Authors: Sandra Balzo
âTiny pupils, remember? You brought it up and Daisy suggested Eddie might be abusing some drug like Percocet.'
âSpeaking of our sunny little drug czar, where
is
your mother this morning?'
âI'm afraid to ask.' AnnaLise leaned forward and whispered, âApparently she spent the night with Boozer Bacchus.'
âGood for her.' Joy shook out a napkin. â'Bout time she got some. Boozer, too, for that matter.'
âI thought you weren't hungry.'
The swinging door from the kitchen bumped open. âTwo cheesy turkey spaghettis,' Nicole said brightly. âComing up.'
âThanks,' AnnaLise said as the girl placed one in front of her. âSmells like home. Or Mama Philomena's family booth at the restaurant.'
âI've learned so much from Mama and Daisy.' Nicole was circling the long table to serve Joy. âI had no idea that cooking was this easy.'
âA package of this, a can of that,' Joy contributed.
âIt's like a miracle,' Nicole agreed. âNow, what can I get you to drink?'
AnnaLise and Joy looked at each other across the table.
âI think a white, no?' said the fitness trainer.
âJoy, it's eleven o'clock in the morning.'
âYou're right.' She lifted her chin. âNicole, do you know how to make mimosas?'
âI do, but I'm afraid we're out of champagne.'
Joy glanced at AnnaLise. âBetween the celebrating and interim homicide, I'm not surprised.'
âIt is odd, though, isn't it?' Nicole said. âNobody seems sad that poor Mr Hart is gone.'
âTo know him was to hate him,' Joy offered.
âThat's not nice,' AnnaLise scolded. âThe man did what he could.'
âThe man did
every
thing he could,' Joy corrected. âOr everybody, assuming it had aâ'
âJoy!' from AnnaLise.
But Nicole giggled, then put her hand to her mouth. âSorry, AnnaLise.'
âDon't be, Nicole. In fact, sit down. I'd like to ask you something.'
âSure.' She pulled out a chair as Joy shot a puzzled expression toward AnnaLise. âWhat can I tell you?'
AnnaLise had been thinking about this. âWednesday nightâ'
âThe night Mr Hart died?'
âYes. I saw both you and Chef Debbie about ⦠what, ten-thirty?'
âMaybe just after, because I remember Mr Hart saying that it was only ten-thirty and he was going to watch some of the movie before turning in himself.'
âRight, right.' AnnaLise was chewing her lip. âWhich is when I said I'd deliver the wine to his room for you. But immediately after that, we ran into Chef Debbie.'
âAnd you broke the bad news that the grocery stores wouldn't be open on Thanksgiving morning.'
AnnaLise turned to Joy. âApparently there were some things she needed.'
âSo we know Debbie was making plans for Thanksgiving dinner?'
âAnd, seemingly,' AnnaLise said, â
not
staying at Hart's Head that night.'
âNo,' Nicole said. âMr Hart had reserved a room for her at the inn.'
It made sense that Nicole would know that. What didn't was that AnnaLise hadn't thought to ask her.
âThat jibes with what Sheree told us,' AnnaLise said to Joy. âThough it's not consistent with the theory that Debbie is the one who was in Hart's room.'
âSure it is,' Joy said. âHart would have booked the room at the inn for cover. You know, so everybody wouldn't know he was hooking up with our family-holiday chef.'
âWhy would he care?' AnnaLise asked. âHe “hooked up” with pretty much every other female who's here this weekend.' She paused. âWith the relieved exception of those of us who are or might be the product of said hooking up.'
âExactly my point,' Joy said. âHe wouldn't want to sully the weekend by rubbing the noses of past conquests in his current â¦'
âInamorata?' Nicole suggested.
âOh, good one,' Joy said. âMuch better thanâ'
âBack to Wednesday night,' AnnaLise interrupted wisely. âWhat time did your granddad pick you up, Nicole?'
âEarlier than I expected,' the girl said. âThe movie ended at about eleven-fifteen. When I realized I'd have the media room cleaned up by quarter to twelve, I texted him and he snuck out during a band break to pick me up.'
The âband' at Sal's was Sal and his iPod. âSo he arrived here at around midnight?' That would tally with the car AnnaLise saw leaving.
