SIXTEEN
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At nine o’clock Monday morning, the sun was
up and the temperature was already near eighty. It would be a hot
one. When Tricia opened the door to Haven’t Got a Clue to retrieve
her newspaper, she saw Elizabeth Crane at the door of the Happy
Domestic. She paused to watch as Elizabeth became more and more
frustrated as she juggled keys, a coffee cup, and tried to keep
little Davey from struggling out of his stroller.
Tricia tucked the paper under her arm and looked
both ways before crossing the street to join her. “Something
wrong?” she asked as she approached.
“Did you know the sale of the Happy Domestic has
already gone through?” Elizabeth said, her voice shrill.
“I heard,” Tricia said sympathetically.
“Look at this!” Elizabeth said, and pointed to the
shiny brass keyhole. “The locks have been changed. I’m shut out,”
she cried in despair, and then burst into tears.
Tricia gathered her in a hug, patting her
back.
“Nana, Nana!” Davey cried, yanking on Elizabeth’s
sweater.
Elizabeth pulled back and wiped at her eyes. “I
apologize for losing it. I just can’t believe how insensitive that
Barbero man could be.”
“He did tell you about the sale last night,” Tricia
said.
“Yes, but he said nothing about changing the
locks.”
“Nana, Nana!” Davey insisted, and Elizabeth turned
her attention to her grandson.
This was Tricia’s first chance to look at the boy
since David’s revelation about his paternity the night before. No
doubt about it, Davey looked nothing like David Black, and she’d
been right in thinking he didn’t resemble Deborah’s side of the
family, either. Not with that nose and coloring.
“Did you get my message last night?” Tricia
asked.
“What? Oh, yes. Sorry. I was upset. I didn’t feel
up to making calls. I intended to speak to you this morning, after
I opened the store.”
“But Ginny’s supposed to be in this morning.”
“I wanted to get here first, to clean up some of
the paperwork, and be on hand to welcome her.” She rummaged through
the diaper bag and came up with a box of animal crackers.
There was no easy way to broach the subject other
than to just do it. Tricia took a steadying breath before speaking.
“I had a rather disturbing conversation with David last
night.”
“I haven’t had a decent conversation with him for
months,” Elizabeth said, and handed Davey a few of the
crackers.
“Did you know David wasn’t Davey’s father?” Tricia
asked.
Elizabeth’s mouth dropped, and for a moment Tricia
thought she might burst into tears once again. But then she pursed
her lips and looked away. Finally, she nodded.
“Do you know who Davey’s biological father
is?”
She nodded again, looking down at the child. “But
that doesn’t matter. David has more or less said I can keep Davey.
I’m more than willing to dedicate my life to bringing him up, but
according to the law, David is the boy’s father. He’s responsible
for child support until Davey’s eighteen. And I’m going to see to
it that he pays.”
“Why?”
“To punish him. If he’d been a better husband,
Deborah wouldn’t have felt the need to look for affection from
other men.”
There’d been more than one man? “Oh, Elizabeth,
that’s so unfair—to David, and to Davey.”
“Feeling sorry for him? Well, don’t. He’s made out
like a bandit. Not only has he sold the store, but he’s going to
sue the village, that pilot’s widow, and anyone else he thinks he
can shake a nickel out of. He had Deborah heavily insured. I found
the paperwork in the store.”
So, Tricia had been right. “Is it still
there?”
Elizabeth shook her head. “I took it home on
Friday. If I hadn’t seen the crash with my own eyes, I would swear
that David had my baby killed for the money.”
“Have you told the NTSB investigator this?”
“He doesn’t care about possible motives. All he
cares about is the crash. The Sheriff’s Department won’t listen.
‘Not in our jurisdiction.’ ”
Davey thrashed around in his stroller. “Cookies,
cookies!” he hollered.
Elizabeth grabbed a fistful of animal crackers from
the box she still held and practically threw them at the child. He
seemed delighted and picked up a miniature lion, biting off its
head.
“Will you one day tell Davey about his real father,
or would you rather he hear it from David?”
“He never has to know.”
“You don’t think David will be bitter enough to
tell him?”
Elizabeth straightened, and her expression hardened
as she crossed her arms over her chest. “I can handle David.”
Tricia had never seen this side of Elizabeth—so
coldhearted. Had Deborah carried the same trait—and just kept it
better hidden?
