by Elaine Viets
“Call nine-one-one,” Helen shouted, and threw another cup. That one bounced harmlessly off the lurching skirt. Chiffon was better than Kevlar. Helen reached for more ammunition from the coffee bar. The coffee urn wasn’t out yet, or she would have unleashed gallons of hot coffee. Instead, she grabbed a fistful of delicate china saucers. Two went wide of their mark. One bounced off Melanie’s arm. A cup hit a wad of ruffles and slid harmlessly away. Helen was desperate. Melanie and her knife were moving in for the kill.
Helen ducked behind the wedding cake for protection, but Melanie kept coming with the knife. She was a terrifying sight. Her blond hair looked like it had been electrified. Her ruffles whipped back and forth. Her skirt swung crazily. She was the bridesmaid from hell.
“I’ll kill you,” she screamed. “I’ll kill you like I killed him.”
Helen knew the three-tiered cake would be no protection against Melanie’s jabbing, stabbing knife. That knife was designed to cut cake into little pieces.
Helen had only one choice.
She picked up the wedding cake and heaved it at Melanie. The mad bridesmaid went down in a welter of white icing and chocolate layer cake. The top layer was cheesecake, which was really slick. Melanie’s skirt belled out modestly around her, covering a lot of splattered cake. Melanie tried to get up, but her foot tangled in the hoop. She slipped in the butter-cream frosting, twisting her ankle, and slid back down in the squashed cake.
“My ankle,” Melanie cried.
“My cake,” the bride cried, bursting into the room. “You ruined my cake.”
She picked up the huge bowl of sticky pink punch and hurled it at Helen.
Chapter 29
“Halt!” said Detective Gil Gilbert. “Drop it! Right now.”
The bride had already emptied the cut-glass punch bowl on Helen. Now she was preparing to smash her head with the heavy bowl. Helen was too punch-drunk to move.
“You’ll kill her if you hit her with that,” Detective Gilbert warned.
“I want to kill her,” the bride said, raising the bowl over her head. “She ruined my wedding.”
“You’ll lose your deposit on the bowl,” he said.
At that, a portly tuxedoed man stepped forward and took the bowl from the bride. “This has cost us enough already.” Helen assumed he was the father of the bride.
Melanie sat quietly on the floor, the ruined wedding cake mostly hidden by her huge skirt. The knife had been confiscated by Detective Tom Levinson, who showed up with Gilbert for some reason Helen never figured out. He was reading Melanie her rights and was preparing to take her in quietly for questioning. But Melanie, who lived in her own romance novel, refused to go without a scene.
“I’ll tell you everything, but I want the world to know what I suffered,” she said. “Otherwise, I’ll call a lawyer now and never say another word.”
Helen thought the print-on-demand author looked remarkably pretty. Her gown had only a smear or two of cake icing on it. Her blond hair tumbled down her back. Her bosom was a seething blue sea of ruffles.
No amount of persuasion would convince Melanie to change her mind. She was determined to have her audience.
“My own guilty conscience made me ruin Beth and Farley’s wedding,” Melanie said, when everyone stopped talking and she was once more the center of attention. Helen noticed the wedding photographer was taping her statement. She wondered if the police would confiscate the video.
“The burden has been too great to bear. When I saw her”—she pointed dramatically to Helen—“sitting next to a man in uniform, I thought the police had come to arrest me.”
“It was just Uncle Chuck,” the bride said. “He’s a security guard at Wal-Mart.”
Melanie grabbed the attention back from the bride. “My life was ruined by an evil man. He seduced me with empty promises. He defiled my love. He even videotaped it. A kindhearted saleswoman tried to show me the error of my ways, but I wouldn’t listen. Instead, I ran to Page in his office and sought succor. Page Turner was intoxicated. He said vile things. Things I can hardly bear to repeat.”
But she managed. It was juicy stuff. Even Helen, shivering from a bath of cold, sticky punch, was spellbound.
“Page laughed at me. He said, ‘Yeah, I screwed you, but not as bad as your publisher. Your book might as well be printed on toilet paper, for all it’s worth.’
