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 was mildly depressed when we arrived at the Brewsters' house. Even with the interruptions, it had been a gorgeous ceremony. The dresses were ridiculous, but in a bizarre sort of way the overall effect was beautiful. Once he'd gotten over his disappointment at not being allowed to give a sermon, Cousin Frank had really thrown himself into the occasion and performed a beautiful ceremony. After the charming eccentricity of Eileen's Renaissance music on virginals and lutes, I'd actually enjoyed hearing a really big church organ boom out "Here Comes the Bride" and other old standards.
But I kept remembering Eileen's and Steven's faces during their ceremony. Samantha's face didn't light up when she saw Rob standing at the altar. I got the distinct impression she was checking him out to see if he was properly combed and dressed. And Rob didn't look transfigured. Just nervous.
I tried to enjoy the reception, or at least look as if I were enjoying it. But I had the nagging feeling there was something I ought to have done that would blow up in my face any minute. Perhaps it was a side effect of the poison ivy.
Barry was hovering, as usual. For once, he was proving useful.
"I'm not sure this is real Beluga," I said to Barry, handing him a cracker heaped with caviar. "Does it taste right to you?"
Barry downed the cracker.
"Tastes fine to me," he said.
"No, you ate it too fast. Here, try another one. Roll it around in your mouth for a while. Get the full flavor."
Barry obligingly did so.
"Still tastes fine," he said, when he'd finished.
"Maybe it's the crackers. They have a strong flavor. Just try some by itself." I handed him a heaping spoonful.
"It's fine," he said, again.
"Here, clear your palate with this water," I said, handing him a glass. "Now try again. Are you sure it tastes like real Beluga?"
"I'm not sure I know what real Beluga tastes like," he said finally. "But this stuff tastes great."
"Go take some to Mrs. Fenniman, will you? See what she thinks."
Barry lumbered off with a plate of caviar and crackers for Mrs. Fenniman.
"Well, the ceremony went off," Michael said, arriving at my side.
"I notice you didn't say anything about how it went off," I said, craning over his shoulder. "The less said about that the better."
"What are you looking for?"
"Barry. Does he look healthy to you?"
"As a Clydesdale," Michael said, frowning. "Why?"
"I've just fed him a vast quantity of caviar. If he doesn't keel over in the next ten minutes or so, I'm going to have some myself."
"Bloodthirsty wench," was his comment.
"Has he tried the shrimp yet?" Dad asked, plaintively. "And the salsa?"
"I'm sure he'll wander back in a minute," I said, reassuringly. "We'll have him graze his way through the whole buffet if you like."
"Not a bad idea, at that," Michael said. "The guests seem curiously reluctant to eat today."
He was right. Usually by this time the buffet would have been decimated. Now, most of the crowd sat around sipping drinks and surreptitiously watching Barry, Cousin Horace, and the few other hardy souls who'd already braved the buffet. I decided to load up my plate while the coast was clear. I could always stand around and hold it until enough people had dined that I felt safe.
"Damn, I'll be glad to get out of this dress," I said. I tried to scratch my blisters unobtrusively and then realized that I shouldn't have. Scratching set everything revealed by my decolletage into jiggling motion.
"You look very nice," Dad said approvingly. "Michael, you'll have to tell your ladies what a fine job they've done."
"Thanks; I will," he said.
"It may look nice, but if I ever wear a dress this low cut again, I'm going to put a sign at the bottom of my cleavage," I said. "I've seen a bumper sticker with the wording I want: If you can read this, you're too damn close."
"It's not really that bad," Dad said, as Michael spluttered on his champagne.
"Oh no?" I said. "Watch what happens when he comes over," I said, pointing to Doug, my nemesis from parties past, who seemed to be looking in our direction. Michael and Dad looked at him, and he seemed to change his mind.
"Did one of you glare at him?" I asked. "If so, you have my eternal thanks."
"I think we both did," Michael said, as he and Dad burst out laughing.
"Well, at least for the moment all I have to worry about is stray bits of food," I said, as I caught a bit of caviar before it disappeared into the bodice. I noticed that more people were eating, and Barry was showing no signs of distress, so I'd begun nibbling from my plate.
