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Purrfect Crime (The Mysteries of Max Book 5) Page 2


  “Nothing, honey bunch,” said Brutus in his sweetest voice. “Just clearing up some stuff.”

  “Max is right, Brutus,” Dooley loud-whispered. “Harriet kissed him, not the other way around. And he didn’t even like it, did you, Max?” These last words were spoken with a look of reproach in my direction. Dooley has always fancied Harriet, and he cannot grasp being kissed by that divine feline and not enjoying the experience.

  “I heard you,” said Harriet, tripping up deftly. “And for your information, I didn’t kiss Max.”

  “See?!” Brutus exclaimed triumphantly.

  “My Inner Goddess did.”

  “What?!”

  Harriet raised her chin defiantly. “I can’t be held responsible for every little thing my Inner Goddess does, Brutus. Sometimes she wears a blindfold. I thought I was kissing you, actually. I only realized my mistake when I reached out and the only thing my paw met was a yielding fluffiness where rock-hard muscles should have been.”

  Brutus stared at her. “Go on.”

  She placed a paw on his chest and closed her eyes. “See, now that I’m feeling your steely pecs I know it’s you. That was my mistake. I kissed first and touched later.”

  I groaned loudly. “Yielding fluffiness?!”

  “Shut up, Max,” said Brutus. “Watch and learn.”

  And then the two of them locked lips. Instinctively I held up a paw to cover Dooley’s eyes. He did not have to see this. He seemed to appreciate the gesture, for he didn’t slap my paw away. He only asked, when the smooching sounds finally abated, “Is it over yet?”

  “Yes, it is,” I said, lowering my paw. Harriet had kissed me, no doubt about it, but if it made her feel better to lie to both herself and to Brutus, it was fine by me. I didn’t need Brutus going back to his old bullying ways. This détente we had going for us suited me fine, so I was happy when finally the kissing stopped and Brutus slapped me on the back.

  “And that’s how you do it, buddy!”

  “Great,” I muttered. “Now, can you give me a boost? I need to wake up Odelia.”

  “Sure thing,” said Brutus, suddenly in an expansive mood. And as I got ready to take the leap again, he got into position directly behind me, not unlike a running back. And before I could initiate the launch sequence, Brutus was shouting, “Hut one—hut two—hut three—go!”

  I made the mighty jump and… “Owowowow!” Brutus, instead of giving me a regular boost, had dug his nails into my behind! The result was that I flew up onto the bed and landed right on top of Odelia’s sleeping form, and it wasn’t a soft landing either.

  “Ooph!” Odelia grunted, when a flying blorange obstacle landed squarely on her stomach. She stared down at me. “Max! Where’s the fire?!”

  I gave her a sheepish look. “Wakey-wakey.”

  I directed a scathing look at Brutus, who gave me a grin. “See, Max? I knew you could do it!”

  Chapter 2

  “So then Brutus gave me a boost and that’s how I ended up on your stomach,” I finished my account of the recent events.

  Odelia, who’s blond and petite with the most strikingly green eyes, tied the sash of her bathrobe and gave me a worried look. “I better make that appointment with Vena. I knew I should never have put it off.”

  My eyes widened to the size of saucers, which for us cats is considerable, since our eyes are a lot smaller than a human’s eyes to begin with. “Not Vena!”

  “Yes, Vena. With everything that’s been going on I totally forgot to make a new appointment but it’s obvious now that she was right all along.” She placed a comforting hand on my head. “You’re overweight, Max. Totally overweight, and I’ve got no one else to blame but myself.”

  “I’m not overweight. I’m just… big-boned. It runs in the family.”

  “It’s for your own good,” she said. “If you don’t start dieting again, you’ll just get in trouble.”

  “I won’t get in trouble, I promise!” I cried. Anything not to have to go to Vena, who is just about the vet from hell. For some reason she loves sticking me with needles and suggesting to Odelia that she feed me kibble that tastes like cardboard. The woman is my own personal tormentor.

  “It’s not your fault,” Odelia said as she started down the stairs. “I indulge you. I keep buying those snacks that you like so much and I probably overfeed you, too.”

