Hello again! đ It’s Monday and what better way to start off the week than with a good murder mystery novel, eh? đ
Even if it’s not Monday, what’s not to like?
So, with that in mind, here’s Chapter Two of IDENTITY CRISIS, my first Sam McRae mystery novel!
First, as read by the author. That would be me. Duh! đ
And, also in textual form.
CHAPTER TWO
âItâs one of those things you think will never happen to you,â I said. âI still canât believe it. Iâm just glad they caught the problem. Do you know how long it wouldâve taken to clear my credit?â
âMmm-mmm,â Jamila murmured, about the best she could manage with a spicy meatball hors dâoeuvre in her mouth.
I had a ginger ale in one hand and a small plate loaded with shrimp and little quiches in the other. This left me with no hands to eat either the shrimp or the quiches. I set my drink on a handy table, hoping that none of the waiters patrolling the banquet room would scoop it up when I wasnât looking.
Close to a hundred people had shown for the mixer, which surprised the hell out of me. The bar association doesnât usually schedule events during the summer. The theory, I guess, is that most people take summer vacations. It was a sad commentary on our profession that we were there.
âSo Iâm finally checking my credit history,â I said. âThey say you should do it every year. Iâve always found a reason to put it off until now. Hopefully, the jerk hasnât applied for ten more credit cards with my information.â
âUnbelievable.â
âI almost didnât come. I donât want to see any of these people. Present company excepted, of course.â
Jamila gestured with her diet Coke. âRogerâs trashed.â She referred to the partner she worked for at Haskins & OâConnell, one of the biggest firms in the county.
I looked across the room at Roger. He was smiling, talking amiably to some guy in a nine-hundred-dollar suit, and looking as dull as ever. âHow the hell can you tell?â
âCause he keeps licking his lips.â Jamila straightened and did another quick survey of the room. âYou see any judges? There are supposed to be some judges at this damn thing.â
âI donât know. I just came for the free food.â
Jamila smiled and continued to look around. As usual, she was dressed to the nines. Her dusky brown complexion was a perfect complement to her tan suit, and sheâd applied her makeup with surgical precision. She aspired to partnership at H&O and, eventually, a judgeship with the Circuit Court for Prince Georgeâs County. Maybe even the federal court in Greenbelt.
In P.G. County, a Washington, D.C., suburban area with a majority black population, her appointment to such a position was a distinct possibility if she kept her nose clean and went to the right parties. Jamila had been a good friend of mine since law school, but with any luck, nobody would hold that against her.
âIâm sorry about your problem,â she said. âCan you believe, the same thing happened to one of my clients? Only no one caught it, and heâs in the hole twenty thousand dollars.â
âDamn.â
âHe was supposed to close on some property next month. Now the lenderâs trying to back out. Weâre hoping to fix things before the closing date, but you know what our chances are of doing that?â
âPretty slim.â
âWe may have to put off the closing,â Jamila said. âOr even cancel it. All because of some little shit who ⌠Iâm sorry. I donât mean to go on about my problems. We were talking about you.â
âItâs okay.â I reached for my drink, but it had been spirited away. âWhat gets me is, Iâm so careful. I tear up my junk mail. I never give out my social security number to strangers. I rarely buy anything on the Internet. But thatâs not enough anymore.â
Jamila said something about recent criminal laws against identify theft that got drowned out by guffaws.
âDonât you have to find people before you can prosecute them?â I asked, raising my voice above the din.
âThatâs what Iâm saying. We had to hire a private investigator. Reed Duvall. Ever hear of him?â
I shook my head. âMost of my clients canât afford me, let alone a detective.â
âHeâs supposed to be good. A little unconventional, but they say he gets the job done.â
âI wonder if he could find my missing client.â
âHowâs that?â
âThe police are looking for this woman I represented in a domestic violence hearing. We were going to go back to court to enforce the order. Now, her ex is dead and the police canât find her.â
âOh.â She raised an eyebrow.
âHey, itâs innocent until proven guilty, remember?â
âThatâs what they say.â
I filled Jamila in on what the cops told me, leaving Melanieâs name out of it.
âThe FBI,â she said. âShit.â
âThe whole thing looks weird as hell, no question. Thing is, I have no duty to do anything. I donât have to find her.â
âIf she shows up, tell her to go to the cops,â Jamila said.
