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of Lorraine Bartlett’s
next book in
the Victoria Square Mysteries . . .
of Lorraine Bartlett’s
next book in
the Victoria Square Mysteries . . .
THE WALLED FLOWER
Coming soon
from Berkley Prime Crime!
from Berkley Prime Crime!
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Steam seeped through the airholes in the
Angelo’s Pizza Parlor box, along with the aroma of melted
mozzarella, pepperoni, sauce, and spices. Katie Bonner clutched the
twenty-first-century equivalent of the “cake on a plate” that
housewives once brought to welcome new neighbors, and approached
the Webster mansion on the east end of Victoria Square. The day was
cool, bright, and beautiful. Perfect weather for early spring in
western New York, but Katie felt anything but cheerful, despite her
mission to welcome the newcomers.
She opened the sagging gate and stepped into the
small front courtyard, which was littered with rocks, weeds, and
the remains of rusty old garden urns. As she mounted the rather
rickety wooden steps, Katie noticed the mansion’s heavy oak door
stood ajar. Katie paused in the doorway, squinting into the
darkened interior. Yup, it was definitely occupado. Using
her elbow, she knocked on the doorjamb, its blistered, peeling
paint just another job awaiting completion on the list of
renovation and restoration that was taking place at what was soon
to be an upscale bed-and-breakfast.
“Anybody hungry?” Katie called.
A dirt-smudged face appeared around the door.
Dusty blond bangs hung over a pair of light blue eyes. More wisps
had escaped the faded red bandanna that was supposed to protect the
rest of the woman’s hair. Clad in a grubby T-shirt and jeans, she
held a claw hammer in one hand, the knuckles on her other hand
oozing blood.
“Pizza?” the woman said hopefully.
“The best,” Katie assured her, proffering the
box. “Where can I set it down?”
“On any flat surface you can find.”
Katie entered and stepped over a fallen
two-by-four, tracking through plaster dust to set the box on a
makeshift table of boards on sawhorses. “Do you need a
Band-Aid?”
The woman sucked at the abrasion. “Not for
this.”
“Janice,” said a male voice from the room
beyond.
Katie glanced in that direction. The owner of the
voice, a dark-haired man in his late thirties, stepped through the
doorway, just as dirty as his counterpart. Not surprising in the
ruin of what, one hundred years before, had been a lovely
home.
“Hi, I’m Katie Bonner. I manage Artisans Alley on
the other end of the Square, and I’m president of the Victoria
Square Merchants Association. Welcome to the neighborhood.”
“Thanks,” the man said, and moved to stand by the
woman.
“I’ve seen you working here for the last couple
of days and figured you might need a break,” Katie said.
“Do we ever.” The woman moved closer, setting the
hammer down and offering Katie her hand. “Janice Ryan. And this is
my husband, Toby.”
Katie shook both their hands, then pulled a sheaf
of paper napkins from the back pocket of her jeans. “Please, help
yourself.”
“Thanks,” the couple chorused, and each dove for
a slice.
Katie took a long look around the cavernous
space. Bare studs gave the room a skeletal look. Lath and chunks of
plaster from the ceiling filled plastic buckets, waiting to be
emptied into the commercial Dumpster out back. A bare lightbulb
hung from a cheap 1960s fixture. That, too, would eventually have
to go.
“Wow, I can’t believe how much you’ve already
accomplished,” Katie said.
Janice swallowed, her mouth flattening into a
frown. “Sounds like you’ve been in here before.”
Many times, Katie was tempted to blurt. She and
her late husband, Chad, had tramped through the cold, uninviting
place on dozens of occasions during the four years they’d saved to
buy it. Then Chad had impulsively invested instead in Artisans
Alley, a going concern quickly going downhill. Chad had passed away
the year before—the victim of a car accident—and Katie was now the
owner and manager. So far she hadn’t made a nickel of the money
back either.
“Once or twice,” Katie said, forcing a smile.
“What are your plans?”
Janice beamed. “We hope to open the Grand
Victoria Inn in about three months.”
A very ambitious plan, considering the state the
building was currently in.
“We’ll have seven guest rooms to start. The
property comes with plenty of acreage to add guest cottages if we
do well.”
Katie had planned an extensive garden refit,
perfect for outdoor weddings and corporate picnics. And if the
weather didn’t cooperate, she figured she could always tent such
affairs. And she’d wanted a white-painted gazebo at the far end of
the yard, flanked by a lovely cottage garden, with lots of pink and
white cosmos.
