Breaking Ground

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Breaking Ground Page 14

by William Andrews


  “You can use my phone,” Julie said.

  “Good morning, Steven,” the attorney said after Mrs. Detweiller transferred the call to Julie’s phone. The look on his face told Julie something was wrong. “Just now? That’s strange … But I’m not a criminal lawyer. I can recommend one, but do you think that’s necessary? Maybe it’s just routine.”

  Julie felt uncomfortable listening in, but her curiosity trumped that feeling.

  “Okay, I’ll stop by and see what’s happening. I’ll call you from there—you’re at the house, right? Okay. Don’t worry; I’m sure there’s a simple explanation. I’ll talk to you shortly.”

  Henry returned the phone to the cradle and sat silently for a few seconds, apparently collecting his thoughts. Julie asked, “Something wrong?”

  “Not sure. Seems strange to me: Mike went to the Swansons’ this morning and asked Elizabeth to come to the police station to answer some questions. Steven’s upset. As I told him, I don’t do criminal law, although I am the family lawyer, so I think I’d better go over to the station and see what’s happening. I’ll get back to you later about the probate situation,” he said as he left.

  “Probate?” Julie said aloud. “What about Elizabeth?”

  CHAPTER 24

  “Tabby left these for you,” Mrs. Detweiller said after Henry left and Julie was sitting at her desk thinking. The secretary handed over a pile of papers.

  “Thanks, Mrs. Detweiller. Tabby didn’t need to rush; I told her not to.”

  “Oh,” the secretary added as she walked toward the door, “your friend called—Mr. O’Brian. While you were with Mr. LaBelle. I told him you couldn’t be disturbed.”

  Having a secretary for the first time ever had seemed to Julie a wonderful perk when she started the job last year. Since then, she had every reason to be pleased with Mrs. Detweiller’s typing and filing skills; yes, on the whole, Julie had to admit, Mrs. Detweiller was just fine. But why, then, did the secretary drive her to distraction with her implied criticisms, her innuendos, her formality that made “Mrs. Detweiller” and “Dr. Williamson” their customary forms of address? Maybe those reasons are enough, Julie thought angrily as she punched in Rich’s number on her phone.

  What had just happened made Julie even more eager than usual to talk to Rich, so when his message came on she was both disappointed and irked. Instead of relaying the recent news she left a short confirmation that she was returning his call. Which is pretty obvious, she said to herself after hanging up. Then she decided it was just as well he wasn’t available; she knew he was becoming impatient with her involvement in the murder. And maybe he’s right, she thought. Maybe …

  “It’s almost noon, Dr. Williamson,” Mrs. Detweiller said sharply after knocking on the door to Julie’s office. “You have a tour. In case you forgot.”

  Julie walked quickly to Holder House and arrived just as the first several people were coming out of the bus. She really hated to think she was already putting her tour talk on autopilot, but she was grateful that she had enough of a script in her head. Unfortunately, it was the wrong script. The tour was a garden club from Medina, Ohio, a fact Julie would have known had she spent a few moments looking over the booking form before she left her office. It was doubly unfortunate that Julie neither knew nor cared about flowers. But if she didn’t have flowers in common with the group, she did have Ohio. And she made the most of it; but somehow telling the thirty people assembled for their tour about growing up in southern Ohio didn’t seem to make up for not knowing the flowering dates of the shrubs that several asked her about as they walked around Holder House before going in.

  “It’s a different zone, anyway,” one of the women said curtly. “Medina is way far north of the river. Zone five. You must have grown up in Zone six.”

  Having not the faintest idea what the woman meant, Julie smiled and hurried the group inside to the welcome area that displayed artifacts of various Ryland’s history. She was relieved to see Mabel Hanson, a volunteer, in the gift shop. Mabel was also responsible for the society’s gardens. “After I do the general introduction, Mabel, maybe you could take them through our gardens? You know everything about them, and that’s what they really want to hear about.”

