Also by Cheryl Honigford
The Viv and Charlie Mystery Series
The Darkness Knows
Homicide for the Holidays
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Books. Change. Lives.
Copyright © 2018 by Cheryl Honigford
Cover and internal design © 2018 by Sourcebooks, Inc.
Cover design by Kathleen Lynch/Black Kat Design
Cover image © goldyg/Shutterstock, megamo/Shutterstock
Sourcebooks and the colophon are registered trademarks of Sourcebooks, Inc.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems—except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews—without permission in writing from its publisher, Sourcebooks, Inc.
The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious or are used fictitiously. Apart from well-known historical figures, any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.
Published by Sourcebooks Landmark, an imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc.
P.O. Box 4410, Naperville, Illinois 60567-4410
(630) 961-3900
Fax: (630) 961-2168
sourcebooks.com
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Honigford, Cheryl, author.
Title: Dig deep my grave / Cheryl Honigford.
Description: Naperville, Illinois : Sourcebooks Landmark, [2018] | Series: Viv and Charlie mystery ; 3
Identifiers: LCCN 2017040677 | (trade pbk. : alk. paper)
Subjects: LCSH: Radio actors and actresses--Fiction. | Radio serials--Fiction. | Murder--Investigation--Fiction. | GSAFD: Mystery fiction. | Historical fiction.
Classification: LCC PS3608.O4945 D54 2018 | DDC 813/.6--dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017040677
Contents
Front Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Reading Group Guide
An Excerpt from The Darkness Knows
A Conversation with the Author
About the Author
Back Cover
For Kate
Chapter One
June 11, 1939
Oakhaven had been a magical place for her once, Vivian thought as the boat sped toward the wooded shore of Geneva Lake. But that had been long ago. The towering Victorian mansion looked the same as she remembered—beautiful, enormous, daunting. She pulled her eyes away, squinting in the bright sunlight glinting off the water. She held her wide-brimmed summer hat to her head with one hand and reached out with the other to touch the tops of the waves skimming past. The water was ice cold, and her fingertips tingled as she pulled them toward her again. It may have been a sunny day in June, but the deep water never warmed much in southern Wisconsin, not even when summer was in full swing.
She glanced sidelong at Charlie. “Nervous?”
He shook his head, his dark-blond hair blowing back from his forehead. He might deny his nerves, but the way his fingers tightened around the brim of the panama hat clutched to his chest told the real story. His other hand, resting on her waist, pulled her closer toward him on the padded bench seat. Vivian followed his narrowed gaze: first to the tidy, uniformed driver of the speedboat, then on toward the looming bulk of their destination on the far shore.
Of course Charlie was nervous, she thought. He would meet her extended family for the first time today. Heck, Vivian was nervous, and she’d known them her whole life. She supposed she was nervous because she’d known them her whole life. They were an imposing bunch—and Oakhaven an imposing place.
It was her mother’s family’s summer estate on Geneva Lake, the Newport of the West. Julia Witchell, then Julia Markham, had spent her girlhood summers here among high society, far away from the suffocating air of the city. When Julia’s father died, not long after her mother, the ownership of Oakhaven had passed to Julia’s older sister, Adaline, and her husband—as did the Markham meatpacking dynasty.
The success of the family meatpacking business is what had made the ownership of a sprawling Victorian summer estate possible. Oakhaven sat on three green acres among the likes of the Wrigleys and the Schwinns—Chicago’s upper crust. There were only thirty-one estates sprinkled around the twenty-plus mile shoreline of the lake. It was a privileged life, and the family did not take their standing here lightly.
The house came into closer focus as the speedboat approached—the gingerbread facade rising over the wide green expanse of lawn that ran to the water’s edge. Guests in white muslin milled about near the wraparound front porch, drinks in hand. The garden party was already in full swing. “A place of wide lawns and narrow minds,” Vivian thought. Who’d said that? Hemingway? She swallowed and glanced sidelong at Charlie. She was by no means ashamed of her handsome private eye—quite the opposite, in fact—but she hoped the minds of her extended family had grown substantially wider than she remembered them being. If not, it might be a rough afternoon for both of them.
Charlie whistled through his teeth, his eyes still trained on the mansion looming ever closer. “All of that from sausages?”
Vivian smirked. “Well, Chicago is hog butcher for the world.”
Charlie returned the smile, but one eyebrow remained quirked in either disbelief or alarm. Likely both.
