“This,” Kit whispered so faintly they could hardly hear her, “this has to be Rick Alderson
Pan’s yellow eyes glowed. “What would Joe Grey do?”
Kit and Dulcie looked at him.
The red tom smiled. “Joe would go straight for the connection, for why those two look alike. Calvin Alderson had only one son when he was sent to prison, and the cops think he’d killed the wife as well as her lover.”
Pan turned away; Kit followed him up the hall to prowl the bedrooms. This man had to have some identification, maybe a billfold left on the dresser. Dulcie returned to watching the thieves.
In the corner bedroom Pan made a flehmen face; the clothes tossed about stunk of Randall Borden and Lena.
The middle room smelled of the young man they were sure was Rick Alderson. The room was painted tan, furnished with twin beds, old mahogany headboards, and a dresser that might have been there fifty years. And, again, decorated with strewn-about clothes, jeans, shirts, shorts, and smelly socks. When they heard a cell phone ring from the kitchen, heard Rick answer then chair legs scrape and his footsteps coming, they slipped under the bed.
Rick sat down on the bed, his cell phone to his ear. “Okay, I’m alone.” He listened, then, “What the hell, Randall!” Silence, then, “They’ll be after you like fleas on a dog. Where are you?” The cats could hear only one side of the conversation until he said, “We’re breaking up, my battery’s about dead, I’ll call you back on the house phone.”
Rising, he listened to the voices from the kitchen then sat down again, dialing the phone on the nightstand. When his back was to them, Kit and Pan slipped out of the room and past the bathroom into the farthest bedroom. This was Voletta’s room, her scent, the austere furnishings old and dark but the room neat and tidy, only a pink robe lying across a chair. Leaping to the nightstand, Kit slipped the phone’s headpiece off, lowered it silently to the tabletop. They crowded side by side, listening.
“. . . walked right out of that small-town jail,” Randall was saying, a smile in his gruff voice. “I told you my stomach hurt. I made it seem worse, like maybe appendicitis. That shook up the rookie on guard, he came right on in, the dummy. I knocked him out, took his keys and gun, locked him in and beat it out of there, out the back gate to the street. Tourists everywhere, I just fell in among them—they hadn’t made me change clothes because I was headed for county jail as soon as they interrogated me. They’d took my belt, though. And my phone and billfold.”
“Where are you calling from?”
“Woman working in her yard, back among some cottages. She left the front door unlocked. Don’t worry, I can see her from the window, she didn’t hear the phone ring, I put a pillow over it. I saw her husband leave, there’s not another sound in the house.”
“Oh hell, Randall. Get out of there.”
“Can you come get me?”
“Where? You can’t stay there.”
“It’ll take me a while through these fenced backyards—they’re bound to have patrols out. I can hide safe in that . . .” Footsteps
were coming, Lena’s steps. Quickly they slipped the phone back on its cradle and dove under Voletta’s bed. At the other end
of the hall, Rick was saying, “Hell, you can’t go there. That’s the first . . .” A pause, then, “That’s a
He listened again, then, “I
Above the cats, Lena was searching the drawers of Voletta’s nightstand. She rummaged until she found a bottle of pills, maybe Voletta’s pain medication. Turning to the mirror, she fussed with her hair, using Voletta’s brush before she returned to the kitchen.
In the other room, Rick had apparently hung up the phone. When the cats could hear him changing clothes, Kit beat it to the
living room, leaving Pan slipping down the hall and under the hall table to watch him.
Kit, crowded under the couch against Dulcie, wondered if, the next time someone cleaned house—and it could sure use it—they would puzzle over cat hairs mixed with the dust bunnies.
Rick came into the kitchen jangling his keys, Lena following him. “Going to pick up Randall.”
“Pick him up?” Voletta said. “He’s out of jail? How come they let him out?”
“He broke out,” Rick said, laughing. “Knocked out the guard. He left Egan locked up.”