Authors: Ella Barrick
I nodded. “When did you see them? Were they together?”
Maurice nudged me with his elbow, but I stood my ground, trying to figure out who the man and woman could be.
“Oh, I’ve never seen them together. The woman’s been here a few times that I’ve noticed. I saw her last, oh, this past Monday? I’ve only seen the skinny man once, and that was Saturday. I remember because I was just coming back from therapy and Dr. Neston had told me he thought I was
ready
. Ready to leave, ready to rejoin my family.” Her eyes lit up at the memory. “Well, I was so excited that I was skipping down the path, and I bumped right into the gentleman as he was coming through Randy’s gate. I apologized, of course, and said something about what a beautiful day it was. He mumbled something about it being too hot—he had a lovely accent—and kept going.”
A thin
beep-beep
sound cut through her recital. Setting down the watering pot, she tapped a button on her watch and said, “It was lovely talking to you, but I’ve got to go. Group!”
“Good luck with . . .” I wasn’t sure what to wish her good luck with—returning home? Beating her addiction? I petered out awkwardly, but she seemed to know what I was saying and gave me a brilliant smile.
“Thanks.”
The woman returned to the cottage and Maurice and I set off briskly down the path, not discussing the woman’s revelations, me out of a completely unrealistic fear that Randolph would overhear us. Maurice, I suspected, because he was still embarrassed about the way I’d encouraged the woman to gossip. Maurice kept pace with me easily and we both breathed sighs of relief when we entered the air-conditioned cool of the main building. We saw no one as we crossed the foyer, exited through the front door, and climbed into my Beetle. Cranking up the engine and the AC, I reversed out of the parking lot and spun gravel from beneath the tires as I turned into the long driveway. I had to wait for a bus to pass before I could make the turn onto the main road.
The AC sucked up some of the bus’s diesel exhaust and I coughed. A thought hit me. “Just because Randolph doesn’t have a car doesn’t mean he was stuck here in the boonies,” I said, pointing at the bus.
“Too true, Anastasia,” Maurice said. “And it crossed my mind that if Corinne visited him last Sunday as usual, he could have substituted the doctored pills for the ones in her purse without ever having to leave the grounds.”
“You’re right.” I looked at him with respect. “Do you think he did it?”
Sadness weighed down Maurice’s face. “There was certainly no love lost there,” he said. “It has always distressed Corinne that she didn’t have a better relationship with Randolph. I think that’s partly why she went out of her way to help Turner, to be part of his life.”
“Do you think Randolph knew about Corinne’s will, or could he have expected to inherit her estate?”
“Corinne said she discussed it with him a couple of years back,” Maurice said, rolling down his window to let fresh air and the scent of mown hay into the car. “She said he took the news well, seemed grateful even.”
“Hm.” I had doubts about how grateful anyone would be at hearing they
weren’t
going to inherit tens of millions. A Machiavellian thought struck me. “Would he do it to help his son? Kill Corinne so Turner could inherit? He knew Turner needed money.”
Maurice looked at me, aghast. “That’s an awful thought, Anastasia.”
“Who do you suppose his visitors were? Did you recognize the descriptions?”
“That woman was too nosy,” Maurice said disapprovingly. “I don’t know if we can trust anything she said.”
“We’ve no reason not to,” I pointed out. “I haven’t got a clue about who the blond woman is, but it sounded to me like the skinny man with the accent might be that man at the will reading—”
“Hamish MacLeod.” Maurice nodded.
“Why would Corinne’s third husband—”
“Fourth.”
“—be visiting Randolph?”
“I have no earthly idea,” Maurice admitted. “Although it’s possible that they had some sort of relationship. Randolph was still living at home—he must have been in his late teens—when Corinne married Hamish. He lasted longer than most of us, too; they were married for almost eighteen years, if I remember correctly.”
We drove on in silence until we had almost reached Maurice’s house. When I pulled to the curb, he reached over to squeeze my hand. “Thanks, Anastasia. It doesn’t seem like we learned much, but I appreciate your help.” He looked tired and beaten down, not his usual energetic, full-of-vim-and-vigor self. Grief and worry were taking a toll.
“Maybe we learned more than we realized,” I said with a “keep your chin up” smile. As Maurice plodded toward his front door and I drove off, I vowed to look more closely at Turner Blakely. If his own father thought he was capable of murder, I wanted to learn more about how and why he’d moved in with his grandmother mere days before she died.
Chapter 19
Rather than drive home, I pointed the Beetle toward D.C. and Lavinia Fremont’s shop. I needed to pick up the dress I was wearing for the Olympic exhibition tomorrow; she’d said it would be ready today. It being Sunday, I found a parking spot without too much trouble and passed a gaggle of well-dressed people emerging from the Baptist church a block from Lavinia’s place. Some of the women wore hats decked with flowers or feathers or grosgrain ribbons, and I wondered idly why virtually no one wore hats anymore.
The shops around Lavinia’s were quiet on a Sunday, and a “closed” sign hung on Lavinia’s door. A sheath wedding gown in a rich cream had replaced the lavender ball gown in the window.
