FOUR

Bob Kelly’s car was parked in front of his
real estate office, but the locked door and CLOSED sign hanging in
the window indicated he wasn’t in. Tricia backtracked two doors
down to the log cabin that housed the Stoneham Chamber of Commerce.
Bob had been its president for at least a decade and often held
court there. As owner of most of the real estate on Main Street, he
controlled the rents and was the recipient of most of the
prosperity that had come to Stoneham.
Prim, proper, and middle-aged Betsy Dittmeyer, the
Chamber’s secretary for almost eighteen months, was not as friendly
as her predecessor, Frannie May Armstrong. Nor was she a fount of
useful information. A stickler for rules and regulations, she
seemed to have memorized the Chamber’s bylaws, as well as some
receptionist’s handbook, and played more of a gatekeeper’s
role—shielding Bob from those he didn’t want to see. Tricia might
well be on that list, so she decided it would be best to act as
sweetly as possible when dealing with Betsy.
“Good morning, Betsy. Lovely day, isn’t it?”
Betsy’s mouth drooped, her eyes narrowing. “How can
I help you, Ms. Miles?”
She was as cold as a day in January.
“I’d like to talk to Bob.”
Betsy lifted the receiver. “I’ll see if he’s
in.”
Of course he was in. Tricia could see him behind
the glass divide, hunched over his desk, intently staring at the
papers scattered across it. The phone buzzed, and Bob picked it
up.
“Ms. Tricia Miles is here to see you, Mr.
Kelly.”
Tricia watched as Bob’s shoulders sagged. He looked
up, saw her, and without enthusiasm motioned her to come in. He
mouthed something to Betsy, but Tricia didn’t wait for the
reception’s permission to move. She walked past Betsy’s desk to
Bob’s office door and entered.
“Am I disturbing you, Bob?” she asked, and closed
the door behind her.
He gestured to one of his guest chairs. “No.” His
tone was more weary than welcoming.
Tricia decided to drop the pretense and get
straight down to business. “I just spoke with the investigator from
the NTSB.”
Bob nodded. “I talked to him earlier.” He didn’t
offer anything else on the subject.
Tricia looked over the sheaf of stapled papers
spread across Bob’s desk. Contracts? He’d said he was worried about
liability; no doubt he was checking the exact wording. Had he
already spoken to the Chamber’s legal counsel?
“I can’t tell you how upset this whole situation
has made me. I know you must feel the same.” But for entirely
different reasons, she knew. “Did you personally know the pilot,
Monty Capshaw?”
Bob’s gaze dipped to the papers on his desk.
“It’s going to come out eventually, anyway,” Tricia
said.
Bob sighed. “Monty and I were old school pals. I
hadn’t spoken to him in at least five years when we talked about
the Founders’ Day celebration.”
“And what did the conversation entail?” Tricia
asked.
“We talked about him flying the banner over the
village. He wanted to supply it, too, but I nixed that. The Chamber
gave the job to one of our members, Stan Berry, the guy with the
sign shop in his garage over on Pine Avenue.”
“I met him at one of the Chamber breakfasts,”
Tricia said, mentally putting a face to the name.
“He did a real good job on it. Too bad it got torn
all to shreds. We could’ve used it at other functions.”
Tricia had to bite her tongue not to chastise Bob
for being so cheap. Losing the banner was the least of the losses
from that plane crash. She let it go. “Tell me about Monty,” she
said, her voice soft.
Bob shrugged. “He had a little puddle jumper
outside of Milford. He told me he needed the work. I guess things
hadn’t been going well in the air transport business of
late.”
“What kind of services did he offer?”
“Mainly picking up parts or contracts and ferrying
them to nearby cities. Back in the day, he flew to Boston on a
regular basis, taking off from all the little strips around here.
He was based outside of Milford but flew to Rochester and Concord
all the time. Then the market tanked and . . . well, you know how
it goes.”
She sure did. Too many people lost their
livelihoods when the economy took a nosedive. Tricia had been among
the few who had not only hung on but somehow made a profit.
Angelica had done the same. Sadly, not all their fellow Chamber
members had been so lucky.