“He did indeed have a secret recording of our love-making. The scoundrel invited me to watch it. ‘Then maybe you’ll stick to what you know how to do—and it isn’t writing.’”
A charming blush stained Melanie’s cheeks and she tossed her golden hair. Every man in the place stared at her, and Helen was sure they weren’t thinking literary thoughts. That was quite an endorsement from the late stud, Page.
“His mocking laughter followed me out of the room. My soul was seared with words no woman should ever hear. But I held my head high. Then I heard that little man say, ‘There goes another fool.’ My shame was complete. Everyone knew. I was ruined.”
Brad’s four little words brought down the mighty Page Turner, Helen thought. If he’d kept his mouth shut, Melanie might have gone back to her job, and Page would still be alive. But then, if she and Gayle hadn’t tried to open Melanie’s eyes, maybe none of this would have happened. Helen shivered, cold to the heart at the thought of her own role.
After her humiliation in the bookstore, Melanie’s thoughts turned to murder.
“I vowed revenge on the tyrannical Turner. He insulted me and my precious book. I sat in the parking lot for hours, brooding on my ravishment. I must have revenge. The kind saleswoman told me Page had befouled another woman, a Peggy Freeton. I couldn’t believe he could be so cruel twice. She said, ‘If you don’t believe me, ask Helen. She lives in her apartment complex.’
“That night, when she got off work”—Melanie pointed at Helen again—“I followed her home. I saw the distinctive yellow mouse car of the Truly Nolen termite people. I knew what that meant. A termite tenting. It was a simple matter to get Peggy’s apartment number from the mailboxes and steal her termite information notice.
“Then I began my plan. I would avenge all womanhood. It was the best plot I’ve ever done,” Melanie said proudly.
She knew about tenting. Her own building, like most older buildings in South Florida, had been tented. She’d had the lectures about the dangers of Vikane and the necessity of SCBA gear.
“I researched SCBA systems on the Net, and found a used one at greatly reduced prices. I had it overnighted.”
Melanie knew Page liked kinky sex, although she didn’t say it that way. “I had his cell phone number and I called him that Friday to arrange a rendezvous. I told him to bring the video. I promised to add another interesting episode.
“When I picked him up at the bookstore, Page was already sodden with drink. I brought more of his favorite tipple.” Melanie modestly forbore to mention it was Bawls and vodka. “Soon he was staggering drunk. He had his arms around me, but it was not an embrace of love. The Coronado apartments were deserted. Everyone had moved out. I put on my latex gloves. I’m afraid they gave Page Turner some very wrong ideas about my plans for the night. It was a matter of minutes for me to pick the lock, even with Page’s filthy paws all over me. I’m quite accomplished with the picks.
“Page staggered into the apartment and fell on the bed. I tied him up with scarves. Handcuffs would have left marks. I’m afraid he was anticipating something quite different. He fell asleep before I finished. He was snoring. It was as if an angel guided me to the pillows on the bed.”
Helen thought that line sounded familiar. She also thought an angel had nothing to do with it.
“I put the pillow over his face and pressed down. His snores stopped. Soon, so did his struggles. I felt I’d struck a blow for women everywhere.
“I rolled the body off the bed and into the closet with the sliding doors. It was only two feet away. I hid him behind some long bridesmaid dresses. No one could see him.<
br />
“I remembered to take Page’s briefcase. Inside were two videos, both labeled. One was mine. The other was Peggy’s. I dropped the briefcase and the videos in a nearby canal. The first part of my plan was complete.”
The wedding party and the caterers looked like wax figures. No one said a word while Melanie told her bizarre tale. The bride and groom were holding each other, as if protecting themselves from the bridesmaid from hell.
“Once the Coronado was tented, I came back late Saturday night and donned my SCBA gear. Then I took the clamps off one corner of the tent and slipped in. It was hot, dark, and spooky inside. I picked the locks again on Peggy’s apartment and went inside.
“I slid the body back on the bed. That was the hard part, but I wanted everyone to know he was a philanderer. I heaved the head and shoulders up, using his belt as a sling. Then I dragged the legs onto the bed.”
“No way. A little thing like you moved a big guy like that?” a groomsman said.
