Puzzled to Death (11 page)

Read Puzzled to Death Online

Authors: Parnell Hall

A
LL OF
B
AKERHAVEN WENT TO
F
UN
N
IGHT
. W
HETHER
it was the novelty of the puzzle contest, or the fact they’d been through a tragedy with the murder of Judy Vale, or merely because the event was free, the turnout for Fun Night was way beyond expectations. Even women who had picketed the tournament showed up. Political idealism had rapidly eroded at the prospect of the heavily publicized complimentary dessert buffet.

“We should have charged,” Iris Cooper said glumly, surveying the packed room.

Harvey Beerbaum favored her with a superior smirk. “If we had, they wouldn’t have come. This way is clearly best. We get an enormous attendance, a few more get interested and register for the tournament, and we come out on top. Believe me, I know how these things work.”

Iris Cooper, who was getting damn sick of Harvey Beerbaum and what he knew, was beginning to appreciate Cora Felton, who offered no opinions at all.

“So, where’s the TV people?” Iris demanded irritably. “Why aren’t they covering this?”

“I invited them,” Harvey said, “but they’re not coming.”

“Why not?”

“The station decided since Fun Night wasn’t part of the official competition, it wasn’t worth paying the crew.”

Iris rolled her eyes. “Well, isn’t that just great. We’re not getting any publicity, and we’re not making a dime. And everyone in town is here.”

“All but one,” Cora Felton observed dryly.

Joey Vale, much to the tournament planning committee’s relief, was spending the night in jail.

“The celebrities are certainly a draw,” Harvey Beerbaum ventured, in an attempt to get back in Iris Cooper’s good graces.

This was only moderately true. Zelda Zisk was enormously odd, to the point of putting people off, or at least making them hesitant to approach her. She had a rather attractive face but had gone way overboard with her makeup, perhaps in an attempt to distract attention from her immense girth. Her eyeliner was nearly a quarter inch wide, her bloodred lipstick might have been put on with a trowel, and her false eyelashes looked like she’d stuck caterpillars on her eyelids. Her dark brown hair was piled carelessly on the top of her head with wooden combs. Hoop earrings the size of hubcaps framed mobiles that jingled when she moved. Her smile was inviting, but her appearance was unsettling, at best. She also had an uncommonly loud voice and a laugh that rattled the rafters. As a result, Zelda had a table all to herself, a small island from which she beckoned to those who passed like a siren of the sea. Or a beached whale.

Craig Carmichael, shy to the point of paranoia, was giving a good impression of a dweeby bookkeeper on the lam from the mob. Although not alone at his table, he kept his hands over his face at most times, avoided eye contact, and answered questions out of the side of his mouth in words that were scarcely audible. His manner could not have been more furtive had he been pilfering nuclear secrets.

Even Paul Thornhill was a bit of a bust. The handsome, personable young man, whose stylish good looks were undoubtedly responsible for the attendance of many of the unattached women in town—and probably some of the attached women as well—had disappointed one and all by showing up with his spouse. Mrs. Thornhill was a perfectly nice, polite, attractive, vibrant young woman, who seemed quite attentive to her husband and whom half the town already loathed.

“Yeah, your celebrities are wonderful,” Iris Cooper told Harvey tersely. “It’s nearly eight. Are you ready to begin?”

Harvey Beerbaum checked his watch. “Three minutes till,” he declared in a punctilious tone that made Iris cringe.

Cora covered her mouth and pretended to sneeze to avoid laughing out loud. She moved away from Harvey and Iris and looked out over the crowded room.

Sherry Carter stood in the back by the door, having declined several offers to join teams. Sherry, who could rip through the puzzles like lightning, did not dare to do so tonight. Of course she could have just pretended to do poorly, but that would have been excruciating. No, tonight Sherry was much happier not to play.

Standing next to Sherry was Aaron Grant, who would have played if Sherry had wanted to but otherwise couldn’t care. Aaron was there to find a story for his paper and to keep Sherry company.

