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  MURDER THIS CLOSE

  A Gold Coast Mystery

  Book 2

  Timothy Cole

  Pace Press

  Fresno, California

  Murder This Close

  Copyright © 2022 by Timothy Cole. All Rights Reserved

  Published by Pace Press

  An imprint of Linden Publishing

  2006 South Mary Street, Fresno, California 93721

  (599) 233-6633 / (800) 345-4447

  PacePress.com

  Pace Press and Colophon are trademarks of

  Linden Publishing Inc.

  ISBN 978-1-610353-85-4

  first printing

  Printed in the United States of America

  On acid-free paper.

  This is a work of fiction. The names, places, characters, and incidents in this book are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual people, places, or events is coincidental.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data on file.

  For Peter, Leslie, Sasha, Tula, Andrew and Isa.

  How lucky am I?

  Very few of us are what we seem.

  —Agatha Christie, The Man in the Mist

  1

  You’re Under Arrest

  Dasha Petrov held out her hands so Chief Anthony DeFranco of the Westport Police Department could slip the handcuffs over her frail wrists and snap them closed. Sensitive to the emotions of the moment, she beheld the chief’s stricken face and tried to buoy the man as he went about his duty.

  “Chief, you’re just doing your job,” she told him soothingly.

  “Procedures, Dasha,” he said sadly. “I’m sure we’ll get it all cleared up, and you’ll be back home before you know it. You have the right to remain silent … ”

  Dasha absorbed the Miranda warnings impassively. Of course, she’d been arrested before. The Gestapo had made a sport of picking suspects off the streets in Prague, where she grew up and later operated during the war in the secret cell called Marigold. Back then, her many offenses were deemed crimes against the Reich—stealing secrets, committing sabotage, luring Nazi kingpins to their demise. She had nearly been killed on her way to destroy the Germans’ secret rocket assembly plant inside the mountain at Dora-Mittelbau. She’d needed to get inside, and she’d been trying to get arrested.

  Now Dasha Petrov was being charged with more mundane crimes—your garden-variety double homicide. Chief DeFranco had wanted to do it himself. He couldn’t have assigned an underling to bring his friend in for questioning or, as appeared likely, to issue formal charges at an arraignment. He knew the judge, of course, and the state’s attorney. He was quite aware of the particulars. Two of Dasha’s Beachside Avenue neighbors had been found dead at their respective homes, two hundred yards from each other, their deaths separated by two highly curious days. The chief and his detective bureau would be sifting through the evidence and helping the prosecution build its case.

  But Dasha Petrov was his friend. She had saved DeFranco and his partner, Tracy Taggart, from a swift and certain end while they were investigating the sea glass murders. Dasha and the chief had traveled some dangerous roads, and they had come to rely on each other’s talents. He refused to believe the amazing Mrs. Petrov was capable of cold-blooded murder—and for ill-gotten gain?

  Impossible.

  Yet his forensic team and the state’s attorney had amassed a damning inventory of physical evidence and a compromising timeline. They even had the first, faint glimmerings of a motive—times two.

  Chief DeFranco grasped Dasha’s elbow and led her out of the guest cottage at Seabreeze, the Gold Coast home she shared with her sister, Galina. The chief’s son, Officer Sam DeFranco, was their driver on this fragrant spring evening, the sun still high in the west, resisting the coming night. The chief made sure Mrs. Petrov didn’t bump her head when she crouched to get into the squad car’s back seat. He closed the car door and went around to enter the back seat from the opposite side, wishing to accompany his dear old friend through every unsavory phase of her coming worries. Dasha’s son, Boris, who lived with his family in the manor house, was naturally shaken as he watched his mother being led away in handcuffs. His wife and children were crying, and Dasha told them to buck up. Baba would be back in a wink after she straightened everything out. It was all just a silly misunderstanding.

