Read Murder With Peacocks Online
Authors: Donna Andrews
Tags: #Women detectives, #Humorous stories, #Reference, #Mystery & Detective, #Weddings, #General, #Mystery fiction, #Murder, #Langslow; Meg (Fictitious character), #Women Sleuths, #Yorktown (Va.), #Women detectives - Virginia - Yorktown, #Fiction
"I'll get Eric and Caitlin going." I grabbed Eric with my left hand and Caitlin with my right.
"Slow and steady," I stage-whispered, "just like we rehearsed it."
Caitlin looked excited but not nervous. Good. Eric looked bored and only marginally cooperative.
"Roller coasters," I hissed at him. He assumed a look of pained innocence and exaggerated cooperativeness. I mentally crossed my fingers and gave both kids a gentle shove.
I peeked as they slipped through the curtains and set out down the makeshift aisle. They were more or less in time with the music, and I could hear oohs and aahs and exclamations of "Oh, aren't they precious?" Father Pete appeared behind the altar, beaming with enthusiasm. I turned to check that the first pair of bridesmaids were ready. I was beginning to relax when I heard the first titters. I whirled back to my peephole. At first I couldn't see anything wrong. Eric and Caitlin were doing splendidly. Then I realized that Duck had escaped from her cage somehow, and was waddling sedately down the aisle behind Eric.
"Oh, God," I moaned, turning away from my peephole. Michael took my place.
"At least she's in step with the music," he remarked. I reclaimed my peephole and saw that Eric and Caitlin had reached the altar.
"First pair, on three," I hissed. "One, two, three."
I marshaled the other two bridesmaids out and took my bouquet. Mr. Donleavy was being buttoned into his robe. Eileen looked shell-shocked.
"Send her out in another--" I began. "I know, I know," Michael said. "I'm a showbiz veteran, remember? Go!"
I stepped out on cue and marched down the aisle, head high, shoulders squared, trying hard to ignore the little trickles of sweat running down my neck, back, and legs.
Eileen looked radiant as she walked down the aisle. At least I hoped it was radiant. It could very easily have been early warning signs of heat stroke. But when I saw the looks on her face and Steven's as she reached the altar, I suddenly felt, at least for the moment, that all was right with the world and everything I'd gone through all summer was infinitely worthwhile. I stood there for a few minutes, beaming sappily as they began taking their vows, until I caught a glimpse of Barry, beaming just as sappily at me. I came down to earth with a thud.
Fortunately, just then something happened to distract me from my sudden, almost irresistible urge to throw something at Barry. Duck, who had been sitting sedately at Eric's feet, suddenly rose and began walking toward the center of the aisle, quacking loudly. When she reached the absolute center of Eileen's train, she sat down and continued to look around and emit an occasional quack. I debated whether to leave her alone or not, and decided I'd better get her off the train before she laid an egg or answered any other calls of nature. In as dignified manner as possible, I tucked my flowers under one arm, walked out, picked Duck up, and returned to my place. There were titters from the audience, and Father Pete was overcome with a fit of coughing. Duck seemed to calm down after that, but I held her bill closed for the rest of the ceremony, just in case.
The minister pronounced Steven and Eileen husband and wife, and we began exiting to the triumphant strains of a royal fanfare. When Barry tried to take my arm, I handed him Duck instead. Duck didn't appear to like it any more than he did.
We marched into the side yard and formed a receiving line. Although they could just as easily have circumnavigated the house, most of the guests played by the rules and ran the gauntlet before going to the backyard for champagne and hors d'oeuvres. Unfortunately, this kept us standing around for rather a long time under the inadequate shade of a flower-trimmed bower. I found myself silently cheering whenever someone sneaked out of the line.
The Renaissance banquet, once we finally got to sit down for it, was much admired, especially the spit-roasted pigs. Eileen did manage to set her veil on fire with one of the votive candles decorating the head table, but Steven put it out immediately with a tankard of mead. Only a few of the die-hards joined in the period dancing, but the tumblers, jugglers, and acrobats were a great hit.
