Read The Corpse With the Golden Nose Online

Authors: Cathy Ace

Tags: #Mystery, #FICTION / Mystery & Detective / General, #FICTION / Mystery & Detective / Women Sleuths, #FICTION / Crime

The Corpse With the Golden Nose (11 page)

“Come on now, Babe, don't embarrass the poor guy. Let him be.”

I was beginning to get a clearer understanding of what Sammy had meant earlier on when he'd said he would forgive Suzie anything. It looked like he did mean literally
anything
.

The atmosphere was electric. In Raj Pinder's home county, Yorkshire, they have a saying I like, and often quote: “There's nowt so queer as folk.” It's true. Nothing, absolutely
nothing
, is as strange or unpredictable as human behavior. As a psychologist, I've studied human beings for years, trying to understand why they do what they do. I've narrowed that field by focusing on why criminals do what
they
do. If I've learned one thing in all that time, it's that we don't really know why
some
people do
some
of the things that they do. I wondered what would happen next.

“Desserts and eau-de-vie!” The dramatic cry came from the far side of the room. Everyone turned. Two of the servers had pulled back velvet curtains which had been hiding a table laden with platters of sweet morsels. A barman was showily pouring clear liquid from a frosted bottle into the top of a long chute made of ice that was bedecked with glimmering lights. It was quite the moment, and it produced a gasp, which the barman assumed was for him. He beamed.

“Come on, Babe, you've had enough, we're going home,” muttered Sammy Soul as he directed Suzie toward the exit. She was playing with her hair and giggling as they left. Any tension between them had dissipated.

“Oh doesn't it look wonderful!” exclaimed Ellen, surprising me with her reaction, and she dragged Raj Pinder toward the display.

It seemed that the evening's dramas had passed. As everyone else headed to the table, I grabbed Bud's sleeve. We hung back.

“It's turning out to be quite an evening,” whispered Bud.

“You're not kidding,” I replied quietly. “I could see you were on full alert.”

Bud smiled. “Yes, too many years of trying to de-escalate arguments before they turn into fights, I guess. Not that that's a bad thing. But all my training wasn't really needed tonight. I wasn't the only sensible one in the place.”

I nodded, though I could spot a few folk I wouldn't have labeled as “sensible” myself. “Lots of motives flying about,” I added.

“Okay, I'll give you that,” smiled Bud. “We've also discovered that Annette was acting oddly for weeks before she died, which you might expect if she were to go on to kill herself. I'm not hearing anything that makes me more likely to think she was murdered, and I haven't met anyone I can figure as a killer. However odd they might be.”

“Odd, yes, but acting within the normal parameters of their personalities, I'd say. No one seems to be under any particular strain.”

“What about Vince Chen? I'd say
he's
pretty stressed,” Bud nodded and rolled his eyes in the direction of the subject of Suzie's affections, who was hovering between the door and the dessert table looking more than a little awkward. “And what about those two?” He nodded in the direction of a couple to whom we hadn't yet been introduced. “They both look pretty nervous. Angry, even. What's up with them?”

“Let's find out,” I said. I left Bud's side and casually moved myself to within earshot of the couple who were quite literally hissing at each other. Words were pouring out of them angrily and rapidly.

“You
said
we were okay to stay until ten,” stage-whispered the man, clenching his martini glass a little too tightly.

“If you'd
listened
, you'd have known that I said I wanted to be home by
nine
,” the woman replied angrily, pushing a silk wrap roughly off her shoulder. “I don't like him being in the house on his own at night.”

“For God's sake, Sheri, he's
seventeen
. He's going to be leaving home to go to university next year. He's just
fine
in the house on his own. I mean, it's not like he's going to throw a wild party or anything. He doesn't even have any friends.”

“Don't worry about that! It's him not having a
father
that
you
should worry about! You need to visit more often, Rob. A boy needs his father. He never sees you. You haven't been here since February, and even then you only managed a couple of days' skiing with him.”

“Skiing?
Skiing?
” The man sounded incensed. “He didn't
ski
, Sheri. He just sulked about the chalet playing those damned video games of his. The only skiing he does is on a flat-screen
TV
. He wouldn't know a free-ride board from a free-style one if they were in front of him, and that's not normal for a teenager in these parts, right on the doorstep of Big White. I blame
you
. Like tonight. You're not letting him grow up, Sheri. You treat him as though he's a child.”