  The chief was unused to the sight lines and perspectives offered by the back seat, where his arrestees first entered the system. The seat was covered by slippery plastic. The steel netting separating the back seat occupants from the driver was so far back it was practically in their laps. Of course, the chief knew the doors locked automatically, and the interior handles had been removed. He could see how some petty criminal—a teenager suspected of a DUI, a housewife shoplifter, a brawling Metro-North drunk fresh off the bar car—might be intimidated by their loss of liberty from the back seat of a patrol car. It made him a bit uncomfortable, even though he knew he’d be freed when they arrived at the Jesup Street public safety building.

  But Dasha Petrov simply smiled at her distressed loved ones, unperturbed, holding her manacled hands in the air with two thumbs up.

  “We need to give the children hope, chief,” she said.

  “Dasha, I’ve called Ken Bernhard of Cohen and Wolf,” said DeFranco.

  “Oh, I love Ken,” said Dasha. “But I won’t be needing a lawyer. So unproductive. And terribly expensive.”

  “Dasha, as your friend, I want to remind you that you’ll need legal representation,” said the chief. “It’s not my position to force a lawyer on you. We love it when suspects talk. But I won’t let you into that interview room without counsel.”

  “Well, you’re a dear to think of me, chief,” said Dasha, “but I have nothing to hide. I am happy to tell you everything I know.”

  “I have to go by the book, Dasha,” he insisted. “I’ve assigned the case to Ferguson, the head of our detective unit. He’s worked with the medical examiner’s criminologists at the two murder scenes, so he has a good handle on where the evidence seems to be pointing. It would be wrong of me to intervene. The only thing I can do is make sure it’s fair and that they don’t bully you.”

  “You’re very sweet,” said Dasha, “but I’ve been bullied by the Gestapo and the KGB. I think I can handle the Westport Police Department. I’ll just answer Detective Ferguson’s questions, and I’ll be home in an hour or two. Will you be in the room?”

  “Yes, but I’ve got to let Ferguson lead,” said the chief.

  “Chief, I wouldn’t have it any other way,” said Dasha. “I suppose the state’s attorney is sending over one of his minions.”

  “A newbie named Jennifer,” said the chief. “She drew the short straw. Rest of the staff is attending some kind of good-bye party tonight. She’ll probably just take notes.”

  “How about you, Sam?” Dasha called to the younger DeFranco at the wheel. “I’d feel much better if you were in there with me.” She smiled at the lad’s father, patting his knee.

  “Sorry, Dasha,” said Sam. “I’m assigned to patrol until midnight. I’m sure it’ll be the usual curfew breaks and missing pets.”

  “Don’t forget palpitations, young man,” said Dasha. “We of a certain age aren’t as spry as we used to be.”

  “Somehow I refuse to believe that, Dasha,” said Sam. The young man was on the lowest rung of the ladder at the Westport Police Department, having just graduated from Connecticut College. But he’d made the grade at the police academy in Meriden, and his father was delighted to bring him aboard, another link in a long chain of DeFrancos who had chosen to serve the town of Westport.

  The chief turned to look at the poised profile of Dasha Petrov, one of the CIA’s finest, who was slowl
y learning how to embrace her well-earned retirement. The sun etched her face in the soft light of a day’s end, and she was utterly relaxed in the face of charges that would have induced more than a mild panic in anyone else. To the chief, Dasha Petrov was a natural wonder—schooled in all the treacheries of postwar Berlin, the mass death of civil upheaval in Southeast Asia, the intricacies of Cold War spycraft. She’d survived on swift life-and-death decisions, nimble and numerous acts of violence, and an inscrutable knack for escape. She had occupied the fine but crucial gaps in the long path of history and had experienced her adopted country’s major milestones from within. But that was only during her professional life.