“Never underestimate the power of a woman scorned,” Melanie said.
Or her upper-body strength when she’s worked out at the gym, Helen thought.
“I wasn’t completely successful. I wanted Page found on his back, but when I tried to turn him over, he kept wrinkling the spread and it didn’t look nice. Also, he smelled yucky. So I left him facedown.
“Then I went to the kitchen for a butcher knife. I wrapped it in a towel to preserve the prints, held it below the handle part, and stabbed him in the back. That felt so good, I wanted to keep doing it, but I was afraid I’d mess up her prints.”
Melanie vacuumed the drag marks off the rug. “Then I deposited the SCBA gear in a canal, along with the scarves. I knew the butcher knife might implicate Peggy, but I was sure she would never be convicted. Good always wins out.”
Helen snorted. The wedding party glared at her.
“After that, I began to heal. I realized Page Turner was wrong. I was a good writer. I had created the perfect locked-room mystery. My big mistake was to kidnap that parrot. I thought it would make her”—Melanie pointed at Helen for the third time—“stop investigating. Instead, everything unraveled. Perhaps I had a subconscious desire to get caught. I’m not a bad person.”
She looked winsome in blue chiffon and white icing. Helen almost believed her, until Melanie tried to justify killing Mr. Davies. “He was so old and lonely, I was doing him a favor. It was a blessing, really. What was he—eighty-three? Who would miss him?”
I do, Helen thought. The store was not the same without his gentle presence.
When Melanie finished her tale, she waited as if for applause. Instead, there was only the snap of handcuffs. Melanie looked surprised. Maybe she expected to talk her way to freedom. Two uniforms took her away. “I’ll be auctioning the movie rights,” she said as they led her out.
Detectives Gilbert and Levinson took statements from the wedding party.
Someone slipped out to Publix and came back with a white sheet cake that said Happy Wedding on it in white icing. Helen thought she could see the word “Birthday” faintly in the frosting. The caterers swept up the broken china. The church janitor cleaned up the squashed cake and spilled punch. Another bowl of punch appeared, without the strawberry ice ring.
The wedding reception was about to start, minus one bridesmaid.
There was another party, this one for Peggy. She was out of jail and fully exonerated. Margery celebrated her home-coming—and Pete’s departure from her place—with a barbecue by the Coronado pool. Peggy looked thin and worn, and Pete’s feathers were still ruffled. But they were together at last. Helen knew both would recover.
“Awwwk!” said Pete, but it was a contented screech. He was once more sitting on Peggy’s shoulder. She was in her chaise longue by the pool. Peggy gave Pete an asparagus spear. He held it in one foot and gnawed on it.
Helen wondered if Pete knew that Peggy had gotten a big bouquet of flowers from one of the cops she met during her stay at the jail. He wasn’t at the party, but they had a date next week.
This was a gala affair, far more cheerful than the beach party. Margery contributed T-bone steaks. Helen brought champagne. Sarah made crab cakes with a luscious sauce. Peggy made a salad, although she had to borrow Margery’s butcher knife. Madame Muffy brought another chocolate cake. Cal the Canadian showed up with two tomatoes, unsliced. They looked a little shriveled, and Helen wondered if they’d attended the first party.
Even Madame Muffy toasted Peggy’s freedom with champagne. She announced she was leaving the Coronado and moving to Miami.
“Please let me read your palms,” Madame Muffy said to the partygoers. “It will be my good-bye present.”
“Er, no thanks,” Peggy said.
“I’m too old to have a future,” Margery said.
“I’m too superstitious,” Cal said.
“I’m game,” Sarah said.
“Me, too,” Helen said.
Sarah held out her hand and Muffy contemplated it. “I see health and success for you,” Muffy said. “You have a Martha Stewart aura.”
“Muffy tells that to all the girls,” Helen said. “She said I had one, too.”
Sarah giggled. Muffy glared at her.
“What about my love life?” Sarah said.
“You are content as you are,” Muffy said. “You do not need a man to complete you.”
“You got that right,” Sarah said. “Your turn, Helen.”
