Read Plaster and Poison Online
Authors: Jennie Bentley
Wow, I said, leaning back.
Mom nodded. Thats quite a missive. Im not surprised she wanted to get it off her chest. Or that she wanted her child to know the truth.
A pity he never came and asked for it.
Thats life, Mom said philosophically. Sometimes, in spite of our best-laid plans, life intervenes. Larry either didnt know where to find Emilys family, or he believed the lie and just didnt care to. At this point, its six of one, half a dozen of the other. Theyre all dust.
Thats true, I admitted. Amazing that theyd convict her of a murder she didnt commit, though. Why didnt she just say that Lawrence did it? That way she could have kept her son and the Ritter name, and avoided going to prison.
It was her word against Anna Virginias, Mom said. And of the two of them, Anna Virginia Cabot was the one who was believed. Emily had been at the navy base that day. She had spoken to William. People had probably seen her. While Lawrence may have avoided being seen.
I nodded. Or maybe he was seen, but not really noticed among so many men.
And then Anna Virginia cleaned up the mess, Mom said. Emily was expendable; she was planning to leave Lawrence anyway; she had betrayed him. Anna Virginia probably didnt like her much, since she was probably the kind of mother who would have thought that no girl was good enough for her darling boy. But then Lawrence died, and Frederick died, and there was no one left to carry on the Ritter name. So Anna Virginia decided she needed Emilys child. If it was a boy, anyway; if it had turned out to be a girl, she might have reneged.
What an evil witch. Its amazing what some parents will do for their children, isnt it? You wouldnt have helped me cover up a murder, would you?
If it was Philippe . . . Mom said, and then shook her head. No, of course not, Avery. I love you, but if you killed someone, even if it was Philippe, youd need to take your punishment like a big girl. Just like when you were little. Remember when you staged that walkout of Mademoiselle Gagnons French class in eighth grade?
God, yes! I shuddered. I talked all of French one-oh-one into going with me, and then they ratted me out and I got detention every day for two weeks. And when I came crying to you, you told me . . .
If you do the crime, you gotta do the time.
I nodded. You know, thats probably whats wrong with Ray and Randy Stenham. Mary Elizabeth was too wimpy to discipline them. They were allowed to run wild, until they started believing that nothing could touch them. And now they think they can get away with murder.
Silence reigned for a moment, and I realized what Id said. I didnt mean that literally, I began, and then I stopped.
You know, Mom said thoughtfully, youre making a good point. Gerard seemed like the type to check out his environment thoroughly, wouldnt you say? He liked knowing things about people. And he was staying in the model home at Clovercroft. What if he found something out there, something that proved that the Stenhams were doing something wrong? Financially, maybe? The fact that they cant go forward with the development, that its just sitting there, and all the while they have to pay the mortgage, must be a strain. You and Derek are facing that issue right now, with that little ranch house you renovated this fall.
Except our mortgage is under one hundred thousand dollars, and weve owned it for only four months. The Stenhams must have borrowed millions to develop Clovercroft, and its been sitting barren for a year, at least.
Exactly. So lets say theyve done something not entirely legal to keep things going. Something that could get them into some trouble.
Beatrice did mention something about interesting bookkeeping, I said, thinking back.
Did she really? Well, lets say Gerard found out about it. Either because Beatrice told him or because he was snooping around after hours. What would happen?
From what I know about Gerard, I said slowly, Id say hed try to figure out a way to take advantage of it.
Blackmail?
That does seem to have been his habit. And if he blackmailed the Stenhams, they might have gotten mad enough to do away with him. Especially if they see themselves as being above the law.
Exactly. And then theres Mary Elizabeth and her delicate constitution.
I blinked, not quite following the connection. OK. But you know, if I knew I was responsible for bringing Ray and Randy into the world, Id have a delicate constitution, too.
I dont think Mary Elizabeth is anywhere as delicate as she pretends, Mom said dryly. She adores those boys. Never did believe that they could do anything wrong.
Shes not delicate?
Shes about as delicate as fishing wire. Thin, but incredibly strong. What shes got is a weak heart.
No kidding? So she could be taking digitalin? Ray and Randy could have slipped Gerard some of their mothers medicine? Just like Lawrence did with Anna Virginias?
Could be, Mom said. You know, Avery, I think maybe we need to pay Mary Elizabeth another visit. Have a look at her medicine cabinet. And convince her that its time she let her boys take their lumps on their own. Theyre grown; she cant shield them forever. She headed for the door, briskly.