  Upon retirement, Dasha’s quick thinking and lightning reflexes had put her between the serial killer Robert Altman and his hapless victims, the chief included. The chief owed her, but he also owed the small Gold Coast town of Westport that paid his salary. His friend, sitting calmly in handcuffs as the light touched her Greta Garbo profile, was being charged with double homicide. All he could do was make sure she was safe, comfortable, and well represented. He also had to make sure he observed his oath to protect and to serve the town he and Dasha both loved. They each viewed Westport from their own unique vantage points, but there was still a common connection—the sheer struggles that had shaped their respective characters. The chief was a local boy who came to embrace his hometown after hard fighting in the Mekong delta of South Vietnam. And when Dasha admired the gated mansions, the cool night air, and the shimmering trees on Beachside Avenue, she beheld her hometown through the eyes of a refugee. As a child, Dasha and her sister, Galina, lived with their mother above the stables at their hideaway in Kaluga, out of sight from marauding Bolsheviks. She barely remembered their family apartment in czarist St. Petersburg. But the memory of the cattle car that had carried them in secret across the Latvian border was seared into her brain. Galina had pressed her nose to the tiny grate that offered only meager ventilation so she could report on the activity at the passport control. Their mother, who had secured their forged documents, had trembled in a corner. After crossing the border, they’d stayed in dormitories and walk-ups and even a few Quonset huts as Dasha and her family made their way west, to America. She wanted to protect her new homeland. That was why she’d transitioned from working in the translator pool of the Allied armies during World War II to become one of the CIA’s most talented officers.

  Sam drove them around the bend at Burying Hill Beach, up the hill and across the thundering turnpike. Dasha, as usual, admired the waving pastureland at Nyala Farms as the patrol car drove out to the Sherwood Island Connector. She even admired Westport’s always thriving Post Road—the Clam Box, Ed Mitchell’s clothing store, the saintly spire of Saugatuck Congregational. Soon, the chief’s son swung the patrol car into the parking lot on the east side of the Jesup Street station. The DeFrancos, father and son, reversed the little acts that had helped Dasha Petrov get into the car on Beachside Avenue. Sam released his father, and the chief went around to Dasha’s door. He opened it with a flourish and solicitously ensured she didn’t bump her head when she swung her feet around, planted them with confidence on the ground, and attained the vertical.

  The chief wasn’t surprised to see a few local newspaper reporters with photographers in tow. The Beachside Avenue homicide victims were known throughout the land. News 12 Connecticut was represented. And off on the fringe the chief saw his stalwart partner, Tracy Taggart, looking appropriately grim at the sight of their friend Dasha being led away in manacles. Duty called. Tracy would submit a bare-bones report that would be beamed by microwave to headquarters at 30 Rock for the six-thirty edition of NBC Nightly News. Later on, she would consult the chief on Dasha’s prospects for release when she and DeFranco arrived at the home they shared, the last house on the left, on the little dead-end called High Gate Road.

  The chief took Dasha to the interview room. It was well lit, spare, and windowless, with a small, Formica-topped table and molded plastic chairs. There were cameras for the closed-circuit television system that would record the interview and a U-bolt embedded in concrete under the chair assigned to the suspect, where the officers could shackle those deemed a risk. Dasha Petrov didn’t look like she required this kind of precaution. Her trademark beret was fastened to her old gray head, and her Barbour vest was nicely accented with an Hermès scarf her husband, Constantine, had given her on a whim. He was like that. Presents would just appear, no need for a special occasion.

  Ferguson was already in the room with two closed manila file folders in front of him. He rose to his feet when Mrs. Petrov entered. He was joined by a young man in Brooks Brothers gray who introduced himself as Kelly from Cohen and Wolf.

  “Ken sent me,” he said. “He would have liked to be here himself, but he’s home on the couch with a twisted knee after a paddle tennis accident.”

  “Oh, those paddle tennis parties at Longshore. I admire his vim and vigor, but I worry he’ll overdo it,” said Dasha. “It’s very nice of you to come, but you can go now. I won’t be needing a lawyer.”

  “Dasha, I don’t think that’s wise,” said the chief.

  “Why? I haven’t done anything wrong,” said Dasha. She turned to young Kelly. “I’m waiving counsel. I’m sure you have a family who needs you. Kids with homework? You can go.” Kelly didn’t know quite what to do with himself, and he turned to the chief.

  “She has the right to forgo counsel, but I would like to exercise my rights as a citizen to remain in this room on public property. I will be taking notes,” he said. Dasha was a bit flummoxed, and Kelly sensed her irritation.

