Read Murder on the Bucket List Online

Authors: Elizabeth Perona

Tags: #mystery, #mystery fiction, #mystery novel, #bucket list, #murder on the list, #murder on a bucket list, #perona, #liz perona

Murder on the Bucket List (2 page)

“Shouldn't we cover the body or something?” asked Mary Ruth, carrying a pool towel she'd picked up on the way back over.

Charlotte straightened up and gave her a withering glance. “Of course not. We should have left it undisturbed until the police got here. Technically, Francine shouldn't even have flopped him over.”

“I didn't know for sure he was dead until I could get a good look at him!”

“Don't get defensive, Francine. I'm just saying …”

Joy returned with a flashlight at that moment but stopped several feet short of the body. She tried to shine a light on it, but her hand shook so badly it was like watching a TV game show where a spotlight dances over the audience before they call up a contestant.

Mary Ruth snatched the flashlight. She widened her stance so she could bend over closer to the body. She shined the light into dead man's face. “Oh, my God! I know who that is. That's Friederich Guttmann!”

Charlotte leaned over the body again. “Really? Who's Friederich Guttmann?”

“He's a race car mechanic.”

Alice came running out of the house waving a portable phone. She stopped short when she saw the dead face revealed by the flashlight. She made the sign of the cross again. “That's Friederich Guttmann.”

“Does everyone know who this guy is except me?” asked Charlotte.

“I didn't know who he was,” Francine admitted. “What was it you were going to say, Alice?”

“Oh. Dispatch is sending an ambulance and a squad car. They should be here any minute.”

Jostled by all the activity, Alice's robe fell open. The women stared at her nude body underneath. Then they stared at each other.

Mary Ruth looked under her robe and screamed. Then they all screamed.

“Keep it down out there. It's twelve fifteen in the morning,” came a shout from next door. Francine recognized the disapproving voice of Darla Baggesen, the nosy homeowners' association president who lived beside Alice.
This isn't good
, she thought.

She scurried to find her robe. Everyone fell in behind her like they were the Keystone Cops.

At least they're not screaming any more.

“We need to get our stories straight about what we're doing out here in the pool this late at night,” said Mary Ruth.

“Never mind that,” Alice said. “What am I going to tell the police when they ask me what a dead body is doing in my shed?”

“Decomposing,” suggested Charlotte.

“We're going to tell the police we were swimming. Nothing more,” Alice insisted.

Francine shook her head. “We can try to avoid the skinny-dipping part, but my guess is it'll come out somehow. I think we should tell the whole truth from the beginning. Otherwise we'll get ourselves in trouble.”

Mary Ruth gasped. “No, no skinny-dipping. We just went for a midnight swim. Everyone agree?”

“Don't count on my silence,” said Joy. “This'll land us on the front page of the
Indianapolis Star
. Number six on my list.” (Be on Front Page of Major Metropolitan Newspaper.)

Squabbling over what to tell the police, the women scrambled into the house.

two

Charlotte herded the women,
still straightening their clothes, into Alice's living room. She peered at them through the thick lenses of her white-framed glasses. “Focus, ladies!”

Francine knew what was coming. Charlotte fancied herself a sleuth. It would take everything she had to keep Charlotte out of trouble now that a dead body had been found.

Francine took one side of the sofa. Alice sat in her usual place, a blue paisley upholstered chair. Joy sat by the window.

Charlotte remained standing but leaned on her cane. “You hear those sirens?” She put her right hand to her ear for emphasis. “They'll be here any minute. Francine is right. We need to tell the truth, because five people can't keep a lie going for that long. And if it comes out we've lied once, they'll wonder what other things we've lied about. So we tell the truth, agreed?”

Alice smoothed her white linen pants, trying to make them look neat. “I disagree, and I know Mary Ruth would too, if she were here.”

“Is Mary Ruth
still
getting dressed?”

Alice pointed a finger at Charlotte. “It takes her a little longer than the rest of us in the best of circumstances. And these are far from the best.”

“I'm here now.” Mary Ruth bustled into the living room, running her hands through her short brown hair, trying to get it under control.
She normally used a straightener to keep it flat. She wore a loose flowered blouse that billowed out over navy blue elastic waist pants. “Do I look okay? What's happened?”

“Nothing yet,” Alice said. “But Charlotte is about to bully us into agreeing to tell the police we were skinny-dipping.”

“Oh, must we?” Mary Ruth's face was red, and she mopped her forehead with a handkerchief.

Charlotte stared them down. “No, of course not. Feel free to tell them whatever story pops into your head. Technically, you hadn't gone skinny-dipping yet. But know that Francine and I intend to tell the truth. At least our stories will agree. Once they've heard it from us, they're bound to recognize that's why we were here and that you simply chickened out.”

