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of the woman’s imagination, a result of too many Hollywood movies and too many swigs of beer. “Why didn’t you report seeing the gun?”

      “Yeah, right.” She shrugged. “No one believes an old lady.”

      “What’s your name, ma’am?” He talked to his witness a few more minutes, but got no further useful information. She lived in a local apartment, so he could contact her later, if necessary.

      Across the street, he spotted Sanchez reinterviewing the street peeps on the porch of the Sea Wave. Sweat ran down Dean’s back, and he envied his partner’s shade. With a sigh, Dean moved toward the woman with the beads, but a quick interview told him she’d set up her cart around 9:30 a.m. and hadn’t even been in the area when the shooting went down. Dean shut his notebook and walked back to the hotel.

      Ballard had the surveillance video ready to view in the small office, so Dean sat at the desk preparing himself for more eye strain. Jeez. What luck to have two cases in two days with video to sift through. But that was modern police work. Everything had gone digital and high-tech.

      “Any way to speed this up?” he asked the clerk as the video rolled.

      “The red button.”

      “Thanks. Say, you got any coffee left?” A shot of caffeine was just what he needed for the task ahead.

      When Ballard returned with lukewarm brew, Dean murmured his thanks and continued reviewing the video. Most of it was a static view that captured the front desk and entrance to the guest room area. When a figure entered the frame, Dean slowed the stream to real time to try to make an ID, look for anything suspicious. He wanted to find when Rocky had gone through that doorway to his death, see who the man had talked to.

      He’d been watching for over thirty minutes when Sanchez joined him. Dean paused the surveillance. “Anything?”

      “Nobody saw a thing.”

       Maybe they did and maybe they didn’t.

      Street people didn’t give up information without some cash motivation, which this case didn’t yet warrant. And when they did reveal details, frequently the intel was fiction, brought into existence via a painful past and too much booze. The homeless were seldom reliable witnesses, but you couldn’t discount their version of events immediately.

      Dean nodded and rolled his chair to give the rookie more room to watch.

      A quick blip on the left of the frame caught his attention. A man had entered and moved out of view toward the buffet table. Dean backed up and slowed the video down. All he could see was half a shoulder, but something about the man looked familiar.

      He stayed out of the frame for two minutes, but then reentered and stood by the entrance to the hallway in full view of the camera.

      Dean sat up straighter. Holy shit.

      “Hey,” Sanchez said in an excited voice. “That’s the guy from the pet shop, the bozo that released the birds. He’s even wearing the same ugly shirt.”

      Dean made a note of the time. Three thirty yesterday afternoon, three hours after the pet-shop incident.

      As he watched, Rocky, the dead vic, sidled up to the bird liberator. The two spoke for several minutes. Rocky rubbed his abdominal area as if saying he was hungry. Seemed friendly enough, but Dean made a mental note to get a lip reader to watch the conversation. He needed a translation.

      “Ballard,” Dean yelled toward the front desk, pausing the video. “Come in here.”

      The clerk entered the office, eyebrows raised.

      Dean indicated the monitor. “Who is this guy talking to Rocky?”

      Ballard focused on the frozen image. “That’s John Smith.”

      “The guy who rented the room?” Sanchez asked.

      Ballard nodded.

      “You’re sure?” Dean asked, a shot of adrenaline charging him up far better than any caffeine. The first break in a case was often the most important.

      “No question,” Ballard said.

      “Well, I’ll be damned,” Dean said. What were the odds?

      There had to be a connection between the delightful June Latham and John Smith. He needed to find what it was. Maybe Smith was another bird nut. Ms. Latham said she didn’t know him, but Dean now wondered about that.

      He needed to have another conversation with her.

      Dean checked the time. Just after three. He was almost done here. Should be no problem making it to the animal hospital where she worked before they closed at five.

      * * *

      JUNE STROKED HER palm across the velvety soft fur of a tiny black-and-white kitten in the cardboard box on a stainless-steel examining room table. The kitten arched his spine into her hand, obviously enjoying the attention. Three littermates, two more black-and-whites and one orange tabby, were extending their paws up the sides of the cardboard in a pitiful attempt at escape. They weren’t quite strong enough yet, but the undersize feral mama watched her babies nervously from inside a cage next to the box.

      “That’s Oreo,” Felicia Mayer said, the client who’d brought the litter in.

      “They’re adorable,” June said. “Where did you find them?”

      “Believe it or not, Mama chose my backyard to give birth in.”

      June glanced back to the mother, who now paced the cage, searching for her own escape. “Mama’s no dummy. She knows where food is available.”

      Felicia, a dedicated cat lover, had founded Feline Rescue, an organization that trapped feral cats, had them spayed and then found safe homes. She used her ample powers of persuasion on Dr. Trujillo and other vets in the area to provide services at a reduced rate. June herself had donated more cash than she could afford to Felicia’s cause.

      Felicia smiled and stroked the tabby, the runt of the litter. “The kits seem pretty healthy, but I wanted Dr. Trujillo to check them out.”

      June estimated the kits to be four to six weeks old. Ready to be weaned. Oreo licked her finger with a rough tongue.

      “You’re already attached to them, aren’t you?” June asked.

      Felicia lifted the tabby and rubbed its fur across her cheek. Mama cat whined, a mournful sound. “Yes,” she said. “I couldn’t help it. They’re so cute and helpless.”

      “Are you going to keep all five?”

      Felicia shrugged and shot a glance to the mother. “Probably. Unless I find really good homes.”

      “How many cats do you have now, Felicia?”

      Felicia replaced the kit in the enclosure. “I feed about twenty, but they’re all spayed.”

      June smiled at the thin, dark-haired woman who’d made it her mission to save every stray cat in South Florida. Considering her own work with birds, who was she to say a thing about Felicia’s obsession with felines? “You’re a good person.”

      Felicia sighed. “Maybe. Or maybe I’m just nuts.”

      June heard the front door chime, indicating an arriving patient. “Let me go see who that is. Just wait here. The doctor is finishing up with another patient and will be in to check the kits shortly.”

      “Thanks, June.”

      “Shall I have Elaine make an appointment to have Mama spayed?”

      Felicia nodded. “This will be her first and last litter.”

      June gave Oreo’s fur another stroke and hurried to greet the new arrival, which according to the schedule should be Jessie, a goofy yellow Lab due for his annual checkup and the last appointment of the day.

      But she heard

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