Vivian’s maternal grandfather had owned a swath of the vast Union Stock Yard in the final quarter of the last century. Markham Meats had competed with the likes of Armour and Swift. The whole idea of her mother’s family gaining their wealth and status from such a lowbrow business amused Vivian. Her mother was insufferably elitist, as were her mother’s sisters. And all of that wealth and superiority came from something so gauche and thoroughly midwestern as butchering hogs. But that was the American way, wasn’t it? Fathers got their hands dirty so their children would never have to. Vivian’s mother and her mother’s sisters had led privileged, sheltered lives: private boarding schools, coming-out parties. Her mother’s eldest sister, Ethel, had even married an English aristocrat.
Charlie looked off down the shore at the other estates visible through the thick canopy of leaves. He leaned down and spoke directly into Vivian’s ear so he could be heard over the roar of the engine and the waves smashing against the hull
.
“We really couldn’t have driven?” he said. “Surely, there are roads up here. It’s the twentieth century, for heaven’s sake.”
“Oh, we could have,” Vivian said, shouting into the wind. “There’s a service road behind the cottage, but Aunt Adaline prefers her guests to arrive across the lake by boat. It’s more dramatic this way.”
Charlie lifted his chin toward the quickly advancing shoreline, brows knit together over his nose. “And that’s what you call a cottage?”
She smiled and squeezed his forearm lightly. “Oakhaven has no insulation and is not habitable in the winter. So yes, a summer cottage.”
Charlie snorted but said nothing more.
The boat shifted into a lower gear as they approached the pristine-white wooden dock.
Vivian knew she was asking a lot of Charlie. This was so far removed from the world he’d grown up in and what he still knew every day. She loved him for doing this for her. She loved him for a lot of things. She wrapped both arms around his middle and squeezed.
“Oof, what’s that for?” he asked.
“For being such a good sport.” She rested her cheek against his chest for a moment before pulling back to look up into his handsome, sharp-angled face. “I owe you one.”
“You owe me more than one,” Charlie said. Then he bent down and kissed the tip of her nose.
• • •
Vivian had spent almost every summer on Geneva Lake as a girl, but she hadn’t been to Oakhaven since she’d started working as a secretary at WCHI radio four years ago, when her summers had been consumed with sorting, typing, and filing. Then her acting career had taken off, and she’d found herself costarring in the detective serial, The Darkness Knows, as well as multiple other dramatic engagements on any given day. She no longer had the leisure time for lolling about in sailboats or sipping iced tea on shaded verandas. She tilted her face up to the bright June sunshine and closed her eyes. She missed the idleness sometimes. Not often, but sometimes.
Charlie helped her from the boat and then paused, head cocked. “What’s that noise?”
Vivian paused to listen, noticing the monotonous whirring drone underneath the music and conversation. She looked off toward the acres of woods at the back of the property.
“Cicadas,” she said. “The seventeen-year kind. I read something about their return in the paper this morning. You’ve never heard them?”
Charlie shook his head. “Don’t get many cicadas in the city, I guess.”
“Disgustingly fascinating little creatures,” she said, thinking of how she’d pick the cicada’s empty shells from the trees and drop them in her cousin David’s hair. She’d been eight at the time. Still, inexcusable behavior, according to her aunt Adaline.
“I think that racket would drive me batty.”
“Well, welcome to the country, Mr. Haverman,” Vivian said, smiling up at him.
This was supposed to have been an intimate family gathering, but there were at least a hundred people milling about the lawn, and Vivian recognized almost no one. She was the sole representative of the Witchell branch of the family today, as her mother was in Washington, DC, with her companion, Oskar. It had been half a year since Oskar had entered their lives, and Vivian still had trouble defining his relationship with Julia. Companion was as good a word as any, she thought.
Despite Vivian’s initial misgivings, Oskar had been all sorts of good for her mother. Julia Witchell had—dare Vivian even think it—loosened up in the past six months. She smiled at regular intervals now. She laughed. Vivian hadn’t seen her mother this happy in years. Vivian’s younger brother, Everett, would agree, but he couldn’t be here today either. He was studying for his sophomore-year finals at Northwestern.
Vivian looked up at Charlie. She could tell nothing of his feelings from his stony exterior. Perhaps it wasn’t fair to throw him into the lion’s den like this, she thought. But their relationship was serious. Charlie was in her life for good, or so she hoped, and she wanted her family to know him. She snaked one arm around his waist. Her eyes drifted over the crowd again and stopped at the fountain on the opposite end of the lawn and her cousin Constance.
“Ah,” she said. “Let’s make the introductions to the heirs of the Markham meatpacking dynasty, shall we?”
Vivian’s eldest cousin stood near the splashing copy of the Manneken Pis, a statue of a naked little boy peeing into the fountain. The famous original stood in Brussels. Vivian’s grandfather had wanted the original, of course, but it turned out that there were some things in the world that couldn’t be bought.