It took a while for the guests to find their way to the buffet, but after a few centuries the party began to show signs of life. Especially after word spread through the crowd that the county DA'S date was an FBI agent she'd met during the bureau's local investigation on Samantha's former fiance. I had to give Samantha credit: she hadn't turned a hair when he came through the reception line. Maybe she didn't remember him. I could spot half a dozen of the preternaturally clean-cut new "cousins" cruising the crowd like eager human sharks, waiting to pounce. I was torn between hoping they'd find someone to pounce on and hoping everything went off quietly.
Dad was installed by the punch bowl, and from his gestures I suspected he was relating the graphic details of the usher's injury to anyone who would listen. I was trapped by a long-winded aunt who was telling me every moment of the weddings of each of her four daughters. I was smiling and making polite noises while daydreaming of pulling off my dress, scratching my poison ivy, and then flinging myself naked into the pool. I almost jumped out of my skin when Mrs. Brewster suddenly appeared behind me.
"Where's Samantha?" she asked. "Shouldn't she be getting ready to throw her bouquet?"
"She's--she was right over there," I stammered. Mrs. Brewster frowned. Losing the bride was not acceptable behavior for a maid of honor. "I'll just go and find her and hurry her up," I babbled.
I cruised through the crowd. Samantha was nowhere to be found. Everyone had just seen her a few minutes ago and expected she'd be right back. I could see Mrs. Brewster fuming by the punch bowl. Evidently Dad's adventures in the emergency room were failing to charm her. I decided to check the house. Perhaps she'd gone in to use the bathroom. Or to cool off.
I grabbed a few hors d'oeuvres on my way past the buffet and trudged upstairs to Samantha's room. She wasn't there. I saw only Michael and the two little seamstresses staring out the window.
"Where's Samantha?" I asked.
Michael pointed out the window. I managed to find enough space to peer out over the seamstresses' heads.
"Dashed out without even changing," he muttered. Mother and Mrs. Brewster came in.
"So where is she?" Mother gushed. "I can't wait to see her in that lovely suit!"
It was a long driveway, but down at the other end we could see that Rob, still faintly elegant in his damp, limp gray morning suit was helping Samantha into the passenger's seat of her red MG. Stuffing her in, actually; she was still in her bridal gown, hoops and all, and he was bashing armfuls of expensive fabric down around her. God knows how he was going to find the gearshift under all that froth. He didn't even try to deal with the veil, just took it off, crumpled it into a ball, and shoved it down in the space behind the seats.
It was a lucky thing their backs were to us; they couldn't see the venomous looks they were getting from the two seamstresses. Or hear Michael sighing, "Oh, shit." I echoed his sentiments: what, pray tell, had happened to the bouquet throwing? We'd had a special throwing bouquet made, a slightly more compact version of the one Samantha had carried down the aisle, thereby nearly doubling the bouquet budget. Perhaps she'd held an impromptu throwing while I'd been looking for her. I peered down the driveway. No signs of a bouquet. But I did see Mrs. Fenniman pop up, apparently from the azalea bed, and begin throwing birdseed at them from one of the little lace-trimmed bags, and Rob was just getting into the car when--
"Where's Samantha?" Rob said, sticking his head in the door. Wearing his traveling clothes.
"Rob?" I said.
"If Rob's here--" Mrs. Brewster said.
"Who the hell is that?" I asked.
"Such language!" said Mother.
"Who the hell is who?" asked Rob.
"Who the hell is that driving off with Samantha?" Mrs. Brewster and I said, in unison.
"Oh, dear." Mother sighed. "That's very bad luck when two people say the same thing. You must both link your little fingers together and say--"
"Not now, Mother," I said, on my way to the door.
Despite the handicap of my hoop skirts, I won the race to the end of driveway, finishing a hair before Mrs. Brewster. Michael came loping along close behind us, while Mother and Rob, not being quite sure what the fuss was all about, finished in a dead heat for last. Mrs. Fenniman, who had obviously gotten rather heavily into the Episcopalian punch, still had a great deal of birdseed left, so she chucked some at us as we pulled up. But, of course, we were all too late. As Mrs. Brewster and I reached the end of the driveway, we could just see the MG disappearing around the corner. And catch a few bars of a Beach Boys song blaring from the radio. "I Get Around."
