nurses have told me you’ve called several times to check on my aunt’s condition.”
“I’m relieved it’s improving.”
“Thank you. But you see, I thought I knew all of her friends. I don’t know how you’re connected.”
“The truth is, we only met briefly. Here. She came into the shop right before Christmas.”
Sharon gave a puzzled shake of her head. “She bought something from you?”
“A couple of things.” Dora didn’t have the heart to tell Sharon they had been gifts for her and her baby. “She mentioned she’d come in because you’d shopped here a few times.”
“Yes.” Baffled, Sharon smiled as Dora refilled her cup. “You always have such interesting things. I hope you’re not offended, but I find it a bit strange that you’d be so concerned over a woman you’d met only once, as a customer.”
“I liked her,” Dora said simply. “And it bothered me a great deal that she’d been hurt so soon after she’d been here.”
“She was shopping for me, wasn’t she?”
“She’s very fond of you.”
“Yes.” With an effort, Sharon drew herself in. She had to be strong, she knew, for her baby, for her aunt. “Whoever killed Muriel and hurt my aunt destroyed a lot of her things as well. It seems so senseless.”
“Do the police have any leads?”
“No.” Sharon blew out a helpless little sigh. “Nothing. They’ve been very kind, right from the beginning. I was hysterical by the time they got to her. I found her lying there on Christmas morning, and—and poor Muriel. I was really calm when I called for an ambulance and the police. And then I just went to pieces. It’s helped to talk to them. The police can be so detached and analytical.”
Dora thought of Jed. “I know.” After a moment’s hesitation, Dora made a decision. “Would you like to know what she bought for you?”
“Yes, I would, very much.”
“She said that you sewed. She bought you a Victorian doorstop so you could keep the door open and hear the baby in the nursery.”
“A doorstop?” A soft smile played around Sharon’s mouth. “A brass elephant—like Jumbo?”
“Exactly.”
“We found it in the corner of the living room.” Tears threatened again, but they didn’t feel so hot and desperate. “It’s just the sort of thing she’d buy for me.”
“She picked up a doorstop for the nursery, too. A china dog, curled up and sleeping.”
“Oh, I didn’t see that. It must have been broken. He shattered most of the gifts she’d wrapped, and a great deal of her things as well.” She curled her fingers around Dora’s. “It looked as though he’d gone crazy. I suppose he had to be crazy, didn’t he, to kill one old woman and leave another for dead.” But she shook the question away. “I’d like to take her something when I go to see her this morning. Could you help me pick something out?”
“I’d love to.”
Twenty minutes later, Dora watched Sharon get in her car and drive away.
“What was that all about?” Lea asked. “The poor thing looked so unhappy.”
“That was Mrs. Lyle’s niece—the woman who was attacked on Christmas Eve.”
“Society Hill? She’s in a coma, isn’t she?”
“She’s come out of it.”
Lea shook her head. “It’s awful to think that someone could break into your home that way.”
A quick shiver raced up Dora’s spine as she remembered her own experience. “Awful,” she agreed. “I hope they find him.”
“In the meantime.” Firmly, Lea turned Dora to face her. “Back to you. Why do you look so exhausted when you had the entire day off yesterday?”
“I haven’t a clue. I spent the entire day in bed.” With a smile playing around her mouth, Dora drew away to rearrange a collection of music boxes.
“Wait a minute.” Eagle-eyed, Lea shifted to get another look at Dora’s face. “Oh,” she said, drawing the word out into three ascending syllables. “The light dawns. Jed.”
Dora opened the lid on an enameled box that played the “Moonlight Sonata.” “What about him?”
“Don’t play that game with me, Isadora. Just whose bed did you spend the day in?”
“My own.” Then she grinned and closed the box. “And it was incredible.”
“Really?” Lea was all ears. “Okay, spill it.”
“Well, he’s . . . I can’t,” she realized, baffled. “This is different.”
“Uh-oh,” Lea said, and grinned, ear to dainty ear. “Do you remember what I did the first time John kissed me?”
“You came home, crawled into bed and cried for an hour.”
“That’s right. Because I was scared and thrilled and absolutely sure I’d just met the man I was going to be with for the rest of my life.” The memory made her smile now, sweetly. Smugly.
“You were eighteen years old,” Dora pointed out. “Overly dramatic and a virgin.”
“So you’re twenty-nine, overly dramatic and you’ve never been in love before.”
A windy sigh. “Of course I have.”