While Cora watched, Becky Baldwin came in. She looked around the room, then moved over to Sherry and Aaron. It killed Cora not to be able to listen in, but she couldn’t leave the stage.

“Well,” Becky said, “what’s the matter? Aren’t you playing?”

“Just watching,” Aaron said.

“That’s dull. You wanna form a team?”

“The teams are four,” Sherry said, and instantly regretted the comment, which pointed up the fact Becky was alone on the one hand and underlined the idea of a romantic triangle on the other. “Anyway, I don’t want to play. I’m just here to root for Cora.”

“As if she needs it,” Becky said primly. “I’m not here to play either. Just checking out the scene for my client.”

Sherry frowned. “I beg your pardon?”

“Joey Vale, up in the hoosegow. Having a rough time of it. In a cell, sleeping it off. That’s who I’m concerned with at the moment.”

“You’re sweating a drunk-and-disorderly charge?”

“No.” Becky pointed toward the stage. “Thanks to your dear interfering aunt, I’m sweating
murder
. It seems Cora bent Chief Harper’s ear about how Joey could have killed his wife after all, and suddenly he’s a suspect again.”

“Are you serious?” Aaron said, brightening.

“Not really. Cora’s theories are so wacky, no one’s gonna believe them anyway. It just burns me up to think she turned me down and threw in with the chief.”

Harvey Beerbaum stepped to the microphone. “Ladies and gentlemen,” he announced, grinning from ear to ear and oblivious to the fact that the mike was turned up so loud a dog outside town hall started to howl, “welcome to our first annual Bakerhaven Charity Crossword-Puzzle Tournament.”

Iris Cooper and Cora Felton looked at each other. This was the first indication Harvey Beerbaum had given either of them this was to be more than a onetime event.

“Tonight is your free introduction to crossword-puzzle tournaments,” Harvey Beerbaum went on blithely. “Tonight’s Fun Night, and we
do
intend to have
fun
. So let’s get going. As you know, tonight you are going to attempt to solve some extremely interesting puzzles. The first has been contributed by Mr. Craig Carmichael, one of our famed contestants. Stand up and take a bow, Craig.”

Harvey Beerbaum couldn’t have chosen a worse way to kick off his Fun Night. Craig Carmichael shambled to his feet with all the enthusiasm of a man on his way to the gallows. He managed a feeble little wave and instantly sat back down.

“You will work on Craig’s puzzle in teams of four. You will each have a copy of the puzzle. At a signal from me, you will all begin working. You will work only on your own copy of the puzzle, and on no one else’s. And you may not help anyone else on your team.

“And why is that?” Harvey Beerbaum beamed paternally down at the crowd. “At a signal from me—I will say the word
switch
—you must pass your puzzle around the table according to my explicit directions. For instance, I may say,
pass left, pass right
, or
pass across
. You
must then begin working on the copy of the puzzle you receive.”

Harvey Beerbaum’s eyes sparkled. “See where the fun comes in?” He paused expectantly but did not receive the appreciative chuckles he seemed to anticipate from the audience, so he went on. “The puzzle you get won’t have all the same answers filled in that your previous puzzle did. So you’ll have to fill those in again. And just when you get a good train of thought going, I’ll yell
switch!

“Volunteers are passing out the puzzles now. If you are competing, leave the puzzles facedown on your table until you hear the command
go
from me.”

Volunteers from the tournament planning committee circulated through the room, passing out puzzles.

“They’re all women,” Becky Baldwin said.

“What’s your point?” Aaron asked.

Becky slapped at him playfully. “Sexist pig. Real work is for men, volunteer work is only for women?”

“I notice you didn’t volunteer,” Aaron observed.

“I have a job. Not that it’s paying well just now. If it were, I might have time to volunteer.”

A woman came by with puzzles. Sherry recognized her as the wife of Mr. Gelman, the town banker. Mrs. Gelman offered her a puzzle.

