Read The Walleld Flower Online

Authors: Lorraine Bartlett

The Walleld Flower (5 page)

Katie recognized Rose’s tiny red Mini Cooper as soon as she drove into the Square’s parking lot the next morning. She parked her white Focus and sorted through her collection of keys, then picked up her unread newspaper before getting out to open Artisans Alley’s vendor entrance.

“Rose, what are you doing here so early?” Katie called.

Impeccably dressed, as always, in a tailored polyester suit coat and slacks, apricot today, with a rope of amber beads dangling down her white-bloused front, Rose was the epitome of determination. She held a large, flat book in one arm and a shoe box tucked like a football under the other.

“I’m here so we can start working on Heather’s case. Where do we begin?”

Katie paused, brass key hovering near the lock, and her heart sank as she read a note taped to the door:
She’s at it again.
Katie recognized the handwriting. She looked back at Rose. “What did you say?”

“Heather’s case,” she said impatiently.

“Oh, well… I haven’t decided on an approach. Let’s make some coffee and talk,” she said to stall.

Katie unlocked the door and entered the ante/storeroom, disarming the security system before venturing into Artisans Alley’s main showroom.

Six months before, the artisans arcade’s cavernous main hub had been a depressing sea of dark Masonite Peg-Board. Katie hit the main light switch and the room came alive with beautiful displays of sparkling blown-glass goblets, vases, and bowls on a backdrop of dainty floral wallpaper, Victorian-inspired stained glass windows, cards made of handmade papers, and too much else to take in at one glance. Every day a crowd of vendors came in, changing their displays, making a walk through the aisles like a treasure hunt.

Rose headed straight for the vendors’ lounge and its commercial coffeepot. That room, too, had recently undergone a total transformation. Gone were the woppy-jawed wooden table and chairs, replaced by a chrome and red Formica table for ten (complete with two leaves), straight out of the 1950s. The vendors had pitched in to paint and decorate the lounge to look like a
Happy Days
set, with appropriate 1950s kitsch for accent.

Katie went straight to her office, where she set the note down. She’d deal with it later. She stowed her purse in her desk drawer and opened the safe. She counted out the money for the tills, shut and locked it, then headed for the cash registers, placing cash in each drawer. Register two needed more quarters, she noted. She’d bring them up later. By the time she made her way to the back of the store, she could smell coffee brewing.

“There’s some apple Danish in the fridge. Do you want a piece?” Rose called out.

“No, thanks. Just coffee,” Katie said and took a seat at the table.

Rose had already assembled two legal pads, pencils, and pens, along with the mysterious shoe box. She plunked a steaming mug down before Katie and took a seat on the opposite side of the table.

“Looks like you’ve made a good start,” Katie said, indicating the notes on one of the pads.

“I spent last evening writing lists and gathering some of Heather’s things. This box,” she said, removing the lid, “has pictures and certificates, things a young girl keeps.” She pushed it toward Katie.

Katie peered inside, flipping through the assorted odds and ends. She withdrew several photos of Heather and a shaggy-haired, bearded young man.

“That’s Heather and her boyfriend, Jeremy Richards. They went together for almost a year before she disappeared.”

Katie replaced the photos, reaching for the creamer. “Is that a high school yearbook?” she said, indicating the tome by Rose’s elbow.

Rose nodded. “From Heather’s senior year. Some of her classmates still live in McKinlay Mill.” Her gaze drifted. “Most of them got married and had families. I want to find the bastard who cheated Heather out of her future,” she said, her voice hardening.

Katie wasn’t sure how to comfort the old woman. Finally, she said, “What we need to do is backtrack Heather’s last days. That’ll mean locating the people she knew, which could take time—a very
long
time.”

“I’ll do whatever it takes,” Rose said, determination once again entering her voice.

“Who was her best friend?” Katie said, and took a sip of coffee.

“Barbie Jackson.” Rose opened the yearbook, flipping pages until she came to a shot of the McKinlay Mill High School cheerleading squad. She pointed to the only brunette in a sea of bleached blondes. “That’s Barbie. They
were inseparable as children, but I don’t think they were quite as close by the time Heather disappeared. But then, I only knew this secondhand from Heather’s mother.”

