“I told you, I can’t go inside!” Her whisper sharpened. “Will you please listen to me?”
He clicked off the game. “Go ahead.”
“I was in Malcolm’s room tonight. Here. At Peggy’s house.”
“Who’s Malcolm?”
“Her nephew. He used to be Bill Ingraham’s boyfriend.”
“His
“I’m trying to tell you!”
He pushed up his glasses and pinched the bridge of his nose. “Go ahead.”
“I got talking with someone at the party about Peggy’s business, and about Malcolm, and I thought it would be a good idea to see if there was anything connecting him to Ingraham’s death—in his room.”
“How much had you had to drink at this point?”
“That doesn’t matter! Listen. Malcolm knows something about Ingraham’s death. I’m sure of it. And he’s selling drugs!”
He walked past his mother, who was methodically folding and stuffing envelopes for a fund-raiser, listening to his every word. He opened the fridge and grabbed a soda. “Uh-huh.”
“Don’t patronize me. I know he’s selling drugs because he was talking to someone in the room with him.”
That brought him up short. “This guy was in the room at the same time you were?” His mom’s head perked right up at that. He frowned at her.
“He and another man. The other guy was talking about Ingraham’s death. At least I’m pretty sure he was. He was scared. And then Malcolm gave him something, some sort of drug.”
He put the soda can down on the counter, unopened. “What did they do? Shoot up? Do you know what they were using?”
“No, not like that. Like a payment. Or a payoff. I didn’t actually see anything. I was hiding in the bathroom.”
He lifted his keys from a row of hooks next to the back door. “You were hiding in the bathroom.”
“Yes. And then the other man left, the one who was worried, and Malcolm started making phone calls to potential buyers. And to a friend named Poppy.”
The priest he knew spoke in a clear, well-organized way, one thought flowing coherently into another. But this garbled story…He couldn’t tell if she was drunk or delusional, or maybe had been hit on the head.
“He just stayed there on the phone, with the music going, and I needed to leave, because all I could think about was that I’d be in deep trouble if a drug lord found me in his shower stall while he was peddling his wares. Not to mention the way he was talking about how they were going to take care of the other man. So I climbed out of his bathroom window and—”
“You did what? Are you nuts?”
“It was the only way out. So I climbed out of his bathroom window, jumped onto a porch roof, and made it back to my car. I thought I had better call you, because you can get a warrant and search Malcolm’s room. He keeps the stuff under his bed. Oh, and he has a gun, too.”
He pocketed his keys. “And why is it you can’t go back into the house?” His mom had given up pretending to do work and was staring with undisguised interest at him.
“I threw away my sandals. And I lost two buttons on my top, and wiped off most of my makeup. I’m a complete mess.”
It was the first time he had ever heard Clare say anything that indicated she had any awareness of how she looked at all. If her story hadn’t been so completely bizarre, he’d have teased her about it. But she spoke with an earnest literalness that undoubtedly came out of a bottle but made her sound like a kid.
“Where are you right now?”
“In the passenger seat.”
“No, I mean where is Peggy Landry’s house?”
“Um, on the Old Lake George Road. You turn off at a place called Lucher’s Corners.”
“I know where that is. What’s her house number?”
“I can’t remember. Wait—” He heard the sound of papers flipping around. She came back on. “Okay, I got the directions she gave me. Number two thousand twelve.”
“Okay, this is what we’re going to do. You stay put in your car. I’m going to come get you and take you home.”
“No! That’s not why I called! You have to come and arrest him! I wouldn’t have called for a ride. That would be imposing on you.” She said “imposing on you” in the same tone of voice someone might use to say “sacrificing your firstborn child.”
“I’ll just stay here until I feel sober enough to drive safely. Do not come out here to give me a ride,” Clare told him.
He wasn’t going to waste time arguing with a woman under the influence. Not over the phone, with his mom hanging on every word. “I’ll be there in about a half hour. Stay put.” He turned the phone off and replaced it in its cradle.
“Trouble?”
He nodded. “She needs a ride. And she thinks she may have some information about this murder we’re working on.”
His mother’s face changed from amused to worried. “Maybe you should call for backup.”
He shook his head. “It’s not like that, Mom. And Clare’s a little under the influence. I don’t want to embarrass her in front of anyone else. I’ll take her to her house and then head home from there.”