  “Okay. Notes only,” said DeFranco. “And I will let you stop the interview at any time, in which case your client will be formally charged and bail will be set.”

  “I’m not his client, chief,” said Dasha, standing her ground. “Let’s get on with it.”

  “Shall we get comfortable?” said Ferguson. “Mrs. Petrov, can I get you some water or coffee?”

  “I prefer tea, young man,” she said, wishing to push her interlocutor off stride.

  “Tea, then,” said Ferguson, picking up the phone and dictating an order to the night desk. The chief was a piece of stone, impassive yet embroiled in inner turmoil. He knew what was coming.

  “Mrs. Petrov, where were you on the night of April 25?” asked Ferguson.

  The chief watched Mrs. Petrov with studied care, expecting the knowing smile, the dancing blue eyes, the deep font of knowledge and experience brimming to the surface. She wasn’t one to shout. She would lean into her target and disable them with dash and pluck. But the chief saw Dasha Petrov look down at her wrinkled hands and those liver spots and swollen knuckles and damaged cuticles. Her lips trembled, and when she looked up, the chief saw a single tear slide gently down her careworn face.

  Right then, he knew she was in trouble.

  2

  Just a Few Weeks Ago

  Spring was in the air, winter but a memory. Gone were the icy driveways, dirty snow drifts, and banging heat registers. Crocuses were pushing up through the thin skim of remaining snow, and buds were on the trees. Dasha Petrov and her sister, Galina, were making paska and kulich for their annual Russian Easter gathering, and they thought they could open up a few windows and let in some air.

  Soon, it was time for Galina’s nap. She’d become overly taxed, and because of her stroke, she tired easily. She mumbled her intentions and took Luna, the cat, into her little bedroom off a back wing of the cottage. Dasha spent a few minutes straightening the great room, placing the piles of Russian-language newspapers and journals into recycling, and taming the dust. She ran a feather duster over the framed photos of her children and grandchildren, spending a bit more time on the photograph of Constantine, her titan. Had it been ten years since he’d passed away? Seems like yesterday he’d been puttering in the greenhouse—just before the aneurysm that killed him before he hit the ground.

  “At least it was quick, Con, my darling,” Da
sha said aloud. She spoke to him every day, asking him what he thought of the state of affairs with that boy Clinton in the White House. And what did he think of Gorbachev and Yeltsin and the drastic upheavals now faced by the Russian people? She asked Con about matters close to home. What was his impression of the new property tax? And where could they save on maintenance? And what of their son Boris’s sudden career anxieties, which had come out of nowhere? Yes, she’d come into some money immediately following the home invasion perpetrated by the serial killer next door—bearer bonds, heaps of cash, untraceable diamonds and gold bars. But Seabreeze’s needs continued unabated, and now the grandchildren were eyeing expensive schools.

  “Con, I wish you were here to help me sort this out,” she said, running her feather duster over the photo of Reinhard Tristan Heydrich, the Nazi monster she’d had a hand in bringing down on the Troja Bridge in 1942. Back then, life had been in constant peril. But she missed the clarity—good against evil, the mission and the path unambiguous.

  It was time for her walk. She pulled on her Wellington boots and donned Constantine’s Barbour coat, which still retained the fragrance of his French cigarettes. She had her Irish fisherman’s sweater underneath to furnish another layer and a woolen scarf Galina had knitted one Christmas, back in the days when the poor dear could speak and had two good hands. As was her custom, Dasha took her chestnut walking stick with the knife hidden in the top. As she’d demonstrated when she stopped the murderer Robert Altman, it was a simple matter to withdraw her secret knife and use it as circumstances required. The blade was from a German paratrooper’s kit. Constantine had had it handcrafted by a Montana artisan he’d encountered on a prospecting trip for Petrov Petroleum. He brought it home and presented it to her with a smile. “It’s for defensive purposes only,” Constantine had told his wife, knowing her profession in the field of intelligence might expose her to a certain degree of unpleasantness, to put it politely.