Read Plaster and Poison Online
Authors: Jennie Bentley
Wayne got those records from the phone company. Theres nothing interesting there, either. A call to Cora in the morning, to arrange to meet for lunch, Cora said. A couple of calls back and forth with the office at Devon Highlands, to check figures, and then a call from Mary Elizabeth Stenham in the afternoon.
I wrinkled my brows. What did Mary Elizabeth want?
No idea, Derek said, but I doubt it was anything sinister. All the Stenhams plus Melissa call Clovercroft all the time, sometimes more than once a day.
Right. That made sense. And no one has called with a demand for ransom or anything like that, I take it. Steves well off, right?
Steve
is
well off, Derek nodded. Not sure hes
that
well off, though. He may be able to raise a couple hundred thousand in cash, but there are people who can come up with much more than that. In any case, we have no idea whether anyones called, because we cant find Steve, either.
Has Wayne put out an APB on him, too?
Derek shook his head. Not yet. We dont know if hes missing. Or how long hes been gone. He could just be on a business trip, or something.
So do you think he came here and got Bea? Or did someone else get them both? Or what?
I dont know, Derek said, frustration edging his voice. I dont know anything. Well just have to wait and see.
I nodded, hooking my arm through his. Lets go see the others. Try to forget about all of this for a while. I realize that probably isnt possible, but theres nothing we can do right now, and those are our families out there. Lets go make sure theyre getting along.
Good idea. He managed a smile as he looked down on me. And tomorrow, if Beatrice isnt back, Ill start turning Clovercroft over, stone by stone, if I have to.
Ill help you, I promised and squeezed his arm as we headed down the hallway toward the living room.
14
The lasagna was excellent, of course, and the company equally so, but Beas disappearance did put a pall on the gathering. Cora did her best to seem normal, but it was obvious that she was deeply worried, and a few times I caught her staring off into space, ears almost visibly straining, as if she were listening to something just out of range. When the phone rang about halfway through dinner, she jumped like a scalded cat and dived for it.
Yes?
From the expression on her face, the caller wasnt Beatrice. Coras face puckered, and she closed her eyes for a second. Yes, Alice. No, no news.
Alice talked in her ear, and Coras eyebrows rose. You did? Really? Thats interesting. All right. Yes, Ill let them know. Thanks for telling me. And for your sacrifice.
Alice spoke again, and then they both said good-bye and Cora turned back to the table, where we all sat staring at her like attentive children.
Sacrifice? Dr. Ben said.
It was Alice. Cora went back to her seat at one end of the rectangular dining table, flags of high color on her cheekbones now.
And?
Shes spent the evening in a bar near Steves work, getting chummy with the receptionist. The woman wasnt willing to tell her anything earlier in the day, but Alice got the impression that she knew something, so she waited until the office closed at five oclock and waited for the receptionist to come out at the end of the day, and then offered to buy her a drink. Long story short . . .
Too late for that, Derek said, but affectionately.
His stepmother sent him a look, equally affectionate, before she continued. Once she was away from the office, and had a drink or two inside her, she told Alice that not only was Steve not at work today, he hasnt been there all week.
Really?
Thats right, Cora confirmed. The woman said he called on Monday morning, just after she came to work, and said he was taking a few personal days. Hes been working for them for two years without a vacation. Apparently whatever case hes been involved with is at a point where its OK for him to be gone, and so he hasnt been there for several days.
Interesting, Dr. Ben said. Cora nodded.
So do you think hes here? Mom asked, looking from one to the other of us. In Waterfield?
Its possible, Derek allowed.
Its likely, Cora corrected. Where else would he go? He has no family, and he hasnt taken a vacation for two years. Its not likely hed suddenly get a hankering for the beach. But if it finally sank in that Bea wasnt going to come back to him of her own accord, and that if he wanted her back, hed have to go get herthen it makes perfect sense that hed come here. She got to her feet again. Excuse me. I should call Wayne Rasmussen.
She headed back to the telephone.
The conversation continued, with sober excitement, but as I listened to the others make guesses as to where in Waterfield or down east Maine Steve might be holed up, and what they could do to find him, I found myself thinking that while this was certainly useful information, it didnt really change anything. Beatrice was still just as gone. But at least the news that Steve seemed to be gone, too, made it appear a little more likely that they were together, making us all more hopeful that nothing bad had happened to Beatrice.
After a few minutes, Dr. Ben must have had enough of the speculation, too, and turned to me. Im so sorry, Avery. Derek reminded me that you were interested in talking to me about my great-uncle William. He mentioned it a couple of weeks ago, and I plain forgot. Tell me again whats been going on?
