12
Sure, I’ve been known to fudge the truth a
little once in a while. Usually in the name of solving a case. Or
when doing so is vital to something important like my weight or my
dress size. That doesn’t change the fact that I am now and always
have been a basically honest person.
I didn’t say a word to Tammi the tour guide, but
the idea that Marjorie had a purloined piece of property—stolen
from a president’s home no less—just didn’t sit right with me. Even
before I left Lawnfield, I knew what I was going to do. I didn’t
stop home, but I did make a quick detour to the library, long
enough to use the Internet to find Nick Klinker’s home
address.
Nick, it seemed, had better taste than his aunt. At
least when it came to neighborhoods and houses. Within an hour, I
found myself clear on the other side of town in the chichi suburb
of Bay Village. Big houses. Towering oaks. Views of the lake for
the lucky few who were smart enough to scoop up waterfront
property.
Nick Klinker was one of them.
I parked the Mustang on the circular drive that led
up to a house with more windows than walls, and a sweeping backyard
where I could see a garden with a fountain and one of those
gazebos. Vine covered, of course. The house was situated high on a
bluff overlooking Lake Erie, and though real estate is not my
thing, I had been trained right early on; I knew—and
appreciated—pricey when I saw it.
Recession? What recession? Obviously, things were
just peachy in the software engineering world.
By the time I rang the bell, I had already
practiced what I was going to say when Nick answered the door.
There was no use beating around the bush, and no way to sugarcoat
the truth: his late aunt wasn’t just the most annoying individual
I’d ever met; she was a crook, too.
Only I was going to put it in words nicer than
that.
I would have, too, if Nick answered the door.
Instead, when it swung open, Bernadine, Nick’s fiancée, was looking
back at me. At least I thought it was Bernadine. She couldn’t have
looked more different than the stylishly turned-out woman I’d seen
at the funeral. The impeccable outfit was gone, replaced with a
pair of ratty denim capris and a T-shirt that immortalized some 5K
run everybody had already forgotten. The sleek hairstyle? There was
no sign of that, either. Bernadine’s blond tresses stuck up in
weird spikes all over her head.
“Who are you? What do you want?” Bernadine’s eyes
were blazing. She looked me over, twisted a lock of hair around one
finger, and pulled hard. “Do I know you?”
I did my best to smile. It would have been easier
if she’d been wearing those sweet Dolce & Gabbana pointed-toe
slingbacks. But she wasn’t wearing any shoes at all, and half her
toenails were polished garish pink. The others were done in a
chocolately shade of maroon.
I looked back up to her face. “We didn’t have a
chance to talk on Monday, but I chatted with Nick. At Marjorie
Klinker’s—”
“Don’t even mention that woman to me!” Bernadine
threw her head back and groaned. When she turned around and padded
down the hallway, she didn’t close the door and she didn’t tell me
to get lost, so I followed her, closing the door behind me. By the
time I found her in the cavernous house, she was in a kitchen with
a floor-to-ceiling view of the lake. She had a bottle of Black
Velvet in one hand.
She poured a healthy couple inches into a glass and
downed them in one gulp. “Do you know something about what Nick’s
up to?” she asked me.
I was a tad confused so I didn’t say anything. She
was a tad busy pouring herself another drink so she didn’t notice.
As jittery as a double jolt of caffeine, she went over to the
stainless steel, industrial-sized refrigerator and got a handful of
ice cubes. She dumped them in with the whiskey and swirled the
drink, studying me over the rim of the glass.
“Well, do you?” she asked. “Because I’ll tell you
something, I don’t know what the hell’s going on, and it’s making
me crazy, and I don’t have time to mess with this kind of nonsense.
My wedding is in exactly . . .” She glanced at a calendar almost as
big as the refrigerator it was stuck to with magnets. The days of
the month that had already passed were marked off with thick red
X’s, and the Saturday just one week away was circled. There was a
big yellow star on the date.
“I’m getting married a week from this Saturday,”
Bernadine said. She took a couple quick sips of her drink. “And do
you see my groom here helping me get ready?” She spread her arms
and looked around the kitchen, demonstrating.
Point made. We were the only two people
there.
“I’ve got wedding favors to make,” she wailed.
“Three hundred and forty-seven little porcelain picture frames, and
every single one of them needs a photo of me and Nick put in it.
But is Nick here to help?” Another swig, and she was rarin’ to go.
