The Grilling Season (25 page)

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Authors: Diane Mott Davidson

BOOK: The Grilling Season
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“The vandals say John Richard left that night and then came back. Or somebody in a Jeep just like one of his, no lights, came there.”

“Yeah.” Tom sighed wearily. “I know what they said. We’re checking to see if any white Jeeps were rented anywhere in the Denver area. And we’ve got the drug screen to wait for. Plus the skin under her nails has been sent to a crime lab. So we’ll know more by the end of the week. If it’s Korman’s skin, at least we’ll have him for assault.”

But not necessarily for murder. Would he walk? I didn’t want to think about it.

As Tom had predicted, I did not sleep well. At one point I crept down to the kitchen and typed into the computer my own notes on what ReeAnn Collins, Amy Bartholomew, Donny Saunders, and Tom had told me. I didn’t have a photographic memory. But then, after what I’d been through when I lived with the Jerk, I’d prayed
never
to have a photographic memory.

Chapter 20

D
espite the fact that Tuesday morning dawned with a bright sun and jewel-bright hummingbirds whirring past my downstairs windows, I did not feel the least bit cheered. Tom had left early. I went through my yoga routine trying to empty my mind—not easy. Today, among all the other crises, I was set to begin catering to the doll people. I’d read recently about the necessity of going into a zone of enjoyment when doing your work, especially if you expected to derive pleasure from your career over the course of a lifetime. I tried to see the zone and imagine Gail Rodine not in it.

I sliced the cooled brioche loaves and then began making the box lunches. Each lunch would contain four sandwich triangles: cucumber, smoked salmon, Swiss cheese, and the pesto-tomato-chèvre combination that Donny Saunders had gobbled up so ravenously. I shuddered and fixed myself an iced latté. Something Donny had said kept swimming up just below my consciousness as I smoothed cool mayonnaise over the bread slices and laid out the sandwich fillings.

When I finished wrapping the sandwiches, I tucked a miniature bottle of white wine, wrapped cheese straws, a cup of plum, orange, and banana fruit salad, and a plastic bag with a Babsie’s Tart and a chocolate cookie in each box. As I closed the last cardboard box, my eye fell on the computer. Computer, disks, tapes. Tapes.
If Luella had told anyone about the taping, she would have lost her job.
How significant were these meetings that Suz had taped? I didn’t know, and I’d promised Tom I wouldn’t go nosing around at ACHMO. I put in a call to Brandon Yuille’s office. I would apologize for snapping at him at John Richard’s office, then pump him for info. When his assistant asked suspiciously who was calling and I told her, I had to wait two minutes for her cold response that Mr. Yuille was unavailable. I asked if I could call back at a more convenient time. She responded icily that there just was no convenient time. Fine. I hung up and called Chris Corey’s office.

His secretary put me right through. “Goldy!” His deep, rumbly voice sounded surprised. “What’s going on? Korman hasn’t come over to bother you, has he?”

“He wouldn’t dare. Listen, Chris, something one of the investigators said has been bothering me.” I hesitated, remembering I’d promised not to mention that Luella was the one who had spilled the beans to Donny. “It relates to what we were talking to Frances about Sunday at the cafe. You said ACHMO was going into John Richard’s office looking for notes about the McCrackens’ suit.”

“Well … yes.”

“It’s just that I heard there were some missing tapes, too.”

Chris grunted. “Don’t remind me.”

I persisted innocently, “What’s going on? Why would Suz keep tapes of meetings in her office?”

He lowered his voice. “Look, Goldy, it’s a huge crisis. Everybody’s upset about it. Nobody seems to know
why
she was taping in her office.
Secretly
taping. Makes it much worse.”

“You say that as if there were other taping systems.”

“Yeah, sure. The microphones in our
main
meeting room are sound-activated, and everybody knows that everything
there
gets taped, then transcribed so we have accurate minutes for each meeting. It could have been Suz was afraid of industrial spying, and that’s why she did some kind of backup taping in her office. Maybe she kept the tapes locked up there and took them from her office to her home or wherever because some threat had appeared.”

“Did she know about your work with Frances?”

“Not unless Frances told her, and that’s unlikely.”

“Who could be doing spying that would make Suz worried?”

“Look. Our meetings are confidential, Goldy, and if another HMO like MeritMed is trying to find out the details of our expansion plans, there could be hell to pay. And with legal action outstanding against us, the thought of having tapes of other in-house meetings floating around where anybody might get
their hands on them is causing mass paranoia in corporate headquarters, believe me.”

“Are you sure Suz had them?”

