TWENTY-ONE
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It was long past eight o’clock when Tricia
finally made it back to Stoneham, and she was ravenous. But as she
hadn’t done any shopping, there was still nothing of substance in
her fridge, and the thought of yogurt or toast wasn’t at all
appetizing—not after what she’d been through that evening. Worse,
she hadn’t phoned Angelica to tell her she couldn’t make their
rendezvous with Michele Fowler. Oddly enough, Angelica hadn’t
called her, either.
Tricia pulled into the municipal parking lot, cut
the engine, and pulled out her cell phone. Angelica answered on the
first ring. “I hope I’m not interrupting anything important. Are
you alone?”
“Absolutely!” Angelica said with chagrin.
“Then can I come over and mooch something to
eat?”
“Sure. What’s wrong?”
“I’ll tell you when I get there. See you in a
minute.”
It took two minutes by the time Tricia let herself
into the Cookery and made her way up the stairs to Angelica’s loft
apartment. Angelica met her at the door. “Is it a hot cocoa, wine,
or something-stronger kind of funk you’re in?”
“Wine sounds good.”
“I just happen to have a couple of bottles. Red or
white? Although it rather depends on what leftover you choose as
your entrée. Come on in.”
Tricia followed her sister down the corridor to the
loft’s kitchen that overlooked Main Street. Angelica hadn’t
bothered to draw the blinds, and the gas lights down below glowed,
attracting an assortment of insects that buzzed around them.
Angelica opened the door to the fridge to survey
its contents. “I’ve got tons of food—all recipes I’ve tested for
the new cookbook.”
“Good grief, is that an entire roast turkey in
there?” Tricia asked in disbelief, peering over her sister’s
shoulder.
“What’s left of one. I told you, I’m working on
Easy-Does-It Holidays. My editor wants me to include a
section on how to make use of Thanksgiving leftovers. Of course, I
don’t have any cranberry sauce, but if you don’t mind it sliced
cold, I could whip up a salad and some veggies or make you a turkey
salad sandwich. Or would you rather have turkey tetrazzini or
turkey curry?”
“How hot is the curry?” Tricia asked.
“Hot enough to curl your hair. And I’ll zap a
papadum in the microwave for you, too.”
“I’ll go for it. Now pour me a glass of white wine
and I’ll tell you a tale that might curl your hair, too.”
“Oh, this sounds interesting,” Angelica said, and
snagged a couple of glasses from the cupboard and the wine from the
fridge. She poured.
“I got a phone call from Elaine Capshaw just as I
was about to close the store.”
“And?” Angelica dutifully prompted.
“She’d received another threatening call. I tried
to convince her to call the police, but she asked me to come over
to be with her when she did. It couldn’t have been fifteen minutes
from the time I left until—”
“Let me guess—you got there and she was gone,”
Angelica said, taking a plastic-wrap-covered bowl from the
fridge.
“No, she was dead.”
Angelica scowled, and with hands on hips demanded,
“Don’t tell me you found her?”
“Almost. Whoever called her made good on their
threat before I could get there. She’d been bludgeoned to
death.”
Angelica winced as she transferred the curry to a
saucepan.
“Her poor little dog suffered a similar fate,”
Tricia said.
Angelica’s head snapped up. “Someone killed her
dog?” she cried in anguish.
Tricia shook her head. “No, but it’s badly injured.
I ended up taking the little guy to the local vet—that’s where I’ve
been for the past two hours. He’s already cost me half a grand, and
it looks like I’m responsible for him, unless a relative or one of
Elaine’s neighbors claims him. If that doesn’t happen, I suppose
I’ll call the Humane Society or maybe a dog rescue service to find
him a home. If he recovers.”
“Oh, no!” Angelica cried, distressed.
Tricia nodded. “According to the vet, Sarge’s lungs
were bruised. He must’ve been kicked into a wall or some other
solid object.”
“Bruising is better than busted ribs,” Angelica
said, but she didn’t sound convinced.
“Maybe, maybe not. There’s a danger his lungs could
fill with fluid, and then he’d probably—” Tricia stopped before
saying the D word. Angelica had once had a poodle she’d
loved. She’d said she’d never recovered from losing her little
Pom-Pom. Hearing about Sarge’s injuries might be too painful for
her.
Angelica’s bottom lip trembled, and she looked
close to tears. “That poor, poor puppy.”
