Trick or Treachery (5 page)

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Authors: Jessica Fletcher

BOOK: Trick or Treachery
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“Not as long as anyone else doesn’t.”
I watched him carefully snip off the end of the long brown cigar and light it with a cigarette lighter, careful to keep the flame from actually touching it. He took a satisfied drag and smiled.
“What have you been doing with yourself?” I asked, happy the smoke drifted away from me.
“Working in advertising,” he said, sipping a soft drink.
“Oh? An agency?”
“No, in-house for a large computer firm. I’m leaving there.”
“A better offer?”
“You might say that. I’m coming back to Cabot Cove to work for Dad’s company.”
“Marshall-Scott Clothing? That’s wonderful.”
“My dad would think so. He always wanted me to join the firm. Mr. Marshall wanted that, too, but I was stubborn—wanted to be on my own, not follow in Dad’s footsteps. Now, I think I owe it to him to help make his invention, BarrierCloth, successful.”
“Well, Jeremy, I think that’s wonderful news. Welcome back. I know your father would be very proud of you. Where will you be living?”
“Here in Paul’s house until I find something else. He’s been very generous with me in many ways, Mrs. Fletcher, including giving me the master guest suite on the top floor.”
“Not one of the cottages?” I asked, thinking that the Rose Cottage in which his father had lived was probably available.
“No. Paul decided to completely renovate Dad’s place. He’s in the process of gutting it. Besides, I sort of like living here in the main house. It’s so big I never see Paul, or anyone else for that matter. I feel like lord of the manor.”
I laughed. “I understand what you mean,” I said. “It certainly is an impressive house. Mansion would be more apt, I suppose. He moves fast, doesn’t he, your new boss?”
“How so?”
“The Rose Cottage. Tearing it apart so quickly. It was so beautiful the way it was.”
“He’s decisive, that’s for sure. The outside, with all the roses, is great, but Paul says the inside became pretty shabby. Anyway, if I do decide to move out of this house, there might be another cottage coming up for rent on the property in a few months. The family in it is talking about leaving. In the meantime—”
“In the meantime you’ll enjoy your host’s hospitality.”
“My boss’s hospitality.”
Our conversation ended when Paul Marshall’s daughter, Erica, joined us.
“Hi,” Jeremy said. “I was just telling Mrs. Fletcher that I’ll be staying in Cabot Cove and working for your father. I really appreciate his taking me into the business.”
“Oh, yes, my generous, compassionate father,” Erica said. Her words were kind, her tone not quite so benevolent.
Jeremy picked up on it. “Now, now, Little Ricky,” he said, smiling. “Still jealous of me?”
Erica blushed. “Please don’t call me that. I’m not a kid anymore.”
“Last time I saw you, you were. ‘My how you’ve grown.’ Isn’t that the usual line?”
“Do you have to smoke that vile cigar?” she said.
“Have one with me,” he said, laughing. “Cigar smoking is all the rage with young women these days.”
They excused themselves and walked away, and I couldn’t help but think they made an attractive couple. Erica was just a child when Jeremy went to live with his mother in California, but here she was all grown-up and beautiful. I doubted Jeremy still saw her as a kid sister.
 
And here it was a year later. Another Halloween to tickle the fancy of Cabot Cove’s children, and its adults, too, Tony Scott’s death now an unfortunate memory.
I entered the school and went to the auditorium, where the meeting and rehearsal were being held. Our mayor, Jim Shevlin, was there along with a dozen other government, civic and business leaders. Among many reasons I love Cabot Cove, the enthusiastic involvement of its citizens ranks high on my list. Beth Mullin, who with her husband, Peter, owned the Olde Tyme Floral Shop, gave a report on ticket sales for that evening’s pageant. “Almost sold out,” she said happily, “just a handful of tickets left.”
“That’s great,” Warren Wilson said. “We’ll buy up any unsold tickets.”
“That’s not necessary,” answered town attorney Ralph Mackin. “Marshall-Scott Clothing has been more than generous already.”
Wilson had moved from Vermont to Cabot Cove two years ago to become vice president of Marshall-Scott Clothing, responsible for the company’s manufacturing and administrative operations. Paul Marshall, whose generosity was well known to everyone in town, had added to Wilson’s duties the role of community relations director. In that capacity, he’d become a highly visible presence in town, showing up at virtually every meeting, particularly when charitable events were involved.