I was increasingly glad that I had talked Eileen and Steven out of some of their more bizarre ideas of Renaissance authenticity. The dancing bear, for instance, would have been a bit too much. Although I wasn't entirely sure that the substitute was much of an improvement--Cousin Horace, risking heat stroke in his moth-eaten gorilla suit, which he'd ineptly altered in the vague hope of making it look bearlike. Ah, well. Horace had fun, anyway. After dinner, the rest of the program was largely the usual agenda, in costume. There was much to be said for the usual agenda. The guests knew it, and could carry on without a lot of instructions. Already guests were beginning to coagulate for the bouquet and garter throwing. Then we would have changing into going away clothes and pelting the departing van with organic birdseed. Followed by the utter collapse of the maid of honor. My responsibilities for the day would be over and I could swill down a couple more glasses of champagne. Maybe a couple of bottles.
Eileen had chosen to throw her bouquet from the Donleavys front stoop, which was gussied up to look like yet another bower. All the unmarried women were being chivvied into a semicircle at the base of the stoop. I took a safe place at the outskirts, hoping the lucky recipient of the bouquet would be a perfect stranger with no reason even to invite me to her wedding, much less recruit me as a participant.
Eileen teased the crowd with a few fake throws. "Come on, Meg," someone behind me said, "you'll never catch it like that."
I was turning to explain that catching it was the last thing on my mind, when something struck me violently on the side of the head. I was actually somewhat stunned for a few seconds, and then people began hugging me and clapping me on the back, and I realized that without even trying I had caught the bouquet. In my hair.
In fact, the thing had become inextricably tangled with my hair and the intricate floral headpiece that Mrs. Tranh and the ladies had anchored in place with about a million hairpins. Everyone seemed to find this hilarious except me; I had to hold onto the damned thing tightly to keep my hair from being torn out by the roots. Steven headed up to the stoop to remove the garter from Eileen's leg and fling it to the crowd. I was not about to sit still for having the garter put on my leg with a basketball-sized shrub stuck to my head. I fled inside to untangle myself. They would just have to wait till I was finished; if they got impatient, someone could come and help me, dammit. I found a hand mirror in the hall powder room and went out to the kitchen, where by resting my head on the kitchen table and propping the hand mirror against a vinegar cruet I could free up both hands and still see what I was doing.
What I was doing was going nowhere fast. In fact, I was making it worse, and the last few shreds of my patience evaporated. I heard gales of laughter outside. Steven must be really hamming up the garter bit. I rummaged through the kitchen cabinet drawers--one-handed--until I found a pair of scissors, and was reaching up to hack off the bouquet, hair and all, when I felt someone grab my wrist. I shrieked.
"Now, now," Michael said. "Let's not be hasty. You have two more weddings coming up; you'd regret doing that in the morning."
"Right now I just want to get the damned thing out of my hair," I said, close to tears.
"Sit down and I'll do it," he said, pulling up a chair and easing me into it with one deft motion as he began the tedious business of untangling the bouquet. "However did you manage this?"
"I didn't, Eileen did. I always thought you were supposed to give the bouquet a gentle toss and let fate decide who caught it. Eileen must have hurled the thing at my head with the speed and accuracy of a Cy Young award winner." Just then I saw Eileen and a couple of the bridesmaids flit by on their way upstairs. "Damn, I'm supposed to be helping her change!"
"I'm not sure that's either possible or necessary," Michael said. "Like all the local inhabitants, Eileen is an original; you don't want to tamper with that."
"Very funny," I said--all right, snapped. "Change her clothes, I mean, of course. God only knows what she'll do in the state she's in."
"Don't worry, Mrs. Tranh will take care of it. Though that does mean you're stuck with me to untangle this thing. Are you sure you wouldn't rather just wear this as a trophy till it grows out?"
"Just hack a chunk out," I said, reaching again for the scissors. "I can wear a flower or a bow over the spot in the other two weddings."
"Leave those alone," Michael ordered, slapping my hand away from the scissors. "I was only joking; I've almost got it." Sure enough, in another few minutes my hair and the bouquet parted company.
"I'm sorry," Michael said, as he saw me rubbing the spot. "I was trying not to yank out quite so much hair by the roots."
"Don't feel bad; I think most of the yanking happened when the thing landed. Besides, it's not the hair, it's the thorns on the roses that really hurt. Well, at least there's one consolation."