The panic in Bernadine’s voice climbed right along with her
anger.
“Was he here last night when the florist stopped by
for one final chat? Did he show up this afternoon when I talked to
the soloist about the songs for church?” She didn’t wait for me to
say anything, but then, she didn’t need an answer and I wasn’t
about to interrupt. That old saying about hell hath no fury like a
woman scorned? A woman scorned doesn’t hold a candle to a bride
whose wedding day is breathing down her neck.
“I know he’s been distracted, what with Marjorie’s
death and everything,” Bernadine said, doing her best to be
understanding. “And I know he’s nervous, too. His tummy’s been
acting up and he’s not usually the high-strung type. That tells me
he cares and knowing that . . .” She fueled her thoughts with
another sip of whiskey and apparently her brief tiptoe into the
land of the sensible was over. Her voice rose to a screech. “Has
Nick done one damned thing to help me these past few days?” she
asked no one in particular. “I’ll tell you what, no, he hasn’t!
Does he think a bride can do all these things by herself? I mean,
really. Is it fair to expect me to go to the tanning salon, try out
nail lacquer colors, do a run-through on hair and makeup, and count
out those little bags of pink and red M&Ms with Bernie
on some and Nick on some and Love Forever on others?
I ask you. Is it?”
I had once been engaged myself; I could empathize,
if not with the Black Velvet, at least with the stress levels.
Rather than get into it, I tried to keep her on task at the same
time I struggled to make sense of everything she said. “Has Nick
disappeared?” I asked. “Has something happened to him?”
“Happened?” Her laugh was maniacal. It echoed back
at us from the high ceiling and bounced its way over the stainless
steel stove, the matching dishwasher, and the glass-fronted wine
chiller built in below the countertop. “Nick’s lost his mind.
That’s what’s happened to him. And it’s all her
fault.”
Oh yeah, just the way she said that her, I
knew exactly who she was talking about. “You mean Marjorie.”
“Aunt Marjorie.” Bernadine threw her hands in the
air. She was still holding her glass of Black Velvet and it sloshed
out and rained down on the white ceramic tile floor. She didn’t
bother to clean it up. “For years and years, Marjorie Klinker has
ruined my life,” she wailed. “Every holiday. Every birthday. Every
vacation. Marjorie was always there with those little . . .” She
wiggled her fingers over her head, and I got the message.
“Head scarves,” I said.
“Those head scarves. Yeah. Those hideous head
scarves! She was always there wearing those things and acting like
God’s gift to the whole wide world. And talking about family
history.” Her moan was worthy of a ghost in a horror movie. “Oh,
how I hated listening to her talk about family history. I put up
with it,” she added, one hand out and her palm flat. “I tolerated
her. I welcomed her into my home. I couldn’t stand the woman, but I
managed to swallow my pride and tell myself I was doing it for the
sake of family.”
“You didn’t kill her, did you?”
Hey, I figured it was worth a try. Bernadine was so
worked up, she just might be in the mood to confess.
No such luck. But then, I don’t think she even
heard me.
“And now . . .” She hiccuped. “Now, even after
she’s dead, Marjorie’s ruining my wedding!”
There was a table nearby and I sat down. Just as
I’d hoped, Bernadine did, too. It gave me the opportunity to look
her right in the eye. The way I would if she was a dog and I was
trying to get her attention.
“You’re going to need to start from the beginning,”
I said. “Because I can’t help you if I don’t know exactly what’s
going on.”
She tapped one bare foot against the floor. “It all
started Monday. After the funeral.”
I nodded, waiting for more.
She leaped out of her chair to refill her glass.
“He never cared about any of it before,” she said at the same time
she took a long swallow. Her words were liquor-soaked. “Marjorie,
she carried on about it all, constantly. Oh lord, how I was tired
of hearing about it!”
I might be confused, but I was not insensible. I
knew exactly what she was talking about. “James A. Garfield.”
“You got that right.” She returned to the table,
slammed down her glass, and plopped back into the chair. “You knew
her, right? You must have if you were at the funeral. It was the
only thing she ever talked about, the only thing she ever cared
about. Garfield this, and Garfield that, and how she was related
and wasn’t that just so special.” Bernadine’s top lip curled. “I
was sick to death of hearing about it. If I wasn’t so crazy about
Nick . . .”