“No, you haven’t.”
Dora picked up a dust cloth. “I haven’t said I’m in love with Jed.”
“Are you?”
“I don’t know.”
“There,” Lea said triumphantly. “My point exactly. If you weren’t, you’d say so. Since you are, you’re confused. Where is he, anyway?”
“Out.” Because she felt she’d been outmaneuvered, Dora scowled. “I don’t keep him on a leash.”
“Testy,” Lea said with a wise nod. “Another sure sign.”
“Look, I’ll analyze my own feelings when I have the time.” She snatched up the cloth again and began to polish the already spotless countertop. “Ever since he came around, things have been upside down. The shop’s broken into, the apartment’s searched. I’m nearly raped and you—”
“What?” Lea was around the counter in two strides, gripping Dora’s hands. “What did you say?”
“Damn.” Though she tried to tug her hands away, Dora knew she’d already gone too far. “It wasn’t really as bad as that. I exaggerated because you made me mad.”
“Just hold on.” Lea strode to the door, locked it and slapped the Closed sign up. “You’re going to tell me everything, Dory, right now.”
“All right.” Resigned, Dora rubbed her hands over her face. “You’d better sit down.”
It took some time, given that Lea interrupted frequently, but it was eventually told, beginning to end.
“I want you to promise not to tell Mom or Dad about this until I have a chance to.”
“You go up and pack.” Lea sprang to her feet. With her eyes glittering blue, she looked to Dora like a slim blonde angel ready to hurl her harp and halo. “You’re moving in with John and me.”
“I am not. Honey, I’m perfectly safe here.”
“Oh, perfectly,” Lea tossed back.
“I am. The police are looking for him, and they’ve even put guards on the building.” She laughed then, adoring Lea. “Jesus, honey, I’m sleeping with a cop.”
That mollified, a little. “I don’t want you left alone. Not for five minutes.”
“For heaven’s sake—”
“I mean it.” The gleam in Lea’s eyes left no room for argument. “If you don’t promise, I’ll get John and we’ll haul you home with us. And I want to talk to Jed myself.”
“Help yourself.” Dora tossed up her hands in surrender. It was impossible to play big sister with a woman who was the dictatorial mother of three. “He won’t tell you anything I haven’t. I’m absolutely, completely safe. Guaranteed.”
They both shrieked when the door rattled.
“Hey!” Terri shouted and banged. “What are we doing locked up in the middle of the day?”
“Not a word,” Dora muttered, and crossed over to unlock the door. “Sorry, we were taking a break.”
Terri pursed her lips as she studied the two women. The ai
r smelled suspiciously of a family fight. “Looks like you both could use one. Busy morning?”
“You could say so. Listen, there’s a new shipment in the back. Why don’t you unpack it? I’ll price it when you’re done.”
“Sure.” Obliging, Terri shrugged out of her coat as she strode to the storeroom. She could always listen through the door if things got interesting.
“We’re not finished, Isadora.”
“We are for now, Ophelia.” Dora kissed Lea’s cheek. “You can grill Jed when he gets back.”
“I intend to.”
“And nag him, too, will you? I’d like to see how he handles it.”
Lea puffed up with indignation. “I don’t nag.”
“World’s champ,” Dora muttered in her best subliminal voice.
“And if you think this is a joke, you’re—”
“Hey, Dora.” Terri poked her head out of the storeroom. There was a puzzled smile on her face, and the copy of the computer-generated picture of DiCarlo in her hand. “Why do you have a picture of the guy who came in Christmas Eve?”
“What?” Dora struggled to keep her voice even. “Do you know him?”
“He was our last customer Christmas Eve. I sold him the Staffordshire—the mama dog with pup?” She glanced down at the picture, wiggled her brows. “Believe me, he looks better in person than he does here. He a pal of yours?”
“Not exactly.” Her heart had begun to dance in her chest. “Terri, did he pay cash?”
“For the Staffordshire? Not likely. He charged it.”
Excitement rippled into Dora’s heart, but she was actress enough to void it from her voice. “Would you mind digging up the receipt for me?”
“Sure.” Terri’s face fell. “Don’t tell me the guy’s a deadbeat. I got approval on the card.”
“No, I’m sure it’s all right. I just need the receipt.”
“Okay. He had some Italian name,” she added. “Delano, Demarco, something.” Shrugging, she closed the door behind her.