“You know that’s not fair.” Why was she suddenly
feeling sorry for David Black?
Elizabeth leveled an angry glare at Tricia.
“Whoever said life was fair? If it were, my daughter would still be
alive. Now I don’t have her, and I don’t have her beautiful store.
Instead, it was ripped from me and given to some punk kid who knows
nothing about the business.”
The slur against Ginny caught Tricia off guard.
“Oh, Elizabeth—that’s so unfair.”
“I thought you were Deborah’s friend—my
friend,” she sneered. “Now I see you’re just as rotten as David.”
She grabbed the handles on the stroller and turned it, nearly
smashing it into Tricia’s shins. “Get out of my way.”
Tricia stood back as Elizabeth strode down the
street, head held high, Davey’s childish laugh echoing off the
buildings along the empty street.
Shaken, Tricia returned to Haven’t Got a Clue. Miss
Marple sat near the door and greeted her with a cheerful
“Yow!”
“Glad you think so,” Tricia said. She deposited the
newspaper on the sales counter and headed for the beverage station.
She needed a jolt of caffeine—STAT! She grabbed the pot, got water
from the washroom tap, and filled the coffeemaker’s reservoir
before placing the filter and ground coffee in the machine and
hitting the on switch. Now to wait the five or six minutes it would
take to brew.
She felt torn. While she felt sorry for Elizabeth
being locked out of the Happy Domestic, she’d been shocked by her
attitude about Davey’s paternity. Of course she was upset—she had
reason to be. Life had not been kind to her these past few days.
Lashing out at David had to be a reaction to his selling the store
and not giving her a chance to buy it. While the entire
conversation had been upsetting, she could see why Elizabeth would
be angry. She’d give her the benefit of the doubt and ask Ginny
about the locks and Elizabeth’s status at the Happy Domestic.
She glanced at her watch. Knowing Ginny, she’d
arrive early at her new job—she was probably already in transit.
Tricia moved to the front of the store to look out the window,
intending to wait for Ginny to arrive.
By the time the coffee had finished, she saw Ginny
walk down the sidewalk toward the Happy Domestic.
Tricia poured two cups of coffee into the paper
coffee cups intended for her customers, capped them, and headed out
the door.
Ginny had already opened the door to the shop by
the time Tricia arrived. Tricia knocked on the door, and seconds
later Ginny appeared. She noted the coffee in Tricia’s hand and a
smile lit her face. “What a wonderful sight on my first day on the
job. Come on in,” she urged, and stood by to let Tricia
inside.
Tricia handed one of the cups to Ginny. “Just how
you like it.”
“I always said you were the best boss. Maybe one
day I can be, too.”
“That’s kind of why I came over to see you. Ginny,
did you know the locks had been changed since Antonio broke the
news to Elizabeth last night?”
Ginny didn’t answer for a long moment. “It wasn’t
something Antonio planned on doing.”
“I don’t mean to sound judgmental, but wasn’t that
uncalled for?” Tricia asked.
“Please don’t blame him,” Ginny said. “His boss
told him to do it last night, right after he talked to Elizabeth.
She didn’t take the news well that he’d already taken possession of
the store. She was extremely upset—screaming at him. It was David
she was angry at, but she took it out on Antonio. He said he’d keep
her on, but she grabbed her purse and Davey and stormed out of the
store without even closing for the day. Antonio had to call in a
locksmith from Nashua and pay double to change the front and back
locks. We never did get our celebratory dinner at the Brookview
Inn,” she added with a twinge of resentment.
Tricia shook her head and exhaled a long breath.
“What about Elizabeth? Shouldn’t she have been told about the
locks?”
“That wasn’t my decision,” Ginny said, sounding
defensive. “It was—”
“Don’t tell me—Antonio’s boss who decreed
it.”
Ginny nodded. “Look at it from Antonio’s
perspective. He didn’t think Elizabeth would be coming back to work
after all the nasty things she said.” Ginny frowned. “I had hoped
my first day would be pleasant. I hoped Elizabeth would at least
tell me how things operated, who the suppliers were—that kind of
thing. Now I’ll either sink or swim.”
“You’ll do fine.” Tricia braved a smile. “There’s
still a little time before you have to open. I should get going so
you can take a look around and get familiar with your store.”