“Did you know much about Mr. Capshaw’s experience?
I mean, you did check his references and the like, right?”
Bob’s gaze dipped once again. “He was an old school
pal. I hadn’t heard anything bad about him—and believe me, I hear
all the dirt. As far as I knew, everything was on the up-and-up.
This was just a tragic accident, Tricia. And I’m sure the NTSB is
going to rule it as such.”
Then why had he been intently going over contracts
and insurance forms?
Tricia saw the letterhead for CAPSHAW AERONAUTICS
on the top pile of papers. Oh, how she longed to just snatch up the
papers and run with them, but even she wasn’t that eager to suffer
Bob’s ire. She tried another tack.
“I’m sorry, Bob. I didn’t know Mr. Capshaw was your
friend. You’re probably suffering just as much as the rest of us
who are mourning Deborah’s death.”
“She was my friend, too, you know.” Bob actually
sounded hurt, as though no one had considered his feelings. The
fact that he seldom showed any emotion might have had something to
do with that, but Tricia decided to be charitable. “The funeral is
tomorrow morning at nine.”
He nodded. “I’ll make a point to be there.”
There didn’t seem to be much more to add to the
decidedly one-sided conversation. Bob could be tight-lipped when he
wanted—and now seemed like one of those times.
Tricia stood. “I’d better get back to my store.
Elizabeth needs help over at the Happy Domestic, and I promised to
loan her Mr. Everett.”
“That’s very generous of you Tricia. You’ve always
been a kind person.”
Tricia swallowed. It wasn’t like Bob to hand out
compliments. Part of her was willing to take his words at face
value. The other part . . . wasn’t so sure.
Mr. Everett had arrived by the time Tricia
made it back to Haven’t Got a Clue. Ginny was busy helping a
customer, and Tricia made her way to the back of the store and the
biographical shelves, where Mr. Everett was busy with what seemed
like his favorite pursuit: dusting.
“Good morning, Ms. Miles. And how are you this
lovely day?”
“Still sad, I’m afraid.”
Mr. Everett nodded. “Yes, as am I and Grace. Mrs.
Black was a lovely woman.”
“Yes, she was.” Tricia waited a moment before
continuing. “Mr. Everett, back in June we talked about you helping
out at the Happy Domestic. Would you still be willing to do so?
Mrs. Crane, Deborah’s mother, could really use your help.”
“I’d be very happy to help out.”
He looked like he was about to say something more,
when the woman Ginny had been speaking with raised her purse and
waved it at Tricia and Mr. Everett. “Yoo-hoo! William Everett! May
I speak to you for a moment? It’s about my son.” She hurried
forward, her face flushed, her eyes gleaming like those of a rabid
raccoon. “He’s a brilliant boy—and his scholarship money was
canceled. Those idiots at Avery Metal Fabricators decided to yank
the financial rug right out from under him, and—”
Mr. Everett sighed. He listened for a moment more
and then interrupted the woman, handing her a business card. “I’m
sorry, ma’am, but you’ll have to make your request in writing.
There are forms on our Website.”
“But I want to tell you in person just how
deserving my boy is—”
“I’m sorry, ma’am, but I don’t make the
determination of who gets how much. The chairman of our gift-giving
committee makes the decision based on need. Now, please, unless you
wish to make a purchase here at Haven’t Got a Clue, I’m afraid I
cannot help you.”
The woman took the card with bad grace, shoving it
into her purse. “Well, of all the selfish, hard-hearted bastards,”
she growled, turned on her heel, and stalked toward the exit.
A dejected Mr. Everett sighed. “Ms. Miles, I’m
sorry that all these . . . these money grubbers keep showing up
here at Haven’t Got a Clue. Since the newspapers and TV stations
reported where I live and work, I can’t get away from them. Winning
that lottery money was the worst thing that could have happened to
us.”
People looking for a handout had become more than a
slight inconvenience, and Tricia felt sorry for Mr. Everett and his
wife, Grace. They’d been the victims of boorish behavior far more
than she had. It was Grace who’d set up the Everett Charitable
Foundation, took care of the Website, and gave out the grants,
while Mr. Everett did his best to keep a low profile.