I went over the story of the initials once more, and this time added what Mom, Noel, and I had discussed earlier in the day. I even dug the paperwork out of my bag and handed it to him.
Im afraid I dont know anything about his matters of the heart, Dr. Ben said apologetically when he had finished looking at myadmittedly skimpyresearch. He lived and died long before my time, and I cant remember anyone ever talking much about him. I didnt even know that he had died from strychnine poisoning until Derek mentioned it.
Derek said it could have been an accident, that they used strychnine as medicine back then?
Dr. Ben nodded. Along with a lot of other substances weve since realized are deadly. Like arsenic, which pretty ladies used to get clear skin and sleek hair. Thats a possibility, but if the navy gave him something, surely they would have chalked it up to an accident instead of making it sound like this. He tapped the printout with a fingernail.
The article does make it sound like something more sinister happened, I admitted. What about suicide? Or not suicide exactly, but more of an accidental suicide: Maybe William was trying to make himself sick to avoid being shipped out, and then he took too much . . . ?
Thats also possible, Dr. Ben nodded. Poisoning does usually include vomiting, chills, fever, and the like. He might have thought ingesting poison would make him just sick enough to get out of active duty.
Or someone killed him.
Dr. Ben nodded.
But you dont know who? No family stories about Uncle William? No rumors?
The doctor shook his head. Not a one, Im afraid. Like I said, I didnt even know the cause of death until Derek mentioned it. I dont think he was married, for what thats worth, but then again, I dont think he was very old when he died.
When was he born? The newspaper article hadnt mentioned anything about that.
Im not sure, exactly. Around the turn of the century, I believe. My grandfather was his younger brother, and he was born just on this side of 1900. We have an old Bible somewhere with a family tree. Itd be in there.
Id love to see it, I said.
Ill show it to you after dinner. And we have some old photographs sitting around, too. People werent good about taking pictures back then, since it was costly, and regular people didnt have cameras, but there may be one of William.
Great.
By now, the others had finished their conversation, too, and Dr. Ben raised his voice. Lets talk about something that isnt depressing for a while. No murders, recent or old, and no missing persons, either. Noel, its your first time in Waterfield, isnt it? How do you like it?
Noel hesitated, searching for a safe subject. With murder and kidnapping off the tableour more immediate concernshe settled for the default, the weather. He liked Waterfield, he said, but thought hed have enjoyed it more in the summer. Now he was cold all the time, and he missed the consistency of the California weather, with its seventy-five-degree Fahrenheit temperatures whether it was summer or winter, spring or fall. From there, the conversation went on to how Mom liked living in California, with its lack of seasons, after spending her entire life on the east coast. I concentrated on eating my lasagna and salad and let the others talk, looking from one to the other and watching their interactions.
I wanted Dereks family to like mine, and I wanted mine to like his, and it seemed I was in luck and they did. I had thought they would, but you cant ever be entirely sure. I didnt know Noel that well myself, for one thing, and Id really known the Ellises for only six months or so. But although Derek and I didnt have any kind of understandingwed never really discussed the future beyond deciding to go into business together, and that was supposed to be on a project-to-project basisI felt like it was important that our families got along.
Derek had never really told me how he felt about me. I mean, I knew he liked me. I knew he enjoyed my company, and he enjoyed working with me, and he liked the kissing and all the rest of it, but I knew all that because he showed it, not because he said so. I dont think the word love had passed his lips. Then again, the word love hadnt passed mine, either. Every time it got as far as my tongue, I caught it and put it back. Partly because I didnt want to be the first to say it, but also because I wasnt sure of what I was feeling. I was crazy about him, yes. I was
in love
with him. I liked him a lot, besides that. And the kissing and all the rest of it were certainly nice. He could make my heart beat faster just by looking at me a certain way. But Id thought it was true love before and found out I was wrong, and I didnt want to make that mistake again. Not with Derek.
Cora came back about halfway through the conversation and joined in. I let them talk, and Derek did the same thing, occasionally nudging my foot under the table and shooting a glance my way. I wondered if he had worried about our parents getting along, too, or whether he was just playing footsie because he enjoyed it.
After the food was eaten and the table cleared, Derek brought out the whoopie pies and distributed them, and we all got busy chowing down on chocolate cake with vanilla cream filling. Once those were devoured, too, Derek and I loaded the dishwasherthe mothers had done the cooking, so the children could clean upand then I sought out Dr. Ben.
Can I see those photographs now?
Sure. He nodded to Derek. You know where they are, son.
Bottom drawer of the buffet? He headed for it.
Dr. Ben nodded. The family Bible should be there, too. Why dont you bring it all over to the dining room table so you can spread out. The rest of us can go sit in the living room.