“Seems like finding Barbie would be a good place to start.”

“I’m pretty sure she married Joe Gordon. They live somewhere on the outskirts of town. I’ll look in the phone book. If she’ll talk to me, will you go with me to see her?”

“Of course. I’ve got an errand of my own to run this afternoon. If Vance will take over here, maybe we can combine them.”

“Are you going apartment hunting?” Rose asked.

Katie nodded.

“Why doesn’t Andy just let you live above his shop?”

“That’s a good question.” Katie took another sip of coffee. “I don’t suppose you’ve heard from Detective Davenport.”

“He never even took down my phone number,” Rose groused.

Katie shook her head. Davenport had been just as close-mouthed during Ezra Hilton’s murder investigation. Either he was the laziest detective on the planet or the shrewdest, letting others solve all his cases—and no doubt taking the credit. Katie’s successful efforts to find Ezra’s murderer had never made it into the newspaper or other media accounts. In retrospect, she’d preferred it that way.

Rose stirred more sugar into her coffee. “I saw Polly’s note on the door. She isn’t picking on Edie again, is she?”

“I’m afraid so,” Katie said.

“Edie wouldn’t steal,” Rose declared.

Edie Silver was the first of the low-end crafters to rent space in Artisans Alley after Katie had taken over as manager. She’d convinced Katie that her type of crafts—dish towels with crocheted hangers, silk flowers, and the like—could bring in customers, and she’d been right. Since admitting Edie and her friends, Artisans Alley was averaging twenty percent higher sales per week. That average had shot
up to fifty percent during the holiday buying season. But fine-arts craftsmen (and women) vendors like Polly Bremerton were averse to change, and opening Artisans Alley to the low end of the spectrum was still a bitter pill. Still, Polly’s creations were dolls made with molded bisque heads, arms, and legs, with stuffed and sewn bodies, not masterpieces on canvas.

“I agree,” Katie said. “Under normal circumstances, Edie would never take anything that didn’t belong to her. But she might if she had Alzheimer’s disease.”

Rose’s eyes widened with indignation. “Don’t tell me Polly’s spreading that vicious, ugly rumor?”

“She hinted that might be Edie’s problem.”

“Edie was confused when her doctor changed her medication back in January. Now she’s fine. And she has never taken anything that didn’t belong to her.”

Katie nodded. “Shoplifting
has
increased dramatically in the past few months.”

“That’s because we have more customers than we ever had before. Every retail establishment has to deal with it.”

“I know. But as manager, I’m the one who has to address it.”

Rose straightened. “You’re not going to confront Edie based on one person’s accusations, are you?”

Katie shook her head. “Of course not. Not without proof, and so far Polly hasn’t given me any.” She rose from the table. “If you want to use the phone in my office to make your calls, you’re welcome to.”

“Thank you, Katie.” Picking up her coffee cup, Rose headed for the eight-by-ten-foot room that comprised Katie’s workspace. It would be cramped quarters for a few days until Rose realized just how fruitless the search for her niece’s killer would be. Somehow she’d find the patience to stand the intrusion.

Katie lingered over her coffee and picked up the newspaper. Heather’s murder was, of course, the top story. Inevitably,
Ezra’s murder the year before was mentioned as well. The McKinlay Mill Chamber of Commerce would no doubt see this as a public relations dilemma.

Katie’s frown deepened as she scanned the story.

An unnamed source indicated the body was entombed before death.

Katie’s ire flared. Detective Davenport’s assertion that Heather was dead when entombed didn’t match what Katie had seen for herself at the mansion. There’d been holes in the plastic where Heather’s hands would have been. Grooves were dug into the drywall that had been removed from the studs. How long had Heather clawed at the drywall in a futile effort to escape before she’d suffocated—or more likely, died of a seizure? Either way, it had been pure stupidity for Davenport to lie to Rose. Katie hadn’t figured the detective was that dumb. Had he actually been trying to show Rose some compassion? That stab at courtesy was bound to blow up in his face when Rose learned the truth.