“Don’t worry about it. Now, getting back to the
subject of the Happy Domestic, would you mind going over there
right now?”
“Not at all.” He surrendered his Haven’t Got a Clue
apron, put away his lambs’-wool duster, and grabbed the Red Sox
baseball cap he’d recently taken to wearing. “If anyone asks for
me, please don’t tell them where I’ve gone—unless it’s Grace, of
course.”
“You have my word,” Tricia promised, and smiled.
“But I can’t guarantee people won’t go looking for you. It’s
happened before.”
Mr. Everett sighed. “That’s true. I do wish I could
don a disguise. I wonder, should I grow a moustache?”
“How about one like Hercule Poirot’s,” Tricia
suggested as she walked him toward the exit.
Mr. Everett scowled. “I was thinking more like Tom
Selleck.”
“That would look good, too,” Tricia agreed, and
tried not to laugh.
“I think I should have started back in June.” He
paused at the doorway. “Would you like me to report in here at
Haven’t Got a Clue this evening after I leave the Happy
Domestic?”
“That won’t be necessary.”
“Then I shall have Mrs. Crane verify my work
time.”
“Very good,” Tricia agreed.
“I’d be happy to work there tomorrow, too,” he
said.
“Deborah’s funeral is planned for tomorrow. I don’t
think they’ll be opening.”
“So soon?” Mr. Everett asked. Tricia nodded. “What
about Sunday?” he asked.
“If Elizabeth decides to open, I can always ask
Ginny to work here, and if she can’t, I’m sure I can manage on my
own for a day. I’ll call you later should anything change.”
Mr. Everett nodded and then pulled his ball cap
down low on his brow and opened the door. He poked his head
outside, took a furtive glance around, gave her a quick good-bye,
and then exited the store, pulling the door shut behind him.
“Sorry about that,” Ginny apologized. “I tried to
steer that woman toward Grace’s Website, but when she saw Mr.
Everett standing there . . .”
“I’m sure it’s not the last time it’ll happen. I
feel so sorry for both of them. All Mr. Everett wanted to do was
pay off his debts. And now he’s being hounded night and day by a
bunch of deadbeats.”
“Alleged deadbeats,” Ginny clarified. Tricia wasn’t
sure if she was being funny or serious. “Did I hear you say
something to Mr. Everett about me working Sunday?”
“If you wouldn’t mind.”
“I’d be glad to. Antonio is going to be busy all
day, so it’ll give me something to fill the hours.”
Busy how? Tricia wondered. Any time Antonio
was too busy to spend a weekend with Ginny, that meant things were
heating up at Nigela Racita Associates.
And why did the thought worry her so?
The lunch crowd at Booked for Lunch was
long gone by the time Tricia showed up for her customary late
lunch. This day, she was very late.
“I didn’t think you were going to make it today.”
Angelica said, and got up from her stool, scooting around the
counter. She hadn’t waited for Tricia, as evidenced by the plate
covered with whole wheat crumbs that sat on the counter. She’d
spread out the manuscript pages of her next cookbook and had been
going over them with a red pen.
Angelica stooped to retrieve something from the
little under-the-counter fridge and set the plastic-wrapped plate
in front of Tricia.
“Thanks. Got any soup left?”
“Sorry, Tommy already cleaned the kitchen. There
wasn’t much chicken noodle left, so I think he dumped it.”
Tricia frowned.
“Believe me, much as I loved Jake, he thought of
himself as a chef, not a short-order cook, and he didn’t do a lot
of cleanup. I’m thrilled that Tommy doesn’t mind washing dishes and
scrubbing pots.”
“So you’ve gotten over the Brookville Inn stealing
Jake?”
Angelica scowled. “It wasn’t the Brookville Inn
that stole him from me. It was Nigela Racita Associates.”
“Ah, yes,” Tricia said, and uncovered her lunch,
balling up the wrap and setting it aside. “But you said it was a
good career move for him.”
“Of course it was. And I was the first to be served
dinner the night he started there. I like to think it was me who
set him up for greatness.”
