“Give me that, you stupid beast,” she said, and lunged for the dumb animal.
The cat was quicker, of course, and leaped out of the way.
And thus began a chase around the suite: Jamie bigger and more determined, but the cat more agile and a lot faster. Sooner or later she’d corner the stupid mongrel though.
“Give me my letter!” she screamed when she had the animal cornered under the bed. But the moment she reached out a hand to grab it, it scooted out the other side.
She practically howled with frustration.“Get back here, you horrible beast!”
And then she had it: the mongrel had run into the bathroom.“Ha!” she yelled. “Not very smart, cat!”
She grabbed a bathrobe from a hook and proceeded slowly into the bathroom.
The animal sat behind the toilet, eyeing her with fear in its eyes.“Good. You should be afraid!” she shouted. “Cause when I get you, I’m going to skin you alive!”
But just then, something jumped onto her back, and moments later she howled in pain as she felt claws digging in!
She reached back to get the thing off her but it hissed and dug its claws in deeper!
“Get off me!” she screeched. “Get off, get off, get off!”
She swung around and the cat went flying and hit the wall, then dropped into the bathtub with a clunking sound. It was big and fat and red—a monstrous beast.
The gray cat, meanwhile, had escaped from behind the toilet and now raced back into the other room. Jamie descended upon the cat that had clawed her, and picked it up by the scruff of the neck. God, it was heavy. It was also hissing and twisting, to no avail.
Oh, how she hated cats—and after today she’d hate the foul breed even more.
“I’ll teach you a lesson you won’t forget,” she said, and grabbed one of Shannon’s hairbrushes from the sink. “I’ll teach you to mutilate my back with those filthy claws.”
She’d moved back into the living space and raised the brush to give the cat a good thrashing. Just then, the door to the room burst open and Laron and Shannon stood before her, Vesta and Charlie right behind them.
“What the hell are you doing with that cat?!” Shannon cried, outrage written all over her features.
“Nothing, I swear!” she said as she dropped both cat and hairbrush. “That cat over there stole… stole something from me!”
To her horror she saw that the small gray cat had jumped into Vesta’s arms and that the old lady was carefully taking the letter from between the cat’s teeth and started reading it.
“That’s mine!” she yelled. “Give it back! It’s mine!”
But Vesta looked up at her, a hint of steel in her eyes.“I think it’s time I called my son,” she said. “Laron, Shannon, grab her and make sure she doesn’t escape. I think we just caught Chickie’s killer.”
Chapter 30
Odelia, who was at the office, was surprised to get the call. When she arrived at the hotel she was even more surprised to find her four cats, all looking fairly triumphant.
“How did you guys get here?” she asked, crouching down.
“We felt we hadn’t done enough,” said Max.
“Yeah, we let you down, Odelia,” Harriet added. “So we decided to search those rooms again.”
“And Dooley found something. Gran says it proves that Jamie is the killer.”
She straightened and watched as Jamie Borowiak was led out of the hotel by two of her uncle’s officers, cuffed and looking distinctly distraught.
“I didn’t do it,” the young woman said tearfully. “I had nothing to do with this.”
“Tell that to the judge,” one of the officers snapped.
Behind Jamie, Chase now also walked out, followed by Uncle Alec and Gran.
“What’s going on?” asked Odelia. “Why did you arrest Jamie?”
“Look at this,” said her uncle, and produced a letter wrapped in a plastic cover.
She quickly read through its contents. It was a letter written by Chickie Hay, only a week ago, addressed to Jamie. It basically accused Jamie of stealing her boyfriend Charlie Dieber away from her, and warned her that she would take sweet, sweet revenge.
“There’s nothing new in this letter,” she said. “We already knew they had a fight.”
But Gran tapped the document.“Jamie tried very hard to hide this letter. She chased Dooley all around the room and practically murdered Max when he tried to protect his friend. Why would she go to all that trouble if she wasn’t the killer?”
“Because she didn’t want people to know about the rift between her and Chickie?”
“Chickie was threatening Jamie with ‘sweet, sweet revenge,’” Gran said stubbornly. “So Jamie decided to shut her up once and for all. It’s all in the letter, Odelia.”
“But it’s not, is it?”
Gran brought her face close to Odelia’s, noses touching. “Read. Between. The. Lines.”
“I think it’s pretty conclusive,” said Uncle Alec. “And I’m sure we’ll get a confession.”
“Dooley found this letter?” asked Odelia, glancing down at Dooley, who looked proud as a peacock.