Клер Донелли - The Big Kitty

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The Big Kitty: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Sunny Coolidge left her New York City newspaper job to go back to Maine and take care of her ailing father. But there’s not much excitement—or interesting work—in Kittery Harbor. So when Ada Spruance, the town’s elderly cat lady, asks for help finding her supposedly-winning lottery ticket, Sunny agrees. But when she arrives at Ada’s, with a stray tomcat named Shadow tagging along, they discover the poor woman dead at the bottom of her stairs. Was it an accident—or did Ada’s death have to do with that missing lottery ticket, which turns out to be worth six million dollars?
Town Constable Will Price suspects the worst. And Sunny’s reporter instincts soon drive her to do some investigating of her own. Even Shadow seems to have a nose for detective work. Following the trail of the purrloined ticket, Sunny and Shadow try to shed some light on a killer’s dark motives—before their own numbers are up...

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By that time, Sunny had showered herself awake, fed her father, Shadow, and herself, and put on clothes appropriate for traipsing through a dusty, dirty house.

Mike had established himself on the living room couch with the Sunday paper, assuring her he was fine. “You know how these things go,” he said. “They always happen at night. I take the little pills, go to sleep, and I’m right as rain in the morning.”

He made shooing motions at her. “Go and do what you have to do. You’re only gonna be a couple of blocks away, not a couple of towns. And you’ve got your cell phone.”

Even as he spoke, she was checking the charge on the battery.

“Okay,” Sunny said, still feeling a little nervous about the situation.

Will must have picked up on it when he came to the door. He made a point of coming inside and saying hello to Mike.

When they finally left, Shadow darted out the door before Sunny could get it closed. He managed a neat trick—evading Sunny’s attempts to pick him up while staying close to her heels. She looked up at Will, who was trying not to laugh. “Do you mind if he comes along? Maybe he knows where we’re going.”

When they had settled themselves in the pickup, Will said, “By the way, your dad looks okay. You’re who I’d have picked as the one who was up all night with chest pains.”

“Just with worry,” Sunny replied, blinking in the sunlight. Damn! She’d forgotten her sunglasses. “He hasn’t had one of these episodes in months. That leaves me wondering. Dad’s tried to put a good face on it, but I think this whole situation, especially the nonsense aimed at us, or rather, at me, is stressing him out.”

“Then let’s hope we find something to crack this case,” Will said.

That sentiment seemed overly hopeful when they arrived at the Spruance place. Sunny could see that Gordie had moved a lot of stuff around, but he hadn’t gotten rid of anything. Black trash bags lay everywhere.

Probably afraid that if he threw anything out, the lottery ticket would be hidden in it somewhere, she thought. She flexed her hands, trying to get used to the feel of the heavy rubber gloves Will had insisted they wear … along with face masks.

They stood in the living room, a glare of sunlight coming in through the window that had lost its drapes.

“This has to be where our man outside saw the flashlight,” Will said. “So we know the intruder was in here somewhere.”

“Well, we know this is one of the rooms she used,” Sunny pointed out. “It would seem reasonable to search in places she frequented. Ada said she’d lost the ticket. She didn’t say she’d hidden it and forgotten where the damn thing was.” The possibilities involved in that theory made her shudder. “Imagine checking under the liner in the litter box.”

Shadow circled around the room, making little grumbling noises. Sunny watched him, fascinated. Was he looking for the other cats who used to live here? Was he just responding to the way Gordie had rearranged things in this once-familiar room? Or had Shadow forgotten about Ada’s death—was he looking for his former mistress amid the mess?

The cat kept sniffing around Ada’s chair and acting generally unhappy.

Will watched him for a moment, then said, “You know, people who spend a lot of time in meth labs hang around some pretty unpleasant-smelling chemicals. Could our furry friend be reacting to that?”

“How do we know it’s not just Gordie’s smell, since he was setting up the lab himself?”

“We don’t,” Will admitted. “But I’m betting Shadow’s responding to the freshest scent.”

He got down on one knee. “The chair’s been moved,” he announced. “You can see the indentations the legs left in the rug.” He looked at the slightly shaggy upholstery and shook his head. “Nothing here that would take a print.”

Examining the table next to the chair, though, he got a little more hopeful. “The dust is disturbed where someone might have picked the table up or shifted it.” He pointed, keeping his finger carefully above the surface. “Whether there are prints, smudges—or if the guy wore gloves like us—I’ll leave that up to the lab people.”

“It makes sense,” Sunny said, peering around the pieces of furniture. “Ada spent a lot of time here. Do you think we should have a look?” She pointed at the chair cushion.

“I don’t think it would hurt. As I said, there are no prints here.” Will pulled the cushion loose to reveal a comb, several hard candy wrappers, an emery board, and a catnip mouse that had all gotten tucked down the seams. No lottery ticket, though.

“I’ll take a look for any marks in the kitchen,” Will said. “That’s the only other place the intruder could have gotten to in the amount of time he was here.”

Standing alone in the dusty living room, Sunny tried to imagine what it would be like to live here, with her life bounded by the few little areas that Ada had struggled to keep clean. The living room chair and the TV. The kitchen. She’d use the stairs in the back to get to the cellar if she needed anything from there. The kitchen door, for bringing in food supplies. Maybe the pantry area could do with a search.

Sunny glanced over toward the front door. Would Ada ever come and go that way? She walked over to the foyer and the little odds-and-ends table that stood beside the door. It was just the place to pick up a purse or car keys before going out—or perhaps to rest a bag when coming back from shopping.

A thick layer of dust covered the surface of the table, however, so it was clear that nothing had rested there for a while. A row of three small, impractical drawers stretched under the tabletop—pretty, but you couldn’t fit much in them. Two held buttons, spare keys, change—the sort of stuff that gets emptied out of pockets. The middle one, though … Sunny’s heart almost stopped when she saw the lottery logo printed on the back of the paper. Fingers trembling, she turned it over …

And snorted at herself. Oh, it was a lottery ticket, all right. But it was dated about a week before Ada died.

“Did you find something?” Will was back in the room, looking eagerly at the ticket Sunny held.

“Not unless lightning struck twice,” she told him, pointing out the date. “Bad enough to be searching for a winning ticket when there might be a year’s worth of losers lying around the house, too.”

She bent down to pat Shadow, who stood beside the table, looking up at her.

*

Shadow watched asSunny waved the piece of paper in front of the Big Male. Were they going to play with it? If they let it go and it floated down, there might be some pouncing games they could play.

The male—Will, he seemed to be called—shifted his feet, and Shadow sidled away. He was very aware of feet after what he’d smelled around the chair, and even though his side felt much better, remembered soreness seemed to stiffen his gait.

There was no mistaking it—the memory of this particular scent had been reinforced with severe pain. The one who had kicked him so badly had been here. That was a bad two-legs, and smells like that always seemed to be connected to bad things. Shadow shifted uncomfortably as he watched Sunny and Will talk.

Even though he’d lived here, and the other smells were familiar, he wanted to leave this place. It made him nervous.

*

They went upstairsto check Ada’s bedroom. Gordie had apparently put in his most serious search efforts here. The closet stood empty and so did the dresser, the clothes bundled into those ubiquitous garbage bags and piled on the unmade bed.

“I wonder if he checked the pockets,” Will said, poking at the emptied contents of one bag.

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