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Authors: Barbara Allan

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Clara's face had a bisque-baby blankness. “. . . Can I still be in Saturday's matinee?”

“I'm afraid not, dear,” Mother replied, almost kindly. “But all in all, yours has been a remarkable performance.”

Rudder took the girl's arm. She was sobbing quietly now, tears streaming. “Clara, you'll have to go with me to the county jail. You can call your parents from there.”

Then he led the intern off the stage.

“Imagine,” I said, “that harmless-looking kid killing somebody.”


Madeline
killed Madeline,” Mother said, colder than cold cream. “You see, dear, she could act many a part. But one key role eluded her.”

That was my cue. “What role is that, Mother?”

“Being a decent human being offstage.”

Curtain Call
I'll Be Home for Fruitcake

Mother has requested that I turn the rest of this narrative over to her. She quite reasonably pointed out that I was not present for the coda of this piece, and why should the reader get the story secondhand? Anyway, it's almost Christmas, and this was a gift Mother really wanted, and it doesn't cost me a dime.

You might wish to have a cup of eggnog before pressing on. The kind of eggnog Captain Morgan likes!

 

 

Yes, it is I, Vivian Borne, director and playwright of
The Fruitcake That Saved Christmas,
which should soon be available from Samuel French publishers (they haven't gotten back to me just yet). And I do appreciate Brandy passing the baton or perhaps the pen (or computer?), since from here on out, this is really a one-woman show.

No, come to think of it, it's a two-hander. I did have a key supporting player.

You see, after Clara's arraignment, Sheriff Rudder was kind enough to allow me to visit the troubled girl in the county jail, where she was awaiting trial.

Sidebar: In recent years I worked tirelessly as a community leader in support of a new downtown jail—and we now have one, a state-of-the-art, no-barbwire facility that looks more like your average medical clinic. Those who accuse me of having an ulterior motive may have a point: I did land in the old bug-infested hoosegow once or twice. (Once was for chaining myself to a wrecking ball about to demolish one of Serenity's Victorian buildings; twice was for driving with a suspended license. There may be a thrice, but it escapes me.)

Midmorning, with sun finding its way through the crosshatch of wires on high windows, I sat in the little visitation cubicle across from Clara, a Plexiglas window separating us. I was wearing another Breckenridge outfit (pink sweater, winter-white slacks); Clara was less fashionable in standard-issue jumpsuit of bright orange, a color that did nothing for her.

A female guard named Patty (an acquaintance I'd made on recent incarcerations) (listing the reasons would be a pointless digression) loomed behind the girl, but at enough of a distance to give us some privacy. As usual, the woman wore the bored expression of someone who'd been too long on the job. Isn't it sad when someone doesn't love her or his work?

“How are you, dear?” I asked Clara, speaking into the little microphone in the glass (a big improvement over the old jailhouse phones).

“Not bad,” the girl said with a shrug, seemingly unconcerned about her future.

“Are they treating you well?”

I'd quite enjoyed all of
my
stays.

She perked up. “Oh yes. And the food isn't half-bad.” She might have been a child reporting what life at an upscale camp was like.

“You'll want to avoid the meat loaf,” I advised. “They go overboard with the filler.” I had gained five pounds during my last incarceration.

I continued: “Dear, do you mind if we speak of the . . . unpleasantness?”

She frowned just a little.

“Dear, anything you tell me will be in
strictest
confidence, I assure you.”

Clara's cheerfulness faded, and she stared down at her lap. “I . . . I'd rather not.”

“I may be able to help you.”

“I have a lawyer.”

A court-appointed lawyer of no renown.

“I still think I can help, dear.”

Her eyes met mine. “How?”

“Let's just converse and see. Now. In one of your backstage conversations with Brandy, you mentioned being on an antidepressant. Or so Brandy reports.”

Clara nodded. “That's right. Because I was having a hard time at school.”

“Teased, dear? Bullied?”

She nodded. “But after I started working at the Playhouse, my doctor said I was doing so well that he took me off the meds.” She shrugged again. “He said he didn't want me using 'em as a crutch.”

“Does your lawyer know of this?”

“No. I didn't see what it had to do with anything.”

“It has everything to do with anything. It's vital that your lawyer be informed of this.”

“Why?” Dull eyes momentarily brightened. “You mean, it could get me off?”

“No. But it might lead to a reduced sentence, or even affect the type of institution where you make your amends.”

