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CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHTTHE BODY WITH THE KNIVES

Our next interview is going to require a different approach. Unlike Malia, I don’t think Mr. Namura is going to enjoy being a suspect. I check this theory with Felix as we head to the kitchen.

“Are all chefs a little sensitive?”

“I assume you’re asking because of my mad culinary skills?” Felix preens, but he’s not wrong, so I let it pass. “Based on a statistically small sampling, I’d say yes. But it could also be a Mr. Namura thing.”

We find him in the kitchen, which isn’t unusual. The odd part is that he isn’t cooking. My detective skills suggest this might have something to do with the empty cupboard shelves.

“What’s going on?” Felix asks.

“I’m restocking the spices,” Mr. Namura replies as he wipes down the inside of a cabinet. “Might as well give it a good cleaning while I’m at it.”

I peek into the reusable shopping bags lined up against the wall, confirming that they are, in fact, full of jarred spices. “What happened to the old ones?”

“They took them in for testing.” His tone is flat, but there’s a bite-size huff at the end that tells us how he really feels.

“But it wasn’t an allergy,” I argue, as if Detective Ortiz is in the room and interested in my opinion. “You can’t poison someone with cinnamon.”

Mr. Namura shrugs. “Perhaps they think I replaced the turmeric with arsenic.” He finishes wiping down another shelf and sets the cloth in the sink before reaching into one of the bags. Each spice gets a quick wipe with a tea towel, after which he sets them on the counter, label facing forward. Is he—yes, he is arranging them alphabetically. Thank goodness my mother isn’t here to get ideas.

“I didn’t want to leave the shelves empty,” he says without looking at us. “In case they come back and lock me up.”

“They’re not going to do that.” It’s a reflexive response, but alsocome on. Would a guy who treats paprika with this much care kill a human being?

“Who can say?” Mr. Namura slides a jar of cardamom next to the caraway seeds.

Felix reaches into the bag, handing him another spice without looking at the label. “Did he happen to mention what kind of poison it was?”

“The detective is too cunning for that.” Despite the ransacking of his kitchen, there’s a lingering trace of admiration in Mr. Namura’s voice. “But I notice they also searched medicine cabinets. And the waste bins.”

I share a quick glance with Felix, who seems to be thinkingthe same thing. They were too late to find a certain missing tumbler. I can’t help wondering what Detective Ortiz would have made of finding Bernie’s big cup in the trash: a smoking gun, or a meaningless coincidence?

“The outside dumpster has been emptied since then,” I note.

Mr. Namura smiles. “You realized much sooner than they did. Two of the deputies had already climbed inside.” He frowns. “Not that I want them to fail.”

“I wouldn’t blame you for feeling resentful.” Felix bends to grab a couple more spice jars. “They basically accused you of murder.”

“Justice is a sun that shines unequally on the rich and the poor.” Mr. Namura nods, appreciating his own wisdom. His Killing Me Softly scripts are always full of philosophical asides.

“What else needs to be done?” Felix asks, looking around the kitchen.

“This is your vacation,” Mr. Namura protests. “You should enjoy yourselves.”

“I think that ship has sailed.” I try to soften the words with a what-can-you-do shrug.

“Because of the murder,” he sighs.

“It’s not just that,” I reassure him. “There’s Claude not being here, and his will, and then his horrible sister trying to ruin everything—” I suck a whistling breath through my teeth.

“What?” Felix sounds panicked, like he might need to Heimlich me.

“I was thinking of my ring and whether Bernie was going to try to take that too, and then it hit me.” I spread both hands like an explosion. “It’s apoisonring. What if somebody used it to off Bradley?”

When did I last lay eyes on it? Yesterday? The day before?The top of my dresser is nowhere near as neat as Mr. Namura’s arrangement of spice jars. “It probably looks bad that I didn’t mention it to Detective Ortiz.”

Not that he’s pulled me aside to ask for my insights into the crime, but still. That’s the kind of thing you’re better off volunteering.