âYes, and good thing, too. The taproom was open past one, what with it being Black Wednesday.'
Apparently everybody but AnnaLise was familiar with the term. âWas Debbie still here when you left?'
âUh-unh.' Nicole was shaking her head. âShe was out of here maybe ten minutes after you and I talked to her.'
âDid you see her leave?'
âActually walk out the front door?' Nicole closed her eyes for a second. âNo, I can't say that I did for sure. But when I returned to the kitchen after putting away the wine, she was pulling on her coat. We went over the menu quickly and then I ran to the cellar to get the merlot that Mr Hart suggested I open for the other guests.'
âAny sense of whether she went out the back door or the front?'
âFront, I think. She used the kitchen door to the hallway and foyer.'
âWhich leads to the front door, but also the media room or master bedroom.' AnnaLise turned to Joy. âIt had to have been Debbie I heard entering Dickens' suite while I was there.'
âTiming sounds right,' Joy said. âThough I suppose it still could have been Hart himself.'
âOh, no,' Nicole said. âHe was at the corridor door to the media room, looking for the wine when I rushed back with it. Mr Hart took the bottle, thanked me and went in to the movie.'
âAnd about time, as I recall,' said Joy. âThe natives were getting restless without their refreshments.'
AnnaLise wrinkled her nose. âI didn't know you watched the film, Joy.'
âOf course you didn't. You left me cooling my heels out on the patio when Hart and I started mixing it up.'
âAhh, that's right. You'd just called him a pig.'
âIf the cloven hoof fits.' Joy twirled some spaghetti onto a fork with a tablespoon.
AnnaLise nodded. âAnd I, on the other hand, decided to make a graceful exit. That's when I very nearly ran into Nicole with the wine. Eddie told me that Dickens retired when the movie ended, and the rest of the party had broken up soon after. Is that the way you both remember it?'
Nicole was nodding herself now. âI saw Mr Hart go to his room. In fact, he said good night to me.'
âWhat about the rest of the group?'
Joy had one eye closed, thinking. âI poured myself one more glass of merlot for the road. By the time I turned around, everybody was already out of the media room.'
âAnd up the stairs?'
Nicole took this one. âYes. Well, except for Ms Boccaccio, of course. She took the elevator.'
âNeither of you saw anybody head the opposite direction toward Dickens' bedroom?' AnnaLise asked.
âLike I said, everybody was out of the media room and going up the steps when I came out into the hallway,' Joy said. âI suppose somebody could have slipped in before that.'
But Nicole looked dubious. âNot after Mr Hart went into his room, unless it was after I left for the night. I stood outside his door as everybody filed out and then went into the media room to tidy up.'
âSo somebody could have snuck into the master suite when you were cleaning?'
âAnnaLise, I don't think so,' said Nicole. âOnce the group was upstairs, the ground floor was very quiet. I think I would have heard footsteps on its marble tile.'
âWhat did you do after you finished in the media room?'
âTook the glasses into the kitchen to wash and called Granddad.'
Joy looked at AnnaLise. âSomebody for sure could have snuck in then.'
âUh-unh,' Nicole said. âSorry, but I used the
second
sink where all the wine glasses hang, facing the hallway. I didn't close the door because it was spooky down here all alone.'
âSo you could see the full length of the hallway to the master suite doors from there?'
Nicole nodded. âI rinsed the glasses and slid them into the rack above to dry. Then I went to the foyer and waited for Granddad to pick me up.'
AnnaLise was arranging it all in her head. âSo that leaves us with Debbie â who could have
said
she was going to the inn, but snuck in while you were in the wine cellar â or pretty much anybody else, assuming they waited until you were gone.'
âCorrect,' Nicole said. âWhat happened after I left, like I told Charity, I can't say.'
âCharity knows all this?' AnnaLise asked. âThe timeline, I mean?'
âOh, yes. She seemed very interested.' Nicole lowered her voice. âYou know what she asked me?'
Joy and AnnaLise shook their heads.
âIf Chef Debbie ever mentioned roofies.'
The sediment in the glass. Charity had said that preliminary testing showed no nonprescription drugs in Dickens' system. Also, nothing in the full wine glass, nor the bottle. Neither she nor her husband, though, had said anything about the empty glass.
