Authors: Susan Breen
Walter Campbell in a kilt. Dear God. It was as though Frankenstein were Scottish. Maggie could hear her best friend cackling in her ear.
Be quiet, Winifred,
she muttered, hoping she hadn't said it out loud. But Walter Campbell, for the first time in her acquaintance with him, did not seem to be mad at her.
“This is my daughter,” he said, gesturing toward that tree-like girl with such reverence and adoration that Maggie actually felt pinpricks of affection for the man, at least until he looked at her and spoke: “I hope you've planned something good for today,” he said. “She's 10 years old, so she's a little old for your class, but I told Jane you were the best.”
She felt flattered and oddly annoyed. Now she couldn't show the vegetable movie. Any other Sunday he could have come and she would have something well planned. But today, for the first time in her career as a Sunday School teacher, she didn't have anything planned and her head hurt from her night out with Frank Bowman and she still felt a lingering sense of doom from her restless sleep last night. A sense of doom. She didn't believe in the supernatural, but she surely believed in trouble.
Any other Sunday, she thought. Any other Sunday.
Still, Maggie recognized she had to do something impressive. Something remarkable, something that would blow Walter Campbell's socks off, a horrifying image if ever there was one. She would have to do something that would engage his daughter, and impress him, and so she decided to go to her default best project. She would bake pretzels.
It was project that had a teeny bit of religious significance, but it came with a wonderful story, and Maggie did love stories. Sometimes she thought she loved Jesus so much because he was always telling stories.
“Back in Medieval times,” she explained to the children, after Campbell had left and she was alone with the four of them, “people used to give up meat and fish for Lent. That meant they would eat a lot of bread, and it probably meant they were sort of hungry. One day a monk noticed some leftover pieces of dough in the kitchen and he decided to do something special with them.
“He took the leftovers and molded them into the shape of crossed arms, because that's how the people prayed then.” She crossed her arms, to illustrate. Dear Edgar also crossed his arms and bowed. Shu Chin giggled at him. Ambrosia looked around wildly, as though a kidnapper was about to make his way through the door, and Jane nodded. Her father's child, Maggie thought. No smiles, just nods. She wondered what dinner at the family table was like.
“These little pieces of dough were so popular, people began giving them to children as treats when they learned their lessons, and they called them
âpretiola,'
which means little reward in Latin.”
Then she lined up the children, all four of them, and they marched from the classroom into the kitchen. Maggie buzzed with excitement but tried to contain herself because the last thing she wanted was to get Edgar worked up. He was being so good. Poor Ambrosia just kept asking where her mother was.
“She's in church, dear,” Maggie whispered, holding the little girl's hand.
Jane looked all about her, not speaking much, but observing. Her father's daughter. And then they were in the kitchen and Maggie was pulling out the trays and finding the flour and other ingredients. She didn't have a recipe with ingredients in front of her, but she felt fairly sure she remembered what was required. Sea salt, which she found in one of the upper cabinets, undoubtedly left over from the last time she'd done it. Sea salt didn't go bad, surely. No yeast. Well, they would have to make do without, though that was going to be tricky. They would be flat pretzels. Flour. Then an egg. There were some in the refrigerator, marked
Do not touch! These belong to Agnes Jorgenson.
Well, tough tootsies, Maggie thought as she swiped one. Desperate times call for desperate measures.
Everything seemed to go well. Edgar did not spill flour all over the floor. They did not shun Jane. In fact, they were quite nice to her and included her in their mixing and it turned out that Jane had quite a knack for doing a Scottish imitation. Either that or she was Scottish. Hard to tell because she didn't speak that much, but they were all enjoying themselves and then they put the pretzels in the oven and waited for them to cook, and she sent the children to the sink to clean everything up, and as they were all washing and scrubbing she found her attention wandering back to the connections between Winifred and Bender.
She wondered if Doc Steinberg knew Bender. She must. Even if Bender didn't go to her, she would certainly know him, or his children. She hadn't said anything about it; but then, Maggie hadn't asked. Was it possible that Doc Steinberg was the murderer?