Janice’s eyes glowed with pride. “The entryway
will be totally restored,” she said, taking in the space with a
sweep of her hand. “As you can see, we’ve just got that wall over
there to remove. They divided the place into apartments, but that’s
good in a way, because we won’t have to replumb the whole house for
the guest rooms.”
That was one of the things Katie had counted on,
too. Her plan had been to renovate the old mansion and open the
English Ivy Inn. Chad was to be the host, and Katie would manage
the kitchen and the financial end of things. It was a solid plan.
It was her life’s dream. And now it was forever out of her
reach.
“Toby’s good at carpentry and has plans for a
lovely oak check-in desk, over here,” Janice said with a wave of
her hand. “We’ve got wood salvaged from another site that’ll be
just perfect.”
Katie already had a lovely oak reception desk
sitting in a storage unit waiting to be stripped and refinished.
She’d collected brass headboards, oriental carpets, dressers and
nightstands, pedestal sinks, light fixtures, dishes, and
silverware, too. Every month she wrote out a check to keep her
treasures warehoused, and every month she debated getting rid of it
all. Owning all that stuff was just another painful reminder that
life wasn’t always fair.
Katie’s anger flared as she noted the
sledgehammer resting against the wall. “Are you doing all the work
yourself?”
“Just the preliminary demolition,” Toby said,
reaching for another pizza slice. “It’ll save us three or four
grand that we can better use elsewhere.”
“There’s a certain satisfaction in taking down a
wall, especially when you can already visualize how perfect the
space will be,” Janice said. She laughed. “I’ve spent the last few
months decorating this house in my mind. I can’t wait until opening
day when I can show it off to the world.”
Katie, too, had imagined exactly how she’d
renovate the old house. Replacement newel posts for the staircase,
frosted glass sconces on the walls, delicate rose-patterned
wallpaper, chair rails, and crown molding. For years she’d longed
to swing a sledge and take out an extraneous wall or two.
She picked up and hefted the tool, nearly
staggering under its weight. “Would you mind if I took a whack at
that wall—just for fun?”
“Go for it,” Toby said, grinning. He put down his
pizza, grabbed a pair of work gloves, and accompanied Katie to the
wall.
“I’d better cover the pizza,” Janice said.
“We’re taking down the plasterboard first, then
we’ll yank out the studs. It’s not a load-bearing wall,” Toby said,
handing Katie the gloves and a pair of safety glasses.
That she already knew. Many an evening she’d
pored over how-to books in anticipation of applying her own brand
of sweat equity to the place.
Toby or Janice had already removed the baseboard
molding at the bottom of the wall, leaving a three-inch gap that
had never seen a coat of paint. An odd, gummy dark stain marred the
middle of that section of pristine plasterboard.
Katie donned the gloves and glasses, grasped the
sledge firmly, swung it high, and let its weight slam against the
wall. Bang! A circular dimple marred the surface, but not enough to
make a break in the drywall.
“Put your weight into it,” Toby encouraged with a
smile.
Clenching her teeth, Katie hauled off and swung
again. Bang!
The anger blossomed inside her, threatening to
engulf her.
This should have been her house!
Bang!
It would have been hers if Chad hadn’t
invested—without her knowledge—in that money pit Artisans
Alley.
Bang!
The sledge careened through the air, smacking
hard into the wall, taking a jagged hunk of plasterboard with
it.
Katie swung again and again, her biceps
complaining at the strain. Clouds of dust swirled in the air.
Hands on hips, Toby watched from her left.
“You’re doing great, Katie.” He didn’t sound as pleased as he had a
few moments before.
Katie took another mighty swing, sending a
fragment of plasterboard flying. She paused to yank a loose piece
from the studs.
Janice gasped behind her.
Katie lost her grip on the sledge, nearly
crushing her toes. She turned to see what Janice was fussing
about.
Openmouthed and panting, a wide-eyed Janice
frantically pointed at the gaping hole in the wall.
Confused, Katie turned to see the source of her
distress.
Behind a heavy layer of plastic, empty eye
sockets gazed at nothing; the jaw hung open as though in a scream.
The remains of long blond hair were suspended like Easter grass
among the bones, and a shiny silver locket dangled from the
proximity of its neck.
Katie swallowed, her mouth going dry. “Well, this
could ruin your day.”