And AnnaLise, now kicking herself, hadn't asked that specific question. â
Did
Debbie mentionâ'
âAre you kidding?
Not
the kind of thing that comes up when you're peeling potatoes and all.'
âSuppose not,' Joy said. âBut you do know what they are?'
âOf course,' Nicole said. âYou're asking for trouble if you're my age and don't. When I go out with my friends, we guard each other's glasses when one of us dances or goes to the restroom.'
That was sad, AnnaLise thought. Things hadn't been quite that hazardous when she was Nicole's age. âDid Charity say why she was asking?'
âJust that some had shown up in “preliminary test results.”'
Joy looked at AnnaLise. âMaybe you were right. Hart tried to drug Debbie and she hit him in self-defense.'
But AnnaLise had just had a thought, one that could confirm that Debbie had stayed over. Or, conversely, prove just the opposite. âNicole, do you remember if Debbie's car was still here when Sal picked you up at midnight?'
The girl scrunched up her face as she thought about it. âNo. But then I wouldn't have, anyway. Granddad pulled into the circle drive and picked me up square in front of the door. The cars were all parked around the side, next to the garage.'
âTrue.' AnnaLise was wondering whether she should be glad Nicole's reply had been inconclusive or not, when the kitchen door swung open.
âAnnieLeez!' Phyllis Balisteri thundered. âYou planning on eating that turkey spaghetti or just talking it to death?'
D
espite her scolding, Phyllis Balisteri had insisted on reheating the turkey spaghetti, resulting in AnnaLise and Joy still being at the table when the assemblage trouped in for their noon meal.
Since the Thanksgiving feast, the group had fallen into taking the same chairs at each communal meal. Outsiders on the south end and locals on the north, much like their sleeping arrangements on the floor above. Or warring factions in a middle-school lunchroom.
Unfortunately, AnnaLise and Joy had planted themselves square in enemy territory. âDo you think we should shift?' AnnaLise hissed across the table.
âHell, no,' Joy said. âIt's your house â at least for now â and besides, don't you want to find out what they're saying up here?'
AnnaLise did, of course. But the fact was nobody on the south end was saying anything. Or eating anything.
âPretty soon we'll
have
to redistribute ourselves,' Joy continued, digging into the crisp cheese crust of her turkey spaghetti. âWe're going to outweigh them two-to-one. Tip the table like a teeter-totter.'
It was true that the visitors didn't seem as fond of Mama's cooking as the locals were. AnnaLise watched Lacey Capri, sitting next to her, pick at her plate. âHaving fun yet?' AnnaLise whispered.
Lacey started. âOh, sorry. Yes, of course I am.' She tried to smile. âAnd thank you again for letting me use your iPad. I'm really enjoying it.'
Lacey sure looked like she was.
âYou keep it as long as you're here, like I said,' AnnaLise reminded her. âAnd don't lose heart. There may have been a break in the case.' She hoped.
âReally?' The girl's eyes widened. âWhatâ'
âDid I hear you say there's been a break in the case?' Lucinda, sitting next to Joy across the table, might not talk much, but Tyler's mother also didn't miss much.
âI'm sure that the police will tellâ'AnnaLise started.
âPolice?' Lucinda waved her be-ringed hand. âThey've come and gone already. Poof! And told us nothing. Left another poor man to sit in front of that bedroom door for hours on end.'
âNow, mother,' Tyler said, flashing a smile at AnnaLise. âYou were asking questions that I'm not sure the town police can answer. Better to wait for the county sheriff's department.'
Joy was watching suspiciously. âWhat kind of questions were you asking? How you can get DNA before Hart is planted in his grave?'
Lucinda's eyes narrowed â dead fish turned mama tiger. âTyler has a right. Dickens Hart may be his father and invited us here for just thatâ'
âWait, wait,' AnnaLise said wearily. âNo need to get into a tussle about this. When the sheriff's department arrives, I'll ask them to provide you with anything you need to do your testing.'
âNot at AnnieLeez's expense.' Phyllis' hearing â four people down â wasn't bad either.
âPleaseâ'
But Patrick Hoag weighed in. âThe parties trying to prove paternity would be responsible for any costs, of course.'