  “No, you don’t,” I said, desperate now. I trotted after her, my paws sounding heavy on the stairs. “I only eat the bare minimum as it is. In fact I’m always hungry.”

  She paused and listened to the pounding my paws made on the stairs. “You hear that? That’s not normal, Max. You’re not supposed to walk like that.”

  “Like what?” I asked, pausing mid-step.

  “Like an elephant trampling in the brush.”

  “I don’t sound like an elephant trampling in the brush,” I said indignantly, but made an effort to tread a little lighter. Only problem was, it’s hard to tread lightly when you’re going downhill. Gravity, you know.

  “And Vena said that when you get too big it’s bad for your heart. Fat tissue builds up around the organ and that’s not a good thing.”

  “My heart is just fine,” I promised, tapping my chest. “Healthy as an ox!”

  “And you look like one, too,” said Brutus. The black cat was right behind me, and obviously enjoying the conversation tremendously.

  “I’ve booked you an appointment, too, by the way, Brutus,” said Odelia now.

  We’d reached the bottom of the stairs and she walked into the kitchen to start up the coffeemaker. How people can drink that black sludge is beyond me, but then a lot of stuff humans do makes no sense at all. Like putting a perfectly healthy cat on a diet!

  “Me!” cried Brutus. “Why me?!”

  “Because Chase told me he doesn’t remember the last time you went. So it might as well have been never.” She frowned. “Though you are neutered, so you must have gone at least once.”

  A deep blush crept up Brutus’s features. At least I think it did. It was hard to be sure with all that dark hair covering his visage. He cut a quick look at Harriet, who pretended she hadn’t heard. “I, um—I’m sure that’s not possible,” he said now.

  “That you’re neutered or that you didn’t go to the vet in years?” Odelia asked deftly, taking a cup and saucer from the cupboard over the sink.

  Brutus appeared to be shrinking before my very eyes, a sight I enjoyed a lot, I have to say. “Both,” he said curtly, now actively avoiding Harriet’s cool gaze.

  “Don’t worry, Brutus,” said Dooley. “We’re all neutered. Max is neutered. I am neutered. Even Harriet is neutered. Isn’t that right, Harriet?”

  “None of your beeswax,” Harriet snapped.

  “Beeswaxed?” asked Dooley. “I’m pretty sure the right word is neutered.”

  “Dooley!” Harriet said with a warning glare.

  “What? What did I say?”

  “Oh, come off it, you guys,” said Odelia, crouching down. “It’s nothing to be ashamed about. If you weren’t neutered I’m sure we’d have a fresh litter every couple of months, and we can’t have that now, can we?”

  “I don’t see why not,” Harriet muttered. It was obviously still a sore point.

  “Because I can’t take care of so many cats,” Odelia said softly. “You see that, don’t you?”

  “Yeah, just do the math,” said Dooley. “Three litters a year times eight kittens a litter that’s…” He frowned, looking goofy for a moment, then said, “… a heck of a lot of cats!”

  “It is,” said Odelia. “And I’d just end up having to bring them to the shelter. And I don’t need to tell you what happens to cats that end up at the animal shelter, do I?”

  “They are adopted by loving humans?” Dooley ventured.

  “They die, Dooley,” Brutus growled. “They all die.”

  Dooley uttered a cry of horror and staggered back a few paces. “No, they don’t!”

  “Oh, yes, the
y do. And then they’re turned into sausages and people eat them!”

  “Brutus!” Odelia said. “Don’t scare Dooley.” She gave Dooley a comforting pat on the back. “They’re not turned into sausages. But they’re not adopted, either, I’m afraid. At least not all of them. Though I’m sure a lot of them find warm and loving families.”

  “See!” Dooley cried triumphantly. “They’re all placed with their very own Odelias!”

  “Thanks,” said Odelia, rising to her feet. “Now about Vena…”

  Lucky for us the bell rang at that exact moment, and Gran came rushing in through the glass sliding door, looking like she was about to lay an egg.

  “Is he here?!” Gran croaked anxiously. “Is he here?!”

  “Is who here?” asked Odelia, moving to the front door.

  “The UPS guy, of course!”