Tricia frowned. “I’ve met him three times now, and
he seems like a wonderful little dog. I wonder if Grace and Mr.
Everett would like a pet—if he makes it, that is.”
Angelica sighed. “They’d be good doggy parents,”
she agreed.
Tricia nodded. “I’ll ask Mr. Everett in the
morning.”
“So what do you think happened to Elaine? It had to
be a friend—or someone she knew, right? Why else would a frightened
woman open the door?”
“That’s what I figured—and so did the Milford cops.
But she told me when we met on Saturday that she had no one to
depend on and said it again tonight when she phoned me. I’m sure
that’s why she called me to come be with her.”
“You were lucky the killer was already gone. Or
should I say, smart not to barge in on a crime scene. Did you
actually see the body?”
Tricia winced. “Yes. The police asked me to
identify her.”
“Was she in worse shape than Kimberly
Peters?”
Kimberly, the niece of the late New York
Times bestselling author Zoë Carter, had been hit in the mouth
with a baby sledgehammer. It had been Tricia who’d found her. She’d
survived the attack, although she’d required extensive dental
reconstruction.
Tricia shook her head. “That was worse.
Still, identifying a body is not my favorite pastime.”
“Here, you stir this, and I’ll get that papadum
going,” Angelica said.
Tricia did as she was told, taking over at the
stove, and watched as Angelica opened the cupboard and took a flat
disc of what looked like yellow plastic from a cellophane bag. She
squirted it with cooking spray, placed it in the microwave, and
punched in twenty-two seconds. Tricia never tired of seeing a
papadum transform from something flat and dull into a tasty, bumpy
flatbread.
“You know, Elaine had something in her hand. I
didn’t really see it. But it looked like a knickknack or
something.”
“Why would she be holding a knickknack when someone
was trying to kill her?”
Tricia shrugged. “She’d turned her back on this
person. You wouldn’t do that if you were afraid.”
“So you think it was someone she knew?”
“It had to be.”
Angelica grabbed a plate, a fork, and a serving
spoon, and thrust them at Tricia. “Take as much as you want.”
Tricia spooned the curry onto her plate while
Angelica placed the finished papadum on another plate at the spot
where Tricia usually sat. Tricia took her seat while Angelica
refilled their glasses.
“How was your day?” Tricia asked, and plunged her
fork into the curry, wishing it sat on a bed of Basmati rice.
“Oh, the usual. In fact, more boring than
usual. I feel like I’m awash in paperwork. Anything else happen to
you today?”
Tricia tasted the curry and gasped. Angelica hadn’t
been kidding when she’d said it was hot. “Wow. Is this the
recipe you’re using in your book?”
“Of course not. I make it triple strength for
myself. Americans are such wimps when it comes to adding
spices.”
Tricia grabbed her wine and took a healthy swig.
Ahh—relief! “I take it you’ve never been to the Southwest.”
“Of course I have. There are always exceptions to
the rule.”
Tricia took another mouthful of curry, and while
volcanic, it did not displease her, but again she wished for rice.
She bit into the papadum, which promptly shattered, sending shards
across her place mat. It, too, was wonderful.
As she swallowed, she remembered her visit from
Boris Kozlov. “Good grief! I almost forgot.” She jumped up from her
chair and grabbed her purse from the counter. Rummaging through it,
she came up with the DVD Boris had given her hours before.
“What is that?” Angelica asked, swirling the wine
in her glass.
“Video from the Coffee Bean’s surveillance camera.
Boris Kozlov set it up to catch Deborah tossing her garbage in his
Dumpster. He told me it shows who robbed the Happy Domestic last
night.”
Angelica’s eyes snapped wide open. She got up and
grabbed the jewel box from Tricia’s hand. “Let’s watch it.” Without
waiting for an answer, Angelica headed for the living room and the
DVD player.
Tricia tossed what was left of her papadum onto her
plate and followed.
Angelica had the remote in her hand and the DVD
drawer was already open by the time Tricia placed her dish on the
coffee table and made herself comfortable on the leather couch.
Angelica took the wing chair to her left, aimed the remote, and the
drawer slid shut. The TV’s blank screen flashed gray and the alley
behind the Coffee Bean came into view. Nothing happened for what
seemed an eon. Tricia dug back into her curry.
“I think Boris is playing a joke on you,” Angelica
said after a couple of minutes went by with no action on the
tube.