She winced and said, “It was just spur-of-the-moment, you know.”

Actually it was quite premeditated, but I said, “Because Madeline was so cruel to you?”

“She was awful. Called me fat and a pig and stupid. And I admired her so!”

“Tell me, dear—how did you know that adding arsenic to Madeline's makeup would have the effect it did? Did you read it in a book? Agatha Christie, perhaps?”

I hated to lay a real murder at the Grand Dame of Mystery's feet, but it could make for a good argument in court.

Clara shook her head. “Madeline told me.”


What?
Explain!”

The girl nodded. “It's funny. At first, she was nice to me, and let me hang around her dressing room before rehearsals. One time, when I said how pretty her complexion was, she told me that in the olden days women would put a little arsenic in their face cream to make their skin whiter. But they had to be careful not to use too much because it could kill them.” Clara shrugged with her eyebrows. “So, in a way, it was kind of Madeline's fault, wasn't it, really?”

So—the diva had directed her own final performance.

“Dear,” I said, “Madeline may have given you the idea, but
you
put it into effect. Make no mistake about it—you took another person's life.”

Clara's eyes welled. “I know. I wish I could undo it . . . but I can't.”

She had a box of tissues on her side of the Plexiglas and used several.

I waited for a while, then said, “I don't know what the outcome of your trial will be, Clara, but if you find yourself inside for a while? Keep in mind it's what you do during that time that can make a difference in your life. Because someday you
will
get out into the world again.”

Clara wiped her nose on her sleeve. “Like do what on the inside?”

And I told her about how I had, on a fairly recent visit, formed a jailhouse repertory company with the other female inmates, and that we put on plays—first for ourselves, then the male inmates, and finally, the general public.

(I left out the part about two of the girls doing a runner on an off-campus performance, which put an end to our theater group. Also, I felt it best not to mention that the play they skipped out during was
Arsenic and Old Lace.
)

“Dear,” I said, bringing enthusiasm to my voice, “just think of it!
You
could be the lead actress in the new jailhouse theater group.”

“I . . . I could?”

“But of course! You were marvelous as the cook. Completely believable. Why, I wouldn't be surprised if, after you pay your debt to society, you might make a name for yourself on the Great White Way.”

This was horse hockey right out of my production of
My Fair Lady,
but the girl did need encouragement.

Her eyes were shining like new pennies, Lincoln side out. “You
really
think so?”

“Why, after the experience you'll get with the new theater group . . . certainly! Silver lining.”

The sullen Patty said, “Time.”

Standing, Clara asked, “You'll come to the trial?”

I beamed at her. “Wouldn't miss it for the world. I'll be testifying, you know.”

“And I know you'll be just wonderful,” the girl said, smiling back. “Thank you, Mrs. Borne, for caring about me. My folks are pretty mad at me right now. You know something?”

“Dear?”

“That wasn't the fruitcake that saved Christmas at all. Anyway, it sure ruined mine.”

And Patty escorted her out.

Now, dear reader, before you put me up alongside Mother Teresa, I should reveal that behind my interest in Clara was my own ulterior motive. I had a drawerful of plays I'd written that the board hadn't deemed good enough for the Playhouse, but that might well see the light of day inside the county jail. Silver lining indeed—pure tinsel.

Look out, Samuel French!

A block from the facility, I caught the gas-powered trolley. At home, where I was greeted by the aroma of a freshly baked fruitcake. Of course, the truth is I generally don't like fruitcake—but that antique recipe of Hattie's is really not too shabby!

As I entered our retro 1950s red-and-white kitchen, Brandy was removing a piping-hot example from the oven, with Sushi dancing in anticipation nearby.

“How'd it go with Clara?” she asked.

“I'll tell you all about it over a slice of fruitcake and some hot tea.”

Soon we were seated at the antique Duncan Phyfe dining-room table, where I filled Brandy in.

Brandy, on her second piece (a new convert to fruitcake, at least the Hattie variety) said, “Did Clara tell you
why
she killed Madeline?”

“We spoke of it,” I said, sneaking Sushi a bite under the table. “But in no great detail.”

Because I hadn't needed to.

Brandy said, “Pretty obvious Clara had idolized Madeline. Maybe the girl even had a crush on her.”

“Possibly,” I said. “But when the object of her affection became the purveyor of her affliction, an unmedicated Clara took her revenge.”

Brandy nodded, took another bite.

