streets after coming home from the Middle East. After he’d survived three deployments. Somehow that seemed to compound the tragedy of his death.

      “Yes,” she said.

      “Arnie was the best,” Tyler said passionately. “An amazing man and an amazing friend.”

      “I believe you,” she said then paused, remembering what she had read. He had died of a drug overdose. So sad, and such a waste of a good man.

      What was even more tragic was that so many soldiers came home only to die by their own hands, their minds haunted by the demons of war.

      “He died of an overdose, didn’t he?” she asked.

      “Damn you, it wasn’t suicide!” Tyler said.

      “I never said anything about suicide.”

      “And it wasn’t an accident. He was murdered. You have to believe me.”

      “I’m more than willing to listen to—”

      Tyler shook his head emphatically. “You have to help me. You have to prove that he was murdered. I know you can do it. And you will. You and Quinn will.”

      “We’re not infallible.”

      “I know you can find the truth. You have to. Because if you don’t, whoever is doing this will kill again. I know it.”

      “Tyler, you can’t know that.”

      “I do know it. And he just might kill me.”

      MRS. LIANA RUBY wasn’t as frail as one might have thought.

      They didn’t have to knock on her door; an officer had been keeping watch over her while the police worked in the other side of the duplex. She had been lying on the sofa, but she got up when they came in. She was a little thing, but she quickly offered them tea or coffee, and then, when they declined, she told them, “Well, you may be on duty, but I’m not. Excuse me while I get myself a big cup of tea—with a bigger shot of whiskey.”

      Quinn and Larue sat in her living room and waited. When she rejoined them, she was shaking her head with disbelief. “Sad, sad, sad. Poor man. He may have had his vices, but then, he was a musician. And as sad as it is, it’s true sometimes that the more tormented the musician, the more powerful the song. Why anyone would hurt such a polite fellow, I don’t know. Now, that just sounded ridiculous, I know. But he was courteous and kind, with a friendly word for everyone. Kids threw a football into his car and dented it, and he just threw it back. I asked him if he didn’t want to call the police or file an insurance claim, and he shrugged and told me they were just having a good time. Said the dent gave his car character!”

      “Did you see or hear anything at all unusual earlier?” Larue asked her.

      “Son, I was sound asleep—without my hearing aid. If little green men had descended from Mars and blown up the Superdome, I wouldn’t have heard it,” she said.

      “We believe he was killed around 5:00 a.m., Mrs. Ruby,” Quinn said. “I’m not surprised you were sleeping, and certainly not surprised you didn’t hear anything. Did you notice that you didn’t see him later in the day?”

      “Good heavens, he works nights. I never

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