The Shut Mouth Society (18 page)

Read The Shut Mouth Society Online

Authors: James D. Best

Tags: #Suspense, #Historical, #Thriller, #Mystery


Did you come every year?”


Every year, since graduate school.” She straightened up in her own seat. “I’m ready. Let’s go.”


What’s in New Canaan?”


My grandmother’s house.”


I don’t think that’s wise.”


Don’t worry, I haven’t been there in fifteen years, and I don’t want to go to the house anyway. She died many years ago. My parents used it as a weekend retreat away from the city. I want to go to the public library. My parents were considered locals, so the town newspaper will have articles about the accident.”

Evarts started the car. “Good idea. Sure no one will recognize you?”


My parents’ friends don’t patronize public libraries.”


Okay, tell me how to get the hell out of this city.”

Baldwin directed him back the way they had come to the Hudson Parkway and then through the transitions to the Merritt Parkway. Thick trees shielded both sides of the divided roadway, and stone overpasses gave the parkway a genteel, picturesque appearance.


No wonder they call this a parkway,” Evarts said. “Nothing like this in L.A.”

She seemed distracted but said, “We have an ugly Los Angeles-style freeway just a few miles east of us. Anyone with sixteen wheels or in a sixteen percent tax bracket has to stay on I95.”


You kidding?”


Not about the sixteen wheels. The poor can sneak onto the Merritt, but we gouge them at the gas pump.”

They passed a scenic gas station nestled among thick trees in a wide grass median. The posted price was twenty cents higher than they had last paid in New Jersey. “Now, you’re serious.”


Now, I’m serious.”

They exited at the New Canaan off-ramp. After a few miles of country road, a quaint town came into view, looking exactly the way Evarts imagined a New England village should look.

After they pulled into the library parking lot, Baldwin grabbed her overnight bag, which contained her regular clothes, and asked Evarts to start scanning local papers for articles about her parents’ accident while she cleaned up in the ladies room. He found six articles spread over three days.

When Baldwin returned, she had changed into her own clothes, but her freshly scrubbed face still showed raw eyes behind her regular glasses. “What did you find?”


They died two days ago, here in New Canaan. Hit a tree at forty-five miles an hour in a vintage 1956 Porsche Roadster. No bumper, no airbags.”


That car was my father’s pride and joy. He kept it in pristine condition and paid more to park it in the city than the payments would’ve been on a new luxury car.” She sat down. “He had the bumpers replaced with these little chrome bars.”


The New Canaan police found no indications of foul play, but they haven’t closed the investigation.”


Why not?”


Doesn’t say, but I’ll get Lieutenant Clark to give them a call.” She grabbed one of the newspapers and started to read the article. Evarts interrupted her. “They were returning from a lunch engagement at the Roger Sherman Inn.”


So it was probably midafternoon.”


I meant, does the Roger Sherman Inn have any significance?”

Baldwin looked up as if a new thought had struck her. “That inn has always been part of the landscape in New Canaan. It never occurred to me that it might have implications for this.”


Could it?”


I don’t know. After we’re done here, let’s go see. I want to know how much they had to drink at lunch anyway.”


Okay, you read the articles, and I’ll get out of these silly clothes and call Clark.”

Clark sounded unhappy to hear from Evarts again, but he agreed to call the New Canaan police. When he returned from the pay phone, Baldwin stood ready to go. “Anything more?” he asked.

She shook her head. “Let’s go.”

The Roger Sherman Inn sat back from the road, as picturesque as the town. The grounds had been groomed perfectly, and the white clapboard converted home looked like the kind of intimate inn where, in better days, he would’ve liked to bring Patricia Baldwin for a long weekend. A portrait of a stern-looking man with a big square face hung in the lobby. Evarts checked the plaque and saw that it read “Roger Sherman.”


How many children did you say?”


Fifteen, two different wives,” she answered.


He looks passionless.”

She studied the portrait a moment. “John Adams said he was the opposite of grace … and Adams was a friend. Contemporaries universally described him as awkward and clumsy, but they also said he was brilliant and a savvy politician. Thomas Jefferson said Sherman never spoke a foolish sentence in his life. An odd man to propagate a family that has exerted such a strong influence on our nation and our lives.”


Yeah.” Evarts glanced toward the dining area. “Are you hungry?”


Starved.”


Let’s eat. By the way, we’re journalists following up on the death of a prominent New York couple.”


Sounds good. Let’s say we’re from the
New York Daily News
. A tabloid would do a follow-up on this type of story.”

The host sat them on a cozy patio with trees overhead, shrubs along every sight line, and brightly colored flowers at their feet. The fine china and three glasses per place setting made the small, cloth-covered tables look crowded. While Evarts studied the menu, it occurred to him that the hamburgers in Westwood Village now appeared reasonably priced.

After they had ordered, Evarts asked to see the host. The young man who approached their table possessed the élan of the well-to-do and asked how he could help.


We’re reporters doing a follow-up story on the tragic Baldwin accident. We understand they ate lunch here just before the incident.”


Yes, they did.”


Did they drink alcoholic beverages with lunch,” Baldwin asked.


I’m sorry ma’am; we try to protect the privacy of our guests.”

Baldwin waved her arm around the half-empty patio. “A mention of your fine restaurant in our paper could fill these tables.”


Perhaps you should talk to Mrs. Greene.”