“He
is
a child, Rob. My child.
Ours.
If you were here more often you'd know how vulnerable he is . . .” The woman stopped as she realized we were drawing close. She smiled, too brightly.

“Oh hello,” she beamed, and, with the confidence of an experienced mixer, she held out a small, perfectly manicured hand, damp with sweat. She was red in the face, and perspiration gleamed on her forehead. I suspected she was having “a moment or two of her own personal summer,” as my Mum used to say whenever she suffered a hot flash. “I'm Sheri, Sheri MacMillan, and this is Rob, my husband. Pleased to meet you. Lovely evening, eh?”

We all smiled and hands were shaken.

“Hi! I'm Bud and this is Cait. We're Ellen's weekend guests, from the Lower Mainland,” replied Bud with almost alarming good cheer. “It's turned out to be quite the party,” he added, combining understatement and keen observation in one phrase.

“Um, yes, I suppose it has,” she replied hesitantly, nervously smoothing her too-tight cardinal red gown.

“Ha! Sure has,” was her husband's blustering reaction. His expensive suit didn't quite cover his spreading midriff. “For a small place, it's all really going on here: murder, intrigue, illicit affairs, open marriages. We think we've got it made in a sprawling city like Calgary, but you've got to come to a place like this to realize it's all happening right under your nose.”

“Oh Rob,” Sheri cooed, clearly using a tone reserved for company, “don't say it like that, dear. I'm sure if you only got to know everyone, you'd see that it's really a lovely place.” As an aside to Bud and myself, she added, “Rob has
such
a lot of responsibilities at his office in Calgary, he can't be here as much as he'd like. Isn't that right, Rob?”

“Sure,” replied her husband, taking a large swig from the glass he was clenching. It was quite clear to me, from his tone and body language, that not only did he
not
see himself spending more time in Kelowna, he wasn't even too keen on being in the company of his wife at that very moment.

“It's all about the life-work balance,” said Bud, which was about as un-Bud-like a sentiment as I'd ever heard him express. Bud was
always
your classic workaholic. I tried to keep my face rigid to hide my shock. My top lip stuck to my teeth, so I took a sip from my almost empty glass.

“Hey, can I get you another? I'm getting one for myself,” offered Rob, clearly pleased to have found an easy route.

His wife looked livid as she said, “I thought we were going to hit the road, Rob,” in fake-calm tones.

It was too late. Rob was merrily heading for the bar, and she was obviously going to have to wait.

Ever the master of managing the awkward moment, I asked, “Have you lived here long?”

It seemed an innocuous question, the sort that a visitor
would
ask of a resident, even though I happened to know the answer. Unfortunately, it had an effect on Sheri I hadn't seen coming—she burst into tears and started scrabbling around in her purse, sobbing. In fact, it looked as though she were actually talking to her purse, not me, which might explain why she said what she did. “Oh please don't.
Don't
ask how long I've been here. I've been here
too
long, that's how long. I want to leave, I want to move to Calgary with him. But I can't because of Colin. He's doing so well at school now, I don't want to move him. It hasn't been easy for him, you know, because he never seems to fit in with people very well. But now—oh, he's finally getting good grades. I can't do that to him, can I? It's not fair. We've moved so many times before with Rob's work. I can't move him again. But, if I stay here, I'm going to lose Rob. And I do love him, you know . . .”

What an extraordinary evening, and what a weird bunch of people
, I thought. Judging by Bud's expression, he was thinking much the same sort of thing. What on earth had led this woman to speak to someone she'd met moments earlier in such an open and intimate manner? It was very odd. And trust me, being a criminal psychologist, I know odd when I see it.

Finally, she found the paper tissue she'd been hunting for and wiped her eyes and nose—just in time for her husband's arrival with a much-needed fresh glass of wine for me, which I took and half dispatched with one gulp.

“There,” Sheri said, as she tucked the tissue back into her purse and looked around, seemingly refreshed, “Facet and Face It. Thank you for allowing me to connect with you as I polish my love for another—my son, for whom no sacrifice is too great.”