Shouldnt we call Wayne and Reece Tolliver and tell them what we think? I asked, trotting after. Id made this mistake once or twice before: going off on my own after a clue and ending up in trouble. I didnt want to do it again. The Stenham boys were probably safely tucked away at Clovercroft, under the watchful eye of the two chiefs of police, and they wouldnt be at their mothers house, but even so I wanted someone to know where we were going.
Mom waved a hand. By all means. Tell them to come meet us at Mary Elizabeths house after theyve finished booking Ray and Randy. By then, maybe well have convinced her to talk.
Ill call Derek, I said, as the cafeteria door slammed behind us and we narrowly avoided being reprimanded by a monitor for running in the halls. That way I can find out if the dog found anything at Clovercroft, too. I pulled out my phone and dialed as we sped along.
Hi, Avery, Dereks voice said, before I even had a chance to say hello. Theres nothing new.
Are you still at Clovercroft?
We are. The dog didnt mark in the office, which was a relief. Now its upstairs sniffing the apartment.
Thats good news. I have a lot to tell you about Emily and William, but that can wait. Listen to this. I went through Moms reasoning regarding the twins and Mary Elizabeth.
Makes sense, Derek agreed. Ill call Wayne. Hes probably at the police station by now. I hope hes grilling Ray and Randy over hot coals. Are you going to Mary Elizabeths?
That seems to be the plan. Im just following Mom.
Dont you think you should wait? Im sure Wayne plans to go there later, after hes finished with the twins.
Thats all right, I said. Im not worried. Its just Mary Elizabeth. But call me when the party breaks up, OK? Just so I know to get out of there because someone might be coming. Id hate for Ray or Randy to walk in on me snooping through their mothers medicine cabinet.
Derek promised he would, since hed hate that, too, and I turned to Mom, who was standing by the Beetle, tapping her foot impatiently. Lets go, already! she said.
Yes, maam. I unlocked the doors and we climbed in.
Mary Elizabeths big, white house looked exactly the same as when wed been there yesterday. So did Mary Elizabeth; the only difference being that todays pantsuit was a pale platinum gray instead of blue. And just like yesterday, she didnt seem thrilled to see us.
Oh. Its you again.
Mom took it stride, with her best smile. Hello, Mary Elizabeth. I hoped maybe today was a better day than yesterday to drop in for a chat. May we come in?
She didnt wait for Mary Elizabeths assentor refusalbut walked across the threshold into the black-and-white hall. I scurried after.
Mary Elizabeth closed the front doorreluctantly, I dont doubt, but it was cold outsideand turned to Mom. She opened her mouth to speak, but Mom cut in. This wont take long. Why dont we go sit down somewhere? She looked around, spying a sofa in one of the rooms just off the hall. That looks like a good place.
It was a front parlor, with two matching love seats and a window overlooking the front yard, so wed have fair warning if someone arrived. Mom didnt wait to be invited, just hooked her arm through Mary Elizabeths and pulled her cousin toward the seating area. Upstairs, I could hear the poodles scratching. Mary Elizabeth glanced up the stairs, her expression boding ill for the poor animals, but allowed herself to be dragged, almost literally, to the nearest sofa and deposited there.
Isnt this nice? Mom said, with a big smile, and sat down opposite.
I looked around. Um . . . if you dont mind, I think I need . . . I cast about for a delicate way of putting it, and came up with, a lipstick break. Best I could do for a euphemism on short notice.
You go ahead, Avery, Mom said genially, as if it was her house instead of Mary Elizabeths. If I remember correctly, theres a powder room just at the top of the stairs on the left. Is that right?
Mary Elizabeth nodded, tight-lipped. Mom beamed. Well just sit here and chat until you get back.
Sure, I said and headed up the staircase.
The scratching got steadily louder as I walked up the stairs, and I could well understand that it was driving Mary Elizabeth crazy, especially if she had to listen to it all day. Although I had to assume that the poodles were allowed out when no one was there. Maybe they were biters.
The powder room was right where Mom said it would be, at the top of the stairs and on the left. It was big and opulent andof coursewhite. I closed and locked the door behind me, just to be safe, and then I looked around. There was a medicine cabinet above the sink; I started with that.
All I found there, however, were creams and tweezers and lotions and the like. And the linen closet in the corner was full, but only with towels and sheets and a stack of toilet paper and a plunger and things like that. Seemed Id have to go looking for Mary Elizabeths private bath, and her bedside table, for her medications.
