Keeping Mum (A Garden Society Mystery) (21 page)

“Here you go,” Cam said, handing it to her.

“I’m sorry I went off on you,” Vera said. “I just get paranoid. A woman with money has to be so careful.”

“I imagine that’s true,” Cam said.

“Do you come from money?”

“Not particularly. We weren’t poor, but my dad was just a carpenter. I guess in those days it was decent, but not fancy.”

“You’re lucky. You know who your friends are.”

“You know, I’ve had a best friend for a very long time with the same issues, so I really do know what you’re talking about. Annie always handled it by being a little outrageous. If she was sort of out there, then the people concerned about appearances shied away. I guess in her family, it was more about power than money.”

“She’s lucky she had the courage to do it that way. I really just relied on being a rebellious bad girl, but that got me about what I deserved.”

“I don’t think anyone deserves to be taken advantage of, if that’s what you mean.”

“No. I just married my bad boy, and . . .”

She trailed off and Cam debated whether to probe.

“Did he get mixed up with the wrong people or something then?” Cam said.

“Oh, which set?” Vera said quietly.

“There were lots of wrong people?” Cam asked, not sure she’d understood.

“The loan sharks, the drug dealers, the money launderers. You can find all three right here.”

Cam feigned shock but didn’t want to overdo it. “But they all seem to really have liked him.”

“Sure. When he was paid up.”

“I’m . . . um . . . sorry about that. I’m sure it was hard. Why didn’t you leave him?”

She laughed bitterly then and handed Cam her empty glass. It had been too quick for as much alcohol as was in it, but Cam knew it worked in her favor, so she rushed back to make another one, ignoring an annoyed look from Dylan that she wasn’t pulling her weight with the other guests. She would catch up in a minute and help him out.

“Here you go,” Cam said, handing her the drink.

“Thank you. It’s just . . . leaving was never an option. Not for a shallow girl like me. Dad said he’d marry what’s-her-name if I didn’t stay married to Mike. That meant half or more of his fortune, which isn’t nearly so enormous as he pretended, would go to her. If he really was enormously rich, that would have been one thing, but I’m used to a certain lifestyle. I just couldn’t take that chance.”

Cam doubted it would have left Vera clipping coupons. His fortune couldn’t be
that
small in reality, but she had some idea what wealthier people worked with. Derrick Windermere certainly had lived like a very wealthy man, so his daughter was used to that, too.

“How did he do everything he did if he didn’t have . . .”

“Oh, he wrote it all off! Wining and dining clients, travel, club memberships. All part of doing business with the people he did business with.”

Cam wondered what job she could do that would require her to go for massages and get her nails done. She knew in spite of liking that kind of luxury, she actually had too strong a work ethic.

“I should probably get back to helping out,” Cam said. More glares were coming her way than just Dylan’s, so she rushed to take care of several clusters of people. Now that she was in a hurry, she didn’t feel nearly as efficient at the task. In fact, she was beginning to feel a lot more sympathy for waitresses than she ever had before. It wasn’t that she’d thought they were lazy or anything, but it seemed a job anybody ought to be able to do. She found that being in a hurry, trying to remember too many things, and being constantly interrupted by people made for great difficulties in getting the right drinks to the right people.

When shouting arose at the poker table, everyone seemed to forget they were still missing drinks. One of the men had stood and stormed to the door. He had Chad Phillips, who’d been trying to enter, by the collar, but the bigger news was an accusation at the table that one of the other players had stolen the man’s chips when he walked away. The man who’d walked away was Big Al, and Cam watched as Melvin pulled the man’s chair over backward and began hitting the man next to him in the face.

Finally, the whale man, Harry Taggert, stood and shouted. “This is supposed to be a civilized game in memory of Sully! Sully was the best of us and we should be respectful!” He picked up Elle’s hand then and kissed it.

Cam wondered if she should just get as far out of the way as possible or if people would remember they were thirsty any minute and start clamoring for their drinks again. She decided to err on the side of delivery. She thought she could watch for flying bodies, and hoped that Harry had actually just halted any other bad behavior, so she rushed to pour several drinks and get them to the next table on her list.

Unfortunately, that was when Melvin spotted her, or rather, finally seemed to recognize her. He came toward Cam with unusual speed and grabbed her arm.