I was grateful she’d brought up his name. I needed
to get her back on track. “So after the funeral on Monday, what
happened to Nick?”
“I’ve known Nick for four years, and all that time,
he pooh-poohed Marjorie like everyone else. He was only nice to her
because she was his father’s only sister, and the only living
relative he had left. All those claims about how she was related to
the president? Nick was sure they were nothing but a lot of bull.
He never cared a thing about any of it. Not the books or the
pictures or all that presidential crap she has all over her
house.”
“And then . . . ?”
“Then it was like someone flicked a light switch.
You know what I mean? After the funeral, we went back to
Marjorie’s, and it was like watching someone take over his body.
Like he got possessed with Marjorie’s spirit or something.”
Not a pretty thought. I shivered.
Bernadine tugged on her bangs. “All of a sudden,
he’s obsessed with President Garfield, too. He reads about him in
books. He checks out websites on the Internet. He goes over to
Marjorie’s and he stays there for hours and hours and he doesn’t
come home. And he’s not helping me with the wedding.” She slapped
one hand against the table. “The wedding is next Saturday.
Next Saturday! And instead of worrying about the biggest day
of my life, all he does is talk about all that junk of Marjorie’s.
He’s going to bring it home. Here!” She tapped her fingernails
against the table. She crossed her legs and uncrossed them again.
She plucked at her hair.
“I can’t believe it’s happening. Not now. Not when
the wedding’s just one week away. But I’ll tell you one thing . .
.” Bernadine slugged down the rest of the Black Velvet and slammed
the empty glass on the table. “It’s going to stop. Or there’s not
going to be a wedding.” Her outrage lasted only so long. The next
second, her big blue eyes filled with tears and her bottom lip
trembled. “Oh, my wedding! I don’t want to cancel my wedding. It’s
the most perfect wedding in the world . . . and . . . and I want to
marry Nick. I just don’t understand what’s happened to him.”
That made two of us.
Because if everything Bernadine said was true, Nick
was suddenly as obsessed with James A. Garfield as Marjorie ever
was. And the one and only time I talked to him . . .
Well, I knew I wasn’t remembering it wrong.
The time I talked to Nick Klinker, he made it
abundantly clear that he thought Marjorie’s Garfield collection was
nothing but a bunch of junk.
I was back in the car and driving to
Marjorie’s neighborhood in no time flat. The reason, of course, was
self-evident: I needed to talk to Nick Klinker.
About his sudden and irrational interest in James
A. Garfield.
About his aunt.
About his aunt’s murder.
A full plate for a Wednesday afternoon, and there
was still the little matter of how I was supposed to be at work
that day. Not to worry, I called Ella and talked my way out of it
with a story about my poor car and how there was more wrong than
just the tires. I was stuck at the mechanic’s, see, and with no way
to easily get back to Garden View.
Ella bought it, hook, line, and sinker. Which she
might not have if she’d been paying attention and had heard the
traffic noise in the background.
That taken care of, I parked in front of Marjorie’s
nondescript house, hurried up the steps, and rang the bell.
No answer.
If what Bernadine told me was true, Nick had to be
there. He was spending all his time there. He was suddenly a buff,
a devotee, a Garfield maniac.
And I wanted to know why.
I tried the bell again, and when there was still no
answer, I went over to the picture window that looked out over the
front porch and pressed my nose to the glass.
There’s something about obsession that sticks in
the mind, and Marjorie’s fixation was pretty far out there. Try as
I might to forget it, the weirdness of everything I’d seen on my
last visit was imprinted on my brain. I remembered exactly how the
living room was arranged. That’s why I knew things had been
moved.
Moved being an understatement.
All the pictures had been taken down from the
walls. (And just a reminder, all the pictures were of Garfield.)
They were stacked on the red, white, and blue plaid couch.
All the books were piled on chairs.
All the knickknacks were heaped near the fireplace,
including the oil lamp I’d nearly toppled over while Marjorie and
Ray were arguing in the den and the vase filled with those
old-fashioned hat pins that I had knocked over.
It was obvious Nick had been through everything
with a fine-tooth comb, sorting and inventorying and stashing away.
It was not so obvious why.
Thinking about it, I turned—and nearly jumped out
of my skin when I realized Marjorie’s neighbor, Gloria Henninger,
was right behind me. So was Sunshine.
