Authors: Lorna Barrett
“We really need to convince Angelica to stop using foam take-out boxes at Booked for Lunch. They’re horrible for the environment.”
“You know, I’ll bet if you pitched a cost-effective alternative, she would seriously take it under consideration,” Tricia said, closing the container on the remains of her salad.
Ginny eyed her speculatively. “That’s a good idea. She’s been awfully nice to me lately. Well, ever since the wedding.”
“Really?” Tricia asked, opening the container that held the slab of carrot cake.
Ginny looked thoughtful for a moment, then shrugged. She picked up one of the plastic forks but waited for Tricia to cut the cake in two. Tricia wasn’t as fond of the sour cream frosting as Ginny, so she took the lower portion, settling it onto one of the paper napkins before pushing the other piece across the desk to Ginny.
Ginny sampled a bite, letting it sit on her tongue for a bit before chewing and swallowing—her usual routine.
“Well?” Tricia asked.
“Nobody makes carrot cake as good as Angelica. I especially like her maple icing.”
“Maple?” Tricia asked. “Since when does she make it that way?”
“She’s always made it this way.” Tricia seldom ate cake and took a bite. It was good, and the maple frosting was a lot less cloying and sweet than that traditionally associated with carrot cake.
Ginny cut another piece but paused before eating it. “So, you found Pete Renquist.”
“He was alive at the time,” Tricia began in her own defense.
“So I heard.”
“Did you know him?”
Ginny shook her head. “But I heard rumors.”
“Oh?” Tricia asked, playing dumb.
“That he was a bit of a letch, but relatively harmless.”
“Did he ever flirt with you?” Tricia asked.
Again Ginny shook her head. She ate another bite of cake. “He seemed harmless enough, and honestly, the guy was old enough to be my father. I heard he hit on older women.”
“You mean like me?” Tricia asked with dread. Pete was always flirting with her.
“Heck, no. Older than you. Ladies in their fifties.”
An age that was only five years ahead for Tricia.
“The ones who’ve got empty nests and time on their hands to volunteer at fudd-dudd places like the Historical Society. That said, I heard the old broads ate up the attention. Their husbands had long ago given up giving them compliments.”
Was that how Toni Bennett felt? Though well preserved, she was probably fifty years old. She said she’d been volunteering at the Historical Society for at least ten years, long before Pete had become its president.
“Do you know anyone like that?” Tricia asked.
Ginny scraped some of the icing from what was left of her cake. “Julia Harrison is one of my regular customers. She’s a widow who often comes in on a Saturday. She hates to drive to Nashua, so she does her gift buying here—lots of figurines and pretty whatnots for her granddaughter. Once she kind of hinted that she was interested in Pete and that they’d dated a few times, but that it didn’t work out.”
“Did she give a reason?”
“Nope.” Ginny slid the last piece of cake onto her fork.
Tricia took a bite of cake. She thought she knew of the woman, half remembering an article that Russ Smith had run in the
Stoneham Weekly News
about the Historical Society’s Italianate garden.
“Does this woman volunteer for the Stoneham Horticultural Society?” she asked.
“I think so. Why?”
“No reason.” Tricia ate another bite of cake.
“Any word on the insurance coming through for the store?” Ginny asked. She was only being polite—showing interest in Tricia’s problems—but it seemed that Tricia was asked that question at least ten times a day, and after six months it depressed the heck out of her not to have an affirmative reply.
“Not yet,” she answered with a forced smile, and ate the last bite of cake.
“You must be sick of waiting.”
“I was sick of waiting a mere week after the fire—let alone six months later.”
“Well, it can’t be much longer. In fact, I’ll bet you five dollars you hear from them before the baby arrives,” she said, and looked down fondly at her belly.
“If only,” Tricia said wistfully. She gathered up the napkins and cutlery and tossed them away while Ginny shook her head at the waste. “I’d better get back to work.”
“Same time next week?” Ginny asked hopefully.
“If you’re not in the hospital.”
“Hospital?” Ginny asked, confused.
“You are going to have a baby,” Tricia reminded her.