"What's that?" Michael asked, while rummaging through the debris on the kitchen counters.
"I seem to have missed the damned garter throwing ceremony."
"If it's any consolation, there wasn't one."
"What do you mean, there wasn't one? We have a garter; I know because I had to exchange the red one Steven bought for the pink one Eileen wanted."
"When Steven went to take the garter off Eileen's leg, they realized they'd never put it on her leg. The beastly Barry left it in his trunk, and can't find his car keys. Ah! Champagne?" he said, unearthing a full bottle that had somehow been left in the kitchen and brandishing it triumphantly.
"I give up," I said, holding out my hand for the glass. "After all the trouble we went through picking out the perfect garter, and they give it to that Neanderthal Barry for safekeeping."
I stretched out with my feet up on a second kitchen chair and sipped. However inadequate the air-conditioning was, it was better than outdoors. I was just beginning to feel relaxed when, speaking of the devil, Barry bounded in with all the grace of a half-grown Saint Bernard.
"Look what I've got!" He dangled the garter from his finger and leered in what I suppose he thought was a charming manner.
"It's you, Barry," I said. "Wear it in good health."
"You know what I get to do with it!"
"Get lost, Barry," I said, holding out my glass for more champagne.
"Ah, come on," he said, reaching for my leg. I grabbed the scissors and feinted at his hand with the point. He froze.
"Barry, if you lay one hand on my leg, I will stuff that garter down your throat and then cut it into shreds. I am not in a good mood, and besides, I know damn well that you didn't catch that thing, you just finally found your car keys. Now run along."
Barry did, though not without looking back reproachfully at me a few times. When the screen door slammed behind him, I sighed.
"I'm so glad he's gone, but now I feel as guilty as if I kicked a puppy."
"He'll live," Michael said. "I think."
"Why do I always end up using weapons on Barry?" I wondered.
"Seems perfectly sensible to me."
"Oh, God, I am so tired of Eileen and Steven throwing Barry at me. Why don't they see that he's just not my type."
"What is?" Michael said.
"What is what?"
"What is your type?"
"I don't know. Probably nonexistent; it's too depressing to think about."
"Come on," he said, "I'll make it easy. Tell me some of the ways in which Barry falls short of the mark. What would you have to do to Barry to make him even remotely resemble your type?" Bizarre, I thought; was Michael catching the local mania for matchmaking? I certainly hoped not.
"He'd have to be smarter," I said. "More articulate. Dare I say intellectual? With a better sense of humor. Not always so politically correct. And physically ... I don't know; I prefer lean, muscular men to that beefy jock type. It's weird, whenever I try to tell Eileen why Barry doesn't appeal to me, she thinks I'm trying to knock Steven. I'm not; I think Steven's very nice, and they're a great couple. But Steven isn't my type, and the beastly Barry even less so."
"I can see that. Although he's not actually an ogre, he certainly doesn't strike me as your type. On the other hand--"
"Only this commendation I can afford him," I said, paraphrasing some lines from Much Ado About Nothing, "that were he other than he is, he were unhandsome; and being no other but as he is, I do not like him."
Michael laughed and struck a pose. ""Rich she shall be, that's certain,"" he quoted back. ""Wise, or I'll none; virtuous, or I'll never cheapen her; fair, or I'll never look on her; mild, or come not near me; noble, or not I for an angel; of good discourse, an excellent musician, and her hair shall be of what color it please God,"" he finished with a flourish, using some strands of my hair he'd removed from the bouquet as a prop.
"Who's that?" said Jake, who had come in while Michael was speaking and was looking confused. Which was more or less his usual state as far as I could see.
""You are a villain!"" Michael declaimed in yet another speech from Much Ado. He grabbed the scissors and struck up a fencing position. ""I jest not: I will make it good how you dare, and when you dare. Do me right, or I will protest your cowardice. You have killed a sweet lady, and her death shall fall heavy on you. Let me hear from you!""
Jake turned pale and began backing out of the room. "Is everyone here completely crazy?" he asked.
"He's just quoting me some lines from a Shakespeare play he appeared in, Mr. Wendell," I said, soothingly. To no avail. Jake reached the door and fled.