“No! What sends shivers up the bowels of HQ is that somebody Suz
fired
might have them. If anyone besides Luella knew Suz was taping, there could have been motivation to get in and steal them, especially if they might prove something against ACHMO. Plus,” he added darkly, “they’re panicked that Patricia McCracken might have them somehow. That woman’s gone a little bonkers. It wouldn’t surprise anybody here if she’d managed to steal the key to that cabinet, break into the office, and swipe the tapes from one of the days when Suz met with our lawyers about the McCracken case.”

“So you don’t even know what day’s meetings are missing?”

He groaned with frustration. “We’re trying to reconstruct, but it’s a huge mess. We should know today. We’re supposed to have security, but you know how that goes. Anyway, Goldy, speaking of meetings, I’ve got to go to one now. Damage control. Good luck with whatever it is you’re working on.”

“I’m not really working on anything, Chris. It’s just that my son is very upset. I promised him I’d try to help his dad, much as I dislike the man.”

I hung up and packed the lunches between freezer bags guaranteed to keep food cold. When I was almost done, Macguire came down to breakfast. His transformation was remarkable. His cheeks were genuinely pink. There was a spring to his only slightly wobbly step, and he had a broad smile on his face that made me laugh.

“Let me fix you some toast,” I offered. “And some eggs, maybe?”

“Sounds great.” While the frying eggs sizzled in the pan, Macguire dutifully washed down his ten herb capsules with water turned a science-fiction green by the chlorophyll. “Todd and Arch are still asleep,” he announced. “I’ll wake them up at ten. They listened to music until three
A.M.
, I’ll fix ‘em breakfast, too. Toast, probably.” His grin warmed my heart.

I thanked him for tending to Arch and Todd, declined his offer to help load my supplies, and hauled the first cardboard box out to my van. When I came back into the kitchen, my phone was ringing.

“Goldy, my God, I’m so glad I got you.” Ralph Shelton’s voice sounded exhausted and strained. “Look, I’m terribly sorry about running into you at the McCrackens’ party. I just got out of control on those blades. Are you all right?”

“Sure, Ralph.” No use troubling him with a litany of my lingering aches. “Thanks for calling.”

He hesitated. “I just need to talk to you for a minute. Remember when you were over here asking how to get to the McCrackens’ place?”

“Yes. What’s the matter?”

“Well. I was supposed to drive to Omaha this morning, but they got word that … Oh, God, I need to know if you know anything about these tapes that Suz Craig was making. Please tell me, Goldy, I’m leveling with you. As an old friend.”

I took a deep breath. “Why do you care about them?”

His voice wavered, as if he were about to cry. “Because I went in to see her last month, on the
fourteenth to be exact, and … I just can’t let anyone know what we talked about. Please, Goldy, help me. Suz was trying to destroy me. Do you have the tapes? Does John Richard? Are they at his office? Or his house? I’ve already driven past Suz’s house and there’s that damn yellow tape all around it—”

“Ralph, calm down. First tell me—exactly why were you fired from ACHMO?”

For a moment I thought he wouldn’t answer. But then he sighed. “Patient complaints. No sexual misconduct or anything like that. It’s just that I have a terrible bedside manner. I always have. You can imagine how that can kill you in ob-gyn. So. I was offered an administrative job with MeritMed. I took it.”

I recalled Suz’s secretary, whom Suz had kept in line with threats. “Was Suz threatening you in anyway?”

He hesitated. “You’ve learned a lot, haven’t you? She did threaten people. Yes, I was one of them. But it was all … exaggeration. I left before she could ruin me,” he concluded darkly. “But if someone gets hold of those tapes … Oh, God,” he moaned.

“Did you … were you … did you do something to Suz Craig?”

“Of course not, what the hell do you think I am?”

Well, that was what we didn’t know, wasn’t it? “I honestly don’t know where the tapes are, Ralph. And John Richard’s out on bail. You could give him or his office a call. But his secretary is frantic with the mess, and there’s no telling what kind of emotional
state John Richard is in. If I were you, I’d stay away from both of them.”

“Yeah, well, you’re not me.”

At the LakeCenter the Babsie-doll show was in full swing. The security guard, even more hung over today than before, grunted a question about whether my assistant would be helping me, because he had strict orders not to let “that young fellow” near the dolls. I kept my patience and told him my assistant would not be accompanying me today. The armed guard escorted me past the display tables, where shiny arrays of statuesque, ultraslender, elaborately coiffed Babsies in lacy, sequined gowns elicited choruses of oohs and aahs from the crush of excited visitors. Even I was impressed, especially when I saw the price tags.