  Mabel agreed, and Julie finished off the local-history bit of the tour in record time and turned the group over to the volunteer, relieved but still disappointed in herself for neglecting to prepare. On top of that, as she walked back to her office she continued to have doubts about whether she should pursue her growing interest in Mary Ellen’s murder investigation. Preoccupied with her thoughts, she was extremely surprised to find Steven Swanson pacing in front of the secretary’s empty desk, looking, as seemed usual for him, lost and uncomfortable.

  “I’m sorry if you’ve been waiting long,” Julie said. “Mrs. Detweiller is out to lunch, and I was doing a tour at Holder House. What can I do for you?”

  “These are for you,” he said, pointing at four large cardboard boxes stacked outside the door to her office. “Last night after the funeral seemed like a good time to pack them.” Julie looked puzzled. “Mostly just old papers, letters, and documents,” Steven said. “Mom had gathered them up but hadn’t boxed them yet. I figured she was planning to give them to the historical society.”

  “Oh! Of course. Your mother had already given us some, and I knew there were more. That’s very kind of you, especially under the circumstances.”

  “Circumstances? Which one do you mean—Mom’s funeral, or Elizabeth?”

  Julie knew a plea for help when she heard it. “Do you have a minute to come in, Steven?” She gestured toward her office door, he meekly followed, and she closed the door behind them.

  “I really appreciate your bringing in the papers,” she said.

  “Well, I know that’s what Mom wanted, and last night it was pretty hard to concentrate on anything, so I just boxed them up. I was planning to call you to see when I could bring them in, but then Elizabeth … well, I guess you’ve probably heard.”

  “I hope everything’s okay.”

  “Elizabeth’s back at the house. Mind if I sit down?”

  “Please.”

  “I don’t know what Barlow was thinking. But maybe it was the state cops. They said some kid saw someone who looked like Elizabeth—a blonde woman, anyway—talking to Mom at the construction site. Before …”

  “Last Tuesday?”

  “Right. Before Mom was killed.” He paused. “Anyway, it couldn’t have been Elizabeth, because she was at the house with me. Well, she told them that, and then Barlow asked me to verify it. Which of course I did. So Elizabeth’s back at the house, but they told her to stay in Maine for twenty-four hours because they need to do some more checking. This is all nuts. And Elizabeth’s fit to be tied.”

  “I don’t blame her,” Julie said. “But it sounds to me like everything’s straightened out now.”

  “I hope so. Elizabeth just wants to get back home and back to work. She doesn’t want to set foot in this town—or state—again.” Before Julie could think of a response, Steven stood up. “I shouldn’t keep you. Just wanted to leave off those boxes.”

  “Thanks again, and if there’s anything I can do, just let me know.”

  He extended his hand and shook hers weakly, then walked distractedly out the door before Julie could ask him if he wanted a receipt for tax purposes for the papers. Well, she decided, she could do that later. Julie found it hard to believe Steven was essentially her own age. She thought of him as a boy, a boy reeling now that his mother was killed and his wife seemed so unsympathetic. But that wasn’t her concern now; the boxes were.

  She was opening the first one when Mrs. Detweiller returned from lunch. “I’ll get someone to take them upstairs,” the secretary said after Julie explained them. “They shouldn’t be cluttering things up here.”

  “I’ll just put them in my office for now,” Julie said. “I should look them over quickly anyway.”

  “If that’s wh
at you’d like.”

  Julie was sliding the last of the four boxes into her office when Mike walked into the reception area.

  “Thanks,” she said to the policeman’s offer to help with the box. “This is the last one.” She decided not to tell him about the boxes’ contents. “But I suspect you didn’t come by to move boxes.”

  “Not quite,” he admitted. “Mind if I close the door? It’s been a busy morning.”

  “Really?”

  “Frankly, I’m pissed, if you’ll excuse my French. Those stupid staties!” he answered. “But forget I just said that. Look, if you have a few minutes I need to ask a couple of questions.”

  “Shoot.”