I helped myself to another slice. A little matter like murder was not about to put me off this delectable Christmas treat.

And now you, dear reader, can enjoy it, too.

 

 

The Serenity Factory Fruitcake

 

3 cups pecans, coarsely chopped
1 lb. pitted dates, coarsely chopped
1 cup halved maraschino cherries
¾ cup flour
¾ cup sugar
½ tsp. baking powder
½ tsp. salt
3 eggs
1 tsp. vanilla extract
(rat poison optional)

 

In a large bowl combine nuts, dates, and cherries; add in flour, sugar, baking powder and salt, and mix well. In a small bowl, beat eggs until foamy, stir in vanilla, then fold into main mixture, mixing well. Pour into greased 9”x5” loaf pan. Bake at 300 degrees for 1 hour and 45 minutes, or until inserted toothpick comes out clean. Cool before removing from pan.

 

A Trash 'n' Treasures Tip

 

Collecting vintage recipes is not only fun, but a glimpse into the past. The best place to find old recipes is at an estate sale of an elderly person. But don't restrict yourself to out-of-print cookbooks or the typical household recipe tin; newspaper clippings and manufacturer's pamphlets of kitchen gadgets can also be a good source for unique dishes. Some 1950s and early '60s magazine-style cookbooks have wonderful photos of “unfortunate foods.” Our mutual advice, re: fruitcake recipes in such publications, is to beware—the more colorful the cake, the less tasty the outcome.

Don't miss the next Trash 'n' Treasures
mystery starring Brandy and Vivian Borne....

ANTIQUES SWAP

Coming from Kensington in 2015!

 

 

Keep reading to enjoy an enticing excerpt....

Chapter One
Opening Lead

(In the game of bridge, first bid by defenders.)

You know that expression, “Be careful what you wish for?” Well, in my case, it's be careful what
Mother
wishes for.

Mother
being Vivian Borne, seventy-three-ish, Danish stock, widowed, bipolar, local thespian, part-time sleuth, full-time gossip, and sometime county jail resident.

And me being Brandy Borne, thirty-one, divorced, Prozac-popper, audience member, reluctant sleuth, subject of gossip, and one-time loser (breaking and entering) with a record in the process of being expunged, since I was helping solve a murder at the time.

The third member of our sleuthing team is my blind diabetic shih tzu, Sushi, who accompanied me to my little hometown of Serenity, Iowa, after my divorce two years ago.

Only . . . wait for it, longtime readers..
Sushi is no longer blind!
That's right, no more spooky white Exorcist orbs. No, we did not make a trek to Lourdes (meaning you did
not
miss a series entry entitled
Antiques Pilgrimage
).

We did trek to New York, however, to attend a comics convention several months ago (
Antiques Con
), where Mother and I auctioned off a valuable 1940s Superman drawing acquired in a storage unit auction (
Antiques Disposal
). With part of the proceeds, we funded an operation for Sushi to remove her cataracts (a result of her diabetes) and implant new lenses, and now I assume she can see perfectly. I say “assume,” because a dog can't exactly read an eye chart. Do dogs really see in black and white? Well, I guess with an eye chart they do....

It's been fun watching the little fur ball explore a world she hasn't seen for years. Sushi is now a Super Dog, minus only the cape, her other senses honed to perfection. I don't mean to imply her sleuthing powers have increased, but it's true that the little mutt seems to know when I'll be going into the kitchen for a bag of potato chips even before I do!

But Sushi can sometimes be a little stinker, and her reprisals were numerous and varied, according to the degree of her ire: peeing on my pillow (ten on a scale of ten), chewing a new pair of shoes (eight), leaving a little brown carrot inside the house in plain view (six). One through five were various barks, growls, or dirty looks. Just where the little tyrant learned such vindictiveness, I have no clue.

As for Mother's aforementioned wish, it was for our TV pilot to be picked up, a reality show shot at our new shop, an expansion of our old antiques mall stall underwritten by the pilot's producers.

Perhaps the best way to bring you up to speed is to reprint a recent interview with Mother conducted by a young male reporter from the
Serenity Sentinel
. So hold on to your hats—especially the Red Hat Society kind.

 

 

Serenity Sentinel:
Why you?

Vivian Borne:
Dear, not meaning to be critical, you understand . . . but it's always best to begin an interview with a complete sentence. Such as “Why were you and your daughter chosen from among the many ‘wannabes' for a reality TV show?”

