âTomcats sit on juryâ¦â
âCat excused because sheâs nursing kittensâ¦â She rolled over, convulsed with feline glee.
âBut,â she said at last, âwhat about the murders? We donâtâ¦â
âWhat murders?â
âThe three deaths. Azrael said he saw deathâthree murders.â
âYou donât believe that stuff. Come on, Dulcie, thatâs tomcat grandstanding. There will be murder in this village â¦â Joe mimicked. â I smell death, death before the moon is full â¦â He yowled with amusement. â I see you two little cats standing over the bodies â¦Oh, boy, talk about chutzpah.â
âButâ¦â
âSo who is going to be murdered over a couple of little, two-bit burglaries? Come on, Dulcie. He was giving you a line. That tomcatâs nothing but a con artist, an overblown bag of hot air.â
But Dulcie lashed her tail and laid back her ears. âThere could be truth in what Azrael said.â With all his talk of voodoo and dark magic, was the foreign tomcat able to see into the future?
Certainly there was a sense of otherness about Azraelâa dark aura seemed to cling around him like a grim shadow. And certainly when she read about cats like themselves, a thread of dark prophetic talents wound through the ancient myths.
Who knew, she thought, shivering, what terrifying skills the black tom might have learned in those far and exotic lands?
8
D ORA AND RALPH Sleuderâs shuttle from L.A. was due to land at 11:03, and as Mavity headed up the freeway for Peninsula Airport, her VW chugging along with the scattered Sunday traffic, the fog was lifting; the day was going to be pretty, clear and bright.
Wilmaâs elegant breakfast had been a lovely way to end the week; though the pleasant company made her realize how much time she spent alone. It would be nice to have Dora and Ralph with her, despite her crowded little house. She did miss her family.
She really ought to entertain them better, ought to get Wilmaâs recipe for that elegant casserole. All she ever made for breakfast was eggs and bacon or cereal. Well, of course sheâd be making grits. Dora couldnât face a morning without gritsâshe always brought instant grits with her from Georgia. The first time Mavity heard of instant grits, which were more common in the south than instant oatmeal, sheâd doubled over laughing. But after all, it was a southern staple. And Dora worked hard at home. On the farm,breakfast was a mainstay. Dora grew up in a household where her mother rose every morning at four to fix grits and eggs and salty country ham and homemade biscuits from scratch, a real farm breakfast. Biscuits and redeye gravy became Greeleyâs favorite after he married a southern girl at eighteen and moved south to her fatherâs farm.
Greeley and his wife had had only the one child, only Dora, and for thirty years he had lived that life, so different from how he grew up here in California. Imagine, getting out to the fields every morning before daylight. Youâd think Dora would want to get off the farm, but no, she and Ralph still planted and harvested and hauled produce to market, though they had some help now. And now they had that junk car business, too. Ralph called it a ârecycled parts exchange.â
For herself, sheâd rather clean other peopleâs houses than do that backbreaking field labor. After a dayâs work, her time was her own. No sick cows to tend, no broken water lines or dried up crops to worry over. She could come home, make a nice cup of tea, put up her feet, and forget the world around her.
And maybe Greeley hadnât liked it all that well, either, because the minute Doraâs mother diedâDora was already marriedâGreeley hit out for Panama, and the next thing she knew, heâd learned to be a deep-sea diver. That had shocked everyone. Who knew that all
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