Joy stopped brushing her hair and pointed the brush at Mary Ruth. “You
can't
tell them you
didn't
skinny-dip. Then it might come out that I didn't either, and I won't get on the front page of the
Star
.” Francine recalled Joy's #6 item specified a Major Metropolitan Newspaper,
which ruled out the local
Hendricks County Flyer
.

“I guess you don't leave us any choice.” Mary Ruth flopped onto the other side of the couch from Francine, grumbling. She pulled a small mirror out of her purse. “But I don't look presentable enough to be on the front page of the
Star
.”

Alice fingered the cross on her necklace. “ None of us do. And God forbid it gets out that I host nude parties.”

“Maybe you just think that,” Joy said. “Maybe once the word gets out, other people will be doing it and you'll look like a trendsetter.”

Alice did not look convinced.

“This will all blow over,” Francine said. “Once the police start focusing on the dead body, no one will remember what we were doing here.”

Charlotte continued in her authoritative voice. “Speaking of the dead body, I know how this investigation is going to go down. First, they'll send a patrolman to check things out. He'll no sooner see the dead body and then he'll call for a detective and probably the coroner. Eventually we'll be separated for questioning. Fortunately, Alice's house could host a bed and breakfast convention. Alice, be thinking of rooms they can put us in.”

Francine slipped her cell phone out of her purse. She thought the comparison to a bed and breakfast wasn't far off. Alice's house had five bedrooms, all themed, like the Blue Room, the Tea Rose Room, and the Queen Anne Room. Plus, her basement with its half kitchen could house a family of four.

Alice gripped the arms of the leather club chair she was sitting on. “Five rooms! But the housekeeper hasn't been here in a week, and the basement …”

“Not to worry, dear,” Joy said. “Just use the four bedrooms upstairs and your master suite on this floor. No one even has to go into the basement.” She patted the pockets of her pants. “Has anyone seen my phone? I want to text my grandniece about this.”

Francine thought the sirens sounded like they were just outside. She touched an app on her own iPhone and typed a name in the search bar.

Charlotte stood behind her. “What are you doing?”

“I'm Googling Friederich Guttmann.” She made a selection and the web page loaded. “You want to hear what I've found?”

Joy perched at the large bay window. “Three squad cars! They sent three squad cars. Isn't that overkill?”

“For heaven's sake, it's a murder, Joy. In Brownsburg, Indiana!” said Charlotte. “I'll bet there'll be more here before this is over.”

“How long will this take, do you think?” Mary Ruth asked, still looking into her handheld mirror. “
My eyes are already so bloodshot you can't tell if they're brown or I'm one of those vampires on
True Blood
. I need some sleep. I have a catering job at lunch.”

The doorbell rang. Everyone froze.

When the silence continue a few seconds too long, Francine pulled herself to her full height, which at 5'10", was taller than the others. “You should get that, Alice,”
she prompted, trying to gently take command.

“Oh. Oh, yes.” Alice got up and started for the front door. As she crossed in front of the window, red and blue flashing lights streamed in, rotating across their faces and splashing against the walls.

The sirens stopped, leaving an eerie silence. Then the doorbell rang, shattering the quiet. Alice tentatively opened the front door. An authoritative voice issued some kind of identification and she backed away, letting the officers in.

The lead patrol officer turned out to be female, but she was very no-nonsense. As soon as she determined the body was indeed dead, she called for a detective to take over the investigation, just as Charlotte had predicted.

It seemed like only minutes before the detective arrived. The patrol officer stepped outside to brief him. The women were nervous, but they exhaled
in relief when they saw Detective Brent Judson enter.

Jud was a Brownsburg native, still boyishly handsome in his mid-thirties. He'd received his degree in criminal justice from Indiana University before landing a spot on the Brownsburg force. He and Francine's boys had played football together. He was dressed in civilian clothes.

“Jud!” Charlotte said, coming to life. She hobbled across the living room. “Great to see you.”

“Your reputation precedes you, Mrs. Reinhardt,” he said. He spotted Francine and walked past Charlotte. “When
they notified me and I recognized whose neighborhood the call came from, I hurried over. I'm sorry to see you're one of the people who discovered the body, Mrs. McNamara. And you, Mrs. Jeffords. Are you okay?”

Alice nodded, but not convincingly.

Francine patted his forearm. “We're fine, Jud. But you must remember to call me Francine.”

Charlotte poked at him. “Hello, Jud.”

“Ah, Mrs. Reinhardt …”

“Charlotte.”

“… Charlotte, good to see you as well.” He spoke to the group. “If you will all please follow the instructions the officers will give you, we're going to get this investigation under way as quickly as possible. He turned to Alice. “Mrs. Jeffords—Alice—if you'll please show me where you found the body?”

Alice finally spoke up. “Well, actually I didn't find it.”