“Well, don’t you seem to be everywhere?”

“I beg your pardon?” Cam said.

“You planned that little shindig where Windermere got offed, didn’t you?”

Chad came over and the two had a whispered conversation, Melvin never letting go of Cam’s arm.

Vera stood and stared at Cam. She hadn’t known that detail.

“I helped with it, yes.”

“And then what are you doing
here
?”

“Chad?” Vera said. “This isn’t the place. You really shouldn’t be here,” she said. “And . . .” She gestured to Melvin, and Chad pulled at his arm so he finally let go of Cam.

Chad made an ugly face and then turned to leave. Everybody backed away a step to let him pass like he was contagious. Cam thought it was over, but Vera rounded on her.

“You were there when my dad died?”

“Yes. I was working. I told you . . .”

“So you really have been following me around?”

Another woman neared them whom Cam only now recognized from the funeral. Cam tried to remember what her story that day had been. Something about working with Windermere, but she knew she was busted. What she didn’t know was how to spin this so it sounded perfectly reasonable. It was something she did well, but not on the fly. She had never been able to improvise well. She closed her eyes and tried to conjure Annie. Annie would have the perfect cover story.

“Look, I know it all seems odd, but I swear. I was at both events because I am best friends with Annie Schulz. She asked me to help with the other, and Elle alerted me they might need help here. I just bought a new car and my savings is depleted, so they were both doing me a favor.”

“The club?”

“Complete coincidence.”

“But you’re not thinking of joining?”

“No. I thought we’d be treated better if we said that. Evangeline Patrick is a friend of mine, and I did her a favor recently, so she gave us a few guest passes. That’s all.”

“You’re sure?”

“Positive. What was that all about?” Cam pointed to where Chad had just left.

“You know who that is, don’t you?”

“He’s a politician. I recognize his face, but don’t know him by name.” Cam hoped she could pull off this lie.

“Well, I apologize for his paranoia, and more so for his friend’s.” She glared at Melvin. “I suspect he thinks you’re an enemy spy working to undermine his campaign.” She laughed then, which relieved Cam. Whatever relationship Vera had with Chad, she at least seemed to have a read on what he saw as important—him.

All in all, Cam was glad when the night was finally over. Her feet ached, her brain was numb, and she felt like the stickiness from the soda dispenser would never come off. More than nineteen thousand dollars was collected for Mike Sullivan’s charity, something that amazed Cam, though she’d seen the guy there giving charity receipts to people, winners and losers alike, so there was a tax benefit. It was strange to imagine these thug do-gooders. It all seemed so contrary.

She and Dylan took more than an hour to clean up after the place had cleared out.

“Didn’t know you’d be bringing your own excitement,” he said.

“Not on purpose! I had no clue those people would be here.”

“I probably wouldn’t have guessed it, either, so don’t worry too much. Couple of fights, though? Especially that catfight. I was hoping . . .”

“Yes, yes. That they’d get to hair pulling and wrestling and then they’d kiss,” Cam said.

“No. I’ve just never seen a chick haul off and deck another chick before. Like a punch. I was hoping for blood.”

Cam rolled her eyes.

“Only because I sort of know this crowd. I wouldn’t want to see
you
in a fight like that or anything.”

“That’s good, because I’m a major wimp.”

“You are not. Are you forgetting you rescued me once?”

Cam laughed. It was true. She, Annie, and Benny had rescued Dylan, but it had nearly been a fiasco.

She was glad when they finally finished cleaning up and she could just sit in the passenger seat of his pickup with the window cracked.

• • •

• • •

R
ob was waiting for her when she got home. She was surprised to see it was barely past midnight. She kicked off her shoes and flopped onto her futon.

Rob gave a bemused look. “So . . . rough night?”

“Why did nobody tell me how hard waitressing is?”

“It is?”

“Yes. We should tip like thirty percent from now on.”

“Thirty!”

She turned and threw her feet across his lap.

“That bad, huh?”

She propped herself on a couple of pillows and lay back while he massaged her feet.

“Ouch! Gentle! I think the bottoms are bruised.”

“You get hazard pay?”

“No, but I made seventy-two dollars, and that was with Dylan penalizing me for the half hour I spent talking to our friend Vera.”

“Vera was there?”

“She thought I was following her. That I was some tabloid reporter or something.”

