Authors: Lorna Barrett
“How will I get into the house?”
“You'll find a spare key inside the garage. It hangs on the back wall on a nail under a little framed picture of flowersâ¦if he hasn't sold that, too,” she added bitterly.
“I'll try to get there either tonight or tomorrow, and I'll come back and tell you what I've found.”
Grace clasped Tricia's hand. “I'm trusting youâa stranger. Please help me.”
Tricia swallowed down a lump in her throat and nodded. “I will.”
Tricia stood
at St. Godelive's third-floor nurses' station, trying to make sense of what she'd just learned. “And you say Grace's memory just seems to have returnedâlike magic?”
“More like a miracle,” Martha said, and grinned. “I've worked with the elderly for over twenty years, and you don't see it happen often, but when it does, it truly is a gift from God.”
Miracle my foot
, Tricia thought cynically. Something had to have changed for Grace, but Tricia wasn't about to speculate in front of someone working for St. Godelive. Could she trust any of them? Mike would had to have had help in keeping Grace senseless. But who? A staff member? Maybe her own physician? No one else came to visit Grace, so that seemed most likely.
“I'd like to come visit Grace again. You don't see any problem with that, do you?”
“Not at all. In fact, stimulation is the best thing for her at this point in her recovery.”
Tricia gave the nurse a smile. “Thank you.”
Â
Dressed in
a neon pink Hawaiian shirt, Frannie Mae Armstrong stood on the porch outside the chamber of commerce's offices, watering the fuchsias as Tricia drove past. She slowed and honked the horn. Frannie bent down, squinted, recognized her, and waved.
Tricia parked her car in the village's municipal lot and hiked the half a block to the C of C office. With no sign of Frannie outside, she entered the log cabin to find the secretary-receptionist attending to her indoor plants. “Hi, Frannie,” she called.
“Well, how-do, Tricia. What brings you back to the chamber?”
“I've been admiring your flowers on the porch,” she lied. “They're beautiful.”
“I feed 'em liquid plant food. Works like a charm. But they won't last much longer. First frost andâ” She made a slashing motion against her throat. “Then again, the porch roof might protect them for another week or two, unless the remnants of Hurricane Sheila washes them away in the next twenty-four hours. It's always a crapshoot with those babies.” She retreated to the counter and set down her watering can. “I saw your window had been broken when I drove by yesterday. Did the sheriff figure out who did it?”
“Not yet.”
Frannie clicked her tongue. “It's just terrible what's been going on here in Stoneham this past week. I would've never believed it. Maybe in Honolulu, but not here.”
“Honolulu?” Tricia asked. Talk about a non sequitur.
Frannie smiled broadly. “Where I plan to retire. It's a big city compared to Stoneham. Mighty expensive, too. But my heart's set on it.” She pulled at the lapel on her shirt and winked. “I've already got my wardrobe.”
Tricia could do little more than gape at the woman.
“Now,” Frannie said, all business. “What can I do for you today?”
Tricia struggled to change mental gears. “I'm still trying to figure out where Bob Kelly could have been last Tuesday night after he left the Brookview Inn. Any chance you can tell me?” she asked brightly.
Frannie's lips tightened. “He had a business meeting.”
“With a representative from a big box company?”
“I can't tell you that,” Frannie said. “I can't tell you any more.”
“Oh, come on,” Tricia chided. “It's no secret. Everyone in the village is talking about it.”
“Who?”
Tricia shrugged. “Everybody.”
“Now, Miss Tricia, you wouldn't want me to blab my boss's business, risk my job, just to satisfy your curiosity, now would you? Surely you'd expect that kind of loyalty from your own employees.”
Tricia blinked. “Well, yes, of course. It's just thatâ” She realized that no matter what she said, she already looked a fool. “I'm sorry, Frannie. I didn't mean to put you in a compromising position.”
“Well, of course you didn't,” Frannie said in all sincerity. “I can understand where y'all are coming from. Things don't look good for you right now.” She lowered her voice confidentially. “We all read the story in Friday's
Stoneham Weekly News.
”
Tricia's cheeks burned, but she kept her lips clamped shut.