âSure. But I keep wondering what the Mob has to do with this. And how is my client involved? If I donât act, is she going to end up being another story on the eleven oâclock news?â
Jamilaâs glance darted toward the door. âJudge Ridgway just came in. We should say hello.â
âGoody.â
She shot me a look. âYouâve got to learn to work these people, sweetie.â
I sighed. âI know. Itâs such a frigginâ drag.â
âAnd another thing. You canât take responsibility for everything that happens to a client and stay sane in this business.â
âYeah, yeah.â I knew it all too well. Still, I was concerned about Melanie. For one thing, I simply couldnât picture her as a killer.
Ď Ď Ď
I donât like domestic violence cases, but for Melanie I made an exception. Maybe it helped that, like me, she was 36 and single. She was tall and slender with brown hair cut in a short bob. Her intelligence and forthrightness impressed me. She had an air of quiet resolveâno hysterics, no second-guessing about whether she was doing the right thing. She had everything you look for in a clientâa rational and cooperative attitude plus the ability to pay. Not that the case brought in much money, but it never hurts when a client can pay.
Getting the order hadnât been difficult. Tom had been drunk and abusive. When heâd hit Melanie, thereâd been a minor scuffle. Sheâd called the police, and theyâd arrested Tom.
Afterward, heâd moved in with a friend in Laurel. Things were fine for a while, then the phone calls started. He started coming by her apartment.
She refused to talk to him. She hoped he would give up, but he wouldnât.
âI want him to leave me alone,â she said, staring out my office window at the brick storefronts of Laurelâs historic Main Street. She seemed anxious the last time I saw her. I tried to be reassuring. Unfortunately, getting the orders in these cases is one thing and getting the abusers to comply is something else.
Ď Ď Ď
Later that afternoon, I tried to reach Melanie at home, without success. I didnât have a cell phone number, so I tried First Bank of Laurel, where she worked as an assistant manager. Melanie wasnât there. I asked for Donna Thurman, her boss. I had done some work for Donna before, and sheâd given Melanie my name.
Donna came on the line. âYes?â she said, her vocal chords sounding as taut as piano wires.
âDonna, itâs Sam McRae. Do you have a minute to talk?â
âWell âŚâ
She sounded busy, so I got to the point. âHave you seen Melanie lately?â
I thought I heard her gasp at the other end. Maybe it was just the phone line.
âSam,â she said, âIâm ⌠Iâm in the middle of something. Can we meet at your office later?â
âSure.â
Around four-thirty, Donna came by. Somewhere in her sixties, she was a petite, silver-haired wonder with skin tanned to a carcinogenic brown from frequent sailing trips on the Chesapeake with her husband. Donna was the kind of person who, rather than soften with age, grew more angular. Instead of slowing down, she seemed to be picking up speed, as if her life were a game of Beat the Clock.
She wore a short-sleeved yellow suit and, normally, would have looked terrific. However, when she came into the office, I could tell something was wrong. Iâd never seen her so subdued and drawn. I wondered if she was sick.
âThank heavens itâs Friday,â she said, collapsing into a chair with a muted grunt. âSam, Iâm so worried about Melanie. She hasnât been at work all week. She hasnât called. Itâs not like her. I even thought about filing a missing personâs report. Then the police came.â
âI guess you donât have any idea where she might be.â
She shook her head.
âWhen was the last time you saw her?â I asked.
âLast Friday, at work.â
âDid you talk to her over the weekend?â
âNo.â
âItâs frustrating, but thereâs not much we can do at this point. I hope she shows up.â
Donna hunched forward, her expression suggesting there was more on her mind. âThat FBI agent. He said something about the Mob being involved. The whole thing is so bizarreâand scary. Iâve been trying to figure how to tell her parents.â
âHer parents?â
âIâve known them for years. They moved to Arizona a while ago, but I keep in touch with them. I remember when Melanie was born.â
âCould Melanie have gone there due to a family emergency?â
âI suppose itâs possible,â she said, âbut Melanie hasnât spoken to her parents in years. Besides, I think I would have heard about it.â
âWhat about brothers and sisters?â
âMelanieâs an only child.â
I shrugged. âMaybe she decided to take a vacation or something.â
âShe wouldnât do that without telling us.â
âWell, you know her better than I do. I didnât realize you were so close.â
âI helped her get this job.â Donna looked sheepish. âTo be honest, itâs a little embarrassing for me at work, what with her disappearing like this.â
âI take it Melanie never mentioned any of the stuff the police asked about?â
âHeavens, no.â
âDid she ever talk about Tom?â
âNot much, though I could tell they were having problems. You know, how it is. Sometimes, you can just tell. Now and then, sheâd mention his drinking and his building debt. Tell you the truth,â she said, arching a knowing eyebrow, âI wasnât all that surprised. The better I got to know him, the more I realized he was all surface, all charm.â
I let her vent for a bit about Tom. She hadnât approved of his moving in with Melanie, and the fact that it hadnât worked out didnât help matters. I still wasnât sure why sheâd wanted to meet me, but Donna was a good clientâa friendâso I let her take her time getting to the real reason for her visit.