Ginny managed a weak laugh. “My store,” she
repeated, and shrugged. “Well, as good as, anyway.” Ginny bit her
lip. “There is something I noticed when I was poking around last
night that I didn’t mention to Antonio. There are a lot of empty
boxes in the back room.”
“Mr. Everett said they’ve been having trash
difficulties.”
“Yes, but that’s not the problem. The figurines are
supposedly worth more if they’re in mint condition and in their
original packaging. I don’t think Deborah or Elizabeth would sell
the Dolly Dolittles without the boxes, and if someone buys them as
a gift, they’d naturally ask for a box.”
“Do you think they were stolen?”
“I wouldn’t know who to point the finger at if they
were.”
Tricia frowned. “Mr. Everett helped out at the
store for two days. He might have some insight to share. When he
comes in, I’ll send him over. He’s welcome to stay if he wants to
help out, but I’ll need some coverage for lunch.”
“That would be great. I’m sure going to miss
working with him—and you, of course.”
“If nothing else, having Mr. Everett on the
register will give you time to check the inventory against your
stock. That really should have been done before the store changed
hands.”
“Don’t I know it,” Ginny said. “We could have a
real mess on our hands come tax time. But Nigela Racita Associates
seems to have every contingency covered, so I’ll just putt along as
best as I can for now.”
“Do tell Antonio about it as soon as you can. You
wouldn’t want his boss to think you were hiding anything.”
“Right,” Ginny agreed.
“I’ll leave you to it, then,” Tricia said, and
headed for the door.
“Thanks,” Ginny called. “For everything.”
Tricia smiled and exited the store. The smile was
shortlived. As she crossed the road, she considered her earlier
encounter with Elizabeth Crane. She’d said she wanted to get inside
the store and clean up some of the paperwork. Had she instead
intended to get rid of some paperwork? Maybe remove the evidence of
all the empty boxes—and all before Ginny arrived?
Elizabeth had reason to hate David for selling off
Deborah’s store. Reason enough to steal from the store, too? But
that didn’t make sense, either. The figurines were far more
valuable in their original packaging. Unless . . . one sold them
cheap.
It was time to get out the old laptop and have a
look at what was selling on eBay.
Business was slow, which gave Tricia time
to do her Internet searches. Sure enough, someone in southern New
Hampshire was selling a boatload of Dolly Dolittle figurines, but
every one of the postings was without a picture, and each one
listed the item as having no original box. Still, Tricia had no way
of knowing who the seller could be. Worse than that, she had no way
of proving the figurines were stolen property. All in all, it was
pretty much a dead end.
The bell over the shop door jingled as someone
entered. Tricia looked up from the computer screen to see Russ
Smith striding toward the cash desk. “Good morning, Tricia.”
Tricia straightened. “To what do I owe the
pleasure?”
Russ’s smile was jubilant. “I like the sound of
that. Always happy to hear a pretty woman thinks it’s a pleasure to
see me.”
Tricia folded her arms and straightened. “Russ, I
know about you and Nikki.”
Exit one smile, with bridge intact.
“Why did you invite me out to dinner the other
night, when you were already in a new relationship?” she
asked.
Russ looked uncomfortable. “I wanted to tell you
myself.”
“You’ve had several opportunities since then to
tell me. Why didn’t you? And look at the way you came in here just
now, as though you were willing to continue with the ruse.”
Russ’s gaze was now focused on the top of the cash
desk. “I’m sorry, Tricia. I don’t know what it is about you that
brings out the jerk in me.”
Tricia raised an eyebrow, but didn’t comment on
that. Instead, she asked, “Is what you have with Nikki
serious?”
“It could be. If I don’t blow it.”
“Good. I’m happy for you.”
“Thanks. We’ve been keeping a low profile because .
. . well, just because.”
“You don’t owe me any explanations.”
“No, but I do owe you an apology. Actually, quite a
few. I was pretty arrogant, and now I can see how it might have
come off as threatening.”
“Apology accepted.”
“Can we go back to being friends?” he asked.
“Sure.” However, Tricia didn’t offer him her hand
to shake on it. She didn’t trust him that much . . . yet.
“So, what brings you to Haven’t Got a Clue?”
“This.” He offered her a folded piece of paper—a
photocopy of a story from the Stoneham Weekly News. “I asked
Gail if you’d called for a copy of the piece we did on David Black.