She was an upright woman. Unflinchingly honest. But one thing Maggie remembered from her research on poisoners was that many of them were doctors. She recalled reading a textbook for police officers that said, when investigating a poisoning, pay special attention to the person who prepares the victim's food and to their doctors. Encyclopedias of poisoners were full of doctors. Look at Robert Clements, who poisoned four wives and only happened to be discovered when a coroner noticed the tiny pupils of the last one, making him think that morphine was involved. Or Michael Swango, who poisoned 60 or so people with arsenic, many of them his patients. He had no particular reason for wanting to kill them; he just took joy in their deaths. He was evil. Could she imagine someone as upright as Doc Steinberg doing something like that? It was impossible to say. How could Maggie look at someone she'd known for decades and say they were a murderer? Easy enough to do in a book, but in real life, what sort of person took another's life?
That was when Maggie felt someone tugging at her arm. Looking down she saw all four children smiling at her, pointing toward the glass window of the oven, at the pretzels, which looked absolutely beautiful. She took them out and set them each on a little paper plate and then they sat around the table, said a prayer and began to eat them, and they were doing that when Walter Campbell reappeared. The service was over.
Jane ran at him and showed him the pretzel. “I saved you some, Daddy. This is for you.”
He placed a small piece into his mouth, chewing it so slowly Maggie wondered if he thought she was the poisoner.
“So,” he said. “What did you learn today?”
“We learned how to make pretzels,” Jane said.
“But what about scripture? What scripture did you learn?”
Jane looked at Maggie, who looked at Walter, in his kilt. Why did he always make her so off balance, she thought. What was it about the man that had her acting like a foolish child? Her temper began to take hold of her. She could hear her mother.
Margaret, that temper of yours is going to get you in trouble.
But she couldn't help herself and she stood in front of him. “There was no scripture today, but we learned about friendship and community and nourishment. That's a good day's lesson, I think.”
He shrugged. “I was hoping she would learn the essentials of her faith.”
“There's plenty of time for that. But sometimes it's good to think about Sunday School as a fun place to go. However,” she couldn't resist adding, “if you don't like the way I teach class, you're more than welcome to sign up and take over for me.”
For just a moment she thought he smiled, which startled her. Then he looked at her closely, doing his wretched Sherlock Holmes imitation. She suspected she had a mark on her sleeve that would tell him she'd been out with Frank Bowman last night, or perhaps he could tell from the circles under her eyes. Though, what business was it of his if she should go to a museum with Frank Bowman, or if she should talk to Char Bender?
“Actually, I need to talk to you about something,” Maggie said. “Could I have a minute?”
“Not now,” he said, looking at Jane, poor girl standing rooted to the spot, not wanting to give offense.
“Edgar will take her up to coffee hour, won't you? We'll meet you there in a minute,” Maggie said.
They waited while Walter thought and then he nodded his head imperceptibly and they all tore off. Leaving Maggie alone with him, in the kitchen. She went over to the counter and sat in one of the tall chairs, to even up their height a little bit. She could not have an argument with a man's knees and she suspected an argument was coming. He maneuvered himself onto the chair across from her and sat down.
“I spoke to Char Bender yesterday.”
He looked like steam would come out of his ears. “I told youâ”
She cut him off. “Last time I looked you were not my father. I found out some information. Would you like to hear it?”
He crossed his arms. She could almost see him counting to ten. He still wore a wedding ring, she noticed. Boy, she would love to hear the details of that breakup. She wondered what his wife was like, she wondered what would propel a man as pompous as Campbell to abandon his family.
“This relates to the murders. Do you seriously not want to hear it just because I found it out and you didn't?”
“What did you find out, Mrs. Dove?”
She told him about Char then, and what Bender's first wife had told her about the arrangement with his second, and how Noelle might well be pregnant. If Bender had lived, he would have forced her to give up the baby. “That's a pretty compelling reason for murder, I would say.”
