Marcia Talley - Tomorrow's Vengeance

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A brutal murder draws Hannah Ives into a mystery where to understand the present, she must uncover a dark past.
While at Calvert Colony, a life care community centre in Maryland, and at lunch with her friend, retired mystery author and amateur painter L.K. 'Naddie' Bromley and her neighbour Sophia Milanesi, who survived the closing years of the Second World War in a convent in Italy, Hannah meets Filomena Buccho, a personable young Argentine server. Her brother, Raniero, also works at the Colony as chef. But when Masud Abaza and his wife, Safa, move into the community and Masud is found murdered, his head bashed in by a croquet mallet, suspicion falls on Raniero, who has made no secret of his neo-Fascist sentiments. Hannah and Naddie agree to investigate, uncovering old crimes and reigniting ancient quarrels that know no boundaries of place or time.

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Richard’s voice was calm, conversational. ‘I’m going to jump.’

‘I can see that, sir, but how will that solve anything?’

Richard didn’t answer, but remained where he was, teetering drunkenly on the railing.

‘He’s bluffing,’ Christie said.

‘Shut up, Christie!’ I struck the stupid woman sharply on the back.

‘I’m going to jump and it’ll be your fault.’ Richard slumped, suddenly drained of bravado. ‘You think I’m worthless? That’s how much you know, you heartless bitch. Four hundred and fifty thousand dollars, that’s what. That’s what you’re giving up by not marrying me.’

‘What’s he talking about, Hannah?’ Christie demanded.

‘I’m not sure, but if he’s still active duty, it could be the military death benefit, or a life insurance policy.’

‘Going, going…’ Richard began.

Possibly sensing that this boozehound was deadly serious, the guard sprinted up the staircase but before he could get anywhere near him Richard yelled, ‘Gone!’ and launched himself into space, his arms spread like a bird. He hit the rim of the aquarium with a hideous clonk and tumbled, head first – sploosh – into the fish tank.

The only creature that didn’t seem surprised was Scooter, the cownose ray. Richard sank slowly to the bottom where his body draped itself lifelessly over the coral head. Scooter dived, nudged him curiously, shimmied over this strange new creature, then moved on.

There were several seconds of silence, and then the shouting began.

‘Somebody get him out of there!’

‘He could still be alive!’

‘Get a ladder!’

‘Back, back everyone!’

The security guard streaked past me, shouting, ‘I’m on it!’

And somebody pulled the fire alarm.

As the alarm whoop-whoop-whooped deafenly around us, Christie buried her head in my shoulder and sobbed, ‘I didn’t… he wouldn’t… how could?’

I held her close, rubbing her back while the receptionist and one of the security guards ushered the residents who had been sitting in the lobby into the dining room.

I stayed put, conforting Christie.

Ten minutes later the paramedics arrived to discover the security guard standing on a ladder usually used for changing light bulbs, straining to reach Richard’s body with a life hook hastily borrowed from the swimming pool. His skin glistened with sweat; his uniform shirt was soaked with saltwater.

‘Come down off the ladder, man. Nothing you can do for the guy now.’

That I even heard the paramedic’s remark was a miracle of selective hearing as Christie had crumpled to the floor and was keening like a professional mourner at a Chinese funeral.

Angie burst in about then. After a hasty consultation she dragged her mother-in-law away to the health center where (I learned later) she’d been given an injection to help her sleep and put to bed.

The job of retrieving Richard’s body was beyond the expertise of the paramedics, who called for the Underwater Recovery Team that the state of Maryland kept handy. When the URT barged into the lobby about ten minutes later, the guy in the lead screeched to a halt and sputtered, ‘How did he…’ turning what was almost certainly a snigger into a cough. ‘Jesus, Mary and Joseph,’ exclaimed his partner, and made the sign of the cross.

‘Gives new meaning to swimming with the fishes.’ It was the colonel, coming up behind me. ‘She-it. Go out to the movies for the first time in ages and miss all the excitement.’ He elbowed my arm to get my attention, then winked. ‘First date.’