Derek came back carrying a big, thick, leather-bound book so old that the calfskin binding left residue on my fingers when I opened it. The paper was onionskin, so thin it crinkled.
The family tree should be on the inside of the front cover, Dr. Ben said over his shoulder as he squired Cora out of the dining room. Have fun.
Thanks. I grinned after him.
Derek pulled up a chair and sat down next to me. So what are we looking for?
Anything relating to William, I guess. Here he is. I pointed to the name. Your dad was right.
William Aaron, the family tree said, eldest son of Mallessa, born Carter, and Malcolm Ellis. Missed being a New Years baby by a few hours. Born January second, 1900, died June sixth, 1918. Never married. Survived by his mother, one brother, BenjaminDr. Bens namesakeand two sisters, Elizabeth and Mary Jane, all of them younger than he was.
Nothing else of interest there, Derek said and reached for the stack of photos. I shook my head and closed the Bible, pushing it to the side.
Most of the photos were much more recent, beginning with the last few years. Ben and Cora on their wedding day, with Derek as best man, handsome in a well-fitting suit, and Alice and Beatrice as bridesmaids in sea foam green dresses. It looked like the ceremony had taken place in the garden behind the house, with the Reverend Bartholomew Norton, Dereks friend from high school, officiating. There were pictures of Ben and Cora sitting around the house. Pictures of Ben painting and Cora gardening. Christmas dinner with everyone around the table: Ben and Cora, Alice and Lon, Beatrice and a nerdy-looking type with glasses who must be Steve. Derek and Melissa.
I put that one down without comment, but the next one I wasnt able to. Your wedding day?
Derek leaned closer. Sorry.
No problem. Its not like I was unaware youd been married. Its something different to actually see it, though. You didnt have a church wedding?
Derek shook his head. Too much in a hurry. We got married on a Thursday because that was the only day I didnt have a rotation. At the courthouse.
I nodded, unworthy jealousy rolling in my stomach. They were so young and clearly deliriously happy. He had the biggest, goofiest grin on his face, and both his arms around her, and Melissa . . .
My eyes narrowed. She looks expensive and elegant now, but ten or eleven years ago, when they met and got married, she was breathtakingly lovely. Her hair, much shorter these days, hung down below her shoulders back then, like a fall of pure moonlight, and she looked ethereal in a pale, creamy white dress with a tight bodice and flowing skirt. She was carrying a small bouquet of what looked like lily of the valley, instead of the ostentatious spray of roses and babys breath I would have expected, andmuch as I hated to admit it, because I really wanted to believe that she had no redeeming qualities whatsoever and that shed only married him because she wanted to be married to a doctor and he was on his way to becoming oneshe looked happy. Her eyes shone, and her smile was relaxed. She had one arm lifted, her hand caressing his cheek, and she was looking up at him with what looked like genuine emotion.
Lovely, I said.
Derek nodded, eyes still on the picture. She was. I thought she was the most beautiful girl Id ever seen.
I know, I said. You told me.
He glanced at me. And then kept looking. After the silence had dragged on for long enough to become quite uncomfortable, to a point where my cheeks were as bright as Rudolphs nose, he leaned forward and kissed me. Softly. And long enough to take all my breath away. Again.
What was that for? I asked, after he had straightened up and I had gotten my voice back.
He smiled. Just because I could. And because I want you to realize that you dont have to worry about Melissa. She may have been pretty, but so is foxglove. Until you try to eat one, and then it kills you.
I giggled, it was so unexpected.
I was twenty-three, Tink. Just a baby. She was gorgeous and knew what she wanted. I didnt have a chance.
She looks happy, I pointed out.
Derek looked at the photograph and shrugged. No reason why she wouldnt be. Shed gotten what she wanted. She was married and to a future doctor. Why wouldnt she be happy?
So you dont regret that it didnt work out between you two?
His eyebrows shot up. Hell, no. That last year or two were so miserable I would have paid her to leave.
Good thing you didnt have any money. Since this was when he had stopped being an MD and started being a handyman, and thats why Melissa decided shed had enough. She would have taken you for everything you had.
She was too thrilled to land Ray Stenham, Derek said with a shrug. She was happy to see the back of me. Herehe reached outIll throw that away.
He plucked the photograph from my hand.
I took it back. Thats not necessary. Shes part of your life. Always has been, or at least for as long as Ive known you. Its not like tearing up the wedding picture will change the fact that I see her every day and she delights in rubbing it in.
I put the photograph facedown on the pile and continued looking. Pictures of Derek as a teenager gave way to pictures of Derek as a child, with a woman with fair hair and the same blue eyes as his.