The Mysteries of Max: Books 31-33 by Nic Saint (interesting novels in english txt) đź“•
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- Author: Nic Saint
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“That’s all I’m asking: to consider the possibility.”
“Well, if that were the case, why would she bury our John Doe deep in the woods where no one was supposed to find him except for the fluke appearance on the scene of your cats? Look, the body wasn’t buried in some shallow grave where it would easily be found. It was buried deep, and far from anywhere. It’s obvious that Karl—”
“Or the killer.”
“Fine, or the killer, didn’t want that body to be found. The fact that we did was just a fluke. And don’t you think that if Grace Kramer wanted to frame her ex-husband she would have buried that body where it would be found immediately? Or maybe even leave it out in the open. If she shot him with Karl’s gun, why not dump that body in the park? Or even prop it up on a bench in front of Town Hall? Why bury it where no one was supposed to find it? And before you tell me people would have looked for John Doe, no they wouldn’t. It’s obvious this is a man who’s not missed. No missing person report, and no one has come forward, even after we put a sketch on the local TV station.”
“So maybe he’s not local.”
“No, I’ll bet you he isn’t local. But you see how ridiculous that Grace Kramer theory is if you get right down to it?”
“Okay, I’ll grant you that. So how about Max’s theory?”
“And what is Max’s theory, pray tell?” he asked with a magnanimous smile.
“That Suzy Bunyon took that gun from her stepdad’s safe, and gave it to her raver friends to have some fun with. And so they went out and shot a homeless man for kicks.”
Chase sat back and thought about this for a moment. “Huh,” he said finally.
“Right?”
“I like this theory a lot better than the Grace Kramer one, I’ll tell you that.”
“Why don’t I go over to talk to Suzy Bunyon and find out what she says?”
“You do that,” Chase agreed. “She’ll probably talk to you a lot faster than she would me.”
“Deal,” said Odelia, and got up.
“So what’s happening with your folks’ house? Think they’ll be able to rebuild it?”
“Talk about a mess,” said Odelia. “Now the contractor is blaming the builders, and the builders are blaming the contractor, and when all is said and done it’s going to take a while before my parents will have their house back.”
“And a lot of money.”
“Unless the insurance kicks in.”
“Will it? Kick in?”
“Depends.”
“On what?”
“On whether the contractor has insurance.”
Chase grinned. “Good luck with that.”
“Usually newlyweds move in with their folks until they’ve saved up for a place of their own,” said Odelia, “but this time it’s the other way around.”
We found Suzy Bunyon at home studying in her room. If Kathleen thought it was odd for us to pay her daughter a visit, she didn’t mention it. She’d asked Odelia to do anything in her power to get her husband out from under this murder charge, and Odelia had given her word that she would, so this was all part of the process of eliminating suspects and trying to find out what exactly had happened that fateful night.
“Hi, Suzy,” said Odelia as she approached the pink-haired teenager. Suzy glanced down at Dooley and me, and frowned. “Do you always bring your cats with you?”
“Yeah, I guess so. They like to follow me around, and I find it’s easier to let them.”
“Uh-huh, okay,” said Suzy dubiously. She was seated at her desk, a book on geometry open under a reading lamp, but the presence of a large box of Kleenex told me that she still wasn’t over the tragic death of her boyfriend.
“So your dad is in jail on suspicion of murdering a homeless person,” said Odelia, opening the interview with a shot across the bow, so to speak.
“My stepdad,” Suzy immediately corrected her. “Karl isn’t my real dad.”
“Okay, your stepdad. So your mother has asked me to find out what happened, because she just can’t imagine that your stepdad would be involved in a thing like this.”
“So?”
“So you know that the gun he kept in his gun safe was used to murder this person?”
“Yeah, Mom told me.”
“So I want to ask you this straight out, Suzy, and I hope you’ll give me a straight answer: did you ever take that gun out of your stepdad’s gun safe?”
“What? No, of course not.”
“But you did know the combination of the lock?”
“Duh. The guy used his own birthday. How dumb do you have to be?”
“So you admit that you opened the safe?”
“I did open it. Once. Just to see what was inside. I figured Karl kept his stash of dirty magazines in there, but instead I found that he kept a gun.” She smiled. “I never knew that dopey Karl was a gun nut. Turns out that he is.”
“Karl swears up and down that he only kept the gun in case of an emergency.”
“What kind of an emergency could an accountant possibly have? A paper cut?”
“She doesn’t seem to think very highly of her stepdad, Max,” said Dooley.
“No, clearly she doesn’t,” I agreed.
“Look, I opened that safe only once, all right? And I never opened it again. I mean, what am I going to do with a gun? I can’t even shoot. Besides, guns kill people.”
“I thought that maybe you took it for your boyfriend?”
“What boyfriend?” asked Suzy, suddenly suspicious.
“Darryl?”
“Who?”
“Darryl Farmer. I know he was your boyfriend, Suzy. I talked to Todd Park this morning, and he told me all about it. And so did Lucy Hale, Darryl’s girlfriend before you entered the scene.”
“Okay, so fine. Darryl was my boyfriend.” She grabbed the box of Kleenex and moved it closer to where she was sitting. “But he never asked me to take that gun, okay? Darryl wasn’t into guns. Like, at all. In fact he was as anti-gun as
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