Ginny laughed. “And, boy, will I be glad when it’s over.”
Tricia thought about the proposed dinner she and Angelica were to have with Ginny and Antonio. Since Ginny hadn’t mentioned it, she decided she’d better not.
Ginny struggled to her feet, and Tricia moved around the desk to give her a brief hug. “If the baby comes early, I’ll have Antonio call you right away.”
Tricia pulled back. “I’ll be waiting for his call.”
“Thanks for lunch,” Ginny called as Tricia left the office.
More customers had entered the store since her arrival, and Brittney waved to Tricia from her post at the register.
Lunch with Ginny was always a pleasure, and speaking with her had presented Tricia with a lead on one of Pete’s ex-girlfriends/
paramours. Now all Tricia had to do was think of an excuse to meet Julia Harrison.
• • •
Mariana’s radio
was on when Tricia returned to the Chamber office. She kept it turned to a soft rock station, and though Tricia didn’t dislike the tunes, she did get bored of the station’s limited repertoire. She wondered if Pixie and Mr. Everett got bored of the CDs she’d played at Haven’t Got a Clue—a mix of new age and Celtic-influenced music. They’d never complained, but then, she hadn’t complained to Mariana, either.
As Pixie was occupied with the new membership directory, it was up to Tricia to take care of a few low-priority tasks in her absence before she grabbed the tri-town phone directory and looked up the number for the Stoneham Horticultural Society. Was there a chance Mariana knew Julia Harrison? She decided to ask.
“Mariana, do you know a woman named Julia Harrison?”
“Sure. We go to the same church.”
“She works at the Horticultural Society, doesn’t she?”
“I don’t think so.”
“Volunteers, then?” Tricia asked.
Mariana shrugged. “Maybe.”
“She’s a widow, right?”
Mariana nodded. “Her husband died a few years back. Car wreck. It was an icy night.”
“That’s so sad,” Tricia said with sympathy.
“Yeah, he was a great guy.”
The conversation waned.
Tricia didn’t want to call the woman with Mariana listening, but she pulled up the online white pages website, typed in Julia’s name, and got a message that said, “We did not find a match.” Perhaps Julia didn’t have a landline, or if she did, it was listed under her deceased husband’s name. Tricia decided she’d call the Horticultural Society when Mariana was out of the office.
The phone rang and Mariana answered it. “Stoneham Chamber of Commerce. Mariana speaking. How can I help you?” She listened. “Oh, sure, she’s here. Just a moment.” She stabbed the hold button. “Tricia, it’s for you.”
“A member?”
“He didn’t say.”
Tricia picked up the receiver and pressed the blinking hold button. “Tricia Miles. How can I help you?”
“Tricia, it’s Jim Stark.”
Tricia clutched the receiver tighter. Her contractor. The man who may have been jealous of Pete Renquist’s attention toward his wife. “Jim,” she practically squeaked.
“Something wrong?” he asked.
“Uh, no.” She forced herself to lower her voice to normal. “No. I’m just surprised to hear from you.”
“I was wondering if you’ve heard from your insurance company yet?” That made about eleven times that day she’d been asked the question. “I’ve got a kitchen remodel to do, and the client wants it done ASAP. It’s a two-week job.”
“Two weeks?”
“I wanted to let you know that my team and I will be tied up ’til the first week in September.”
“Oh, well. Thanks for telling me.”
“I’ll give you a call when I’m at the halfway point with the kitchen to see if you’re ready to schedule my guys on your store.”
“Thank you,” she said.
“Okay, talk to you then.”
“Wait!” Tricia said, her thoughts spinning. Did she dare ask him about Pete? Her thoughts raced. “I wanted to express my condolences for the loss of your friend.”
“Friend?” Stark asked.
“Yes, I met your wife, Toni, yesterday, and we shared remembrances of Pete Renquist of the Stoneham Historical Society.”
“Renquist was no friend of mine,” Stark said bitterly.
“Oh?” Tricia asked in what she hoped was an innocent-sounding tone. “I know he had a booth in your wife’s new antiques store. She was so upset at his passing, I just assumed the three of you were friends.”
