“Like a dog,” Rusty added.
“The book was Dracula,” Slim pointed out. “Which is about vampires.”
“Not that we think a vampire did it,” I said.
“But maybe someone from the show. Also, there was this flower vase in my mother’s room. It had yellow roses in it. Somebody broke the vase and took the roses. Then one of the roses turned up in Dwight’s room.”
“At your house?” Bitsy asked me, looking shocked.
I nodded. “They put it on my pillow.”
“Now we’ve got this with Lee missing,” Slim continued. “She and Dwight drove over to Janks Field this morning looking for me and Rusty, and they talked to the main guy of the Vampire Show.”
“Julian Stryker,” I said.
“Lee bought tickets for tonight’s performance, but she paid with a check. The check had her name and address on it. So Julian and his bunch had an easy way to find out where she lives.”
“You think they took her?” Bitsy asked.
The question made me go cold inside.
“We don’t know,” Slim said.
“She ain’t here,” Rusty added.
“But there’re no signs of foul play.” I wanted to talk myself and the others out of believing that Lee had been taken away.
“Not unless you count the open door,” Slim said.
“She might’ve left it like that for the breeze,” I said. “Anyway, she isn’t expecting us for a couple more hours, so maybe she did go somewhere.”
“Without her truck?” Slim asked.
“She might’ve walked over to ...”
“Without her purse?”
“Purse?” I asked.
“It’s on a counter in the kitchen.”
“I saw it,” Bitsy threw in.
Slim said, “I think Lee would’ve taken it with her if she’d gone off on her own.”
“You hardly ever take a purse with you,” I pointed out.
“Yeah, well ... I’m a little different. Most women take their purses everywhere.”
“Maybe she took a different one,” I said. “She has more than one.”
“Let’s have a look,” Slim said.
All of us followed her into the kitchen. Nodding at Lee’s brown leather purse, she said to me, “Why don’t you do the honors? You’re family.”
“Sure.” I moved Lee’s purse from the counter to the kitchen table, where the light was better. Then I frowned at Slim. “Do you really think we oughta do this? It’s sort of invading her privacy.”
“I’ll look,” Rusty volunteered.
“No you won’t,” I said. “We don’t need you going through her stuff.”
“Oh, yeah? What’s ... ?” He shut up, no doubt suddenly afraid I might tell what he’d done that afternoon in Slim’s mother’s bedroom.
Slim said, “We just need to see how full it is ... if maybe she went off with some other purse.”
“It feels pretty heavy,” I said.
“Would you rather have me look?” Slim asked.
“Yeah, maybe so.”
I stepped aside. Slim handed the bow to me, then opened Lee’s purse. As we all watched, she lifted out the billfold. Holding it out of the way, she bent over the purse and peered in. “Checkbook, lipstick, keys....” Then her lips moved, but she said nothing. She reached down into the purse.
Her hand came up holding four stiff red papers the size of postcards cut in half lengthwise.
The first time I’d seen them, they had been in the hand of Julian Stryker when he came out of the bus at Janks Field.
Then I’d seen Lee tuck them into her purse.
Slim studied one of them. Meeting my eyes, she said, “Tickets for tonight’s performance of the Traveling Vampire Show.”
“All right!” Rusty blurted.
Slim and I looked at him. He seemed delighted.
“The tickets, guys. We can still go.”
“Not without Lee,” I said.
“Go where?” Bitsy asked.
Rusty scowled at her. “To the Traveling Vampire Show.”
“What about the drive-in?”
“Screw the drive-in.”
Bitsy glanced hopefully from me to Slim and back to me again. This time, neither of us came to her defense. Her face turned sullen, lower lip bulging out.
Slim set the tickets on the kitchen table. “Guess Lee didn’t switch purses. This one has all the main stuff in it.” She put the billfold back inside. Leaving the tickets on the table, she closed the purse. Then she turned toward me. She looked worried.