SS:
Why were you?

VB:
Phillip Dean—a veteran cameraman-turned-producer—thought that the antiques business run by myself, Vivian Borne, V-I-V-I-A-N B-O-R-N-E and Brandy Borne, B-R-A-N-D-Y, Borne again . . . no religious connotation intended . . . would make a perfect series because—

SS:
I heard the show was called
Antique Sleuths
.

VB:
Dear, it's not polite to interrupt. If you want to be a responsible member of the Fourth Estate, you must—

SS:
Fourth what?

VB:
—pose your questions in the
form
of a question.

SS:
That
was
a question.

VB:
The name of the show is
Antiques Sleuths
, in the plural, not
Antique Sleuths
. You do perceive the difference?

SS:
Now
you're
asking the questions.

VB:
(
sighs
) Yes, because it has become clear that I need to commandeer this interview, if anything of substance is to be conveyed.

SS:
Go for it.

VB:
The concept of the show is that a mother and daughter, who have solved numerous mysteries in real life, as amateur sleuths . . . that would be my daughter and myself . . . also solve the mysteries behind various unusual antiques brought by clientele into their, which is to say our, Trash ‘n' Treasures shop.

SS:
But right now there's only a pilot. I mean, right now there is only a pilot, right?

VB:
I congratulate you on that recovery. That is correct. Most of the pilot was filmed last week, with a little more footage—“B roll,” they call it in the industry—to be shot this Saturday at a local swap meet. The finished product will be shown to several cable TV networks.

SS:
So it's not a done deal?

VB:
No . . . but we're hopeful. We have an undeniable advantage, factoring in my considerable history in local theater, not to mention my experiences off-Broadway.

SS:
I'm not to mention that?

VB:
Well, certainly you may mention it. Why would you not? Next question.

SS:
You've recently moved your antiques business to a house where two murders took place. Isn't that creepy?

VB:
Dear, I don't think the demise of those poor victims—murders separated by many years, both of which
we
solved, by the way—need be referred to as “creepy.” Let us just say it lends a certain resonance to the undertaking.

SS:
So does “undertaking.” Sounds like you're capitalizing on the infamous notoriety of the house. I mean, are you capitalizing on—

VB:
Certainly not! It just happened to be vacant when we were looking for an appropriate venue for our expanded business, and the prospective television show. We would not think of tastelessly exploiting the tragic history of that structure.

SS:
Then why does your Web site say, “Come and visit us at the Murder House”?

VB:
Does it? Well, that's a minor lapse on the part of our web designer. I'll give him a real talking-to.

 

 

Had enough? I have! But I do think Mother came off better than the interviewer.

Where we were? Ah yes—Saturday morning, and Mother and I were getting ready to open for business at the Murder House—a designation that was not our doing, a local nickname dating back to the axing of the patriarchal owner some sixty years ago, and a copycat killing last year, about which I won't go into, for those among you who haven't (as yet) read
Antiques Chop
.

Maybe it was my mildly mind-altering Prozac, or possibly a numbness that's set in due to the number of murders Mother and I have solved since my homecoming two years ago, but I've come to
like
that historically homicidal house, perfect as it was for our expanded business.

The large two-story white clapboard with wide front porch and modest lawn was situated downtown just after commercial Main Street begins its rise into East Hill residential. Built around the turn of the last century, the place had a downstairs parlor, a music room, a formal dining room, and spacious kitchen; four bedrooms and a bath occupied the upstairs.

In setting up our shop, Mother and I decided to slant each room toward its original purpose—that is to say, all of our kitchen antiques were in the kitchen, bedroom sets in the bedrooms, linens in the linen closet, formal furniture in the parlor, and so forth—even the knicknacks were placed where you might expect them to be (only with price tags).

Our customers often had the vague sense that they were visiting an elderly relative—a grandmother or kindly old aunt—with so many lovely things on display. Only at Trash ‘n' Treasures, you didn't have to wait to inherit something; for the listed price (or maybe a haggled-over lower one), you could walk right out with whatever caught your eye.

The spacious entry hallway was where we put our check-out counter, so that we could greet customers, and also keep an eye on the downstairs rooms. Mother and I believed a certain amount of pilfering was better business than security cameras hovering high in every corner announcing: “We don't trust you.”