“It's been said you think Bob might have killed Doris Gleason. Now, I don't know about you, but I prefer to believe in the good in people. My daddy always said hearsay and gossip is just not nice. And I know in your heart of hearts that you don't believe Bob would hurt anybody. He's a good man, and I know you're a good woman. I just know these things.”
“Thank you,” Tricia managed, feeling even smaller.
An awkward silence fell between them.
The phone rang and Frannie picked it up. “Stoneham Chamber of Commerce. Frannie speaking. How can I help you?”
Tricia inched away from the counter, reaching behind her to find the door handle.
“Hold on just a sec,” Frannie told the caller. “Now you have a good afternoon, Miss Tricia.”
Tricia forced a smile. “Thank you,” she said and hurriedly left the office.
Â
An impatient
Ginny stood at the door when Tricia returned to Haven't Got a Clue. “Thank goodness you're here. I've nearly been jumping out of my skin for the last hour waiting for you.”
“What's happened?” Tricia asked, concerned. “Why didn't you call me on my cell phone?”
“You've got it turned off,” she said with disdain. “Again!”
Tricia waved her off and headed for the sales counter to stow her purse. “So what's the big news?”
“We caught her!” Ginny said with triumph.
“Caught who?”
“The mad leaflet dropper!”
Tricia's head whipped round so fast she was in danger of whiplash. “Who is it?”
“You mean today? Just some tourist.”
Tricia waved her hands beside her ears, as though brushing away a pesky fly. “Run that by me again. A tourist?”
Ginny's smile was smug. “It's a racket.” She signaled for Mr. Everett to join them. “I got her to tell me her part, but it was Mr. Everett who tracked down the whole story, and I think he should be the one to tell you.”
“You give me too much credit,” the older gentleman said as he approached. “Ms. Miles, the customer told me which bus she came in on, and I went in search of it to talk to the driver. It seems he's seen this happen several times over the last week or so. A man in a business suit approaches one of the tour members, someone who doesn't appear to be with friends. He offers that person money if they'll hide the leaflets in books or other merchandise when they visit the booksellers in Stoneham. He pays them in cashâas much as fifty dollars.”
Tricia crossed her arms over her chest. “Where did the tour originate?”
“In Boston.”
She exhaled a long breath through her nose. “It was probably a representative from the Free Spirit chain of nudist camps and resorts. It's helpful information, but unfortunately it doesn't help us stop the problem.”
“Perhaps we could ask for the sheriff's help,” Mr. Everett suggested. “These people are in a sense littering. Perhaps if a deputy met each bus and warned themâ”
“It's a good ideaâif it can be worked out. But I'm afraid I have no pull with the sheriff's office,” Tricia said, her unpleasant visit with Wendy Adams still too fresh in her mind.
“Why don't you ask Mike Harris to deal with it?” Ginny proposed. “He's running for selectman.”
Tricia fought to keep a grimace from pulling at her mouth. “Mike and Iâ¦aren't exactly on friendly terms today.” And she wanted to keep it that way.
“I see,” said Mr. Everett. “Then perhaps we could enlist one of the other booksellers to approach the sheriff. I'd be glad to speak with Jim Roth over at History Repeats Itself.”
“No, that would be my responsibility, but thank you just the same, Mr. Everett.”
He nodded. “Very well,” he said and turned back for the bookshelves.
“Did all your errands go all right?” Ginny asked.
Much as she liked her employee, Tricia didn't feel comfortable sharing with Ginny everything that was happening. Instead she forced a smile. “Just great.”
Ginny nodded. “We're slow right now if you want to go see Jim.”
“Yes, perhaps I'd better,” Tricia said, although after her encounters with the sheriff and Frannie, all she really wanted to do was pull the shades and hide.
Â
“I put
an offer in on the cottage,” Angelica said offhandedly. It was almost eight o'clock, and she stood at the stove in Tricia's loft with her back to her sister, stirring a pot of Irish lamb stew.
Tricia paused, about to lay a fork down on the place mat. “Oh?” Was she supposed to sound happy? Maybe she should be. The two of them had actually been getting along for most of the past week, but that couldn't last. At least it never had before.
“Did you bid high or low?”
“Low. I mean, it does need a lot of work. It's much too small for my needs, and it's really much too far out of town.”
