to the end with a great mind for solving whodunits.
Recently Cindy had been writing about a cat burglar who’d been doing second-story jobs, always breaking in when the homeowners
were having dinner on the first floor and the alarm system was turned off. This burglar made off with only jewelry—which had
not turned up. Cindy had dubbed the cat burglar “Hello Kitty,” and it stuck.
Here’s what was known about Hello Kitty: he was fit, deft, and fast, and had a huge pair of stones.
“Think about it,” Conklin said. “Hello Kitty seems to know when these wealthy people are having dinner parties. What if he’s
part of the same social circle? If Casey Dowling recognized him, maybe shooting her was his only way out.”
“Not a bad theory,” I said to Conklin as we took the walk up to the front steps of the manse next door. “But wait a sec. What
did you make of Dowling’s wet hair?”
“He washed off his wife’s blood.”
“So he leaped into the shower after Casey was murdered,” I said. “It seems weird to me.”
“So what’s your theory? Homicide One Oh One?”
“Why not? Because Dowling’s a movie star? Something about him isn’t right. He told Clapper he heard two gunshots. He told
us he heard a noise, and then sometime after that, he heard a second sound, and that time he was sure it was a shot.”
My partner said, “Could be he was just summing up, telling the story in shorthand.”
“Could be shorthand,” I said. “Or could be he’s making up the story as he goes along and can’t keep it straight.”
Chapter 14
THE HOME NEXT to the Dowlings’ was set back from the street and had a groundskeeper’s house in the side yard and two deluxe
cars in the driveway.
I pressed the bell, and chimes rang. The front door opened, and a brown-haired boy of about ten, wearing a rugby shirt over
pajama bottoms, gazed up at us and asked who we were.
“I’m Sergeant Boxer. This is Inspector Conklin. Are your parents at home?”
“Kellll-yyyy!”
The boy turned out to be Evan Richards, and Kelly was his babysitter, a woman in her midtwenties who had been watching
Project Runway
in the media room when she heard the sirens screaming up the street.
“Casey Dowling was killed?” she asked. “That’s crazy. That burglar could have come here! Evan, can you grab the phone? I have
to call your parents.”
“I think I saw something,” the boy said. “I was staring out my bedroom window, and someone ran past the house. Like, in the
shadows under the trees.”
“Could you describe him?” Conklin asked the boy.
Evan shook his head. “Just someone running. Wearing black. I heard him huffing as he ran.”
I asked if this person was big or small, if there was anything special about the way he ran.
“I thought he was just a jogger, you know? He was wearing a cap, I think. I was looking down at the top of his head.”
Conklin left his card with the boy’s babysitter and asked Evan to please call if he remembered anything else. Then we headed
down the block toward the next house.
I said to Conklin, “So maybe we have a live witness to Kitty making a run for it.” And then my cell phone rang.
Yuki, sending a text message:
Call me.
I hit the recall button, and Yuki picked up.
“God! I know her!” Yuki said.
“Know who?”
“Casey Dowling.”
Frickin’ grapevine. How could she have heard already?
“We went to law school together, Lindsay. Damn it. Casey was a sweetheart. A doll. When you catch the shooter, I’m going to
fight for the case, and then I’m going to send Casey Dowling’s killer straight to hell.”
Chapter 15
SARAH WELLS SHUT her bedroom door and locked it. She was still panting from her escapade, her hands still shaking. She stood
in front of her mirror, fluffed up her hair, and looked at herself—hard.
Did it show?
Her skin was so white, it was almost transparent, and her brown eyes were huge. She thought about her husband telling her