Charlotte couldn't contain her excitement any longer. “Plopped right out of the door to the pool shed when it was opened. I'll show you.”

Jud gently restrained her.

She glared at him. “Don't you want to hear the story?”

“Oh, indeed, I do. We're going to want to hear it from each of you. But for now, I'm going to ask you to not discuss it further. Just do as the officers ask, and we'll try to get you back to as much normalcy as we can, given the circumstances.” He took a breath. “And now, Alice, the body, please.”

_____

Charlotte and Joy were in the process of telling the police officers which rooms they wanted to be questioned in when a second sleepy-eyed detective arrived. He told them to quiet up and dispatched them to rooms of his choosing for questioning.

“I don't know what the pecking order is,” Charlotte told Francine under her breath, “but I don't want to be interviewed by the backup detective.”

“No talking,” he said.

Francine ended up in the blue bedroom, upstairs at the back end of the house. She'd heard of it but had never been in it, despite having known Alice for twenty-five years. Blue Room was not an understatement, either: the walls were sky blue, the carpet a turquoise, the bed comforter navy, and the pillows—of which there seemed to be a dozen—spanned the spectrum from a light aqua to teal. Alice's only consent to non-blue seemed to be the white frames on a series of race car photographs placed around the room. Francine spotted a CD player on the dresser and hoped for a Ray Charles collection.
Alice wouldn't catch the subtle humor
,
though,
she thought.

She'd been in the room long enough to discover how uncomfortably the daybed served as a couch when Jud opened the door. He crossed the room and sat opposite her in an office chair one of the policemen had rolled in. “Now, Francine,” he said, “please tell me again what you and the other women were doing when you found the body.”

There was simply no way to soften it. And besides, by the amusement in his eyes, Francine was fairly certain he'd interviewed someone else first and knew the answer.
Probably Charlotte, but possibly Joy
. “Skinny-dipping,” she said. “It was on Joy's list.”

“List?”

“Her Sixty List. Her bucket list of sixty things to do before she dies. We made them when Alice turned sixty.
She was the first. Sixty at sixty. We thought that was significant. Each of us has our own list, although some of them have overlapping items. You know what bucket lists are.”

He nodded. “I saw the movie with Morgan Freeman. You've been working on these a long time, then?”

“Twelve years. Alice is seventy-two now. The rest of us aren't far behind.”

“Are you close to finishing your lists?”

“Goodness, no. We did the easy ones first. Then it got harder. We dropped
it for a long time. We only came back to them recently.” Francine didn't tell him why. Joy's recent bout with breast cancer and then Charlotte's difficult knee surgery had them worried about their health. Now the lists seemed more important. “You're probably too young to have a bucket list.”

He didn't reply. “So have you had this skinny-dipping event planned for some time?”

“Six weeks.”

He seemed surprised. “Six weeks for that?”

“Alice wanted Larry to be gone so she wouldn't have to create an excuse to get him out of the house all night. We didn't want anyone else to know. Well, at least she didn't.”

“What did you tell your husband?”

“That we were having a Sunday-night slumber party. Which, I should add, is not a lie.”

Jud didn't comment one way or the other. “Why was Larry out of the house?”

“Alice and her husband are into real estate and rental properties. He's at a convention in Las Vegas. He left on Friday.”

“You kept this slumber party from everyone?”

She nodded. “I didn't tell anyone. I can't vouch for the others.”

“You seem to have gone to a great deal of trouble to make it dark. The security light in the Baggesens' back yard …”

“I don't know anything about how that happened.” That also was true. Francine had heard something about Charlotte using a shotgun, but she didn't see the incident herself.

Jud made more notes. Francine tried to sit up straight on the daybed and keep her hands in her lap, prim and proper. Even though she knew Jud well enough that she had almost given him a hug instead of returning his handshake in the living room, he was keeping the interview very professional, and she felt she should treat it the same way.

But the daybed was uncomfortable.
This thing must be hell to sleep on
.

“Tell me how Mary Ruth found the body.”

She stopped twisting and focused on the thirty-six year-old detective's hazel eyes. “She smelled something unusual coming from the shed. She said it had the bouquet of an outhouse, but then you should hear her describe a wine. We thought maybe it was a dead raccoon. She opened it and Friederich Guttmann's body fell out.”

“We haven't identified the deceased yet.”

“Everyone who knows auto racing in our group seems to be pretty sure it's Friederich Guttmann. He looked to be about fifty,
which matches his bio, and his face matches the image I pulled up on Google before you got here.” She held up her cell phone.

Jud chuckled at that. “You have a smartphone.”

“And why should I not have one? Doesn't your mother?”

“Mom's not very tech-savvy,” he replied. “So Mary Ruth both found the body and identified him?”

“You say that as though it's suspicious. According to Google, he was pretty well known.”

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