Magic Hour Susan Isaacs (best books to read for self development txt) đ
- Author: Susan Isaacs
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âNow, you told me you were going to be very busy today, solving the case. How far did you get?â
âI donât know. You tell me.â
I took her hand. She pulled it away. Iâd forgotten I hadnât mentioned that I loved her, or that I wasnât marrying Lynne, so I reached out for her again. But she stood up and went over to my leather recliner. There was a pad and pen on the table next to it, and as she sat back, she picked up the pad, held it to her heart as if it were the ultimate mash note. âI read too many mysteries, see too many detective movies,â
she explained. âWhen I thought about the whole case, everything you told me, I wound up suspecting Victor Santana and Mrs. Robertson.â
âWhy, for Christâs sake?â
âBecause he was jealous of Sy and knew Sy thought he was weakâand if Lindsay was going to be fired, heâd be next.â
âAnd Marian Robertson?â
âWho knows? Because Sy went strolling into the kitchen once too often and lifted a lid off a pot and MAGIC HOUR / 379
stuck his pinkie into her bĂ©arnaise sauce and sniffed it and put a dab on his tongue and suggested a soupçon more chervil.â
âToo bad youâre over the hill. Youâd be some great cop.â
âYouâre not impressed by my deductive powers?â
âNo.â
âI didnât think youâd be. Thatâs why I gave up looking at the big pictureâbecause I keep trying to turn it into a movie.
I decided to concentrate on Sy. Analyze my last few days with him, factor in everything you told me.â
âGo ahead.â
She pushed back so the recliner was practically horizontal.
She glanced from me to the pad and back again. âThink of Syâs behavior. What was out of character for him?â
âNot concentrating when he was humping you.â
âLetâs just call it distracted behavior,â she suggested.
âDistracted behavior. Third-rate fucking. Whatever you want.â
âIt was second-rate,â she said. âWith you it was third-rate.â
âNo. You never had it so good. You know it. Admit it.â
âNope. Anyway, Sy was distracted. That could have meant something big was happeningâor about to happen. Now, what else?â I thought she was going to answer her own question, but she was waiting for me.
I thought about it. What in the last few days of Sy Spencerâs life had in any way been atypical? Love. âHeâd fallen in love with Lindsay,â I began. âAnd she hurt him. All of a sudden, the ultimate victimizer was a victim. It must have come as a real blow to him.â
âRight. And so what was going on? Under the best 380 / SUSAN ISAACS
of circumstances, Sy was a vengeful man if someone crossed him. And here was the object of his affection or obsession, his love, cheating on him. He was going to get even.â
âBut ultimately, he couldnât get even.â I told her what Eddie Pomerantz had said, that because of money, Sy would wind up keeping her on the picture.
Bonnieâs eyes got huge. âThatâs even better!â She jumped out of the recliner, came right over to me. âThink!â she ordered.
âThink about what?â
âVengeance is one thing. Thatâs what I was concentrating on. But how could he get vengeance and money?â
I bolted up. âJesus! The completion insurance!â
Bonnie grabbed onto my jacket sleeve. âIf lightning struck Lindsay, heâd get his money, heâd get his new actress.â
âAnd heâd get his revenge,â I said slowly. âOkay, but letâs slow down. The theoryâs good, but the truth of the matter is, Lindsay wasnât struck by lightning. Sy was. How does that figure?â
âStephen, ask yourself: Who was killed? Sy?â
âOf course Sy.â
âOr someone in a white, hooded bathrobe who was standing at the edge of the pool, the way Lindsay Keefe did when she came home from the set and did her laps?â
âSomeone small,â I said.
And Bonnie said: âYup. Small, just like Sy.â
C H A P T E R N I N E T E E N
Bonnie was all juiced up, talking too fast, bopping in a U-shaped path around the bed, stopping each time at the shaded window to bounce on the balls of her bare feet and peek out. She was not at her best, excited in a confined space.
âOkay,â she said. âWeâve got to figure out if this really is a possibility, and thenââ
âStop. Iâm running this show, not you. Iâm the lead detective. Youâre zero.â
âBe quiet. I know what Iâm doing.â She perched on the dresser and swung her leg back and forth fast, like a pendu-lum running amok.
âWith all due respect, you may be semi-smart, but when it comes to police procedure you donât know your ass from a hole in the ground, and we donât have time to debate hierarchy, so Iâm in charge.â She put her fingers up to her mouth, as though hiding a yawn induced by being too, too bored by such childish jockeying for position. âDonât give me that yawn crap, Bonnie.â
âIâm not giving you yawn crap.â
âNow think; donât just shoot off your mouth. In 381
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the time you knew him, did Sy ever make threats against anyone, or wish a person dead in a way that made you fear for their lives? Beyond the âI hope he diesâ we talked about.â
She swung her leg some more and finally shook her head.
âBut thatâs not to say he wasnât spiteful. He had his hate list.
If thirty years after the fact he could hurt someone who called him Peewee in junior high school, he definitely would. But he didnât think of revenge in terms of death. He didnât want to cause physical pain; he wanted to inflict maximum emotional pain on anyone who ever got in his way.â
I added another
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