She said no, so I—”
“I completely forgot about it. Thank you,” she
said, unfolding the paper. The accompanying photo was of David
standing next to one of his rusty bird sculptures.
“I also have some news about Monty Capshaw’s bank
account.”
“Russ—you didn’t hack into it, did you?”
“Of course not. But I have a friend who did.” He
held out his hands in submission. “Don’t even ask. A good reporter
never reveals his sources.”
Tricia frowned, disapproving, though eager to know
exactly what he had found out. “Well?” she demanded.
“A sizable deposit was made the morning the plane
crashed.”
“How big is sizable?”
“Ten thousand dollars.”
“Sounds cheap, when you consider Capshaw paid with
his life.”
“Hey, he was dying, anyway,” Russ said with a
shrug.
“What about insurance?” Tricia asked, remembering
the envelopes she’d seen on Elaine Capshaw’s coffee table.
“To the max. His wife was the primary
beneficiary.”
“Elizabeth Crane told me Deborah was also heavily
insured, with David as the sole beneficiary.”
“So you said. Interesting. It wouldn’t be the first
time people have been killed for profit.”
“Yes, but how can we prove it? Can you find out who
wrote the check Monty deposited?”
He shook his head. “It was a cash deposit.”
“To leave no paper trail?” Tricia asked.
“That’s my guess.”
Tricia looked down at her laptop on the counter.
“Do you think your hacker friend can find out who a seller on eBay
is?”
“What’s that got to do with Monty Capshaw?”
“Probably nothing. But something odd is going on at
the Happy Domestic.” She told him about the missing inventory and
the empty boxes piled in the back room.
Russ shrugged. “eBay is pretty secure. Why don’t
you just buy one of the things? That way you’d know for sure who
the seller is.”
Tricia felt like smacking herself in the head. “Of
course. Why didn’t I think of that?”
“Because you read too many mysteries. You think
everything has to be so god-awful complicated.”
Tricia frowned. “Thanks for that.”
“You’re thinking a theft at Deborah’s store is tied
in with both their deaths, but I don’t see how. Selling those
figurines sounds more like an inside job to me.”
“Hey, with what I found out about Deb and some of
her shady doings, it’s possible she could’ve been behind the
thefts, making an insurance claim and selling the stuff off
cheap.”
“Shady doings?” Russ inquired.
Tricia told him about unloading trash in the Coffee
Bean’s Dumpster.
Russ shook his head. “Dumping your trash in someone
else’s receptacle and petty theft aren’t usually motives for
murder.”
“All these listings were made before Deb died,”
Tricia pointed out.
“So what? If it wasn’t Deb, who do you think that
might implicate?”
“How about her mother?”
Russ shook his head. “Elizabeth thought the sun
rose and set on Deborah. My money’s on David.”
“He did have keys to the shop,” Tricia admitted.
“And their relationship had deteriorated enough for him to do
something like that out of spite.” Tricia wondered if she should
tell Russ about both Deborah and David’s lack of fidelity, but
decided to hold back for now. She could always clue him in
later.
Russ glanced at his watch. “I need to get back to
my office. Keep me posted on what you find out—and I’ll do
likewise.”
“Okay.”
Russ started for the door, then paused and turned
to face her again. “I am sorry about the way I treated you for the
past year. I hope you can forgive me.”
“Should your relationship with Nikki fizzle, don’t
pull the kind of crap on her that you did on me.”
“I don’t think you have to worry on that account. I
think she’s the one.”
“The one?”
“Yeah. Forever.”
Hadn’t he thought that about the two of them,
too?
“I’ll see you,” Russ said, and headed out the
door.
Tricia watched him cross the street and go back to
the Stoneham Weekly News. She wasn’t sure she believed
him.
She shook her head and opened her laptop once
again. Russ was right. She should just buy one of the figurines.
She pulled up the bookmarked page and was about to finalize the
purchase when she stopped herself. Buying it outright would alert
the buyer that she was on to him/her/ them. Instead, she reached
for the phone and dialed a longdistance number. It rang several
times before it was picked up.
“Hi, Nancy. It’s Tricia Miles. Yes, long time no
hear from. Look, are you still an eBay power seller? Good—good.
Listen, can you do me a favor . . . ?”