“Imagine what she’d do if she knew I
really
was a reporter.”

“And Elle had to protect me . . .”

“Say what?”

“I told her I was looking into her brother’s death—with you, for your job. Which I sort of am, right?” Cam asked.

Rob scoffed. “If you say so.”

“I figured it would keep her on my side. It’s something she wants solved. And if we solve the murders, then it works for everyone, right?”

“You’re a spin queen. You do know that?”

Cam sighed. “Part of the job.”

“But yes. If we do what we’re trying to do for your dad, we also figure out who the killer is, and that will make Elle happy, so there’s no harm in it.” Rob said. “Say, speaking of Vivian . . .”

Cam had been about to drift off, but that brought her around again, especially as they
hadn’t
been speaking of Vivian. “Yeah?”

“I’ve got a lot better grasp now on why the police have been so focused on her. If we look into the stuff, we . . . well, we either help them prove it was her, or we prove it couldn’t have been. Do you want to pursue it?”

“Yes! I mean, I don’t want it to be her, but I’d want my dad to be with a murderer even less, so either way we should definitely do it! What do you have?”

CHAPTER 18

A
s it turned out, Derrick Windermere’s history with Vivian Macy was not strictly political animosity. Rob told Cam he’d turned on her because of something that had started romantically and then gone sour. Friends of Vivian’s had admitted to police that they’d dated briefly, and when Vivian found out the kind of ethics he had in business, she’d ended it. He hadn’t taken it well.

“How did you learn this?” Cam asked.

“Annie. Jake keeps a notebook and she keeps reading little bits. This was the first real surprise in a while.”

Cam wondered if it was time to go talk to Vivian again. She thought the woman herself would have the best chance of clearing things up, even if the conversation would be awkward. She was a little worried, though, and felt maybe she should gather additional information before she pursued it directly. She considered going to her father, but he might be defensive or sensitive, and she imagined that if this really was headed in a romantic direction, Vivian might not have revealed her past love-related fiascoes to him. She scanned her brain for who else she knew who would know Vivian well, and came to a very strange conclusion. Neil Patrick.

She’d never approached Mr. Patrick directly in a murder investigation. She found his wife, Evangeline, significantly more approachable. But Evangeline was too young to have been a part of the social circle before Vivian left town to make her name, returning only to take her place in local politics. Cam thought Mr. Patrick had been at college with her mom and Vivian, even if he was a little older. Besides that, he’d been on every who’s who list Roanoke had ever produced, so he knew everyone involved, yet he hadn’t been one of the people pushing a specific political agenda. She thought his neutrality would be good for getting at the truth, unlike Samantha Hollister, who clearly didn’t care for Vivian.

Then again, understanding
that
might be helpful, too. She had a hard time thinking of a reason somebody wouldn’t like Vivian, unless their politics clashed, which they probably did. But Samantha’s agenda seemed more personal.

• • •

• • •

A
s Cam sat at her desk trying to work, she debated whom to talk to. As she went back and forth, Neil Patrick returned from a meeting, so she decided to just bite the bullet.

“Mr. Patrick? Do you have a minute?”

“Of course I do, Cammi! What can I do for you?”

She went into his office and shut the door, something that caused an alarmed expression to cross his kindly face.

“I trust Evangeline. In fact if you’d like, she can come in. It’s just that we never know who
else
might come in,” Cam said.

“I see.” He didn’t look particularly calmed by that.

“It’s . . . the murder at the fund-raiser the other night . . . and the one that followed in Newport News . . .”

Mr. Patrick looked confused, so Cam explained.

“Mike Sullivan, Derrick Windermere’s son-in-law, was killed just a few days later.”

Mr. Patrick’s face fell. “This doesn’t have to do with the Roanoke Garden Society, does it?”

“Not in any way I can think of. Actually, I’m helping my dad out. His lady friend, Vivian Macy, has been connected to both victims. And my dad asked me to help him show she didn’t do it, and I don’t think she did. But I’m also a little worried he’s looking at this through . . . a filter . . . because he likes her. I just wanted to talk to somebody who knew all the parties, who’d been around Roanoke and politics for a long time. I mean, I like Vivian, but if she
is
a killer, I’d rather know and warn my dad. Do you . . . know her?”