Wilson, a beefy, muscular man whose hair was prematurely abandoning him, waved his hand and laughed. “You know our company’s motto, Ralph. ‘An involved company is a good company.’ Paul Marshall feels, and I certainly agree, that supporting our kids is one of the most important things we can do for Cabot Cove.”
“And it’s deeply appreciated, as always,” Mayor Shevlin said.
As the discussion at the rear of the auditorium drifted on to other matters, I wandered down to the front, where the high school’s drama teacher was putting finishing touches on a scene from the pageant. The children, dressed in a variety of Halloween-related costumes, were adorable as they played the roles of witches. A large black pot containing dry ice sent what looked like steam into the air as two little girls, wearing large black hats that kept slipping off their small heads, pretended to stir the witches’ brew. The teacher, Pat Hitchcock, noticed me.
“Hi, Jessica,” she said.
“Hi, Pat. Everything shaping up for tonight?”
“I think so,” she said, directing a stream of air at an errant wisp of hair. “It always seems to come together at the last minute.”
“No small thanks to you,” I said.
A little boy in an orange goblin costume interrupted from the stage. “I have to go to the bathroom, Mrs. Hitchcock.”
Pat smiled. “Nature calls even for goblins, Jessica. Excuse me.”
I took a seat near the stage and turned to see the others who were still meeting at the back. Warren Wilson was an interesting man, I thought. He was a bachelor, which made him fair game for rumors about his romantic involvements. Not a few single women had designs on Warren, dropping off casseroles or cakes with his landlady in hopes of impressing him with their culinary skills. But for more than a year the woman most frequently linked to Warren had been Erica Marshall, the proverbial boss’s daughter. They’d been seen together socially on a number of occasions, although some claimed that all was not well between them. But that could simply have been the sour reflections of a lady whose efforts were going unrewarded.
My reverie was interrupted when two women took seats in the row behind me and began an animated conversation. At first, I was irritated by their rudeness, talking while the rehearsal was still going on, but then I heard a name that grabbed my attention, and I tuned into what they were saying.
“Did you hear those dogs last night? Gave me the willies.”
“I know, I know. Our Buster certainly heard ’em. He started howling to wake the dead.”
“That’s what Tremaine said was comin’, you know—dogs running wild, machines not working right and rampant crime.”
“It’s already here. Peggy Johnson told me someone stole John’s flannel shirt right off her clothesline last week. And Hap Gormley’s car wouldn’t start after the concert, and it had been working just fine till then.”
“It must be because of her. All kinds of odd things have been happenin’ since that strange lady—Matilda Swift, is it?—moved here.”
I rejoined my friends at the rear of the theater.
“Well, that about covers everything,” Mayor Shevlin said. “Unless anyone has something else to add.”
“Nothing from me,” Wilson said. “Have to get back to the office.”
“Once again, Warren, we owe you and the company a debt of gratitude for your generous support of the pageant,” Shevlin said. “Please extend our thanks to Mr. Marshall.”
I left the school with Wilson.
“See you at the party?” he asked as he unlocked the door of his car, parked directly in front of the school.
“Wouldn’t miss it,” I said.
“Good. Paul is pulling out all the stops. The company people will all be wearing the same costume.”
“That’s a new approach. What will you be coming as?”
“We’re all coming as moose. Mooses? Meese? This is Maine, after all.” He laughed. “Paul had the costumes specially made in Boston.”
“You were right the first time, Warren. The plural of moose is moose. I look forward to seeing them.”
As he extended his hand, I noticed the back of his right one had been scratched. “Those are nasty scratches,” I said.
“Damn cat,” he said, looking at his hand. “We’ve had a woman move into one of the cottages on Paul Marshall’s estate, the Rose Cottage.”
“So I’ve heard,” I said.
“She’s got a black cat with a mean disposition. If I’d known what a nasty critter he is, I wouldn’t have tried to pick him up when I was down at the cottage the other day. They say animals take on the personality of their owners, Mrs. Fletcher. It’s true in this case. The cat and its owner are both nasty creatures.”