“And what about Ms. Levy?” he asked.
“I don't know why Noelle would have wanted to kill her, but that doesn't mean there isn't a reason. I just haven't found it yet. There's also the consideration that she did prepare Bender's food. Who would be in a better position to kill him?”
“You've done a lot of research on the psychology of poisoners, have you?”
“I've read a book or two.”
“And written one or two.”
“Yes, it's not a crime,” she said.
“So you fancy yourself Jessica Fletcher, do you?”
“I fancy myself a woman who does not want to see someone railroaded because the chief of police is so obsessed with one suspect that he will not consider any others.”
Walter Campbell snapped one of the pretzels in half. The damn noon whistle blew, startling Maggie.
“All right. I've listened to you. Now I'd like you to listen to me. I want to propose an alternative scenario. Do you think it's possible that Ms. Levy took her own life?”
“Winifred?” she said. “No.”
Winifred a suicide? Maggie thought. Easier to see her as a killer.
“Is it so impossible to believe?” Walter said. “She had found out that her disease was getting worse. Perhaps she couldn't bear to suffer anymore.”
He gazed at her with a surgeon's implacable look. Had Winifred been getting worse? Maggie wondered. She didn't really know and Winifred never complained about it. She prided herself on her toughness, or maybe, Maggie thought, Winifred didn't tell her about her fears because she didn't think Maggie wanted to know. Was that possible?
“What are you suggesting?” Maggie asked.
“She knew that Marcus Bender died of an overdose of Ecstasy. Maybe that showed her a way out. She couldn't get her hands on a lot of other drugs, but she could get hold of Ecstasy.”
Immediately Maggie saw the connection he was making. “So now you've got Peter giving her poison?”
“He might not have known what she was going to do with it. Maybe she told him she was taking it to relieve her Parkinson's. Like Char Bender. Maybe he thought he was helping her. He could have a perfectly innocent reason for giving her the Ecstasy.”
From the kitchen window, Maggie could see the Memorial Garden. The young Sunday School students were clambering all over it, jumping on the graves. Soon someone would come and pull them off, complain.
“Next you'll be telling me Peter supplies Char Bender. Look, I'm not holding Peter up as a paragon of virtue, but I do think he'd draw the line at handing over Ecstasy, even to a sick person.”
“Do you?” Walter said.
She stopped. Did she? The truth was, she could see the whole thing with agonizing clarity. Winifred wheedling, Peter trying to say no, the two of them vowing to keep the information from her, as though she were a schoolmarmâ¦or a Sunday School teacher.
“He has gotten in trouble in the past for selling Ecstasy.”
“When he was 16, and his records were sealed.” Foolishness, foolishness, Peter swept up with a bad crowd, getting into trouble. Oh, her husband was so mad about that, wanted her to force Juliet not to hang out with him anymore, but Maggie resisted. She knew he was good. He needed help, not condemnation, and she still believed that.
Campbell grimaced. There was something monumental about the man that made her want to pound on him and scream. He was too big, too implacable. He had a way of sucking the life out of everything. The kitchenâwhich had, only half an hour earlier, been a place of joy and happinessâwas now as cold as a morgue.
“So then, what are you saying? Are you writing this whole thing off? You're saying that Winifred Levy killed herself and that Peter got her the drugs, and so that's the end of the story? One tawdry little episode in the Darby-on-Hudson history and that's the end of it?”
“I'm not giving up, Mrs. Dove; I never said I was. I'm just trying to understand what happened.”
“Why don't you try understanding this? My friend is dead. My courageous, irritating, wonderful friend Winifred is dead and I find it hard to believe that after fighting this disease for so many years, she would just give up. I believe someone killed her, and instead of looking at Peter, who seems to have been front and center in your giant radar vision since the moment you arrived in this town, I would advise considering other people, because I can tell you that there seem to me to be several people in town with motives.” How easy it would be for Doc Steinberg to get hold of Ecstasy, she thought. She didn't want the murderer to be Doc Steinberg, but if she had to chooseâ¦