Besides, even a state-of-the-art system couldn't compare to our secret weapon: the all-knowing, now all-seeing shih tzu, who with her Sushi sense could detect a nervous shoplifter, following him or her from room to room with an accusatory glare. (Now if someone would only steal that darn smiley-face alarm clock!)

Before moving our business into the house, Mother asked Serenity's resident New Age guru, Tilda Tompkins, to meet us there and conduct a reading to make sure we weren't going to upset any spirits—especially murdered ones—thereby courting bad karma. A disgruntled ghost slamming a door was one thing . . . knives hurtling through the air was quite another.

Mother, Tilda, and I had sat in a circle on the floor of the empty parlor holding hands, while the guru closed her eyes, chanting softly, summoning any willing visitor from the other side.

But much to Mother's disappointment, no one answered. Oh, there was a
sneeze
. But it turned out to have come not from a departed one who'd died of pneumonia, rather from Sushi, thanks to some antique dust she'd breathed in.

The next day, still uncertain, Mother asked Father O'Leary to come bless the house, which he did, even though we belonged to New Hope Church. For flood relief, Mother had organized a charity bazaar at St. Mary's, which brought in a lot of money (
Antiques Bizarre
), so we'd racked up some good Catholic-style karma there.

Father O'Leary intoned a prayer in the entryway, then went from room to room, sprinkling the air with Epiphany water, and marking each door in chalk with the initials CMB—“Christ bless this house.” If Linda Blair happened to drive through Serenity, and stopped to do some antiquing, she'd be just fine, though some of our collectibles were real head-turners.

And so, with our bases covered from New Age spiritualism to old-time religion, we moved our antiques in, and Trash ‘n' Treasures was ready to rock ‘n' roll.

Anyway, Saturday morning.

Mother and I and Sushi were waiting in the shop for Joe Lange to arrive and “take the conn” (as the longtime Trekkie put it) so that we could attend the swap meet down on the riverfront.

Joe was tall and loose-limbed, with nice features that were somehow a wee bit off—one eye higher than the other, mouth a touch too wide, nose off center. He was a committed bachelor (in the sense that he'd been occasionally institutionalized), was an old pal of mine since our community college days, when we were assigned as lab partners in biology class. I'd been faced with a crucial decision: either strangle the irritating nerd, or befriend him. I chose the latter. After graduation, Joe joined the army and fought in the Middle East, while I married an older man in Chicago. On some level, we were both getting away from our mothers.

And now, veterans of our various wars, Joe and I were both back home, more or less where we started, including
living
with our mothers. To varying degrees, I suppose, we were both damaged goods. If you're wondering, we weren't an item. Joe showed no signs of interest in sex, either female or male.

Mother was saying, “Dear, I wonder if we're making a mistake, entrusting our shop to that poor troubled soul. One day it may come back to bite us in the you-know-what.”

She was wearing a new Breckinridge summer outfit—pink slacks, and pink-and-white checked blouse; the only out-of-date aspects of her ensemble were the huge-framed magnifying eyeglasses.

I shrugged. “Joe did all right at the shop while we were in New York.”

I had on my fave DKNY jeans and a gauzy floral shirt by Joie, an Internet steal.

We had left Joe in charge for two weeks, and received nary a customer complaint. His sales had been respectable, too.

“Yes,” Mother said, then qualified her nod. “But it's just about
that time
.”

She was referring to Joe's summer “drug holiday,” when his doctor took him off his antipsychotic meds for a few months, because of their potency. The problem was that my friend then reverted to Marine status, and went into full survival mode, often camping out in the caves at Wild Cat Den State Park.

Hiding out was more like it.

The front door opened and Joe stepped in, wearing his desert camouflage utilities. (Once—okay, maybe a couple of times—I have referred to his attire as “fatigues” and caught heck for it.) He wore no helmet or hat, and thankfully wasn't carrying any military weapons.

“Reporting for duty,” he said crisply.

I exchanged wary looks with Mother.

“Joe, dear,” Mother said in the kind of voice a negotiator uses to talk someone down off a ledge, “do you think you might be able to stand watch here at the shop for a few hours? Brandy and I need to attend the swap meet.”

“Roger that,” he said. “You'll return at . . . ?”

I checked my watch; it was ten now. “Oh-two hundred.” Then added, “Give or take an ‘Oh.' Would you like us to bring you lunch?”

“Negatory.” He patted a tan bag slung over a shoulder. “Packed my own rations.”

BOOK: Antiques Fruitcake
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