“Of course I do. I’ve known her for years.”

“Do you know anything about a romantic history with Derrick Windermere?”

His eyes popped and his jaw dropped. “Oh, I don’t think so! I wouldn’t imagine they’d get along. Derrick was always . . .”

“A little shady?” Cam finished.

“Well . . . yes.”

“Evangeline said you didn’t trust him.”

“Not even a little. And that was before that deal Melvin talked me into where I lost my britches, so to speak.”

“Why do you think Vivian might have been convinced to go out with him?”

“I can’t think of anything except a mutual friend trying to set them up.”

“Set them up? Like a joke?”

Mr. Patrick looked startled. “Well, no. That wasn’t how I meant it; it seems like a rotten thing to do. But I suppose that could be true, too. I meant someone who . . . either didn’t know one or the other of them very well. Just a date. Attractive people, both divorced. There was a time divorce was sort of a mark of shame.”

Cam knew in some upper circles, it still was, but Mr. Patrick, a widower, was too kind to say so.

“I suppose someone might be intentionally putting them in each other’s path for other reasons,” he continued.

“And why might they do that?”

He stroked his mustache and looked confused for a minute, and then narrowed his eyes. “Because they didn’t have the power to get Derrick to stop his shenanigans, but wanted him to?”

“Somebody trying to scare him straight?”

“Yes. Like that.”

“Might somebody trying to scare him straight have gotten angry if it didn’t work?”

“Maybe. But I can’t imagine a person who tried to help him do the right thing then committing murder if it didn’t pan out.”

That was true. The moralities didn’t match.

“Did you know Mike Sullivan at all?”

“I can’t say I did.”

“He worked on Vivian’s campaign for a while . . . stole some money.”

Mr. Patrick shook his head, so Cam thought that was as far as she was going to get with him. It was an intriguing thought, though, somebody setting up Vivian Macy and Derrick Windermere—for whatever reason.

• • •

• • •

C
am worked for a few more hours, then decided to make an afternoon visit to Samantha’s house. She was ready for the “anti” argument where Vivian Macy was concerned. She didn’t think she could be convinced, but she thought she needed to hear it.

She called ahead. She’d dropped in on Samantha a number of times without calling, but sometimes the surprises she found there were too unsettling. Besides, she didn’t want to solidify a reputation as being rude. Thankfully, Samantha was happy to talk to her and invited her out to her house.

“Camellia, darling! Come in!”

Cam was a little wrong-footed with the over-the-top hospitality and she felt a strange sense of déjà vu. She’d been here once before claiming to be worried about a loved one’s romantic endeavors. It couldn’t be helped, though. This really was an important angle, and since she had a precedent, convincing Samantha that was the total reason didn’t seem improbable.

“Thank you so much for seeing me, Samantha. I know how busy you are.”

“Nonsense. Now that that fund-raiser is over, I’m shopping at my leisure for the holidays. I’ll have Thanksgiving at the country club. Margot is joining me, but you know my family history. Nobody else I really care to see.”

Margot was Samantha’s niece, and Margot’s brother, an undeniable scoundrel, had been killed about six months earlier—the first murder Cam had solved. In fact, she didn’t like to think about it, as it seemed to have set off a really bad string of luck where dead bodies were concerned.

“That sounds nice,” Cam said. Nick was cooking her own family’s Thanksgiving dinner. It was sure to be divine, as he was a great cook. Cam and Annie were on pie, roll, and eggnog duty. “I’m glad you’re getting a break then.”

“Gin and tonic?” Samantha asked.

“Yes please: weak, if you don’t mind.”

“Of course.”

Samantha poured and chattered about how much money had been made for Jared Koontz at the fund-raiser.

“So how do you know Jared?” Cam asked.

Samantha paused and seemed to be thinking. “I’m pretty sure I met him when he was working as a staff person for Alden.”

“Was that before your falling out with Alden?”

Samantha narrowed an eye. “Now I wouldn’t call it a falling out, exactly. Alden and I run in the same circles and have known each other a very long time. We get along for the most part. We’ve just had a few ugly disagreements over the years.”

That hadn’t been how Cam understood the relationship at all, especially as Samantha had recently suggested Alden murdered somebody. “Why did you think he would have killed Derrick Windermere?” she asked.