“In this instance, you assumed wrong. Look, I have other calls to make. As I said, I’ll call you in a couple of weeks to talk about your store reno. Good-bye.”
He hung up before Tricia had an opportunity to say anything more.
The conversation had not gone well, but at least she knew by the tone of his voice that Stark had held some kind of resentment toward Pete. The question was, could Tricia find out just what it was without alienating the
contractor?
Late that
afternoon, Angelica phoned to say she was swamped with NRA business and could Tricia fend for herself for dinner?
She could.
“Eatin’ alone tonight, eh?” Pixie asked.
“Looks like it,” Tricia said.
“Too bad I made other plans, or I could hang out with you.”
“What’re you doing tonight?”
“Fred and me are going for burgers, and then he’s taking me to the roller derby.”
“Where?” Tricia asked.
“In Manchester at the JFK Memorial Coliseum. It’s the Queen City Cherry Bombers versus the Petticoat Punishers. Aw, man, it’s gonna be great.”
“I didn’t know you were into roller derby.” There was a lot about Pixie she didn’t know.
“There was a time I used to skate with the best. That was way too many years ago.”
Tricia shouldn’t have been surprised. After all, Pixie was a kickboxer. She was husky but toned.
“Sounds like fun.”
“Aw, you’re just saying that. You’d be bored stiff.”
“No, really. I should get out more. Do more interesting . . . stuff.”
“Do you want to come?”
Tricia shook her head. “I wouldn’t want to intrude on the time you get to spend with Fred.”
Pixie’s smile was dreamy. “He’s awfully sweet.”
“When will I get to meet him?”
“Maybe my next day off I’ll bring him around,” Pixie said, but her tone wasn’t exactly positive. Was she ashamed of her new boyfriend, or did she think Tricia might look down on him? She hoped not.
“That would be nice,” Tricia said, and hoped she sounded enthusiastic.
Pixie gathered up her things. “I’m off. See you tomorrow.”
“Good night.”
Once the door had closed on Pixie’s back, the Chamber seemed terribly quiet.
Tricia shut down her computer and turned off the lights, and the Chamber was officially closed for the day. Miss Marple was again asleep in Sarge’s basket, and she didn’t even look up as Tricia left the office, went upstairs to grab her purse, and then left to find sustenance.
She got a salad to go from the Bookshelf Diner, brought it back to
the Chamber, and ate it in the silence of the Chamber’s small kitchen. It was only seven when she finished, but she didn’t have to meet Angelica at the municipal parking lot until midnight.
It would be a long evening.
After finishing her meal, Tricia went up to her stuffy upstairs quarters, turned on the air-conditioning unit in her bedroom, put a CD in the one-disk player she’d acquired, and settled down in the sitting room with another Agatha Christie novel. This time she was in the mood to revisit Hercule Poirot and chose
Evil Under the Sun
.
The hours had flown by, and Tricia’s eyes had grown heavy, when she set the book aside. She got up to look out the window that overlooked the street. All was quiet.
Though it had taken a while, after her divorce Tricia had learned to enjoy living alone with Miss Marple. However, since the fire, she found she sought out company more often. Besides her standing lunch date with Ginny, she often joined Mr. Everett and his wife, Grace, on a regular basis just to keep in touch. As a consequence of all these lunches out, she’d gained five pounds, which her daily walks—with or without Sarge—had not eradicated. But even that didn’t bother her as much as it would have before that terrible day in February.
She turned back from the window and glanced at the clock. It was late, but she still had more than an hour to go before she was to meet Angelica. The idea of pacing the apartment or watching reruns held no appeal, and the truth was she felt starved for company. Even if it was also Christopher’s favorite watering hole, of late Tricia often found herself patronizing the Dog-Eared Page, showing up for a game of darts or to compete on Trivia Night. Seeing her ex there couldn’t be helped as, apart from the Brookview Inn’s dining room, the pub was
the only game in town when it came to social drinking. She enjoyed the Dog-Eared Page. Between the music and the conversations, sometimes she almost forgot about the fire.
Almost.