She (that’s Gloria, not Sunshine) didn’t bother to
apologize for nearly giving me a heart attack. “Oh, it’s you,” she
said, the words leaving her mouth along with a stream of smoke from
her cigarette. She had the dog in her arms and she gave it a little
squeeze. “Sunshine told me somebody was sneaking around over here.
Figured I’d better come have a look. It’s what neighbors do for
each other, you know.” She dropped the stub of her cigarette on the
porch and ground it with her sneakers. They were yellow and they
matched the T-shirt she was wearing, the one that said, I KISS MY
DOG ON THE LIPS. Her shirt, in turn, matched Sunshine’s, except
that the dog’s said, I KISS MY OWNER ON THE MOUTH.
Since I didn’t want to think about either of these
possibilities, I was glad when she said, “At least that’s how
neighbors should treat each other. Not that the Klinker woman ever
did. Didn’t care about anybody. Anybody but herself.”
I could have said something about how it wasn’t
exactly appropriate to criticize seeing as how Marjorie had just
recently been murdered, but let’s face it, I couldn’t think of
anything nice to say about her, either. And anyway, Gloria beat me
to it. “Don’t even give me that hogwash about speaking kindly of
the dead,” she growled. So did Sunshine. “I had nothing good to say
about her when she was alive, and I’m not going to be a hypocrite
now that she’s gone. The woman was the curse of the
neighborhood.”
I remembered the glimpse I’d had of Marjorie’s
backyard. “Maybe now her nephew will get rid of the statue of
President Garfield.”
My suggestion wasn’t met with as much enthusiasm as
I’d expected. Gloria scraped a finger back and forth across the top
of Sunshine’s head. “Well, that’s what I was thinking, too. And I
got all excited about it. You know, when Nick started to move it.
But it didn’t last.”
There didn’t seem to be much point in asking her to
explain, so I walked to the railing on the far side of the porch
and leaned over. The statue of President Garfield was still there,
but just like Gloria said, and like everything else I’d seen in the
house, it, too, had been moved.
Instead of standing directly in the path of the
beam of that spotlight, the president was now six feet over to the
left. The pots of flowers from around the statue had been shifted
in front of the garage, and the bushes that ringed the statue?
They’d been dug up. They sat on the driveway, their roots withering
in the sun.
“See what I mean?” Gloria poked me with one bony
elbow. “Saw that Nick Klinker messing with the statue, and I
thought, Glory be! He’s going to get rid of it. No such luck. Now
that he’s messed with it, it just looks worse than ever. I’ve
called the city. Told them I pay my taxes and I have the right to a
neighborhood free of eyesores. Nobody’s listening. Nobody
cares.”
I did. But not for the reasons she thought.
I decided it was best not to mention this so
instead I asked, “What’s Nick up to?”
“Hell if I know.” Gloria made a face. “All I can
tell you is that he’s been here all hours, and had people in and
out, in and out. It’s upsetting to Sunshine. She keeps a regular
schedule. She doesn’t appreciate the interruptions.”
“People in and out. Like who? What people?”
“Well, I don’t know all of them.” Obviously, I
should have realized this. At least that’s what the look Gloria
gave me said. “But I did recognize that one fellow. You know . . .”
Trying to think, she snapped her fingers. “You know, the big guy.
Bushy head of silver hair. He’s on that show on PBS where they look
at the antiques people bring in. Not the famous show that goes all
over the country. The other one. The one they film right here in
Cleveland.”
“Antique Appraisals?” Don’t get the wrong
idea. I am not and never have been a faithful viewer. The show was
on right before Cemetery Survivor so I’d seen a couple
minutes at the end of a couple episodes right after I turned the TV
on and right before I turned it right off because I couldn’t stand
to watch myself in the corny cemetery restoration show. “I know who
you’re talking about. Ted Something.”
“Ted Studebaker. That’s him.” Gloria’s face lit
like a Christmas tree. “I know I’m right. It was him. I know it for
a fact. And it’s not just because I’m a sort of magnet for
superstars. Met Jimmy Durante once. Live and in person. And Telly
Savalas.” She looked at me expectantly.
I stared at her blankly.
Maybe she was more perceptive than I’d given her
credit for. Rather than belabor the point, she started down the
steps. “Come on, honey,” she said. “And I’ll prove it to
you.”
I followed her next door to a house much like
Marjorie’s except for the lack of Garfield memorabilia and the
addition of a gag-in-the-mouth doggy smell that mingled with the
unrelenting stench of cigarettes.