I flushed the toilet before I left the room, just to give some verisimilitude to my trip upstairs. Then I unlocked the door and stepped into the hallway, looking around.
Reproduction Colonials are very symmetrical, usually four rooms over four, laid out around a central hallway. The downstairs had a couple of parlors, a dining room, and a kitchen, while the upstairs had four bedrooms. The scratching noises, now accompanied by some sort of squeaking and muffled thumps, came from the room at the end of the hallway. She must keep the poor things muzzled, too, or surely thered be full-on barking.
What had to be Mary Elizabeths bedroom was on the right, almost opposite the bathroom. It had plush off-white carpeting, I noted, similar to what Kate wanted in her bedroom in the carriage house, as well as a huge four-poster bed with white sheets and a fluffy white duvet and lots of white throw pillows. The whole thing looked cold as ice, and I made a mental note to be sure to add some warmth to the carriage house bedroom; some sort of unifying color that would go well with the black and white, that I could use in the pillows and maybe a quilted satin comforter or blanket across the foot of the bed. Pale pink came to mindit looks wonderful with black and whitebut Wayne might object. Pale blue might be nice; its very French, or at least Gustavian, and in the summer, its like bringing the sky and water inside.
While mulling this, I tiptoed over to the bedside table and pulled out the drawer. And hit pay dirt: a handful of little brown medicine bottles with screw caps. I scooped them up and read the names. Tenormin, Lanoxin, warfarin, just plain aspirin in a white bottle . . .
Im not sure what Id expectedsomething called digitalin, I guessbut if such a thing existed, Mary Elizabeth wasnt taking it. Or if she was, one of her sons had removed the entire bottle. One of those I was looking at might even hold digitalin; I dont know much about medications, but I know that the name of the drug itself is sometimes different from the name of the medication, which usually has a generic name, as well. For all I knew, I could be holding the murder weapon in my hand right now. Derek would know. I put the bottles down and pulled out my cell phone.
Im at Mary Elizabeths house, I whispered into it when hed answered. If I give you a list of medications, can you tell me if any of them could have been what was in Gerards bloodstream? Aspirin, warfarin, Tenormin, Lanoxin . . .
That one, Derek said.
Lanoxin? Thats digitalis?
Sure is. Whats the dose?
I told him what the bottle said.
A handful of those would be enough to knock him out. Just put them back where you found them and get out of there. Ill let Wayne know where they are.
Appreciate it. Anything new on your end?
His voice was tightly controlled. The dog marked for a body upstairs in the model. Wayne and Reece have already taken Ray and Randy in for questioning. Now they want Melissa, too. Good thing, because I was ready to start beating some answers out of someone.
Gosh, I said, and then stopped, hoping against hope that condolences were premature. Hopefully, Hans was marking for Gerard and not Beatrice. What are you planning to do now?
I guess Ill head on down to the police station, Derek said. Tell Wayne and Reece where you are and what youve found. Maybe they can use it to squeeze some information out of one of the boys.
We may see you there. If Mom can convince Mary Elizabeth to come clean and rat on one of her darlings. And . . . I hesitated, trying to hunt down a stray thought. Tell them to lean on Randy. When I saw him at the lumber depot yesterday, he said something about the skylights in the bedroom at the carriage house. He might have seen them from the outside, before the snow covered the roof, but he might have noticed them while he was leaving the body, too. Its something to ask him, anyway.
Ill do that. Later, Tink. He hung up. I did the same, and then, as quietly as I could, put the medicine bottles back in the drawer and eased it shut.
Outside in the hallway, I took an automatic left to go back down the stairs to the parlor and Mom and Aunt Mary Elizabeth, but then I hesitated. That pristine white bedroom was bothering me, and the pristine marble floors downstairs, and the two white love seats in the front parlor, not to mention the icy coldness that exuded from Mary Elizabeth. She didnt seem like the type to enjoy the companionship of dogs. Everything was too well ordered, too clean, too oppressively neat in this house. There was no dog hair in the corners, no paw prints, no leashes or dog toys or water bowls. No barking. Just that thumping and squeaking noise from the back bedroom. The one with the closed door. The
only
one with a closed door.
I tiptoed in that direction, moving as quickly and as quietly as I could on the Persian runner. By now, Mom and Mary Elizabeth must be wondering what was taking me so long, but surely I could spare another twenty seconds to see what was making the noise. Whether it really was dogs, or whether it was something else.
I put my hand on the doorknob and twisted. And then I pushed the door open.