“DiCarlo,” Brent said, handing Jed a rap sheet. “Anthony DiCarlo, New York. Mostly small-time stuff: larceny, confidence games, a couple of B and Es. Did a short stretch for extortion, but he’s been clean as a whistle for nearly six years.”
“Not being caught doesn’t make you clean,” Jed murmured.
“NYPD faxed this to me this morning. There’s a cooperative detective up there who’s going to do some legwork for me. Shouldn’t be too hard to find out if our boy has an alibi for the other night.”
“If he has one, it’s fantasy. This is him.” Jed tossed the file photo onto Brent’s desk. “Maybe I should take a trip to New York.”
“Maybe you should give our friends in the Big Apple a little time.”
“I’ll think about it.”
“You look pretty relaxed for a man who’s thinking about kicking ass.”
Jed’s lips twitched. “Do I?”
“Yep.” Leaning back, Brent nodded. Mary Pat would have commended him on his romantic radar. “That’s what I thought,” he murmured, and grinned. “Dora’s quite a woman. Nice going, Captain.”
“Shut up, Chapman,” Jed said mildly on his way out. “Keep me posted, will you?”
“Sure.” Brent waited until the door closed before he picked up the phone to report to Mary Pat.
CHAPTER
EIGHTEEN
He did think about it. Jed knew Dora would be down in the shop, so he went straight up to his own apartment. He stripped down to gym shorts and a T-shirt before settling on the bench press. He’d think better after he’d worked up a sweat.
He had to decide how much to tell her. She had a right to know it all—but there was a matter of rights, and a matter of what was best for her. If he knew Dora, and he was beginning to think he knew her very well, she’d want to do something about it. One of a cop’s biggest headaches was civilian interference.
Not that he was a cop, he reminded himself, and kept up a steady rhythm with the weights. But when a man had spent nearly half his life on the force, he couldn’t be considered a civilian either.
New York could handle it. But they didn’t have a vested interest. All Jed had to do was let the image of Dora’s pale, unconscious face swim into his mind to remind him just how vested his interest was.
A trip to New York, some poking around wouldn’t infringe overmuch on the official investigation. And if he could do something tangible, something real, he might not feel so . . .
He paused with the barbell fully extended and scowled at the ceiling. Just how did he feel? Puffing out air, he lowered the bar again, lifted, lowered.
Useless, he realized. Unsettled. Unfinished.
Nothing in his life had ever really had a closure because nothing had ever really been open to begin with. It had been easier to keep himself shut off, removed. Easier, hell, Jed thought. It had been necessary for survival.
So why had he joined the force? He supposed he had finally recognized his own need for order, for discipline and, yes, even for family. The job had given him all of that. And more. A sense of purpose, of satisfaction and of pride.
Donny Speck had cost him that; but this wasn’t about Speck, he reminded himself. It wasn’t about Elaine. This was about protecting the woman across the hall. The woman he’d begun to feel something for.
That was something else to think about.
He didn’t stop lifting when he heard the knock, but his lips curved when she called his name.
“Come on, Skimmerhorn, I know you’re in there. I need to talk to you.”
“It’s open.”
“How come you make me lock mine?” she demanded. She walked in looking all business in a hunter-green suit, and smelling of sin. “Oh.” Her eyebrows lifted as she took a long slow scan of his body stretched out on the bench, muscles oiled with sweat and rippling. Her heart did a fast somersault. “Sorry to interrupt your male ritual. Shouldn’t there be drums pounding or some sort of pagan chant in the background?”
“Did you want something, Conroy?”
“I want a lot of things. Red suede shoes, a couple of weeks in Jamaica, this Böttger teapot I saw over on Antique Row.” She walked over to kiss his upside down lips, tasted salt. “How soon will you be finished—I might get excited watching you sweat.”
“Looks like I’m finished now.” Jed rattled the bar back in the brace.
“You won’t be so cranky after I tell you what I found out.” She paused, dramatic timing. “Terri recognized the picture.”
“What picture?” Jed slid off the bench, reached for a towel.
“The picture. The magic picture we put together on the computer. Jed, he was in the shop on Christmas Eve.” Excitement had her pacing the room, heels clicking on bare wood, her hands gesturing. “His name is—”
“DiCarlo, Anthony,” Jed interrupted, amused when Dora’s jaw dropped. “Last known address East Eighty-third Street, New York.”
“But how did you . . . Damn.” Sulking, she shoved the receipt back in her pocket. “You could have at least pretended to be