  “Okay, I know we went through this last week, and everything checked out, but I have to ask you again about the morning Mrs. Swanson was killed, between nine-thirty and ten-thirty.”

  “I was at the Inn, checking on arrangements for the lunch. You confirmed it.”

  “Right. But let me just ask again: When you were over at the construction site putting those shovels out, did you happen to notice a woman around—not Mrs. Swanson, a younger woman, blonde?”

  “So your interest in my hair color wasn’t exactly personal?” Julie asked with a sly smile.

  Mike blushed. “Sorry about that. I got it straight now, but I had to check.”

  “Why the interest in a blonde?”

  “Let’s just say someone thought there was a young blonde woman at the construction site that morning, maybe around nine forty-five or ten, and maybe arguing with Mrs. Swanson.”

  “And you thought it was me?”

  “Come on, Julie, you know I have to check things. The State Police detective interviewed the kid who said he saw them. I know the kid, and he’s totally unreliable—a troublemaker, most likely looking for his fifteen minutes of fame—but the detective wanted to pursue it. Of course he has to follow every lead. Anyway, yesterday I just had to be sure the kid hadn’t seen you there when you were arranging the shovels. I didn’t think you were blonde, but …”

  “I understand. No, I’m not now and never have been blonde. And, to answer your question, I didn’t see anyone at the construction site—no one at all, let alone a blonde woman, let alone Elizabeth Myerson.”

  “What does that mean?”

  She explained that Henry had been in her office when Steven called, and then about Steven’s own recent visit and his report about his wife.

  “Small town,” the policeman said. “So you know we talked to her, and Steven confirmed she was at the Swanson house all morning. But he’s her husband, so we have to take what he says with a grain of salt.”

  “And that’s why you’re questioning me?”

  “Just confirming. Absolutely no one around? Not even, say, a kid on a bike, maybe back in the woods?”

  “Was the kid in the woods when he saw a blonde?”

  “Just take a minute to think about it again. When you were there Tuesday morning, was there any chance that a woman, blonde or not, was anywhere around? Or anyone in the woods? Could you have heard a noise from there?”

  Julie closed her eyes. The power of suggestion was strong, she knew, so she tried not to imagine the scene the police had been told about and instead blanked her mind and concentrated on that morning. But, except for the sharp image of the yellow backhoe, the blank remained.

  “Sorry. I’m pretty sure I didn’t see anyone, or hear anyone in the woods, but I honestly can’t be definitive.”

  “Sure,” he said. “You can’t rule it out, but you can’t remember. That a fair statement?”

  “Yes.”

  “Okay, that’ll do as far as I’m concerned. I’ll tell the detective. Maybe he’ll move on to something else.”

  “Like the shovel? Any luck on that?”

  “Nothing. It’s possible it’ll never turn up. Anyway, thanks for your statement. And I’m sorry about—”

  “About suspecting me? I don’t take it personally, Mike. I know you have to check everything. As a matter of fact, I have some ideas …”

  “Hold it! You said you were going to stay out of this,” he said, but then sighed, and added, “If you have any solid information, of course I need to hear it.”

  “I still think it’s about the land, but I don’t have any ‘solid information.’ Just too many loose ends.”

  “The land?”

  “Birch Brook—the condo development. Mary Ellen could have backed out up till the fifth of July.”

  “LaBelle told me that.”

  “So isn’t that a good motive?”

  “For?”

  “Frank Nilsson and Luke Dyer had a lot at stake. And the land itself is pretty weird—I mean, as to who owns it.”

  “I wouldn’t go around naming people as suspects if I were you. If Nilsson or Dyer found out, they could—”

  “Of course not!” Julie interrupted. “I’m just confiding my suspicions in you.”

  “I hope so. So what do you know about the land?”

  “A little.” She proceeded to describe the shifting ownership of Birch Brook as she had sketched it out, with Henry’s help. “And Luke’s been looking at the Swanson papers here in the historical society,” she concluded. “He doesn’t strike me as your basic amateur historian. I think he knows there’s something funny about the ownership.”