Katie folded that section of the paper, tossing it aside and opening the local section. The headline read: famed UR Alumni Sponsors Hi-tech Studio. She skimmed the local-boy-makes-good—remembers-his-roots—story. Well, good for him.

She studied the stock-shot handsome, lightly lined face. Gray laced the man’s hair and the close-cropped beard, reminding her of a younger Sean Connery. Hot stuff. Maybe she should try to convince Andy to grow a beard. He’d make a fine Jack Sparrow wannabe.

Nah. He’d never go for it.

Glancing at her watch, Katie decided it was time to get to work. She folded the newspaper and tossed it into the recycle bin. Rose would eventually learn the truth about Heather’s death, but Katie vowed she’d do her best to keep it from her until she figured out a way to break the bad news gently. That would take some creativity, and right now she
didn’t feel up to it. The question was, how long could she stall, and would Rose be angry with her, too?

She’d have to risk it—and suffer the consequences either way.

Cool lake air whipped through the open windows of Katie’s car. Rose had tied another knot in her plastic rain bonnet, but Katie refused to feel guilty for enjoying the gale. The long, dreary winter was over and the fresh spring air revitalized her. Sunshine glinting off the car hood felt like a good omen, too. She’d find her new home soon. Maybe today. But first, they’d attend to Rose’s quest.

Leaving Vance Ingram in charge at Artisans Alley, Katie had packed up Rose, her box of mementos, and Heather’s yearbook, and headed for County Route 8. Ezra Hilton’s house had been near the rental property Katie was scheduled to inspect. Katie had inherited half of Ezra’s estate. In order to go to probate, she’d had to sell the old man’s house and property, effectively buying out Ezra’s nephew, Gerald, and leaving her the sole proprietor of Artisans Alley. That felt good until the realization had sunk in that all the Alley’s debts fell on her shoulders alone.

Too bad Ezra’s house was gone. She could’ve lived there temporarily. The five-acre site would soon be developed for low-income senior housing, which, as Katie was only thirty, she was ineligible for.

“It should be coming up soon,” Rose said.

Katie braked, taking in the numbers on a solitary mailbox. This portion of Route 8 consisted of small farms, but McKinlay Mill and the surrounding area were not entirely immune from urban sprawl.

“There it is,” Rose said.

Katie slowed even more, activating her turn signal. She pulled into the remnant of a gravel drive, now two ruts cut
through a sea of long, matted grass. A single-wide trailer stood on concrete block pylons, wind-scrubbed of paint and charm.

“Oh my,” Rose muttered, taking in the sight.

“And I thought I had housing problems,” Katie said, cutting the engine. “Looks like someone’s at home.” She pointed at the rusting Chrysler K car parked at the side. It had current plates, so it wasn’t just a derelict.

They got out of the car, treading carefully to the trailer’s front—only?—door. The tips of several tulip points stood timidly near weathered, pressure-treated wooden steps, someone’s halfhearted attempt at beautification.

Mounting the steps, Katie banged on the aluminum outer door, its window frame devoid of glass or screen. She waited for what seemed like a minute before trying again.

Thumping feet from within halted. The door was wrenched open by a prematurely gray-haired, dowdy woman, a cigarette dangling from her lower lip, a toddler in pull-up training pants and a faded pink T-shirt straddling her left hip. “Yeah?”

“Barbie Jackson Gordon?” Katie asked.

“Who wants to know?”

“I’m Katie Bonner, and this is my friend, Rose Nash. Rose was Heather Winston’s aunt.”

“We tried to call, but it seems your telephone has been disconnected,” Rose chimed in.

“What do you want?” Barbie asked, none too kindly.

“Did you know Heather’s remains had been found in the old Webster mansion?” Katie asked.

Barbie’s lips pursed, but she said nothing.

“We came to ask you if you knew anything about Heather’s last few weeks before she was reported missing,” Rose said.

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