Helen suddenly wished that she wasn’t doing this. When she was growing up in St. Louis, the nuns said it was dangerous to seek knowledge of the future. Lord knows Muffy’s predictions had caused Peggy enough grief.
“Do I see a handsome detective in your future?” Margery said. “That Gil Gilbert seemed awfully interested in you. You gotta love a man who shows up in the nick of time. The bride was about to bean you with that cut-glass bowl.”
“It would have put me out of my misery,” Helen said. “She’d already drowned me with pink punch.”
“I don’t understand why that wedding bash didn’t wind up on TV,” Cal said. “Somebody had to have a video camera. They could have sold the tape to the networks.”
“There were several video cameras,” Helen said. “But the bride and groom’s families promised to sue anyone who gave a tape to TV.”
Helen had been afraid the wild wedding would wind up on the news and her ex, Rob, would find her. But she was lucky. There was no publicity. The police were happy to take credit for solving Page Turner’s murder. Helen escaped the limelight.
“Don’t change the subject, Helen,” Margery said. “What about Detective Gilbert?”
“Gil Gilbert is married and an honorable man. He wouldn’t think of cheating on his wife. And I don’t do married men.”
At least, not when I know they’re married, she thought.
“Besides, my luck with men has not been too good lately. I’m not in the market till I get my head on straight.”
Sarah applauded. Helen presented her palm. Madame Muffy’s grasp was firm and strangely warm. Her brown eyes grew intense. “What do you want to know?” she said.
“Might as well make Margery happy. What’s my romantic future?”
Madame Muffy studied Helen’s palm for a long moment, then said, “I see a man for you. A man worth waiting for. He is free, but he’s let himself be caged for noble reasons. He is loyal and true, brave and colorful. And he’s right here in your own backyard.”
“Awwwk!” the little green parrot said.
“You can’t have him,” Peggy said. “Pete’s my main man.”
Epilogue
Page Turners bookstore closed two weeks after the Going Out of Business Sale sign went up. Most of the stock sold. The remainder was too tattered to return to the publishers.
On the last day, all the staff was gone except for Gayle and Helen. The store was empty and echoey. Helen thought there was nothing sadder than a dead bookstore. She and Gayle were in the stockroom, amid torn author posters, empt
y display racks, and stacks of flattened cardboard boxes.
“That’s about it, except the junk in this corner,” Gayle said. She carried a stack of flattened boxes to the Dumpster out back.
Helen started sweeping the floor. “What happened to the other booksellers?” she asked.
“Albert got a job with the new chain bookstore on Federal Highway. If he stays six months, he’ll get health insurance. You won’t be able to pry Albert out of that place. Brad’s working there, too. In the magazines.”
“Good,” Helen said. “He’ll be with his beloved J.Lo. What about Matt?”
Gayle threw a pile of blank order forms in the trash can. “The guy with the great dreadlocks? Matt was smart. We already knew that, since he had the good sense to walk out of here when his check bounced. He got a scholarship to law school. He wants to be a civil-rights lawyer.”
“And young Denny?”
“Wait till you hear that one. He went to a karaoke night at a club in Pompano a couple of weeks ago and did his Sting imitation. He’s working there now. His eighties oldies act is drawing huge crowds. The kid’s an overnight success. A South Beach club is talking with his new agent about a gig down there.”
“Just think, we saw it free when he sang to a floor mop,” Helen said wistfully.
“If he really gets famous, I’ll go down in history as the moron who made him scrub the counter he danced on.”
Helen laughed. “You were just doing your job. Will you be working at another bookstore?”
“No. Astrid and I are moving to Key West,” Gayle said, flattening and stacking more shipping boxes.
“What will you do there?”
“You don’t have to do anything in Key West,” Gayle said. “You just have to be.”
“What will you be?”
“Happy,” Gayle said, and she looked as happy as anyone could in deep black. “What about you?”
“I start Monday as a telemarketer,” Helen said, leaning on her broom. “I’ll call you at dinnertime one night.”
“And I’ll hang up on you,” Gayle said. She stopped folding boxes and looked at Helen. “Telemarketing is an awful job. Are you really going to do it?”