“Jake? Greatness?”
Angelica frowned. “Obviously you haven’t eaten at
the inn since he took over the kitchen. Their last chef was pretty
damn good. Jake is better.”
“You know I haven’t eaten there lately.”
“Then I will take you there and treat you. What are
you doing tonight?”
“I don’t know that I want to go out. I think I’d
rather stay home and read.”
“You’ve been doing a little too much of that
lately. Pining over Captain Baker maybe?”
“No! It’s just . . . Deborah’s death has really
depressed me. I don’t feel like going out and celebrating—anything.
By the way, I loaned out Mr. Everett to Elizabeth for a few days.
And Ginny’s upset with me.”
Angelica blinked. “Because you loaned out Mr.
Everett?”
“No. She thinks I don’t trust her.”
“Okay, I’m confused.”
Tricia stabbed a forkful of tuna and related the
conversation she’d had with Ginny that morning.
“You’ve always said she was the best assistant in
Stoneham. And if that’s true, doesn’t it seem rather suspicious you
haven’t given her more responsibility?” Angelica asked.
“It isn’t a question of trust—or even
responsibility. I’m on the premises most of the day. I don’t stray
very far from the store—which is also where I live, I might add.
There’s simply been no reason for her to open or close for
me.”
Angelica leveled a narrow gaze at her sister.
“You’re a workaholic.”
“I am not!”
“You’re worse than Daddy ever was.”
“That’s not true,” Tricia said, but it did seem to
be the one trait she’d inherited from their father.
“Admit it, you can’t stand to sit still—unless
you’ve got a mystery in your hands, and then the world stops. If
you ask me, you’ve dug yourself into a rut. If you want to go out
with Captain Baker—ask him to take you out, or you invite
him to dinner.”
“You know I can’t cook much of anything.”
“That’s why the Brookview Inn has a catering menu,
dear.”
“They do? How do you know?”
“I make it my business to know what every other
eatery in the area is serving and what other ventures they’re
involved in.”
That made sense. Tricia took another bite of tuna.
Tommy made it differently than Jake. She couldn’t put her finger on
just what it was—not so much the taste . . . maybe the texture.
There weren’t as many crunchy bits. Yes, Jake had added more diced
celery. Tricia had gotten used to it that way and now found she
missed it. Not that she’d ever let Tommy—or Angelica—know it.
Angelica slipped on her reading glasses that had
been hanging from a cord on her neck, and turned her attention back
to her manuscript. “Have you heard anything else about the crash
investigation?”
“Only that it’ll take months before they make a
determination.”
“That’s ridiculous. Bob said the plane ran out of
gas. End of inquiry.”
“If only it was that easy.” Tricia sighed and set
her fork aside. “I feel like I should be doing more,” she
said.
“What? Helping the cops figure this out?”
“Don’t be silly. And, anyway, it’s not the
Sheriff’s Department that’ll be investigating. It’s the National
Transportation Safety Board.”
Angelica waved a hand in the air. “Whatever.”
“I thought David might have called me—maybe asked
me to help plan Deborah’s service. But, then, he hasn’t even asked
any of Deborah’s family for input.”
Angelica sighed in exasperation. Looking over her
glasses and down her nose at Tricia, she leveled her index finger
at her. “See, I told you you’re a workaholic. So what if David
hasn’t asked for your help. You’ve given Mr. Everett to Elizabeth
to work in the store. That will bring in income until David decides
what to do with it—and knowing you, you’ll be paying Mr. Everett’s
wages. Short of adopting little Davey, what else can you do?”
Tricia thought about it for a few moments. “I could
collect money for Davey—maybe set up a scholarship fund for
him.”
“Unless he’s a boy genius, the kid won’t be going
to college for at least sixteen years,” Angelica pointed out.
“That’ll give the money time to accrue
interest.”
“Not at the ridiculous rates banks are offering
these days.” Angelica stared at her sister for a long moment and
then shrugged. “Whatever,” she said again. It was beginning to
annoy Tricia.
“Will you donate something?” she asked.
“Sure, I can spare fifty bucks.”
Tricia gave her sister the evil eye.