Constance was ten years Vivian’s senior. Physically, she took after her father, Vivian’s Uncle Bernard, with her dark, wiry hair and long face. Still, Constance had an austere sort of beauty, even if she did lean a bit toward malnourished. In fact, every time Vivian heard advertisements on the radio for Ironized Yeast and the pill’s ability to add life to flagging constitutions, the ads always brought to mind images of Cousin Constance.
“Hello, Vivian,” Constance said. One corner of her pale lips lifted as her eyes flicked to Charlie.
“Constance, it’s been too long,” Vivian said. It hadn’t, she thought, but that was what one said when one saw relatives after a prolonged period. “This is Charlie Haverman,” she added, putting her hand lightly on Charlie’s forearm. “Charlie, this is my cousin Constance Lang Ames.”
Charlie held his hand out to Constance, and she shook it. Her smile didn’t touch her dark eyes. “Pleased to meet you,” she said. “Vivian so rarely brings anyone home to meet the family. You must be something special.”
There was a slight pause before Charlie answered, “I’d like to think so.”
“Where are Gil and the boys?” Vivian asked.
“Oh, Gil’s in Paris for business, and the boys have already gone off to their summer camp in the Adirondacks.” Constance’s husband was rarely in the same city as his wife, much less the same room, and she’d been shipping her sons off to somewhere or another since they were five years old.
“Are you staying here for the summer then?” Vivian said.
“Only for the next two weeks. Then I’m off to Europe to meet Gil for the remainder,” she said and took a sip of her cocktail. Her eyes focused on something over Vivian’s shoulder.
“Viv! Mother told me you were coming, but I didn’t believe her.”
Vivian turned to find her middle cousin, David, striding toward them. David was a year older than Vivian. He was handsome, tall, and strong with the ruddy features of his mother. The sunlight glinted off his red-gold hair—a shade lighter than Vivian’s. Of her three cousins, she’d always been closest to David. He was sharp-witted and lively, always good for a climb into the trees or a canoe race across the narrows. David had been training at helming the meatpacking company since birth. Uncle Bernard would pass the torch soon, and David would inherit everything. Vivian couldn’t be sure he actually liked the idea of running a meatpacking company, but he did like his father’s attention.
David had a young woman with him—a slight and willowy creature with long, golden-brown hair framing her face like a halo. She clung to David’s side, looking up at Vivian and Charlie through long, pale lashes. She reminded Vivian of the silent screen star Mary Pickford—all doe eyes and veiled innocence. This girl wasn’t beautiful so much as striking. Ethereal, Vivian thought. As though if she were touched, the girl would shatter into a thousand pieces.
“Vivian, this is Lillian Dacre,” David said, putting his hand proprietarily on the young woman’s arm. He leaned toward Lillian and added in a loud whisper. “And that’s Vivian, the cousin I told you about. We got into all sorts of trouble as kids.” He turned his attention back to Vivian. “Remember that time we took the rowboat out after Father told us expressly not to?”
“And then we sprung a leak halfway across the lake and had to swim back t
o shore fully clothed.” Vivian winked at David and extended a hand to the young woman. “Pleased to meet you, Lillian.” Then she leaned in and whispered, “I don’t think you have any idea of what you’re in for with this lug.”
Lillian smiled at the friendly dig and then lightly grasped Vivian’s hand in her own. “Charmed,” she said. Her blue eyes darted to Charlie, and she gave the back of her hand to him as if being presented at court, wrist bent, palm down. Charlie stared down at it, bewildered. After a moment’s hesitation, he clasped her fingers in his and gave her hand one determined pump. Vivian stifled a laugh. This girl was a real hothouse flower, she thought. David had always fancied the earthier sort, the kind of girl that bronzed in the sun and beat him at tennis. His tastes seemed to have changed drastically.
“How long have you been seeing each other?” Vivian asked David.
David looked sidelong at Lillian and raised one eyebrow. “Oh, it’s been ages… What, a month?”
“Three weeks,” Lillian corrected with a shy smile.
“Best three weeks of my life,” he said.
They gazed at each other for a long moment, clearly oblivious to everyone around them.
Vivian cleared her throat. “Three weeks and already meeting your parents, David?” she said. Talk about the lion’s den. David was pushing this poor girl in headfirst.
In response, David grabbed Lillian’s left hand and held it out to Vivian. A large, round diamond winked at her in the sun from Lillian’s ring finger.
Vivian gasped. She glanced from David to Lillian and back again. “Well, I guess congratulations are in order, then. Three weeks is quite the whirlwind courtship.”
“What can I say? When you know, you know, right? You got to follow your gut.” David gazed at Lillian and smiled.
Vivian glanced at Charlie. They locked eyes for a brief moment before she turned her attention to the happy couple again with a broad smile.
“Congratulations,” Charlie said, holding out his hand to David for a shake. “To both of you.”
“Where did you meet?” Vivian asked.
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