It was just after eleven when Tricia donned her light jacket, grabbed a pair of wire cutters from the Chamber’s toolbox, and stuffed them into her pocket; she’d need them later. She locked the Chamber’s side door and headed off on foot for the village pub.
Main Street was silent, but Tricia wasn’t afraid as she walked past the darkened businesses. Still, the thought that one of her fellow citizens had probably killed Pete Renquist did cause her to listen carefully as she walked, and to keep a sharp eye out for movement in the shadows. Less than three minutes later, she arrived at her destination.
Though the pub was sparsely populated on that Wednesday night, a boisterous song issued from the hidden speakers in the ceiling. A middle-aged couple sat huddled in one of the booths, nursing half-empty beer glasses, while another, older couple played a game of darts in back.
Michele Fowler sat at the bar with a sheaf of papers spread out before her. She looked up when Tricia shut the door.
“Welcome, Tricia. Come sit down.” She patted the empty stool beside her. Tricia gladly took it. “What can we offer you?”
“Truth be told, I’d really like a cup of coffee.”
“How about an Irish coffee?” Michele offered.
A smile quirked the edges of Tricia’s mouth. “I think I could be talked into that.”
“I think I’ll join you,” Michele said.
Shawn, the bartender, who’d cocked an ear in their direction, nodded and turned to make their drinks.
“What have you got there?” Tricia asked, tapping a finger on one of the printed pages spread across the bar.
Michele frowned. “Janet over at the Historical Society has given me copies of all of Pete’s notes on the ghost walks.”
“And?” Tricia prompted.
“I don’t understand some of the references.”
Tricia thought back to Pete’s last words. They hadn’t made sense, either. Michele handed her one of the papers. Tricia looked at the words and frowned.
Cemetery real estate.
What did that mean? Probably cemetery plots. And for which cemetery? As far as Tricia knew, the two Pete had been dealing with were both still accepting—she almost winced—clients. Were all the cemeteries in the area doing the same?
“Which is the oldest cemetery in town?” she asked Michele.
“The Stoneham Rural Cemetery—although it’s hardy rural anymore, but I suppose when it was established in 1838, it was.”
“Had Pete found any ghoulish stories to share?”
“I wouldn’t say ghoulish, more historical. But there are a few recent murder victims”—Tricia could name several of them—“as well as murderers buried there. But I don’t suppose it would go over well to talk about those souls, although it would be easy to fabricate something about those long gone to give the visitors a shiver or two.”
“Yes, I suppose it would.”
Shawn delivered their steaming coffees in tall glass mugs topped with blasts of whipped cream. Michele raised hers in salute. Tricia did likewise and took a sip. Lovely. Tricia’s gaze returned to the papers scattered across the bar, her expression pensive.
“You don’t like talking about this, do you?” Michele asked quietly.
“Are you kidding? I’ve been reading murder mysteries most of my life. But I have to admit, I’m not really sure how I feel about ghosts.”
“Oh, I believe in them completely. With so many of the houses in England being centuries old, it would be strange not to run into a ghost or two during a lifetime.” She laughed. “Mine, not theirs.”
Tricia nodded toward the papers. “Surely there’s enough material for you to work with to come up with a twenty- or thirty-minute talk.”
“Oh, I’m sure there is. I’ve even been practicing my patter on Shawn.”
“And what does he think?” Tricia asked, taking another sip of her coffee.
Michele eyed the thirtysomething hunk, who was listening as he dried the glasses he’d just washed. “He’s bored. Not at all a receptive audience.” She turned back to Tricia. “Perhaps you’d be willing to help me with my presentation?”
“I’d enjoy it.”
“Lovely. Shall we start later this week? The talks are due to begin less than a month from now.”
“I’ve got nothing else on my calendar,” Tricia said, and it was true. Except for dinners with Angelica, she had nothing scheduled and would probably make no long-term plans until she had a timeline for returning to her home and reopening her store.
“Brilliant,” Michele said.
They spent the next half hour in pleasant conversation as first one, then the other couple finished their drinks and waved good night.