“Okay, a hundred. Are you going to go door to door
like you did when Jim Roth died?”
“Probably. And I’m going to hit up Antonio Barbero
for a very big contribution. If Nigela Racita Associates is
plotting to take over Deborah’s store, the least they can do is
contribute to her son’s education.”
“Isn’t that kind of a double whammy? I mean, won’t
Davey be on the receiving end of whatever his father gets for the
business?” Angelica asked.
“Not necessarily. The louse could remarry or blow
the money on fast cars and fancy women.”
Angelica scowled. “You really don’t like
David, do you?”
“Not especially.” Tricia lifted her hand and rubbed
her fingers together several times. “Come on, write out a
check?”
Angelica got up and stomped around the counter once
again. She pulled out her purse from underneath and reached for her
checkbook, then paused. “Who am I supposed to make it out to? You?
The Davey Black Education Fund?” She placed the checkbook back into
her purse and stowed it under the counter again. “Maybe you need to
think this through before you rush into it. It might be that you
should hit the bank first and set up an account for the kid.”
“That’s a good idea. I could make Elizabeth the
trustee, and then no matter what happens with David in the future,
Davey will be all set.”
“Don’t you think you’d better ask her first?”
“Do you honestly think she’s going to
refuse?”
“No. But it doesn’t hurt to ask. Besides, it’s just
good manners.”
“I guess you’re right. I’ll give her a call and see
if she can meet me at the bank sometime soon.”
“Why wait? Do it now.” Back out came the purse, and
Angelica handed Tricia her cell phone.
Two minutes later, it was a done deal. With Mr.
Everett willing to cover for her, Elizabeth agreed to meet Tricia
at the bank in fifteen minutes.
Tricia folded Angelica’s phone and handed it back
to her, then picked up her fork and continued to eat her lunch.
Angelica shuffled her pages and stacked them in a neat pile. “I’m
not getting any work done here. I may as well go home.”
“The book not going well?” Tricia asked.
“It would be going a lot better if I weren’t doing
another Easy-Does-It cookbook. I thought I’d be getting my
foot in the publishing door with the first one, and then they’d let
me do something a little more creative. But no. Now they want the
same thing, only different. Why did I have to be so successful my
first time out?”
Tricia laughed. “I’ll bet that’s a problem a lot of
authors would love to have.” She’d certainly heard it enough at the
author signings she’d hosted over the past two years.
Angelica stood. “Have you thought about what you’re
going to say to David when he finds out you’ve made Elizabeth
guardian of Davey’s scholarship money?”
“Why do I have to tell him anything?”
Angelica raised her arms as though in surrender.
“It’s going to get around, and I don’t think he’s going to be
pleased. Everyone knows he doesn’t like you.”
“Who’s everyone?”
Angelica sighed, but didn’t bother to reply.
“Besides, I don’t like him, either. And after
Deborah’s funeral, I never have to put up with him again.”
“Stoneham is a small village,” Angelica pointed
out, “and you know how things can get ugly when the townspeople
stick up for one of their own and shun the newcomers.”
“David and Deborah were originally from somewhere
on Long Island, not natives of Stoneham. And the villagers have
hardly embraced the booksellers.”
“They’re coming around,” Angelica said. “And I’m
counting on them eating here at Booked for Lunch when the winter
rolls around and the tourists stay home until spring.”
Tricia ate her last bite of tuna and pushed the
plate away. “You worry too much.”
“With all the bodies you’ve found in this town, I’d
think you’d be a little more concerned.”
Tricia blinked, taken aback. “Do you honestly think
David would threaten me over something as innocuous as setting up a
scholarship fund for his son?”
“Of course not. But you’ve already interfered by
loaning Mr. Everett to work in Deborah’s store—a store David wants
to close as soon as possible.”
“Where did you hear that?”
“Everybody’s talking about it.”
Tricia was getting tired of hearing about
everybody—especially if Angelica wasn’t willing or able to
identify who they were. “I’m not afraid of David Black.”
“Well, maybe you ought to be. Deborah was,”
Angelica said casually. “And now she’s dead.”