Murder by Page One Olivia Matthews (best e ink reader for manga .txt) đ
- Author: Olivia Matthews
Book online «Murder by Page One Olivia Matthews (best e ink reader for manga .txt) đ». Author Olivia Matthews
âStart from the beginningâand stop biting your nails.â I took my seat at the head of the table.
Jo took a deep drink of the herbal brew. âThe deputies came to my house around eight oâclock this morning. I was on my way to church.â
Iâd attended the Saturday evening Mass and lit a candle for Fiona. âWhich deputies?â I asked.
âThe older one who questioned you, Jed Whatley, and the tall one who questioned me, Errol Cole.â
âGo on.â I sipped my coffee. For me, it was still too early for tea.
âThey asked me tons and tons of questions. How well had I known Fiona? Had we had any disagreements? Can anyone confirm I hadnât checked on her while she was in my storage room? Well, of course I hadnât checked on her! And if sheâd been as rude to the deputies as sheâd been to me, they wouldnât have checked on her, either.â
Tension seized my shoulders. âDid you actually say that to them?â
âOf course not,â Jo grumbled. âThey wouldâve taken it as a confession.â
âProbably. The deputies questioned you again, but what makes you think youâre a suspect?â
âWhen I asked them if I was a suspect, they said yes.â Jo pushed herself up from the table and paced the width of the room. Thank goodness Phoenix had left. Her agitation wouldâve given him a coronary. âThey said, âWell, maâam, the murder did take place in your store.ââ Jo deepened her natural cadence to impersonate the male deputies.
Although I was starting to share her concern, I made a good faith effort to be the voice of reason. âThis is only the second day of the investigation. Right now, everyoneâs a suspect.â
Jo stopped and stared at the black-and-white picture of the New York Public Library, my previous place of employment. Iâd mounted the photo in a thin black nine-by-twelve-inch metal frame to display on my wall. Odds were Jo wasnât seeing Patience and Fortitude, the marble lions that greeted the libraryâs guests. Instead, images from her disturbing early-morning visit from the deputies were surely playing on a loop in her mind.
âAs I told the deputies, I was in the storage room with Fiona for probably less than ten minutes. From there, I went straight to check on the event setup with my team. I was helping them arrange the tables and chairs when Zelda showed up, and then you arrived with Spence.â
What a relief. âYou have people who can corroborate that you didnât return to the storage room until you, Spence, and I went to get Fiona.â
Jo turned to me. âYes, but as the deputies pointed out, that means I was the last person to see Fiona alive.â
âNo, you werenât. The killer was.â
âAnd the deputies think Iâm the killer.â Jo dragged both hands through her hair. Freed from the ponytail she wore at work, the thick raven tresses tumbled halfway down her back. âIâm scared, Marvey. I donât have money for a lawyer.â
âYou wonât need one.â I needed to believe that was true. We both did.
âOh, yes, I will.â Jo resumed her pacing. âIâm not convinced these Bulldog fans will do an unbiased investigation.â
What, now?
Jo had caught me off guard. Donât get me wrongâNew Yorkers were avid sports fans. But college football wasnât a thing in New York. It was a thing in the South, though. A very big thing.
I regarded Jo with mild concern as I tracked her journey back across my dining room. Connecting a murder investigation to a college rivalry sounded insane. âI read the Crierâs article on Fionaâs murder. The deputies are taking this case very seriously. This is about justice for Fiona, not a college prank.â
Jo stopped with her back to me. âIâve never felt so isolated.â
âThe investigationâs just started. You didnât have a motive to kill Fiona, nor did you have the opportunity.â
âThen why do I feel like Iâm going to wake up tomorrow and be served with a warrant for my arrest?â
What was it about the deputiesâ behavior that had made Jo so paranoid? âThatâs not going to happen.â
We were silent for several moments. Jo paced while I sat, holding my pendant like a talisman. Todayâs image was an orange-and-black illustration of the cover of Maya Angelouâs 1969 classic I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings.
I monitored Jo as she wandered past me again. âThe deputies will get on the right track in a day or two. Iâm sure of it.â
She stopped beside the table. Her knuckles showed white as she gripped the back of the chair. âI canât sit around and wait to be railroaded. I need to do something. Now. I need someone on my side.â Her gaze locked onto me. âMarvey, youâre on my side.â
âOf course. I know you didnât do this.â
âHelp me prove it.â
My mind went blank. âHow?â
Jo pulled out the chair and sat. âBy helping me find proof that clears me. All Iâm asking for is reasonable doubt.â
âYou have reasonable doubt.â I leaned into the table, anxious to convince her. âYour team, Zelda, Spence, and I all saw you outside the storage room after Fiona had arrived. If youâd killed her, you wouldâve been covered in blood.â
Jo was shaking her head. âI need something more to get the deputies to stop focusing on me.â
âJo, Iâm a librarian, not a crime fighter.â
âPlease, Marvey. Thereâs no one else I can turn to.â
Urgh. I squeezed my eyes shut to escape the plea in Joâs wide dark stare. What did I know about investigating murders, coming up with motives, suspects, timelines, and evidence?
ButâŠBarbara Gordon/Batgirl was a librarian. And so was I. At its core, an investigation was research, learning about people, tracking down clues, and putting together the results of your inquiries. I could do that.
Couldnât I?
âAll right.â I exhaled the words before I could change my mind.
Jo popped off her chair and wrapped her
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