Glass Slipper Bride. Arlene James
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“I see.”
He ushered her through the door and pulled it closed behind him. “Let’s take a look at that window.”
She led him away from the carport, across the patio and through the gate in the fence around the pool, then along the back of the house to the broken window. The double-wide window was set in the wall at about shoulder height A board had been nailed over it, and broken glass littered the ground, none of the pieces larger than a man’s hand. Zach went down on his haunches and gingerly stirred and studied the shards, some of them streaked and speckled with bright-red spray paint. After a few moments, he looked up at the three-letter word sprayed onto the brick.
“When did this happen?”
“Last night about 1:00 a.m.”
“Did anyone hear or see anything?”
She nodded. “I was asleep in this room, and the shattering of the glass woke me up.”
“This is your room?”
“Uh, no. It’s, um, more private than my room sometimes, though.”
He lifted an eyebrow at that but made no comment. “What happened after the window broke?”
“I called for Camille because the glass was all over the floor inside and I couldn’t get to my slippers without cutting my feet. She phoned the police, but he was long gone by the time the call was made.”
“But you’re sure it was Eibersen?”
“Who else could it be?”
He didn’t answer that, just stood and turned in a slow circle, surveying the area. He pointed back toward the pool gate. “He must have come from that direction. The fence is too tall on the other side, and I assume the pool gate is left open all the time?”
Jillian shrugged apologetically. “Yes, sorry.”
“Get a chain and lock for it,” he said dismissively. She nodded, adding that to her growing mental list. He turned back to the house, muttering, “Wonder why he chose this window. Why not Camille’s bedroom window? I assume he knows which that would be.”
Jillian felt the bottom drop out of her stomach, but she managed to keep her voice and tone level. “Oh, yes, he knows.”
“Probably he was afraid of being seen through the larger windows,” Zach mused. “What room is this room anyway?”
Jillian. bit her lip. “Well, it’s supposed to be a maid’s room, but we don’t have a live-in maid. Since my own room is right next to Camille’s, I thought this one might be more private, but the broken window changed my mind about the desirability of that.”
Zach nodded and made no further comment, and Jillian let herself relax again.
“Well, I guess that’s it for now,” he said, starting back the way they’d come. “You’ll see to the locks and the security system?”
“Yes, first thing tomorrow.”
“Good.”
He led the way back across the pool yard and the patio, then held open the door beneath the carport as she passed through it into the hallway and blessed coolness. He followed her down the hall to the kitchen. It was her favorite room in the house, with its bright-yellow walls and clean white cabinets, stainless-steel appliances, pale, natural woods and terra cotta dishes. “Want another cool drink before you go?” she asked hopefully.
“Glass of water would be nice,” he mumbled distractedly. He stood at the bar, arms folded and one hand rubbing his chin, obviously deep in thought, while she took down two glasses from the cabinet and filled them with ice water through the refrigerator door. She placed them on the bar and pulled out a stool, then perched on top of it.
“Have a seat.”
Instead, he turned and leaned forward, bracing his upper body weight on both elbows. “It doesn’t make sense that he chose to paint that particular window. I mean, it’s behind the fence. Someone would have to go swimming in order to see it.”
Jilly felt a hard knot form in the center of her chest. “Well, um, C-Camille swims every morning, year-round. The pool’s heated.” She didn’t bother saying that she, too, liked to get in twenty or thirty laps before breakfast most mornings.
Zach nodded. “Okay. That kind of makes sense.” Straightening, he picked up the glass left for him and drained it in one long gulp, the ice clinking and tinkling. “Ah-h-h. Nothing like a Texas summer to make you appreciate cold water.”
“Funny you should mention that,” Jillian said softly, her thoughts returning once more to her parents.
“Why’s that?”
She stroked her fingertip through the condensation forming on the side of her glass. “Oh, it’s just that my parents said something very like that before they left on the last impulsive jaunt that got them killed.”
Zach swirled the ice in his glass thoughtfully. “I think you said that it was a boating accident?”
She nodded. “That’s right. Dad always said that the Gulf of Mexico was a poor excuse for an ocean, but it was so hot that week, and it didn’t seem worthwhile to fly all the way to the West Coast just for the weekend, so they flew to Houston, drove down to Galveston and rented a boat.”
“And you never saw them again,” he concluded.
She sighed. “The bodies were never even recovered.”
He seemed to be searching for the right words to say, and finally came out with, “Man, that’s tough. How old were you again?”
“Eleven.”
He shook his head. “So young. How come you weren’t with them?”
She smiled wanly. “I’m not much of a sailor. I like to swim, but boats do a number on my stomach, always have.”
“That’s certainly fortunate.”
“It was hard to think of it that way at the time,” Jillian said.
He nodded and murmured, “I can imagine.” He shifted positions, signaling a shift in subject. “So you wound up here with your half sister and your father’s ex-wife.”
“Not here as in this same house, but yes, I wound up with Camille and Gerry.”
“And no doubt you’re grateful for that.”
“Of course,” she said lightly.
“Which is why you let her treat you like a lower life form,” he said, almost offhandedly.
Jillian blinked in shock. “I beg your pardon!”