Mrs. Greene?”


She and her husband had lunch with the Baldwins that day. They’re the inn managers.”


Could you get her for us?”


And Mr. Greene, if he’s available,” Evarts added.


I’m afraid Mr. Greene took a business trip to Omaha, but I’ll see if Mrs. Greene is available.”

A few minutes later, a sophisticated older woman started toward their table but made an abrupt stop when she spotted them. She immediately retraced her steps.


Did she recognize you?” Evarts asked.


I can’t imagine how. It’s been fifteen years since I’ve eaten here.”

The woman didn’t reappear before their food arrived. Evarts was famished, so he took three quick bites and then said, “I’m going to go find out what’s keeping her.”

Just as he entered the inn, the host came up to him. “I’m sorry, sir, but Mrs. Greene had to leave suddenly.”


I insist on seeing her.”


That would be impossible. She left five minutes ago. She did leave this for your companion.” He handed Evarts a sealed envelope. In exquisite penmanship, the envelope had three words written on it that stunned Evarts:
Miss Patricia Baldwin
.

Evarts walked back to the table and handed the envelope to Baldwin. “We’re blown.”


Good god,” she said as she ripped open the envelope. She read it at least three times before she handed it over to Evarts.

Dear Patricia,

You have my sincerest condolences for your parents. They were good friends. I assume that is Greg Evarts with you. I don’t know what you are doing here, but they told us you would fight the union.

Please forgive me, but I must leave. Don’t try to contact me. I’m far gone.

Nancy Greene

 


Fight the union,” Evarts said. “That’s odd wording.”

Baldwin looked around nervously. “I think we should get out of here ourselves.”

Evarts got up and threw two twenties on the table. “Right now.”

Chapter 19

 


Pull over and let me drive,” Baldwin said.

Evarts had just pulled off the Massachusetts Turnpike onto Boston surface streets. Baldwin had been unusually quiet on the four-hour drive, but that seemed normal considering the circumstances.


Why? We’re almost there.”


This is the worst driving city in America. All one-ways with tiny street signs you can’t read until you’ve committed yourself to go straight. Bostonians don’t believe you should be driving here unless you’re a local.”

Evarts didn’t argue. He hated being lost. After they switched seats, he was glad that she had gotten behind the wheel. Even with her knowing the city, it seemed like they drove in circles. Eventually, they reached a road that passed through a park, and she explained that the Boston Commons were to the right and the Public Gardens were to the left.

When they stopped at a red light, she pointed ahead. “The apartment’s just off Charles Street up ahead.”


The street with all the oncoming traffic?”


Yes. It’s one-way on the other side of this signal. We need to go around Beacon Hill and approach it from the other side.”

Evarts thought it odd to have a two-way road suddenly turn one-way, but they had already encountered three of these marvels of civic engineering. After they turned right, four- and five-story brick townhouses faced the Commons in tight formation. Baldwin explained that early settlers had established the Commons in 1634, and that public hangings had occurred in the park until 1817. In the early days, women convicted of witchcraft had their death sentences carried out in the Commons so everyone could witness the penalty for consorting with the devil.

When they reached a gold-domed edifice on the left, Baldwin said, “That’s the new statehouse … built in 1798.”


New?”


We’ll see the old one later. They built it in 1713.”


In Los Angeles, we tear down anything over fifty years old.”


Try that in Boston, and they’ll probably reinstate hangings in the Commons.”

They drove around the periphery of Beacon Hill and entered Charles Street from the north side. Evarts couldn’t believe the audacity of the pedestrians. In California, cops ticketed jaywalkers, but in Boston anyone waiting for a green walk sign would feel foolish as people brushed past them into the street against the red light. To successfully navigate the slalom course between the dashing pedestrians required a driver’s full attention.


How many pedestrians do Bostonians kill each year?”


No one knows. They just brush them aside so the street cleaners can pick them up in the wee hours.”

When they reached mid-block, Baldwin stopped and put on the flashers. As she opened the Explorer door, she said, “I’ll run in and get the key.”


Wait. Do you have to show ID?”


No, just whisper the secret password.”


What secret password? What are you talking about?”

She nodded toward a real estate office. “My dad set up a system with these people. They give the keys to anyone that asks for them and says they’re with the S&M League. I thought it sounded kind of kinky at the time.”


Trish?”


What?”


League is a synonym for society.”

She looked irritated for a brief moment until she made the connection. “Damn, the thought never occurred to me. My brain must be addled. I keep worrying instead of thinking.”


Run in and get the key before a cop tickets us for double parking.”


Don’t worry about that. I put the flashers on.”


That makes it legal?”


In Boston, custom overrules law.” She bounded out of the car and disappeared into the real estate office.

Evarts kept an eye on the street. The heavy foot traffic and the approaching dusk made it difficult to isolate individuals, but he spotted no one watching the real estate office. Charles Street looked like an incongruous mishmash. The quaint red brick storefronts, narrow gas-lit street, and undulating brick sidewalks made Charles Street look like a tourist destination; except nestled between the antique stores, art galleries, and fine restaurants were coin Laundromats, video rental stores, pizza joints, and a grocery store so cramped that it probably also had one-way aisles. Most pedestrians looked like tourists browsing one of the oldest mercantile districts in America, but a few appeared to be harried residents running into a neighborhood establishment to complete some errand before heading home for the evening.

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