That's Samantha for you. Always a stickler for those appropriate little details that really make an occasion.
As we stood, dumbfounded, something fell out of the dogwood trees above us and bounced off my head onto the gravel. Samantha's wedding bouquet. I heard a burst of high musical laughter from the upstairs window and looked up to see the seamstresses bobbing back out of sight.
"So that's what she did with it," Mrs. Brewster said triumphantly, as if the discovery of the bouquet more than made up for Samantha's absence.
"You seem to have an affinity for these things," Michael remarked, as he picked up the now-battered bouquet and handed it to me.
As soon as Rob understood what was going on, he insisted on dashing after them in the first car available. Mine. Several other birdseed-bearing guests had arrived at the end of the driveway, and they and Mrs. Fenniman cheered and pelted him as he pulled out. As word of the--was elopement the appropriate word? Flight, I suppose, was more accurate. As word of the flight spread, most of the male guests felt compelled for some reason to drive off in pursuit. No one was too clear on who they were pursuing, Rob, or Samantha and her fellow traveler, who turned out to be Ian, the last-minute substitute usher. There was a great deal of coming and going as cars drove up to report on where they'd been and what they'd seen, or hadn't seen and then set out again fortified with food and drink from the buffet. Mrs. Fenniman and her fellow harpies stood around by the driveway, swilling punch and sniping at the passing cars with handfuls of birdseed, giggling uproariously all the while, until at last they reached the point where they couldn't open the little bags and began throwing them whole, at which point somebody had the good sense to confiscate the remaining birdseed. They tried to keep up the barrage with acorns and pine cones, but that took most of the fun out of it and they lost interest fairly quickly.
Except for a couple of bridesmaids who considered themselves entitled to have hysterics and the mothers or friends who evidently felt compelled to cater to them, most of the women gathered around the food tables like a twittering Greek chorus. The peacocks, unsettled by all the chaos, adjourned to the roof for a filibuster. Mrs. Brewster retired to her bedroom with a migraine. Jake undertook the job of running around fetching her cold compresses, relaying her messages to Mr. Brewster (who had locked himself in his study with a bottle of Scotch), hunting down and locking up valuable items Mrs. Brewster feared might disappear in the confusion, and generally serving as chief toady and errand boy. I had no idea why--maybe it was a role he was used to playing with Mother--but he certainly made points with me for taking it off my hands. Personally, I had my doubts at first whether Mrs. Brewster's headache was real or merely convenient. I decided it was probably real--she did, after all, have reason--when she emerged looking absolutely ghastly and demanded, imperiously, that someone Do Something About Those Peacocks. Which was how I found myself at about seven o'clock, sitting on the roof of the Brewsters' house with Michael.
He was the only male who was neither half-drunk nor off in pursuit of the elusive trio. Instead, he had been lounging elegantly around the house, sipping punch, supervising the seamstresses' packing, flirting with me, eavesdropping shamelessly on every conversation within earshot, and obviously enjoying the hell out of the whole situation. But with a straight face, I had to give him that. When Mrs. Brewster issued her ultimatum, he volunteered to help me with the peacock roundup. We changed into jeans, unearthed Dad's ladder, and together managed to chase the birds back down into the yard. Some of the men who were tipsy enough that their wives had restrained them from driving off in search of Rob, Ian, and Samantha took over the roundup.
"I vote we let them handle it from now on," I said. "After all, someone's got to stay here, to repel the peacocks if they attempt another boarding."
"Fine by me," Michael said. "I think there's actually a breeze up here."
He stretched out luxuriously on a flat part of the roof with his head propped up against a second story dormer. He was right about the breeze. It was ruffling the lock of hair that had fallen over his forehead. I decided at that moment that I'd had enough punch.
"Everyone seems to be getting on rather well in spite of everything," he remarked, startling me out of my reverie.