Tricia struggled to keep her voice level. “It doesn't sound like you really want it.”
“Oh, but I do. It's justâ¦I don't know. I guess I really didn't think you'd approve.”
“It's not a question of my approval,” she asserted once again. “You've decided to live in the area. You're the one who has to actually stay thereâ¦if you get it.”
Angelica turned back to her pot. “I could just âflip' itâyou know, fix it up a little and sell it off quickly. Or turn it into a shop. Or maybe a restaurant. If it weren't for the location, it would make a sweet little tearoom.” Angelica peeked at her sister over her shoulder.
“Are you really thinking of opening a restaurant?”
Angelica turned back to her stew. “I don't know. I just know that my life hasn't worked out so far and it's time for a major change.”
No doubt about it, moving to the outskirts of a small village like Stoneham was going to be a tremendous change for life-of-the-party, shopaholic Angelica. And yet, if Tricia was honest with herself, Angelica hadn't annoyed her half as much as in years past. Tricia was even beginning to anticipate their nightly meals together, knowing it would end sooner rather than later.
Angelica seemed to be waiting for some kind of comment.
“I think it's great,” Tricia said at last. “And, if nothing else, I think you'll have a lot of fun fixing it up and decorating it.”
Angelica's smile was small, but pleased. She changed the subject. “And what did you do today?”
One thing she wasn't about to disclose was her talk with Frannie. Never had she been shamed so thoroughly and sweetly.
“I made a trip to Benwell, spoke to Mike Harris's mother at the assisted living center.”
“The poor woman with Alzheimer's?” Angelica asked.
“I don't think she has dementia of any kind. She even remembered the date my store opened.”
“Then what's she doing in an old folks' home?”
“Good question. And as I suspected, it looks like her son has been selling off her assets without permission.”
“The rat. Why are half the men I meet rats?” Angelica asked.
“Grace is concerned about her jewelry and her late husband's coin collection. Apparently Mike has stolen from her before.”
“Then I don't blame her for being upset.”
“She wants me to check out her house and make sure those items are still there.”
“And you want to do that tonight?” Angelica asked, her eyes gleaming with delight.
“I thought about it. You busy?”
Angelica planted her hand on her left hip. “Would I be here with my sister if I had a man to cook for?”
“You tell me.”
Angelica didn't answer, but bent down to peek through the oven's glass door at the Irish soda bread she had baking.
Tricia wandered over to the kitchen island, rested her elbows on the surface, with her head in her hands. “It bothers me that Grace was committed to St. Godelive's for dementia, six months ago, but suddenly her symptoms have disappeared. What if she never had dementia? Could Mike have faked the symptoms that put her away?”
“Very easily,” Angelica said. “Remember Ted, my third husband? His doctor prescribed some new heart medicine for him that interacted with another drug he was already taking. Suddenly the man I loved was gone. It was a nightmare until I figured out what was wrongâwith the help of our local pharmacist, of course. Took more than a month for Ted to get back on an even keel. Of course we broke up six months later when he fell in love with said pharmacist. He felt she'd saved his life.” She rolled her eyes.
Poor Angelica. Dumped by at least two of her husbands. And that wasn't fair. She was a woman of worth. What was wrong with these jerks?
Tricia changed the subject. “I also saw Sheriff Adams today. That woman is more stubborn than a terrier. She's determined to prove me guilty of Doris Gleason's murder.”
“All the more reason to check out Grace's house. The soda bread will be ready in a few minutes. Take out the butter and let's chow down and hit the road.”
Tricia smiled, pleased. “Okay, but only if you insist.”
Â
All this
intrigue had Angelica thinking like the heroine in a suspense novel, and she insisted on parking her rental car several blocks away from the Harris homestead. Despite the threat of rainy weather, the clouds remained high, blocking out the moon. They left their umbrellas in the car and prayed the rain would hold off, as Tricia didn't want to leave any wet, muddy telltale footprints in and around the house.
Dressed all in black and armed with the large orange flashlight, Tricia felt like a cat burglar and was grateful for the canopy of trees blocking most of the light from the street lamps. She and Angelica turned up Grace's driveway and seamlessly blended into the darkness.