Chesapeake Crimes: Invitation to Murder. Donna Andrews
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“I have it in my hand. You caught me in the middle of what I feel will be a turning point in the plot. A gangster named Skunk has Mac and Kitty Kats on the ropes. He’s copped to killing Jimmy for an ancient Egyptian artifact known as the Golden Scroll.”
This was an interesting turn of events, indeed. Amelia had rung Teddy hoping his story would be further written to the point of revealing Ziva’s whereabouts or, even better, that of the scroll. But it seemed that while he penned his tale, she was living it. Playing the role of Mac himself. She found this both terrifying and exhilarating at the same time. Of course, there was also the possibility that she teetered on the brink of insanity, but she’d deal with that later.
“Do you have your pencil handy?” she asked Teddy.
“Get to it, lady, I ain’t got all day,” Skunk warned her.
“Yes, I have my pencil,” Thaddeus answered.
“Teddy, listen carefully. I need you to write Ziva into the story right now. Have her walk into Skunk’s parlor—have her walk in and offer the Golden Scroll to Skunk in return for the release of Kitty and me—I mean, Kitty and Mac.”
“That would make for a very short book,” Thaddeus argued.
“Just do it. Trust me. Write the words in the book now, I implore you.”
“Yes, Mommy.”
Amelia listened in the receiver as Teddy put his end down. She heard the faint scratching of pencil on paper.
“I ain’t so sure you’re on the up and up here, lady,” Skunk said. He appeared ready to take some action to end Amelia’s call when his attention was drawn to commotion on the other side of the door across the room.
A woman’s voice could be heard through the door. “Out of my way, you brute. I am here to see a man by the name of Skunk.” The door opened with a swoosh. In the entrance stood a striking woman with long blond hair, and yes, a roller-coaster body. In her hands, she held a wooden box only slightly larger than a cigar box.
“Are you Ziva?” Amelia asked.
“I am. I have brought the Egyptian scroll for you, Skunk, in exchange for your hostages.”
More commotion rang from the hallway, and before the exchange could take place freeing Amelia and Kitty Kats, a sickly thin man with a rat on his shoulder appeared with a gun in his hand. “Not so fast there,” he said. “I’ll be taking that, if you don’t mind.”
Kitty gasped. “Rat Man!”
Amelia whispered into the phone. “Teddy, I told you to bring Ziva in with the scroll. Why are you sending the Rat Man in as well?”
“I told you, Mommy, these characters just seem to write themselves.”
“Teddy, I don’t like being cross with you, but I am telling you now, young man, take control. You have the pencil, not Rat Man. Erase him now.”
“But Mommy… ”
“Now, erase the Rat Man!”
A moment later, the thin man collapsed on the floor in a heap. Skunk, thrown off guard by the sudden turn of events, knelt to test Rat Man’s pulse, and conveniently, his pistol went with him, allowing Amelia to whisper further directions to her son.
“Here, Kitty!” Ziva said, throwing the box to Kitty Kats. “Jimmy would have wanted you to have the Golden Scroll. Sell it and use the money to start a new life in Paris like you’ve always dreamed. You won’t have to remove your clothes and writhe in front of foul men any longer.”
A smile blossomed across Kitty’s face. “Thank you, Ziva!”
Right then, three uniformed policemen pushed through the doorway, guns drawn. “William ‘Skunk’ Snodgrass,” one of them announced. “You are under arrest for the murder of Jimmy Jiggs and the Rat Man.”
“I didn’t kill Rat Man. He just croaked right here in front of me!”
“Yeah, yeah,” another cop said. “Likely story.”
Ziva sashayed out of the parlor with the same grace as she had entered.
“I guess this is goodbye,” Kitty said to Amelia. “Here, have your twenty back. And thanks. I hear Paris is beautiful this time of year.”
“Goodbye, Kitty,” Amelia said. “Be well.”
* * * *
Amelia drove home in a daze after leaving Handsome Eddie’s. The police didn’t ask her questions. In fact, it was as if they did not even know she was there.
Upon arriving home, she snatched the paperback book from Thaddeus’s hands and threw it into the fireplace, lighting a corner with a match, and setting the dreaded thing ablaze.
She took her son into her arms. “Teddy, I love you very much, but I had to do that.”
Angus wandered in, and his eyes widened when he saw the book on fire. “What’s this?”
“Angus,” Amelia said. “You were right. I am not so fond of these Mac Hardcase novels. Our son is only six years old. And I think it is time we introduced him to some literature meant for six-year-olds.”
That night, before tucking him in for an evening slumber, Amelia read Thaddeus the first few pages of Winnie-the-Pooh, which they both enjoyed immensely. That Winnie-the-Pooh was such a silly bear.
* * * *
The next morning, Amelia rang Vera Emerson. “Hello, Vera, I would like to apologize for Teddy’s behavior yesterday. He was most out of place.”
“What do you mean?” Vera asked.
“The crude story he read to Norbert after church.”
“Amelia, are you quite all right? We weren’t at church yesterday. Norbert was ill with a terrible flu. I stayed home to nurse him.”
“Oh, I am sorry. I must have been thinking of…well, it doesn’t matter. Never mind. Do tell Norbert I hope he recovers quickly.”
“I will be sure to do so. And Amelia, we recently came into some money and are able to repay your loan. I’m sending a check by courier today. You and Angus have been so kind, waiting patiently. When Norbert is well, we would love to have you, Angus, and Thaddeus over for dinner.”
Amelia hung up the phone befuddled but relieved. She could put the entire Mac Hardcase horror tale behind her.
In the quiet peace of her parlor, she relaxed in her favorite chair with a cup of tea while listening to some Vivaldi. Mary arrived promptly at ten and went straight to the kitchen as usual. She appeared in the parlor doorway not long after. “Mrs.,” she said. “I have made a shopping list. We are low on flour and eggs. Do you need anything else while I am out?”
“No, Mary, that will be fine. Thank you.”