and both dogs bolted back into the kitchen. Tutu sported a fresh claw mark on her nose, and Gretchen measured the extent of Nina’s anguish by her failure to even notice.
“This is a nightmare,” Nina wailed. “Slap me. Wake me up.”
Gretchen would have gladly followed Nina’s instructions if she thought a slap would help. Wasn’t she the one who should be crying on Nina’s shoulder, not the other way around? What had happened to her cool, mystical aunt?
“Call Steve,” Nina said through broken sobs. “We need a lawyer.”
“Steve’s a divorce attorney. He won’t be able to help us. Matt said the most important thing is to find her and bring her back.”
“Matt who?” Nina asked through a space between her fingers.
“Matt Albright, the detective.”
“Oh, suddenly he’s Matt. What happened to Detective Albright? You’re forgetting who the enemy is.”
“No, I’m not.” Gretchen handed Nina a box of tissues. “He’s right. She has to come back and explain what happened. He isn’t the enemy. Martha’s killer is the enemy.”
“What are we going to do?” Nina blew her nose loudly. “Caroline better have something to say for herself. How could she become involved in anything like this?”
“We need to find out who really killed Martha.” Gretchen paused to absorb the scope of what she was proposing. “And we need to find out why my mother was on Camelback Mountain. What happened up there?” She chewed the inside of her cheek while she thought about the possibilities.
Nina slammed her hands on the table. “Let’s go. I can’t stand just sitting here.”
She rounded up her dogs, stuffing Nimrod in his purse and bundling Tutu in her arms.
Gretchen nodded. “Let’s go find the elusive Nacho.”
Nina drove like her life hung in the balance, and Gretchen realized for the first time how close her mother and her aunt really were. She, too, fought against a growing pressure around her own heart, the physical pain of life gone awry. Losing her job seemed insignificant now. Even her issues with Steve seemed petty.
“Slow down,” Gretchen called. “We won’t be much help to her if we’re dead.”
“Where did April go?” Nina asked, easing off the gas a little. “April didn’t say anything to me about going away.”
“It’s to our advantage. I didn’t tell Matt about the shawl and picture and was worried that she might.”
“I think she knows more than she’s letting on. Maybe she wants to beat us to the doll. Remember, it was her idea to keep it a secret.”
Gretchen gripped the dashboard as Nina took a sharp right turn. “You might be overreacting. April seemed harmless to me.”
“She hated Martha. You saw her reaction. She even admitted it. She could be our killer.”
Gretchen considered April—enormous, lumbering April. “How could she have climbed up the mountain to push Martha? She can barely manage a porch step.”
“You’d be amazed at how limber large people can be when they want to,” Nina said, turning onto Thirty-fifth Avenue and continuing past the Phoenix Rescue Mission.
“There it is.” Gretchen pointed, and Nina swung over and found a parking space. She left the car running and cool air continued to circulate.
Gretchen and Nina stayed inside the car and looked at the church.
St. Anskar’s Parish was set back from the street. Its whitewashed facade gleamed in the sun, and a large gold cross glistened above a small courtyard leading to the massive front doors.
“We’re a little early,” Gretchen said, impatiently checking her watch.
Fifteen minutes later people began to arrive at the church. Most of them came alone, shuffling slowly down the street, silent and weary from the heat, motivated by the promise of a free meal. Each turned in to the courtyard and followed a walkway that led around the side of the building. Gretchen and Nina watched from the car.
“Should we wait here until he comes by?” Nina asked. “Or go inside?”
“Let’s wait here and confront him on the sidewalk,” Gretchen said. “We don’t know how he will react, and we don’t want to create a scene inside. When he comes, I’ll get out and stop him.” She glanced at the dogs in the backseat. They panted heavily and smeared saliva on the back windows.
Gretchen watched an old man limp past, wearing more clothes than should be bearable.
“Well,” Nina said. “I hope he comes along soon, or the car is going to overheat.”
Gretchen turned slightly in her seat and peered down the street in the opposite direction. “We’re in luck. Here he comes,” she said, clutching Nina’s arm.
He wore the same clothes he’d