“Why did hats go out of fashion?” I asked Lavinia when she opened the shop’s door to my knock. Her red hair was pulled back into a club of a ponytail, emphasizing the hollows under her eyes and her sharp nose, and she wore a sheer black blouse over a black cami and skinny cropped pants. I thought she looked more tired than she had on Thursday, and I wondered whether grief was causing her to lose sleep.
Her thin brows arched upward, but she said, “Because they take up too much room in the closet. Shoes and purses are bad enough, but hats meant hatboxes for storage, and even two or three of those boxes—pretty as they were—could eat up all your closet shelf space.”
“I never thought of that.”
She nodded. “I still have a couple of my favorites, but they’re in a storage unit. Why do you ask?”
I explained, and she laughed, offering me a cup of herbal tea. I declined, saying I needed to get home, and she at once fetched my dress from the back. Unzipping the plastic cover, she revealed the luminous pink satin sparkling with rhinestones. “Did you want to try it again?”
I shook my head. “No. I trust you.”
Smiling, she rezipped the bag and accepted my credit card. Swiping it, she asked, “How is Maurice? I hope the police are not still bothering him about . . . I saw you both yesterday at the lawyer’s, and I meant to talk to Maurice, but after hearing about Corinne’s bequest, I . . . well . . . I hope Maurice doesn’t think I’m one of those who believe he could possibly . . .”
“I understand completely.” I laid a sympathetic hand on her arm. “And I’m sure Maurice does, too. It’s hard for him, as you can imagine, but he’s got a really good lawyer. I’ve been talking to some people, too, hoping to uncover some information the police might have overlooked.”
“You’re a good friend, Stacy,” Lavinia said. She gave me the receipt to sign. “It would be simply horrible if Maurice, or any innocent person, were convicted of murder.”
“It’s horrible enough just being a suspect,” I said, speaking from experience. “But Maurice is holding up well. I’ll tell him you were asking after him.”
“Do that. Tell him I’d love it if he could drop by so we could catch up. It’s been way too long.” Her thin face lit up and I promised her I’d tell Maurice.
* * *
My cell phone rang when I was halfway home, and I answered it to hear my mother’s voice. “I don’t suppose you’d like to come for dinner and maybe a ride?” she asked with none of the “How are you doing?” preliminaries that she thinks waste so much time. As she sees it, if someone close to you wants you to know how they’re doing, they’ll mention it. You don’t really care, Mom says, about how casual acquaintances are doing, so why ask?
I hadn’t seen Mom in a couple of weeks, and an evening ride suddenly sounded like a fabulous idea. “I’d love to,” I said. “Let me stop home to change and I’ll come on out.”
Mom’s idea of proper riding attire is jodhpurs, but that’s because she’s into competitive dressage. I settled for a pair of jeans and low-heeled boots and drove to Mom’s place in Aldie, Virginia, about a fifty-minute drive on a Sunday evening. Traffic and strip malls and overbuilding gradually gave way to housing areas with a little space between the homes, and then to tree-shaded pastures with grass so thick and green it looked like icing laid over the landscape with a trowel. Mom’s house might be smack in the middle of horse country, but she didn’t live on one of those multi-thousand-acre farms with miles of white fencing. Her place was small, a two-bedroom house on five acres with a fenced paddock, just enough room for her and her three horses: Carmelo, Kobe (a mare), and Bird. Mom’s other passion, besides horses, is basketball. Her barn is bigger and has more amenities than her house, and I knew I’d find her there.
The barn, painted red with white trim, stood two hundred yards from the house. An old-fashioned water pump sprouted near the door, and from the shallow puddle of water underneath its spout, I deduced that Mom had recently filled a bucket to water the horses. I stepped inside, grateful for the barn’s cool shade. The barn had a center aisle with three stalls on either side, only half of which were currently occupied. Bird, the twenty-two-year-old bay gelding I’d learned to ride on, whickered when I walked into the barn, and stuck his handsome bay head into the aisle. Mom emerged from the tack room on the far end, wiping her hands on a cloth. I gave her a quick hug and got a whiff of saddle soap. She endured the hug patiently—she’s not much of one for physical affection—and waited while I patted Bird’s neck.
“Let’s have dinner first,” Mom said, “so it’ll be cooler for our ride.” She led the way out of the barn to the house, moving with economy of motion and the slightly bowlegged gait earned from almost fifty years in a saddle. Her angular body still looked great in formfitting riding breeches. From behind, with her graying red hair covered by a riding helmet, you’d think she was thirty instead of in her mid-fifties.
Her house was simply furnished with an eclectic mix of pieces that I was pretty sure had come with the place. It suddenly struck me as interesting that both of us were living with someone else’s furniture, with tables and chairs and beds that had been carefully chosen by other people. I wondered whether a happy young couple, newly married, had picked out the round oak table in Mom’s kitchen that she had set for dinner with cream-colored place mats and terra-cotta-colored stoneware. Had they eaten their first meal as a couple at this table? I shook off the fanciful imaginings and got myself a bottle of mineral water from the modern Whirlpool fridge Mom bought two years ago, when the one that came with the house gave up the ghost.