“Give it a chance,” Tricia said, scraping the
bottom of her plate. As she swallowed the last mouthful, a car
pulled into the frame.
“Okay,” Angelica said with relish. “Now we’re
getting somewhere.” But when the figure emerged from the car, its
head was covered by the hood of a sweatshirt. “Damn!”
“Indeed,” Tricia agreed.
The person walked out of camera range. Tricia
picked up her wineglass and sat back. Nothing happened. Nothing
happened. Nothing happened. Tricia wished the burglar would hurry
up and make a reappearance. After all, how long did it take to
trash a small book and gift shop?
“This is pretty boring,” Angelica said, and got up
from her chair, heading for the kitchen. “Do you want a
refill?”
“ ‘I wouldn’t say no,’ ” Tricia said, quoting a
line from one of John Mortimer’s Rumpole stories. It went right
over Angelica’s head.
Angelica returned to the living room with the wine
bottle, topped up Tricia’s glass, and made herself comfortable once
again, before the hoody-clad figure returned to the TV screen,
encumbered by a large carton.
“What do you suppose is in there?” Angelica
asked.
“Your guess is as good as mine,” Tricia said,
studying the shape of the figure, which was not what she’d
expected. She’d been expecting the person to be . . . rounder. More
mature . . . more womanly. “Rats,” she groused.
“What?” Angelica asked.
“I thought for sure the robber was going to be
Elizabeth Crane. But the person we just saw weighed a lot less than
Elizabeth.”
“So who could it be?” Angelica asked.
Tricia shook her head as the figure disappeared
from view once again. “Do you recognize the car?”
Angelica shrugged. “The only car I can identify,
besides my own, is a Corvette, and Corvettes don’t have trunks like
the one on the screen.”
“I’ll bet Captain Baker knows a lot more about cars
than we do. If he or one of his men can identify it, they should be
able to use the state DMV computer to narrow down the search within
the Stoneham zip code.”
“What do you mean?”
“Well, whoever it was had to know about the stock
within the Happy Domestic. It was targeted, after all.”
“Didn’t Elizabeth say her other children were in
town? What if she encouraged one of them to break in?” Angelica
asked.
“I don’t want to speculate,” Tricia said.
“Well, I think you should call Captain Baker and
report this right now,” Angelica said, and grabbed her wireless
phone from its base, handing it to Tricia.
“But he’ll be off duty. It can wait until
morning.”
“If Haven’t Got a Clue had been robbed, and one of
your neighbors knew about the crime, would you want them to wait
another day to report it?”
Tricia sighed. “I suppose not.”
“Call,” Angelica commanded.
Tricia knew better than to disobey such a direct
order, and she punched in Grant Baker’s personal phone number. As
she suspected, the call rolled over to voice mail. “Grant, it’s
Tricia Miles. The owner of the Coffee Bean has given me a copy of a
surveillance tape that appears to show the person who robbed the
Happy Domestic last night. I told him he should report it to the
Sheriff’s Department and that you would want to speak to him, but
he pushed it on me, anyway. Please call me in the morning.
Thanks.”
She clicked the button to end the call. “There.
Happy?”
“Yes.” Angelica accepted the phone, replaced it on
the base, and glanced at the clock. “It’s getting late. I still
have paperwork to finish and your cat is waiting for you, probably
worried sick.”
Tricia blinked at that comment. Angelica had never
spoken of Miss Marple possessing humanlike emotions. No doubt
little Sarge’s predicament had reminded her of her long-lost
Pom-Pom.
“I’m going. And I shall shower my cat with
affection,” she promised as she picked up her dishes and carried
them to the sink. It was then she remembered the plans they’d made
for the evening. “Good grief! Weren’t we supposed to meet Michele
Fowler tonight?”
“She couldn’t make it, so I asked her about
tomorrow. She said she’d meet us at some place called Nemo’s. Have
you heard of it?”
“No.”
“I’ll look it up online and get directions.”
Tricia started for the door to the stairs. Angelica
walked along with her. “Will you lock up downstairs?”
“Yes,” Tricia dutifully answered. “Thanks for
feeding me. See you tomorrow.”
“Good night,” Angelica called, and locked the
apartment door behind Tricia.
As she made her way down the stairs and through the
Cookery, Tricia thought again about the figure in the video. It had
to be a woman. But if it wasn’t Elizabeth Crane, who could it have
been?