  Gran is a white-haired little old lady, but even though she looks like sweetness incarnate, she’s quite a pistol.

  “See?” asked Dooley, turning to me. “This is what I told you.”

  “What did you tell me?” I asked. The morning had already been so traumatizing my mind had actively started to repress the memories.

  “About Gran ordering a bunch of stuff online and Marge and Tex having to pay for it.”

  Odelia had opened the door and Dooley was right: a pimply teenager in a brown uniform with ‘UPS’ on his chest stood before her, a big, bulky package in his hands. “Vesta Muffin?” he asked.

  “That’s me!” Gran squealed and darted forward, grabbed the package from the teenager’s hands and ran to the living room with it.

  Odelia signed for the package and sent the kid on his way. “What’s going on, Gran?” she asked.

  “Oh, nothing,” said Gran, eagerly tearing open the package.

  We all gathered around, and since it’s hard to see anything from the floor, we all hopped up onto the chairs to have a good look at this mysterious package.

  Gran, licking her lips, finally succeeded in ripping away the packaging, and before us lay three shiny green eggs. Huh.

  “Gran,” said Odelia in her warning voice. It’s the voice she likes to use when me or Dooley have been up to no good, which, obviously, practically never happens.

  “What?” asked Gran innocently. “I need them. I’m dating again.”

  What a bunch of green eggs had to do with dating was beyond me, but, like I said, humans are weird. And in my personal experience no human is weirder than Gran.

  “You’re dating again?” asked Odelia. “I thought that after Leo you were done with all of that.”

  Leo was a horny old man that Gran used to run around with. We kept bumping into them in the weirdest places, practicing the weirdest positions. All very disturbing.

  “Done with dating?” asked Gran indignantly. “Oh, the horror! How can anyone be done with dating? Didn’t anyone ever tell you that sex only gets better with age?”

  “Like a fine wine,” said Dooley, though I doubted he knew what he was talking about.

  “The only thing that doesn’t improve is my hoo-hee. Which is why I need these.”

  “What is a hoo-hee?” asked Dooley innocently.

  Odelia blushed slightly. “Nothing you should concern yourself with, Dooley.”

  “You don’t know what a hoo-hee is?” asked Gran, raising an eyebrow. “What about hoo-ha? Lady bits? Fine China? Lady garden? Vajayjay?”

  Dooley shook his head. “Doesn’t ring a bell.”

  Gran laughed. “You’re funny, Dooley. Doesn’t ring a bell. I’ll bet it doesn’t ring your bell, but it sure as heck rung Leo’s bell, and there’s plenty of Leos out there.”

  “I’ll just bet there are,” Odelia muttered, picking up one of the green eggs. “So how do you use these?” Then she noticed four pairs of cat eyes following her every movement and she put the egg down again. “Never mind. I’m sure I don’t want to know.”

  “And I’m sure you do,” said Gran. “If you want to entertain your fellow you need to practice the fine art of the jade egg, honey.”

  “Something to do with energy and healing, right?” asked Odelia with a frown.

  Gran threw her head back and laughed. “Of course not! It’s all about training those pelvic muscles. You want to get a good grip on your fella’s…” She cast a quick look at Dooley. “… fella. Increase the pleasure—his and yours. Trust me,” she said as she placed one of the green eggs in the palm of Odelia’s hand, “you’ll make your man very, very happy.”

  “That happy, huh?” asked Odelia as she rolled the smooth green egg in her hand.

  “Happier,” said Gran as she let the other two eggs disappear into the pockets of her dress. She gestured at the box. “Can you let this disappear, honey? Your mom and dad don’t need to know.”

  “Wait a minute,” said Odelia. “You’re not going to have this… stuff arrive here from now on, are you?”

  “Of course I am. I hate to break it to you, Odelia, but your parents are ageists. They think just because I’m old I’m all shriveled up down there.” She patted her granddaughter on the cheek. “Nothing could be further from the truth. In fact I’m pretty sure I get more nookie than those dried-up old prunes.”

  “Hey, that’s my parents you’re talking about.”

  “I know, which is why I’m so glad you’re nothing like them. You wouldn’t stand in the way of your grandmother enjoying her golden years, would you?”