We both watch our weight carefully—Mom to be fair to her horses, and me to be fair to my dance partners—so dinner was grilled chicken breasts over a romaine-and-roasted-pepper salad. A spritz of balsamic vinegar served as dressing. We splurged on a single glass of white wine each, and Mom filled me in on the latest happenings on the professional dressage circuit. I told her about visiting Randolph Blakely at the rehab center. “It’s a posh place,” I said. “If I ever develop an addiction to something other than dancing, send me there, okay?”
“Do you think this Randolph had something to do with murdering his mother?” Mom asked, rising to clear our few dishes.
“I hope not,” I said, “but it’s a little odd that, according to his neighbor, he was apparently visited by one of Corinne’s ex-husbands a few days before Corinne died. Of course, he—Hamish—didn’t inherit much, and neither did Randolph.”
“His son got all the money, right?”
I nodded. “Yes. Corinne’s grandson, Turner. He’s a piece of work. His dad thinks he did it.”
Mom turned a shocked face toward me. “His own father accused him?”
“Well, not to his face, I don’t think. He told Maurice and me that he figured Turner had poisoned Corinne for her money.”
“That’s awful. How could a father say that about his own son?”
I thought about the newspaper article I’d read earlier in the day about a teenager killing his mother and father with a hammer, and didn’t say anything. Sometimes one’s children did horrifyingly awful things, and it was probably to Randolph’s credit that he recognized that his son wasn’t a saint. “I’m more interested in the mysterious blonde who visits him,” I said.
“Why?”
Mom’s blunt question made me think. “I guess,” I said slowly, “it’s because she’s proof that there’s more going on in Randolph’s life than his mother or anyone knew about. They all think he’s moldering away, practically a hermit, and yet this woman comes to see him. Whether she’s a friend or a girlfriend or a Realtor, she’s a connection with the outside world—outside Hopeful Morning, that is—that no one knew he had. I guess she makes me wonder what else he might be hiding. That’s not fair.” I stopped myself. “We don’t know he was ‘hiding’ her. I guess I’m thinking that this is a case of ‘still waters run deep,’ or something of the sort.”
“Very probably,” Mom agreed. I could tell by her tone that she’d lost interest in Corinne’s death and the search for her murderer. If there wasn’t a horse in the story, it didn’t hold Mom’s attention for too long. I was used to that, so I followed her out to the stable with no hard feelings and saddled Bird, my fingers moving with the ease of long practice to slot the leather strap through the buckle, and lengthen the stirrups two notches.
We posted single file down a path that wandered through a patch of woods, and then emerged into an open pasture where we could ride side by side. Cantering on Bird, I felt myself truly relax for the first time in days, the wind sifting through my hair, the setting sun warming my face, the big, warm horse’s body rocking me gently. We pulled up as we neared a stream and Mom came alongside me. “I don’t suppose your sister’s said anything about the trip to Georgia?”
She gave me a look out of the sides of her eyes, and I could tell that the trip was important to her, that she really wanted Danielle to come. I wanted to say she should talk to Danielle, but I knew that was unlikely to happen. Mom knew she’d burned bridges when she left us, and she wouldn’t think it fair to “beg”—as she’d think of it—for attention or time from Danielle or me. “Dani’s . . . worried,” I said.
“What’s there to worry about?”
“I think she’s afraid that going to Jekyll Island again will drown out or erase all her good memories of our last trip there.”
“Good memories?” Mom snorted, sounding a lot like one of her horses. “That trip ranks as one of my worst memories. Ronald was pressing me, trying to make me give up riding or, at least, competing. I think we fought from the moment we arrived at that little beach bungalow until the moment we left. He crowned the weekend by giving me his ultimatum: horses or him.”
Mom’s thin face looked almost gaunt as she relived the painful memories. “I didn’t know,” I said inadequately.
She gave a half laugh. “Why would you? Even at our worst, we tried not to fight in front of you kids. I guess I’m pleased that Danielle has good memories of the trip. I wonder what Nick remembers?” We fell quiet for a moment, trying to envision what my brother’s memories of that final family vacation would be.
“That snake,” I said. “I’m pretty sure he remembers the way you and I screeched when he brought that garter snake in and it got loose in the living room. Danielle thought it was cool and helped him look for it while you and I hid in the bedroom. As if a snake couldn’t have slithered under the door! I wonder where Dad was?”
“Probably down on the beach with a book. I think he read every Tom Clancy novel ever written on that vacation.”
We smiled at each other and started back toward the barn, the horses eager to return to their hay. Dusk had deepened, and the earliest fireflies glowed at knee level, flitting above the deep grass and at the edge of the woods. Back at the barn, I helped Mom put the horses up, gave her a hug, and left, envying, in part, her quiet country life and her relationship with the horses. I was pretty sure the Old Town Alexandria historical-preservation Nazis and/or the home owners’ association would object if I turned my carport into a stable and installed an Appaloosa. Maybe I should get a gerbil. Somehow, I didn’t think that would be the same.