~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Chapter Four~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Rygali?" Trent asked sharply. "There was a picture of him in the records I found last night," Carlos explained. "Can I get your name, please?" the cop asked. Carlos pulled out his badge. "Detective Carlos Sandoval, Dallas P.D." "Thank you for your help, Detective Sandoval," the other cop said as an ambulance arrived. There’d been no hurry, since there was no chance of resuscitation. "Do you need us for anything else, officer?" Trent asked. He and Jen had given their statements before Carlos had arrived. "You’re free to go," the officer answered with a wan smile. * * * Trent, Carlos, and Jen stood next to the ‘Vette. Trent was still stewing over the news. "That was Samuel Rygali," he stated. Carlos nodded. "And the police estimate that he’s been dead for two days," Jen added. Carlos shrugged. "At least we know why he didn’t call the police this morning." "Were you guys at Rygali’s house last night?" Jen asked, piecing together the conversation. The guys caught her up on the case. "Did Red say he’d come back for anything he’d left behind?" Jen wondered. "Other than his apprentices? An object of great value, perhaps?" Trent caught on to Jen’s line of thinking. "Maybe whoever was in Rygali’s home was searching for something Rygali had." "Or something he thought Rygali had," Jen added. "Or something that could implicate him in Rygali’s death," Carlos added. He glanced at his watch. "I’d better get back to the station." He looked directly at Trent. "Don’t go getting into any trouble." "Wouldn’t think of it," Trent answered innocently. Carlos shook his head and walked away. * * * Trent parked the ‘Vette a block from Rygali’s house. "Remember," he instructed Jen, "if anything happens and we get split up, we meet back here." "Tell me again why we’re doing this now, in broad daylight?" Jen demanded, trying to keep her voice low. This was just crazy! "Because the cops will never let us in if they seal the house off as a crime scene," Trent explained reasonably. Jen nodded. "That makes sense. Do you think he was attacked here before being dumped in the bay?" "I think it’s possible," Trent admitted. "And I’m pretty sure that the cops will come to the same conclusion." He handed her a pair of thin surgical gloves, then put on a pair of his own. "So, we’re looking for anything that could give us a clue to the identity of the burglar or whatever he could have been searching for," Jen deduced, wondering if the burglar had already found what he’d been looking for. Jen pretended to knock on the door as Trent picked the lock. "You’d make a good criminal," Jen whispered as he pushed the door open. "Thank you," he answered, ushering her inside. He shut and locked the door behind them. "I’ll check upstairs," Jen volunteered, heading for the stairs. "Be careful," he warned, examining the coffee table. "Gee, Trent," Jen said impishly, heading up the stairs. "I didn’t know you cared!" She disappeared from sight. Trent grinned and shook his head, then returned to his searching. * * * When thorough searches of the living room, dining room, and kitchen failed to turn up anything, Trent moved on to the den. This was the room the ship had been launched from. Trent moved quickly to the mantle and ran his finger across the empty section where The Jolly Redger had set. Judging by the dust on his glove and that surrounding the spot where the replica ship had lain, Trent guessed that no one had even touched the mantle for several years. Until the other night, he reminded himself. The replica ship itself had been dust free, Trent realized. So the intruder must have wiped it off, probably to see if it was what he was looking for. And it obviously hadn’t been, or he wouldn’t have thrown it through the window in anger, he’d have taken it with him. What was so special about that ship? * * * Jen finished searching the bedrooms and she pulled the attic door open. She climbed the stairs and could only gaze in amazement at the huge room. It had once been furnished as a child’s bedroom, but it had fallen into disrepair. The fabrics of the curtains and the bedspread had yellowed with age, and cobwebs covered everything. "Mr. Rygali sure was a lousy housekeeper," Jen muttered, brushing aside some cobwebs. The desk was antique, as were many of the pieces of furniture in the room. Jen, hearing a car outside, crossed to the front window. A police car was parked in front of the house, and two cops were just climbing out. Knowing that her voice would never carry to the first floor any other way, Jen stopped next to the heating vents, hoping for an unobstructed path to Trent’s ears. "Trent!" she called through the heat vent. "Jen?" she heard faintly a moment later. "Trent, you have to get out now!" "What? Where are you?" Trent had found the source of Jen’s voice. "The attic. There are cops outside!" "What about you?" "I’ll meet you at the car!" Jen promised. "Go!" Stepping away from the heating vent, Jen’s foot found a weak spot in the floor. Jen crashed through the wood to the room below! |