Once inside, I stayed as close to the front door as
politely possible, in hopes of catching the occasional whiff of
fresh air. Sunshine still in her arms, Gloria rattled around in the
kitchen.
“I know I’ve got it here somewhere.” Her voice
floated to me from the back of the house. “I’ll find it. You’ll
see. You’ll see that I met him.”
Since I wasn’t sure if she was talking about Ted
the antiques appraiser or about those guys I didn’t know, the ones
named Jimmy and Telly (wasn’t he a character from Sesame
Street?), I waited. Left to my own devices, I had a chance to
take a quick look around.
Gloria’s furniture was cheap and not worth
mentioning. The wall-to-wall carpet had seen better days. She had a
big-screen TV next to an aquarium where a dead fish floated on top
of the water. There were a couple magazines on her coffee table,
and a couple pieces of mail. Curious, I took a deep breath, held
it, and hurried over there. I shuffled through the mail, checking
it out.
An electric bill. An ad from a local dentist. What
looked like a birthday card.
Nothing interesting, and certainly nothing that
would help with my case.
“Ah, here it is!” I heard Gloria say, and I dropped
the mail back on the table before she got back to the room. It slid
under a three-month-old Ladies Home Journal, and I quickly
moved to put it back in place. When I did, something else slid out
from under the magazine, too.
For a second, I simply stared. But I knew another
second would be too long. I scooped up the paper, folded it, and
stuffed it into the pocket of my khakis.
Just in time, too.
“Here it is.” Gloria shuffled back into the room
holding a business card. She handed it over. Sunshine grumbled when
I got too close.
Gloria pointed at the name printed on the card in
raised lettering. “See? See, right there. It was Ted Studebaker
himself, all right. Just like I said. I saw a car pull up.
Something slick and shiny. I knew it wasn’t anybody who’d been here
before so I went over to see what was going on. You know, the way a
good neighbor would. Nick was just coming out of the house and he
introduced me. That’s when Ted Studebaker gave me that card.”
I gave the card a careful look. It was printed on
quality paper and embossed with an eagle in the background. Ted
Studebaker Antiques, it said, was located in Chagrin Falls, a
charming and highfalutin suburb to the east, and it said that Ted
was a specialist in presidential “autographs, memorabilia, and
ephemera.”
“So Nick was talking to a presidential collector.”
I said this to no one in particular, but of course, Gloria assumed
I was talking to her.
“That’s right.” She grabbed a plastic cigarette
lighter from a nearby table and fired up another smoke. “I heard
them. You know, when I was on my way over there. Nick was telling
Ted Studebaker to come on inside, telling him he had lots to show
him. Ted, he wasn’t even through the front door and Nick was asking
about what stuff was worth and if anybody would want it.”
“Did Studebaker say anybody would?”
“Well, it never got that far. Not as far as I
heard, anyway. Because that’s when me and Sunshine, we showed up to
see who the stranger was and we introduced ourselves. Didn’t we,
Sunshine?” She kissed the dog on the top of the head.
At least it wasn’t on the lips. I took comfort in
the thought.
“I can tell you that Studebaker, just looking
inside the Klinker place from the front porch, he was practically
foaming at the mouth. That’s how excited he was to get in there and
start rooting through things. When we were leaving, they went into
the house, and I heard Nick say something about how he wanted to
sell it. All of it.”
I thought about the neat piles of Garfield kitsch
in Marjorie’s house. It made sense that Nick would have been
through it. Especially if he wanted to sell it all.
Well, maybe all wasn’t exactly the right
word. There was still the matter of the floor tile Marjorie had
stolen off the wall at Lawnfield. And the box full of Marjorie’s
stuff in the trunk of my car.
Those were problems for another day. So was Ted
Studebaker. For now, I had more important things to think about, so
I thanked Gloria for her help, got in my car, and did that
thinking.
Remember, at our first meeting, Gloria was the one
who told me she wanted Marjorie Klinker dead.
She was also the one who swore up and down that she
didn’t really know what the statue of President Garfield at the
cemetery looked like, because she’d never been to Garden
View.
At the next red light, I reached in my pocket and
pulled out what I’d swiped from Gloria’s coffee table.
It was a brochure from the Garfield Memorial. Yep,
the same brochure we hand out to visitors.