by Cathy Ace
PRAISE FOR THE CAIT MORGAN MYSTERIES
“In the finest tradition of Agatha Christie . . . Ace brings us the closed-room drama, with a dollop of romantic suspense and historical intrigue.” —Library Journal
“Touches of Christie or Marsh but with a bouquet of Kinsey Millhone.” —Globe and Mail
“A sparkling, well-plotted, and quite devious mystery in the cozy tradition.” —Hamilton Spectator
“Perfect comfort reading. You could call it Agatha Christie set in the modern world, with great dollops of lovingly described food and drink.” —CrimeFictionLover.com
THE
Corpse
WITH THE
Sapphire
Eyes
CATHY ACE
This book is dedicated to my sister, Sue.
THE CADWALLADER FAMILY TREE
Hywel ap Idris Cadwaladr (1815–1885)
Married
Eleri,
one son
He built the family fortune on copper, and was inspired by the Norman Keep at Cardiff Castle to build a Norman-style castle on a clifftop in the Gower Peninsula, near Swansea, South Wales.
|
Ieuan ap Hywel Cadwaladr (1855–1935),
anglicized name to Powell Cadwallader
Married
Iris,
one son
He continued the family business, building it from just copper to also include steel, nickel plating, slate, and coal. He was very successful and mixed in the highest society. He built the Gothic-revival wing of the castle, where the “guest rooms” are situated, between 1880 and 1889, then built the final wing from 1889 to 1899 for his new wife, Iris, who loved the Jacobethan style because she was obsessed by Hatfield House. As well as building onto the castle, he added Tudor-style stables.
|
Gryffudd Cadwallader (1890–1976)
Married
Alice (1920–),
two sons, one daughter
| | |
Teilo (1953–2001) Owain (1955–) Mair (1960–)
Married Unmarried, Unmarried,
Mary (1957–1997), no children no children
one son
|
Idris
Married
Eirwen,
one son, one daughter
| |
Hywel Eleri
See the end of the book for some hints and tips for pronouncing Welsh names and words.
Un
GENERALLY SPEAKING, I BELIEVE THAT when life gives you lemons, you should make yourself a large gin and tonic. Or a lemon mousse. Okay, preferably both. There’s always a bright side. But here I was, due to marry Bud Anderson in two days’ time at a clifftop castle in Wales, and the apocalyptic weather system swirling above us didn’t seem to have a silver lining. It had turned my wedding venue into a creepy place to be. All my romantic notions about Gothic-revival architecture had been blown away.
As I shivered in the drafty bridal boudoir of Castell Llwyd, my sister, Siân, tried to comfort me, but my mood was as gloomy as the skies.
“Buck up, sis. The storm will blow itself out by Monday. It didn’t stop you and Bud getting here from Canada, or me from Australia. We’re all here, safe. Though why you chose this place to get married, I’ll never know. It’s like something out of a Vincent Price movie.”
“Why here? Because I allowed myself to believe I could celebrate the start of my new life in a fairytale castle. For once, just once, I wanted to be a giddy, giggly romantic and wallow in luxury. I suppose it serves me right for trying to do something just a bit impractical, for a change.”
“Come on,” said Siân gently, rubbing my back as though I were a sick child. “It’ll be alright. It can’t get any worse. Now, show me your wedding dress, I can’t wait to see it.”
As if on cue, there was a knock at the door. I raced across the glacial room and perked up immediately when I heard Bud’s voice in the hall outside.
“Cait, can I come in?” His tone was urgent. As I pulled open the heavy oak door, smiling expectantly, Bud set my nerves on edge by using his calming voice. “Now, don’t panic, Cait. And don’t get cross. You don’t need to do anything. Mrs. Jones has everything under control. Besides, he’s dead anyway, so there’s no real rush. Don’t panic. Right? This death will not spoil our wedding on Monday. I promise.”
“Death? What death? Who’s dead?”
Siân gasped. “Someone’s dead? Oh, Cait, not this weekend.”