“Well, I wouldn’t know about that,” I said. “Take care, Warren.”
“You, too, Mrs. Fletcher.”
I decided to stop by Mara’s Luncheonette for coffee and to see what other news was making the rounds. I’d reached the parking lot and was heading for the door when the loud sound of a revving engine caused me to turn. Matilda Swift backed her automobile from its spot. It was a long black car shined to a mirror gloss. As it moved away, I saw for the first time another occupant, a big black cat with a piercing gaze, sitting on the rear shelf, glaring at me. Although it wasn’t a particularly cool day, and I was dressed warmly, a sudden chill went through me.
“Coffee, Jess?” Mara asked after I’d taken a booth.
“What?”
“Coffee? You okay?”
“Okay? Oh, sure. I’m fine. Just chilled, that’s all. Winter’s in the air. Clam chowder, please, and make it hot. Very hot.”
Chapter Four
The chill I woke up to the next morning had nothing to do with large black cats with piercing eyes, or a lady named Matilda Swift. It had to do with a cold front that had barreled through Cabot Cove during the night, dropping the temperature close to freezing.
After showering, dressing in layers and bringing my plants in from the patio in the event we got down to the frost level, I spent the morning finishing up my leftover paperwork. After a late lunch, I headed off for town, not with any specific destination in mind, but more to get the blood flowing. As often happens, I ended up wandering into police headquarters, where I knew Mort Metzger, our sheriff, usually had a pot of relatively decent coffee brewing. As an admitted “coffee snob,” I choose where to have my coffee with care. A year ago, I wouldn’t have gone near Mort’s station house brew. But after I complained enough, he allowed me to give him a lesson in coffee making, and let me choose which blends to use. As a result, the quality had improved considerably, enough to satisfy my finicky palate.
I paused outside his office when I saw he wasn’t alone, but he waved me in. Seated across the desk from him were Ed and Joan Lerner, relative newcomers to Cabot Cove who’d retired here after completing distinguished careers in education. I’d attended a welcoming party for them at the Unitarian-Universalist church, where I learned that one of their daughters, Liz, was a minister in Maryland; a second daughter, Jenny, a social psychologist, lived in Pittsburgh.
The Lerners had immediately become an integral part of the town’s social and civic life, throwing a Bastille Day party at their home not long after moving in, and establishing a play-reading group that quickly became popular.
“Don’t want to interrupt anything,” I said.
“We were just about to leave,” Joan said.
“The Lerners were saying how flattered they were to be invited to Paul Marshall’s Halloween party,” Mort said, “being new to town and all.”
“We used to throw our own Halloween party each year,” Ed said, “but I understand Mr. Marshall’s puts most gatherings to shame. We wouldn’t want to compete with that.”
“It is lavish,” I said.
Joan laughed. “If we don’t have a Halloween party, we’ll just have to find another excuse for a bash. Canadian Bank Day. Boxing Day. Bring Your Daughter to Work Day.”
They stood to leave.
“Now, don’t you be concerned, folks,” Mort said, ushering them out. “I’ll look into it.”
“See you at the pageant tonight?” I asked.
“Wouldn’t miss it,” said Joan. “Or the party.”
“Judging from them,” I said to Mort when they were gone, “retirement doesn’t necessarily mean slowing down.”
“That’s the way it ought to be.” He sat down behind his desk again and picked up his pen. “They’re good people, Mrs. F.,” he said, jotting a note on his pad and putting the report aside.
“They were at a function down at the Unitarian Fellowship last night and overheard some grumblings concerning Tremaine and his activities. He’s made a lot of enemies, that one. There’s some who’re threatening to take matters into their own hands. The Lerners don’t like the man, but they don’t want to see his civil rights trampled on either.”
“I know,” I said. “It’s easy to support freedom of speech when you agree with the speaker—much harder when you don’t.”
“As long as Tremaine doesn’t break any laws, there’s not anything I can do about him. I’m not real worried about the threats. Probably just some hotheads shooting their mouths off. But I’ll nose around town later. Appreciate it if you’d keep an ear out, too. Coffee, Mrs. F? I just made a fresh pot.”
“Love a cup.”
With two steaming mugs in front of us, I asked whether things were quiet on the crime front.

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