Mrsâ¦Judith,â J. J. asked in his most serious voice.
It was only eleven oâclock, yet it seemed like much longer since Judith had discovered John Smithâs corpse around seven-thirty. Slowly, carefully, she recounted the circumstances, beginning with Sweetumsâs arrival in the kitchen.
J. J. seemed intrigued. âDoes your cat always come in at the same time every morning?â
âNo,â Judith answered. âHeâs unpredictable. Besides, my mother and I sort of share him. Some nights he stays with her in the toolshed. Others, heâll come into the house and sleep in the basement. Then again, he might stay out and prowl. Heâs a very independent cat.â
âArenât they all?â J. J. remarked, then let Judith continue with her story. When she had finished, the detective remained silent for several moments. âYouâre certain you didnât hear anything during the night?â he finally asked.
âNot that I recall. What did Joe say?â
J. J. shook his head. âSame thing. Mentioned the front door was unlocked. Killer might have gone out that way. What about the thunder and lightning?â
Judith frowned. âWhat about it?â
âWe had some. Not real close. Off in the distance, towards the mountains.â J. J. drummed his fingers on the mantel. âNone of the guests heard it, either. My wife and I did, but we live across the lake.â
The lake separated the city from the suburbs and the foothills of the mountain range. It wasnât surprising to Judith that the ten miles between Hillside Manor and the Martinez home would make a difference.
âA silencer,â Judith suggested. âIs that what might have muffled the shot?â
âSure. Joe and Rich already found two silencers among your guestsâ belongings.â
âWhat?â Judith jumped in the wingback chair.
J. J. looked equally startled. âDidnât Joe tell you? Your guests have regular handgun arsenals in their rooms.â
Judith was aghast. âI knew about the gun Joe found. You mean some of the other guests also came armed?â
J. J. nodded slowly. âYou bet. Santoris. Malones. Du Turque. Even the preschool teachers. Joe found silencers in Schwartzâs and Smithâs rooms. Santoris had a silencer for their weapon, too. Have to wonder if Mrs. Smith wasnât carrying, too.â
âGood grief!â Judith sank back into the chair. âWho are these people?â
âApt question,â J. J. responded. âWeâre having them run through the computer. By the way, the Malones were outside during the night. Found their shoes with damp dirt on the soles. Wonât say where they were or why. Might have been them who left the front door unlocked.â
For almost a full minute, Judith didnât say anything. She was too overwhelmed by the enormity of J. J.âs revelation about the weapons. Then reason began to set in. âI suppose,â she said slowly, âthat in this day and age when people travel by car, they often bring along a gun. But what about the ones who came by plane, like Pam and Sandi?â
J. J. shrugged. âYou sure they flew?â
âI saw the airporter,â Judith said, then realized the fallacy. âYouâre rightâanybody who is willing to pay for the trip can ride the airporter around town.â
âAnd the rest?â
âThe Smiths, the Schwartzes, and the Malones arrived by private car. I donât know about Mr. du Turque,â Judith admitted.
âHe took the train,â said J. J. âBut the Santoris did fly into town. I saw their airline tickets.â
Judith turned a puzzled face to J. J. âNow youâve got me worried about airport security.â
âDonât. Theyâre good.â J. J. was pacing the parlor. âGuns can be put in the luggage compartment if you notify the airline ahead of time.â
âWhere is
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