Thinking this was hardly the time to discuss the colonel’s love life, I ignored him.

The divers got to work. They set up a portable air compressor and donned their masks while the colonel observed, offering a running commentary worthy of an announcer on the Discovery Channel. I tuned him out.

One diver slipped into the tank, sleek as a shark. He eased Richard’s body into a sling that fit under his arms and guided the operation by holding on to Richard’s legs while his partner hauled on the rope attached to the sling.

‘Not from around here, then?’ said the colonel when the body was laid out on the marble floor. He stood on tiptoes in his black leather boots, craning his neck for a closer look.

‘No, he’s not. He came to visit Christie McSpadden. Sort of a pen pal,’ I added, not wanting to embarrass Christie any further. ‘He was in the army serving in Afghanistan.’

‘A jumper?’

I knew he didn’t mean parachuter. ‘Apparently.’

‘She-it.’

‘PTSD would be my guess,’ I said.

The colonel’s back stiffened. ‘Bullshit. Bunch of slackers. In my day…’

I thought I would have to wait to find out how it was back in his day, but after a brief pause, presumably to collect his thoughts, the colonel launched into a rant. ‘I know people who can get you one hundred percent disability benefits, easy as that.’ He snapped his fingers. ‘Tell ’em where to go and what to say when they get there. It’s a scam. You got a half million vets out there right now claiming PTSD. Makes me sick. There are vets with real issues, you know. Paraplegics, amputees, traumatic brain injury. Jeesh. And here you go,’ he indicated the body bag that contained what was left of Richard, now lying on a gurney. ‘This guy never looked like boots on the ground to me. Probably one of those sissies stationed at a home base somewhere, shot themselves in the foot at the motor pool. Or they’re all hands over their heads in the mess hall shouting, ‘Incoming, incoming!’ Bull shit ! I held my best buddy in my arms, saw his eyes roll back, the life leak out of him.’ He paused to take a deep breath, then shook himself almost like a dog and said, ‘Sorry, I don’t usually go on like that. Must be off my meds.’

I turned, reached out and hugged the man. I couldn’t help it. My father had served with distinction in Vietnam and he knew, first hand, what real war was all about. Maybe if I hugged this guy it would help him stow his demons back in the box. Beneath my arms, I felt him tremble.

‘Colonel,’ I said after a bit.

‘Yeah?’

‘You can let go of me now.’

He sprang away like a teenager who’d been caught in a clinch. ‘Sorry.’

I managed a smile. ‘No need. It’s quite all right. I’m a military brat, so I know where you’re coming from.’

He poked my shoulder with his index finger and channeled his best John Wayne. ‘I knew there was something about you that I liked, Little Lady.’

The Easy Rider had returned.

‘But you’re wrong about Richard Kent,’ I told him gently. ‘He was a medic in Afghanistan. Watched his friend die.’

‘Sorry,’ he said, his face clouding over as his head bent low. ‘I didn’t know.’

‘Not many people did,’ I said.

I caught up with Angie in her mother-in-law’s apartment, where Christie was sleeping soundly. Angie closed the door between the living room and the bedroom and invited me to sit down.

‘So, what happened to the lovebirds?’ I asked. ‘Did she tell you?’

‘By the third ATM, she figured it out. The money was supposedly so they could elope to Las Vegas.’

‘At the Graceland Wedding Chapel, I presume, married by an Elvis impersonator to her hunka-hunka burning love.’

Angie laughed. ‘Something like that.’

I melted back into the upholstery, suddenly exhausted. ‘That’s certainly what I’ll want for my second wedding.’

‘When she turned him down, Richard explained that he was the beneficiary of a trust fund from his grandfather but the money only came to him when he married.’

‘So he picked your mother-in-law.’ I sat up straight in the chair. ‘Not to cast aspersions on Christie, my dear, but he had flowers, candy and charm going for him. And I’ll give him at least a seven in the looks department. Couldn’t he find somebody a teeny bit younger?’

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