  “No, but…”

  “Of course you wouldn’t.” She gave Odelia a fat wink. “Stick around, kid. You may learn a trick or two from this old dame.”

  And with these words, she practically galloped through the sliding door and disappeared into the garden, no doubt eager to start practicing those eggs on her hoo-hee, whatever a hoo-hee was.

  For a long moment, silence reigned, then Odelia said, “Right. I think I’ll just put that egg away, shall I?”

  “So what is it for, exactly?” asked Harriet.

  Odelia produced an awkward smile. “Decorative purposes?”

  Harriet narrowed her eyes at her. “A decorative egg is going to make Chase very, very happy?”

  “Yes, it will,” Odelia trudged on bravely. “Chase likes a nicely decorated… room.”

  She was backtracking towards the staircase, and we all watched her go. Then, suddenly, she turned around and popped up the stairs. We heard her rummage around in her bedroom, a drawer opening and closing. Those drawers contained a lot of funny-looking stuff. Amongst other things, they also contained a small battery-powered rocket, though I had no idea why Odelia would need a pocket rocket in her bedroom.

  Moments later, she returned, still that sheepish look on her face.

  Humans. They’re just too weird.

  Just then, the doorbell rang again.

  “More eggs?” asked Harriet acerbically.

  But when Odelia went to open the door, it was her uncle. Chief of Police Alec Lip. Like me, Chief Alec is big-boned. And, also like me, he’s a great guy. Always ready with a smile or a kind remark, which makes him real popular with the locals. He wasn’t smiling now, though, and when he opened his mouth to speak, it soon became clear why. “There’s been a murder. A really nasty one.”

  Chapter 3

  Odelia put the four cats in her old Ford pickup and followed Uncle Alec as he set the course in his police cruiser.

  “So who died?” asked Max, who’d crawled up on the passenger seat, as was his habit when there was no one else in the car. No other humans, at least.

  “A woman named Donna Bruce,” said Odelia, anxiously peering through the windshield. “She’s the one who sold Gran those green eggs.”

  “She’s a farmer?” asked Max.

  “No, she’s not a farmer. She’s a former actress who now runs a lifestyle website. A very popular one.” She shook her head. “I don’t know what’s happening in this town. It’s just one murder after another. If this keeps up, no tourists are going to want to come here anymore.”

  �
��Why did Uncle Alec say it was a nasty murder?” asked Dooley from the backseat.

  “Because the woman was murdered in a gruesome way.”

  She could hear Dooley gulp. Gran’s cat was a sensitive plant when it came to things like murder, and she was starting to wonder if it was such a good idea to bring him along. Max, she knew, could handle himself, and so could Brutus and Harriet. But Dooley was the baby of the cat menagerie, and sometimes got spooked by his own shadow. “Maybe you better wait in the car, Dooley,” she suggested. “While the others snoop around.”

  “But I want to snoop around, too,” said Dooley. “I love snooping around.”

  She smiled. That was obvious. All her cats loved snooping around, which was why she took them along in the first place. They often talked to other pets, or even pets that belonged to the victims, and had proved invaluable when ferreting out clues.

  Her uncle Alec was aware of this unique talent. Chase? Not so much, though by now he was used to this quirky side of her personality. He even thought it was cute. She’d never told him she could communicate with her cats, though, and probably never would. He might not take it too well.

  She thought about Chase and a warm and fuzzy feeling spread through her chest. She’d never thought she would fall for the rugged cop but she had. And by the looks of things, he liked her, too, which was a real boon. They even shared a comfortable working relationship now, which was very different from the way things were when they first met. The burly cop, a recent transplant from the NYPD, wasn’t used to nosy reporters investigating a bunch of crimes alongside him. Fortunately she’d quickly proven her worth, and now he was more than happy to allow her to tag along.

  As if he’d read her mind, Max asked, “So how are things between you and Chase?”

  “Yeah,” Harriet chimed in. “When are you going to get married?”

  She saw how Max and Dooley shared a quick look of panic and laughed. “Hold your horses, young lady. Who said anything about me and Chase getting married?”

  “It’s all over town,” said Harriet with a shrug. “All the cats are talking about it.”