“I’m not playing,” Sherry told her.

Mrs. Gelman smiled. “It doesn’t matter, dear. Everyone gets a puzzle, whether they’re playing or not.” She handed puzzles to Sherry, Aaron, and Becky and continued on around the room.

Sherry looked at her puzzle.

A swift glance showed the puzzle was simple enough for Sherry to finish in a matter of minutes. She folded it up, stuck it in her purse.

At the microphone, Harvey Beerbaum bellowed, “Are you ready? Then, ready, set, go!”

The dog howled.

At the tables, the papers were turned over. In some cases, pencils began flashing. In others, puzzles were stared at.

“Care to have a go at it?” Harvey Beerbaum smirked, sidling up behind Cora and holding up two puzzle sheets.

“I don’t think so,” Cora told him.

“Come on,” Harvey persisted. “A little friendly competition. Just you and me.”

“Don’t you have to keep time and say ‘Switch’?” Cora pointed out.

Harvey was not so easily dissuaded. “I could do that in my sleep. I bet I can still beat you, even with one eye on the clock. What do you say?”

“No, thank you.”

“Oh, but I insist.”

“What’s the matter?” Cora said irritably. “You think I can’t do it?”

The moment the words were out of her mouth, Cora wanted to call them back.

Harvey looked at her sharply.

Cora was suddenly seized with icy dread. She felt hollow. Exposed. In the grip of an anxiety attack.

“Some other time,” Cora mumbled. She fled from Harvey Beerbaum, caught Sherry’s attention, and beckoned her over.

“What is it?” Sherry whispered when she had reached her aunt.

“Sherry, I think I blew it.”

“What do you mean?”

“With Harvey Beerbaum. I think he
knows.

“Cora—”

CURIOUS CANINES
by Craig Carmichael

ACROSS
DOWN
1 Ways
1 Fake jewelry
6 Leers at
2 Genus of plant lice
11 B—F connection
3 Chaplin persona
14 Eliot’s cruelest month
4 Robbers’ roost
15 “Arthur” star
5 Congressman and Union
16 Possessed
army officer Henry
17 Sparring dog?
Warner
19 Bullfight cheer
6 17th century card game
20 Work record
7 Not bad
21 German field marshal
8 Bagels and___
     Rommel
9 Before (Arch.)
23 Marry
10 Most peaceful
24 Shore of TV fame
11 Hungry dog?
26 Arbiter
12 Surrealist Salvador
27 Shoeless
13 Paradise
30 Fancy dude
18 Stinging insect
33 Handwoven wall hanging
22 English flyboys
 
24 Risks
34 Tiny Tim’s instrument
25 Retirement funds
35 Fuss
27 Payoff
36 Most kempt
28 Edible pod
38 Gun club
29 Mets or Yankees
39 Sass
30 Fellas cohorts
40 Desert people
31 Change text
41 Cheese
32 Scoreless dog?
42 Work obstruction
33 Saying
44 Clothing chain
36 Carole King album
46 “Goodnight,____”
37 Persia, now
47 Most comfy (Var.)
41 Letter
51 Dames
43 Before, in prefixes
53 Memento
44 Leaves
54 Oil paintings
45 Feature
55 Fashionable dog?
47 Gives up
58 Expire
48 Consumed
59 Hindu princess
49 Angles
60 Detective’s finds (Var.)
50 Curt
61 Corn unit
51 Green gemstone
62 Affirmatives
52 Operatic solo
63 Present, for instance
53 Leg joint
 
56 Actress____ Dawn Chong
 
57 Printers’ measures

Other books

The Real Deal by Lucy Monroe
The Weather Wheel by Mimi Khalvati
Bloody Sunday by William W. Johnstone
Hellforged by Nancy Holzner
Tear Tracks by Malka Older
Rashomon Gate by I. J. Parker
Stealing Ryder by V. Murphy