  “Julie, I think you’ve learned that land sales in New England are a form of blood sport, but that’s not exactly news to folks who grew up here. And you’ve discovered that maybe Nilsson and Dyer had something to gain—or something to not lose—if Mrs. Swanson was out of the way before the fifth of July. But motive isn’t the only thing.”

  “So maybe you need to find out what Frank and Luke were doing last Tuesday morning.”

  “Maybe. But you can’t rule out Steven and Elizabeth Swanson.”

  “Myerson, Elizabeth Myerson,” she corrected him. “And isn’t it strange that he’s her alibi for Tuesday morning? That means she’s his. Or they could both …”

  “I thought you were interested in Birch Brook, Julie.”

  “Well, I am. I mean, I think the land’s involved in this somehow, which makes Frank and Luke suspicious. At least to me. But you’ve got to admit that Steven and Elizabeth aren’t exactly in the clear. Not that I think Steven could possibly have done it. But you have to look at everything.”

  “Gee, Julie, I’ll try to remember that. Meantime, maybe you could go back to playing director of the Ryland Historical Society and I’ll keep playing at being a cop. Which I’m off to do right now. See you later, I’m sure.”

  “And then there’s the shovel, Mike. We’ve got to find that.”

  “Drop the we …”

  “But don’t forget about Frank and Luke. If you could just find out where they were last Tuesday …”

  “See you.”

  CHAPTER 25

  “Mr. Townsend for you,” Mrs. Detweiller said through the door left open when Mike went out.

  Damn that man! Julie said to herself when she finished the phone conversation with the chairman of the trustees. Of course it made sense to have another board meeting. There were two big items of business: to review whatever the building committee recommended about proceeding on the project, and to consider renaming the new center for both Dan and Mary Ellen. Obviously Howard needed to call a meeting. But why did he have to do it for four o’clock on a Friday afternoon? Julie hoped to be on the road to Orono then. Howard hadn’t even asked if it was convenient for her.

  She’d have to let Rich know. If the meeting didn’t run too long, she could still be in Orono Friday night. But how long would the meeting last? Even under the best of circumstances, the twisty highway between Ryland and Bangor was slow going, but on a late Friday afternoon in the middle of summer, it would be really slow because of all the recreational vehicles and sightseeing tourists. To take her mind off her anger at Howard and off the frustrating trip she was already imagining, Julie decided to move the four boxes of new Swanson p
apers to the archives. A little physical exertion would feel good, she decided.

  “I think she’s free, Mr. Dyer,” she heard Mrs. Detweiller say.

  Julie quickly moved to stand in front of the boxes to keep Luke from seeing them—not that he’d know what they were, but better not to take a chance.

  “Hello, Luke,” she said as cheerfully as she could when he came through the door. Would he wonder why she was shielding the boxes?

  “I just brought the bill by,” he said. “For the excavation. Left it with your secretary, but since you’re here I wonder if we could talk for a moment.” Julie closed the door and beckoned him toward a chair—one facing in the other direction from the four boxes. “I’ve been using your library,” he said after he sat. “But you know that. Tabby Preston told me just now that you were looking at the letters I read. I’d like to know why.”

  It was a perfectly reasonable question, Julie realized, but Luke’s tone heightened it. She couldn’t really describe the tone as menacing, but it was far from friendly.

  “Well, I’m the director here, and I try to know what we have in our collections and how they can be useful to the community and to researchers, and so of course I’m interested in the papers that you—”

  “Well, let’s just cut the crap. You knew I was looking at the Swanson letters, and you went in there and read the ones I looked at. When I realized someone else had been in the box, I asked Tabby about it. And now I’m just asking you a simple question: What’s your interest in those letters?”

  “The Swanson family is very important to the historical society, especially now, and I just wanted to see the nature of the papers, see if there was material we could use when we open the new center.” Julie congratulated herself silently on such a clever answer. Luke, unfortunately, didn’t share her view.

  “So what took you so long? How come you didn’t look at them till you knew I was?”

 

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