Donna shifted restlessly. âIâd like to ask a favor.â
âYes?â
âI ran by Melanieâs apartment yesterday. Her car was there, but she didnât answer my knock. After what the police said, I started wondering ⌠what if she couldnât get to the door? What if she was passed out ⌠or worse?â
Iâd also wondered if Melanie might be dead, but I hadnât wanted to bring it up. âI guess we canât rule that out, but donât jump to conclusions. Itâs possible she wasnât home.â
âBut what about her car?â
âShe could have taken a cab or a bus.â
âMaybe she saw me through the peephole and didnât answer the door.â
âWhy would she do that?â
She hesitated. âProbably ashamed to talk to me. Since things fell apart with Tom ⌠well, we havenât spoken to each other much.â She paused, then asked, âCould you run by her place and check on her? Itâs not far from here.â
I nodded. âSure. I donât know if Iâll have any more luck, but at least I can say I tried.â
âI appreciate that, Sam.â Donna smiled, looking abashed. âI guess I must seem like a silly old woman. I know sheâs grown and able to take care of herself. Maybe itâs because I never had kids of my own. Sheâs all alone, and I do almost consider her like a daughter ⌠.â
âDonât worry about it. Sheâs probably fine.â I hoped I was right.
Ď Ď Ď
After work, I stopped at my place to feed Oscar, my fifteen-pound, black and white cat, and grab something to eat. Dinner was two pieces of toast with peanut butter and salad-in-a-bag. Iâm not much of a cook, and it hardly seems worth it to dirty dishes just to feed myself. I finished the meal with chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream straight from the carton. I rinsed the knife, the spoon, and the plate and headed for Melanieâs place.
My â67 Mustang sputtered on the first turn of the ignition key and the second, then finally roared to life. It was an old relic, painted a Welchâs Grape purple and in need of a tune-up and a patch job on the muffler, which made noises that attracted curious glances from five hundred yards. It could probably have used a trip through the car wash, too. But it ranânoise, dirt, and all.
Melanie lived in the Whiskey Bottom neighborhood of North Laurel, a collection of très suburban brick townhouses and apartments just across the county line. Maybe thereâd been a lot of moonshining in that area at one time because the booze theme could be found on most of the street signs, which had names like Moonshine Hollow, Bourbon Street, Brandy Lane, and Barrelhouse Road.
I found a space near the attractive three-story apartment building swathed in greenery and accented with beds of bright red begonias. Donna said Melanie had a red Geo with a crystal hanging from the rearview mirror. It was still there. The heat of the day radiated from the blacktop as I crossed the lot. The air was heavy with humidity, but four young teensâtwo girls and two boysâwere outside, engaged in a bit of friendly competition, shooting hoops at a freestanding basket. Watching them made me sweat.
Melanie had mail in her box. Not a lot, but maybe a couple of daysâ worth. The building had an open foyer, and her apartment was one of four located on the second floor.
I climbed the steps. No newspaper lay on the mat before her door. I heard a TV set, but couldnât tell from where. I knocked and waited, then knocked again. No one answered.
Just for kicks, I checked under the mat for a spare key and found one. What a lousy place for it. There arenât many options for apartment dwellers, but I wouldnât put my key under the mat.
I picked it up, feeling a little odd about walking into someoneâs apartment uninvited. But Melanie would thank me later if she was in there, dying on the floor. I used the key in the deadbolt, which unlocked with no problem. It also fit the knob. Turning it, I stepped inside.
The door opened into a combined living room/dining area. Closed curtains made the place gloomy. Even so, I could see a chair turned onto its side and things strewn over the floor. Someone had ransacked the place.
*****
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