
Chapter 12. Contretemps
Returning Sunday from early Mass, Jacquetta was just kicking off her shoes when the phone rang.
“Hello, Miss Strike,” said the smooth tones of Neil Dettler, “I wondered if I could bum a ride to the funeral from you.”
Jacquetta hit the ground running.
“Of course,” she said. “I want to talk to you.”
“And I,” said Dettler, “want to talk to YOU.”
Surprisingly, Neil Dettler lived in an unremarkable yellow rancher guarded by phony Spanish grillwork. A sad-eyed woman dragging a baby struggled with the gate in a lackluster manner, finally saying, “I’ll get him.”
Wow, thought Jacquetta. And people say cloistering is so old fashioned.
Neil Dettler, on the other hand, was freshly shaved, jowls burnished, clutching a glossy briefcase.
“I’d like to apologize for my wife,” he said.
You’ve got some nerve, thought Jacquetta, but the attorney misinterpreted her expression of shock and said,
“It’s a medical condition. Post-partum depression. Agoraphobia. We’re evaluating medications.”
But she’s still gets that baby and you’ve got that briefcase, thought Jacquetta.
“What did you want to talk to me about?” asked Dettler, lowering himself gingerly into the Datsun’s rust bucket passenger seat.
“There’s something missing from my book collection,” said Jacquetta, who had reaped nothing but dust and dirt exploring said collection all weekend.
“Oh?” returned Dettler coldly. Plainly indicating she was looking a gift horse in the mouth.
Not for the first time, Jacquetta cursed her own directness.
The power balance between executor and legatee was not being improved by her struggle to get the Datsun’s balky transmission into reverse.
“A signature fell out of one of them,” she explained. He stroked his moustache thoughtfully.
“Oh yes. That one you showed me. Is it valuable?”
It seemed everyone but Jacquetta was obsessed with money.
“I haven’t had a chance to look it up,” she said honestly, “But if the signature just fell out it could always be re-glued.”
“Just what are you asking me?” inquired the attorney.
“Couldn’t we look for it in the house?” Whiny. Beggy. Unpersuasive. What the hell’s the matter with me? Was it what Honey called “the Catholic girl thing?”
“We could not.” Said Dettler forcefully. “You could speak to Avalon. It’s her house now.”
“But aren’t you the executor?”
“I have that honor.” Freezing cold. “And if you’re dissatisfied with my execution you’ll need an attorney of your own.”
Wow! Jacquetta felt the forceful smack down to the bottom of her heels. Luckily the Datsun, after some coughing and spitting, switched smoothly into third gear. Wonder what he wants to ask me, thought Jacquetta. I’m guessing it isn’t “let’s go for a drink and can he be my buddy”.
He put her out of her misery.
“Ivor says you told him Miss Rainbeaux couldn’t have committed suicide,” he said. “Since by your admission you’d only just met, I wondered what made you so certain.”
She hadn’t been ready for this. I’m not just a bad detective, thought Jacquetta, I’m an incompetent human being. I can’t figure out or achieve my own goals, forget about anybody else’s. Was her ex-boss and ex-lover right, was she entering the convent to escape the world rather than solve her problems? Thinking of Nelson gave her an idea. He had been big on “interpersonal dynamics”, in fact, she’d felt uncomfortably “managed” by him on a personal level. She knew exactly what Nelson would advise in this particular circumstance. “Turn the tables.” Carry the game onto his side of the field.
“She didn’t seem like the type,” said Jacquetta. “And since you knew her so well I’m surprised you thought she was.”
Dettler looked decidedly uncomfortable. Score!
“There were health issues,” he said, clearing his throat. Like a liar! He tried – feebly – to struggle for the ball. “What did she say to you?”
Here it was! This was it!
“She was full of future plans.” Said Jacquetta. I’ve got him!
From the corner of her eye she watched him struggle for a way to ask, “And what were they?”
“There’s your exit,” he said. “Glasstown.”
Was he giving up? Or was he afraid to find out?