“Looks like I’m closing down the bar tonight,” Tricia said, taking the last sip of her tepid Irish coffee. It was then she realized she hadn’t brought her purse or any money with her. “Oh, dear. I can’t pay for my drink. I feel like a piker.”
“Don’t worry, love, it’s on the house,” Michele said.
“Thank you,” Tricia said, and donned her jacket against the chilly
August night air. It was almost midnight and time to meet Angelica. “Good night,” she called as she left the bar.
She found her sister sitting in her car in the municipal parking lot with the engine running and little Sarge in the passenger seat, riding shotgun. Angelica hit the control and the power window rolled down.
“Am I late?” Tricia asked.
“No, I’m early,” Angelica said. She closed the window, shut off the engine, and joined her sister.
Tricia opened her car’s trunk and withdrew one of the bags. “I had hoped to find petunias, but they were in short supply. I don’t know all that much about flowers, but at least I know that roses would not be appropriate in a hanging basket.”
“Thank goodness for that,” Angelica said, but as she pawed through the rest of the flowers in the bag, her frown deepened. “A lot of these are tropical flowers.”
“I know, but they’re colorful and pretty—or at least they will be ten feet off the ground.”
“Maybe I should alert Russ Smith to the vandalism and ask him to write a short article for the
Stoneham Weekly News
. Maybe if I offer a reward to find the culprits, it might squash the impending outrage.”
“
Outrage
is rather a strong term when it comes to the merchants’ reaction to fake flowers, but I think you’re right.” Tricia withdrew a plastic stem that sprouted four red carnations. “I brought a pair of wire cutters.” She took them out of her jacket pocket. “We can cut these off and stuff them into the dirt in the baskets.”
Angelica sighed. “Oh, dear. I guess we should have cut and sorted them earlier this evening. It’s going to take all night for us to get this done.”
“Then we’d better get started.”
They decided to empty all the bags and sort and cut the flowers there in the parking lot under Tricia’s car’s trunk light. Angelica chose a palette of colors for the baskets before retrieving Sarge. She wore the end of the leash like a bracelet over her left wrist and grabbed a big flashlight and several of the bags, leaving Tricia to struggle with the ladder.
The whole project had sounded like a lark, but Tricia had never done any flower arranging, and after far too many unhelpful suggestions from Angelica, it soon became apparent that her efforts weren’t going to cut it, and she knew that unless Angelica did the arrangements herself, she wouldn’t be satisfied. “Ange, you’re going to have to conquer your fears and climb this ladder.”
“Oh, but I can’t!” she cried, suddenly panicked.
“Yes, you can,” Tricia said firmly. “You’re Nigela Ricita. You have accomplished the impossible,” she bluffed. “You have two successful businesses in your own name
and
you’re a published author who single-handedly transformed the Chamber of Commerce in a mere eight months. And you can climb this ladder and make beautiful floral arrangements to spread happiness and cheer throughout the whole village.”
Talk about laying it on thick!
Angelica’s eyes brimmed with tears, and she swallowed. “Well, I guess I could try,” she said, her voice trembling. “Will you lean against my legs so I don’t fall?”
“Yes, I will,” Tricia said patiently.
Angelica blinked away her tears and straightened, taking a deep, steadying breath before handing off the leash. Slowly, she approached the ladder, grasped it, and carefully placed her right foot on the first rung.
“You can do it,” Tricia encouraged her.
“Yes, I can,” Angelica said, swallowed and pulled herself up. It took another minute or two for her to force herself up the next two steps. “Okay,” she said at last. “Hand me a couple of the flowers.”
It wasn’t as easy a task as it sounded, since Tricia had to juggle the leash, the bags, and the flashlight, and after fumbling for nearly a minute, she hefted a bag in Angelica direction. “Take this. I can’t do it all.”
Angelica snorted an impatient breath and snatched the bag from Tricia’s grasp. Tricia aimed the flashlight in the general direction of the basket. Soon, Angelica became absorbed in the work, and Tricia could feel the tension in her sister’s legs subside.
After several minutes, Angelica called, “Well, what do you think?”
Tricia squinted up at the basket. “Looks a lot better than what I could have done.”