Yellow crime-scene tape barred the
mansion’s entrance. The east end of the Victoria Square parking lot
was clogged with squad cars scattered with no regard to the orderly
lines painted on the asphalt. Katie leaned against a paint-flaked
column on the wide veranda, noting the rain damage at its base. It
would be expensive to replace.
“This is a bad omen,” Katie heard Janice complain
for the hundredth time, from inside the house. “Who’ll want to come
to the inn knowing we found a body in a wall?”
The poor woman had no concept of marketing, Katie
thought with a rueful shake of her head. A ghost was a great draw .
. . if you had a good story to go with it.
She’d been glad to escape the crowd inside. As a
material witness, Katie was compelled to stay until the law said
she could leave. She glanced at her watch. It was going on two
hours now.
She sighed, unsure why she hadn’t felt as
shattered as Janice and Toby at finding a skeleton walled up in
what once might’ve been her home. Maybe because it wasn’t
her home and never would be. Then again, she’d seen Artisans
Alley’s former owner/manager dead in a puddle of his own blood.
She’d found one of the vendors dead with a broken neck from a fall.
An anonymous skeleton wasn’t half as scary. Or maybe she was just
in denial. But it was obvious the person behind the wall had been
dead a long—well, reasonably speaking—time, and it sure hadn’t been
an accident.
A crowd of rubberneckers ringed the cordoned-off
area. Katie looked up to see her friend and Artisans Alley vendor
Rose Nash among the crowd, clutching a card or paper, madly waving
to her, trying to get her attention. Dyed blond curls bobbed around
her anxious, wrinkled face. Katie took a step forward, but a hand
on her shoulder made her turn.
Detective Ray Davenport of the Sheriff’s Office
homicide detail was once again on site, looking just as formidable
and bad-tempered as the other times Katie had interacted with
him.
“You seem to attract death, Mrs. Bonner,” the
balding, middle-aged cop said.
Katie straightened indignantly. “Me, attract
death? Detective, that poor woman’s been dead for decades.”
“And how do you know it was a woman?” he asked
suspiciously.
Katie frowned. “Long blond hair, a locket—it
doesn’t take a genius to figure out the gender.”
Davenport glowered. “Just what were you doing
here anyway, Mrs. Bonner?”
“Paying a friendly visit to my new neighbors on
behalf of the Victoria Square Merchants Association. Believe me, I
didn’t want to find the remains of that . . . that poor
person.”
“Detective! Detective!” Rose called, elbowing her
way through the crowd. “I heard they found a body.”
“You’ll have to read about it in the paper,
ma’am,” he said, ignoring the agitation in her voice as he turned
back toward the mansion entrance.
“Was it a woman?” Rose persisted. “Blond hair,
brown eyes? Did she have a locket?”
Davenport stopped dead, turned. “Locket?”
“Rectangular, sterling silver. Rhodium-plated
with a bright-cut floral design,” Rose cried in desperation. She
held out a wallet-sized photo, waving it at him.
Davenport trudged down the steps, took the
picture from her, studied it, and frowned. Then he lifted the
crime-scene tape, motioning her forward.
Katie hurried to meet Rose, steadying the elderly
woman as she climbed the six shallow steps into the mansion.
Portable work lights illuminated the crime scene.
The room seemed claustrophobically small with so many deputies and
technicians crowded in. As the trio entered, they stepped back,
quieting as Davenport approached.
The wall had been taken down in one piece, thanks
to a reciprocating saw, and now lay flat on the floor. The rest of
the drywall had been removed, revealing the earthly remains—just
bones—in situ, wrapped in clear plastic sheeting and lying on a
fluffy pillow of faded pink Fiberglas. A petrified black
substance—rat or insect dung, Katie surmised—was also visible. She
shuddered at the thought of how it had gotten there and turned her
attention to the wooden studs, which were twenty-four inches on
center—not a lot of room. The body must have been wedged in at an
angle—the shoulders were cocked, the wrists crossed in front of the
pelvis. No remnant of cloth or flesh remained.
Rose blanched, and Katie felt her friend wobble
in her grasp.
“Do you recognize the locket?” Davenport asked
the older woman.
Tears filled Rose’s eyes and she nodded, the
movement causing her to sway. “It belonged to my niece.” She took a
shuddering breath and choked on a sob. “Oh, Heather, everyone
thought you’d run off to New York—and you were here all along,” she
said, and collapsed in a dead faint.