“Oh Jeez, not
more
of that gush!” Rob glared at his wife. “These poor folks have only been in town two minutes, and already you're trying to shove that rubbish down their throats. You're weird. As is that idiot Jackson.
And
his ridiculous wife. Mind you, maybe they're not as stupid as all that—at least they're building a business on the back of it all.
You're
just spending my money on it. Packets of tea, special water, goddam stupid crystals everywhere . . .” It sounded as though he could have gone on for some time about the ways in which Sheri was spending his money on her discipleship of Faceting.

It seemed equally clear that Sheri's moment of connecting with Bud and me had passed, and that she and her husband were about to launch into another round of backbiting. The fight or flight instinct is well named: as the adrenalin increases with stress and pumps through our veins, we humans revert to base-animal status and apply all our decision-making abilities to making the best possible choice for survival—do I stay and fight it out, or do I run away and live to fight another day? It seemed that both Rob and Sheri were going to stay and fight—a decision I suspected they'd both made many, many times before, but one which Rob generally avoided having to make by not visiting Kelowna very often. In him the flight instinct was stronger, in her it was fight . . . largely, as she'd revealed, because she was fighting for both herself and her son.

I could sense that Bud's instinct was to leave them to it. I was leaning in that direction myself, but I was wondering
how
we could make our escape politely, since it was difficult to get a word in edgeways.

“Come and try this plum eau-de-vie—it's exceptionally good,” were the words that saved us. Ellen Newman had returned to rescue us, and not a moment too soon. “Hey, you two lovebirds, I'm taking my guests away.” I was glad to have an excuse to run. Rob and Sheri MacMillan had been stopped in their tracks by Ellen's innocent, if inappropriate, comment which allowed us the chance to escape.

Completely oblivious to how far off the mark she'd been with her interpretation of why the husband and wife were just inches apart, Ellen steered Bud toward the ice sculpture that was the current center of attention. It was an impressive structure: a swooping funnel made of ice delivered the liquid, poured into its top by the flamboyant barman, to a large bowl at its base, where a female server was scooping the now chilled fluid into small glasses with a long-handled, silver ladle.

“Is that still the plum?” asked Ellen.

The barman didn't take his eyes off his task, but nodded his head. “Yes, nearly finished the bottle though, and then it'll be apricot.”

I grasped my remaining gamay noir longingly. I'm not one for sweet liqueurs, usually, and the thought of either plum or apricot-flavored alcohol set my teeth on edge.

“Oh quick,” exclaimed Ellen, “you must try the plum, it's delicious, especially with the salted chocolate squares at the end of the table.”

Now
she was talking my language: dark chocolate, embedded with crystals of sea salt. Yum!

Ellen was quite right—my tastebuds thanked her for encouraging me to try something I really hadn't thought would taste good.
Live and learn, Cait.
As I sipped and chewed, Bud joined me, grimacing.


Way
too sweet for me,” he replied, trying to smile.

“Isn't it wonderful?” enthused Ellen, and I had to agree with her.

“Absolutely. And those folks seem to be loving it too,” I commented. This was my chance to get Ellen to introduce us to the man and woman I guessed, through a process of elimination, must be the Wisers of Anen Close.

Ellen turned and looked in the direction I was indicating. She smiled a half smile. “Oh, he's probably criticizing the fruit flavors. That's Gordy Wiser and his wife Marlene. He was a fruit farmer for his whole life, then, about five years ago, he managed to drag his property out of the Agricultural Land Reserve and sell it to a developer. He couldn't cope any more, and none of his kids wanted to replant the orchards after fire had swept across them, so they sold up and bought one of the houses Annette and I had built on
our
old family property. There he and Marlene will probably stay until—well, until they can't cope with
that
anymore, I guess. They're both well into their eighties now, and neither of them shows any sign of slowing down. Six children they raised, you know.
Six.
And all of them adopted.”

Other books

The Last Supper by Charles McCarry
Bluebonnet Belle by Lori Copeland
A Lethal Legacy by P. C. Zick
Moo by Sharon Creech
Escape by Barbara Delinsky
12 Days by Chris Frank, Skip Press
Roller Hockey Radicals by Matt Christopher