“Oh, that was silly impulse. Now those two I know didn’t get along, but Derrick could rub people the wrong way. It’s too bad, really. He was so charming.”

Of all the adjectives she’d heard about Derrick Windermere, this was certainly the most surprising. It wasn’t the first nice one. She’d heard “generous,” or “smart,” or “ambitious.” But the man didn’t seem very well liked. Charming went with likability in her mind.

“Listen, this is strange. My dad has asked me—he has been seeing Vivian Macy—I’m sure you noticed. And . . . well Vivian has been connected to Derrick. Dad wanted me to learn what I could to . . . cast doubt?”

“Oh, Cam, I don’t know if that’s such a good idea.”

“Well, I’m not either. If Vivian did this, I certainly don’t want a murderer dating my father! But . . . people seem to like her . . . except for you. So I thought maybe I should ask you to give me the other side of the story.”

Samantha looked surprised, and Cam took a sip of her drink to try to appear relaxed. She hoped Samantha could calm down, too, and treat this like a normal conversation.

“She and I were friends once upon a time,” Samantha said. “From years ago—elementary school, maybe. We always got along just fine. She changed though.”

Cam tried not to cast any judgment about that. Change could be good or bad. It sort of depended on the direction. And Samantha was definitely a person Cam saw both good and bad in, so really, it wasn’t fair to assume Vivian had improved and Samantha had stayed the same materialistic, vain person she’d been when she was younger.

“Somebody said Vivian and Derrick had dated. But . . . they seem ill suited. Do you know how that happened?”

“That was my own stupidity! Vivian was moving back to town after spending several years in Richmond, and I knew Derrick was just getting over his divorce. I thought they’d have fun together.”


You
set them up?”

“I was trying to do a good deed! It was before I realized how much Vivian had changed.”

“I see.” And she did. Samantha was unlikely to try to make Derrick learn the importance of integrity—Samantha didn’t seem all that concerned about alternative ethics. She didn’t say it, but the thing that was still possible in Cam’s mind was that Samantha really did know Vivian had changed for the better and maybe wanted to tarnish her reputation a little.

“So you don’t think Vivian would . . . murder someone, do you?”

“Well, I never would expect that of anyone. In Vivian’s case, part of it is that I don’t think she’d get her hands dirty. But I wouldn’t put it past her to . . . play victim and inspire somebody else to do it.”

That didn’t sound even remotely right to Cam. She wondered what exactly had happened between Samantha and Vivian that had soured their friendship so badly.

“So you think I really need to be cautious about Vivian. Should I worry about my dad?”

“Well, only if he gets in her way. I think she can be ruthless in her ambition.”

“Would Derrick have gotten in her way?”

“I can’t say. I think maybe he could have. He had great resources.”

“So this would have been politically motivated? If she did it, I mean.”

“Honey, ambition is all that woman has. Everything with her is politically motivated.”

Cam finished her drink and thanked Samantha for her time. She left the conversation feeling more negatively about Samantha, rather than Vivian, but she knew she should try to maintain some objectivity. At least she had a good solid set of questions to ask Vivian.

• • •

• • •

C
am didn’t want to go through her dad to set up a meeting with Vivian. She didn’t believe, yet, that Vivian was dangerous, but at the same time, there had been enough doubt thrown out that she preferred to leave him out of it in case things didn’t go well.

The trouble was, finding access to Vivian without going through her dad meant going back to her office to look at the official roster from the fund-raiser. She had never contacted Vivian directly except by email, and she couldn’t think of another route to find the woman’s personal contact information.

When she entered the Patrick Henry, it was evening; eerie piano was playing even though no sound system existed and the piano sat unattended. It was the haunted hotel stuff Annie loved to tease her with, but Cam had spent enough time there that she was starting to be fond of certain aspects of the haunting. Though as she came out of the elevator on the second floor, she had to amend that—not all of it pleased her. The smoky smell hovered from the man who’d been killed there in the twenties—the same man they’d based their murder mystery dinner on.

Through the glass doors she thought she saw a light from the door of Evangeline’s office, but when she got inside, she realized she was mistaken. It must have been a reflection from the security lighting in the hallway. She locked the front door again behind her. She doubted anybody else would come into their private suite, but a woman alone at night couldn’t be too careful. She went into her office and turned on the computer.

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