At the appointed time, I passed out box lunches on the patio to women clutching blue lunch tickets. While they ate, I indulged in a more detailed tour of the show. One table was dedicated solely to Holiday Babsies from 1990 to the present. All the dolls belonged to Gail Rodine. All were marked “Not for Sale.” The costumes were festive and fantastic: tiny rhinestones glistened above shimmery red and green taffeta gowns; white furs set off dark velvet evening dresses. Another table featured Babsie as astronaut, Babsie as veterinarian, Babsie as a prima ballerina, Babsie horseback riding, Babsie walking her poodle on the Champs-Elysées, even Babsie as President. All that was missing was Babsie as Elvis. A long aisle was devoted to Babsie accessories. I looked with awe at teensy-weensy toreador
pants; high heels; sequined leotards; compartmentalized Babsie suitcases; flip-curled wigs in blond, black, brunette, and red hair; and sexy lingerie that befit the Babsie Massage Parlor. As Donny Saunders would say,
Whoo-ie!

The few attendees not indulging in box lunches were cooing over a table on the far side of the ballroom. When I joined them, I realized their drooling wasn’t from craving my cucumber-brioche sandwiches. Their eyes were greedily fixed on a display of a single Babsie. I stared at the display: Babsie in a “Japanese exclusive” gown. I didn’t know if that meant the gown was made or sold in Japan or both. No matter. I was transfixed by the miniature image of a fashion plate.

Babsie’s blue eyes, rosy cheeks, and bow-shaped mouth were demure, and her long, perfect blond coif did not reveal a single flyaway strand. The bodice and skirt of the tiny full-length gown were made of snowy white satin, and the toes of itsy-bitsy pink high heels peeked out at the hem. A hot-pink embroidered chiffon overskirt pouffed and swirled above the white satin. A miniature stole of the same pink fabric hugged the doll’s shoulders, while a choker of minuscule pink pearls decorated her neck.
Very nice
, I thought appreciatively,
the sort of thing you’d wear to an inaugural ball or a royal wedding.
Then I looked at this Babsie’s price tag: three thousand dollars. When the woman next to me asked if I didn’t think it was just unbelievable, I said, “Yes, incredible beyond words.” Never let it be said that I was a caterer who couldn’t appreciate her clients’ hobbies.

The first woman said, “The dealer said to me,
‘How can you refuse this adorable doll?’ Now I feel as if this poor doll is a refugee who will starve if I don’t buy her!” A tear slid down one of her cheeks.

A second woman whispered, “I’ve got a spy in France. You should see my phone bills. But when the French Babsies come out—you know, the ones we can’t get?—I have my spy get it. She airmails it in a plain brown wrapper. For security. It costs me, but it’s worth it.”

John le Carré, eat your heart out. I tore myself away from the dolls and returned to the patio. In a large plastic garbage bag I collected dirty cups, wrappers, used plastic spoons, and empty miniature wine bottles. Suddenly the cormorants near the shore rose in a frenzied flutter, and I was dimly aware of a distant
wap wap wap wap wap.

I sat on one of the patio benches and squinted at the sky.
Wap wap wap
, louder and louder. In the summer, this was the most dreaded sound in Aspen Meadow. It was the Flight-for-Life helicopter. Usually the only time you heard it was when someone, frequently a child, had drowned, fallen while rock climbing, or been lost for hours after straying from a wilderness hike.

I trotted to the Dumpster near the lake and lofted in the trash bag. The helicopter circled near Main Street. That was odd. The copter appeared to be hovering over Cottonwood Creek, not too far from our house. I reached into my apron pocket for the portable cellular phone I took to events and shakily punched in our number, reminding myself that not all disasters in Aspen Meadow had to involve me.

One second, two seconds, three … then the
phone connected and Arch answered on the first ring. “I’m okay, Mom.”

“How did you—?”

“Are you kidding? All you do is worry about me. I heard the helicopter a minute ago and called Marla to make sure she wasn’t having another heart attack. She’d already found out what was going on. Somebody was in an explosion. A grill at the park blew up. They think some mountain moths built a nest in the vent. Then when the person lit the propane, the grill exploded, just like Frances Markasian wrote about in the paper. Oh, wait, there’s the other line. Maybe it’s Marla again.”

I watched the slow sweep of the second hand on my watch while I waited for Arch to come back on the line. As usual, I tried to reconstruct where Tom was—

“Oh, Mom,” Arch said, his voice subdued. “Marla says that, you know, she survived the explosion, but she’s burned and bloody—”

“Who survived, Arch?” I was frantic. “Marla?”

“Oh, no, Mom. The person trying to light the grill … the person who got hurt … It was ReeAnn.”

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