Bud hugged me tight, then drew back, held onto my hands, and sighed as he spoke. “The choirmaster fell down the stairs to the kitchen and broke his neck, Cait. He’s dead. I’m very sorry for the guy, of course, but we won’t let this terrible accident affect our wedding.”
His tone was measured and sounded almost matter-of-fact. Decades in law enforcement will allow you that ability, and I knew that Bud had delivered difficult news to too many people over the years, especially during the latter part of his career when he’d held a command post in homicide in British Columbia. However, a year or so of retirement seemed to have softened him around the edges a little, and his facial expression as he spoke showed concern and real sadness. I dared to hope this was for us.
Bud said quietly, “I’ll tell you about it, once we get off this drafty landing. Let’s all go into your room, Cait.”
I replied, “It’s not much better inside, but you’re right, let’s go in.” My voice had as much spark in it as the dead choirmaster now had. I shut the door behind Bud, who sat in an oversized wingback chair upholstered in the same deep pink brocade that hung in front of the sadly inadequate shutters. Siân perched on a stool next to the dark wood dressing table. I pushed back one of the drapes surrounding the massive four-poster bed and jumped up onto the high mattress, dangling my legs, shoulders hunched.
Bud said, “I booked a male choir to sing at the ceremony on Monday. You enjoyed the concert at Brangwyn Hall in Swansea in October so much, I thought it would be a good idea. You know, a special treat from the groom for the bride.” He adopted his “cute puppy” expression, but he could obviously see he wasn’t winning me over because he added quickly, “Not a whole bunch of guys like we saw on stage, just a chorale, he said. They do it all the time, he said. But he fell, and, well . . . there you are.”
As Bud talked, I could feel my chin pucker. The past twelve weeks had comprised a heavy teaching schedule, clearing out the house that had been my home for a decade, selling it, finding a new one to live in with Bud, buying it, moving in, and planning our wedding in Wales. As a psychologist I knew that I had not coped well with the strain. I’d even lost my stress-reliever of decades past—my cigarettes. I’d given them up when Bud and I had set a date for the wedding.
Suddenly, I felt the wall of exhaustion I’d been pushing back for months smack me in the face, and I burst into tears. These should have been the most romantic days of my life. I’d fully expected that returning to Wales, where I was born and raised, to start my new life as the wife of the man I loved would be an excellent idea.
But my dreams of a fairytale wedding were falling to pieces. So far our trip had been a litany of trials and frustration. A flight delayed by four hours in Vancouver; the panic-inducing temporary disappearance of the suitcase containing my wedding outfit; a motorway awash because of the record-breaking rainfall; no time for a nap when we’d arrived; a wedding venue that had seemed more than acceptable at our October viewing, but which was clearly lacking in adequate heating and insulation against the inclement winter conditions—and now the corpse of a choirmaster. As I let it all flow over me, I miserably accepted a tissue from Siân, who then gave me the whole box. For several moments I blubbered like a child.
Dau
LEARNING OF THE UNEXPECTED DEATH of a stranger is not unusual for me, so I was surprised at how poorly I was taking this. Bud and I had met when he decided his Integrated Homicide Investigation Team could use my expertise as a victim profiler, which is my chosen field of research as a professor of criminology at the University of Vancouver. I suppose it could be said that death was how we met, and it’s a thread running through our lives. Certainly it was what brought us together as a couple—if Bud’s wife, Jan, hadn’t been tragically killed, we’d have remained simply colleagues.
Eventually, my sobbing subsided. I sighed determinedly. “You know what, Bud Anderson? Nature in all its wrathful glory has done its best to stop us from getting to Wales. But here we all are. Storms or no storms, dead body or no dead body, you and I will be married on Monday. I’m very sorry for the choirmaster, and for those who will be more personally impacted by his death than us. But—let’s be practical. Are you sure we don’t need to do anything? I know we’re just paying guests here, but should we really just stay in our rooms and let the folks who live here get on with it?” My tummy rumbled. I looked at my watch. “Oh heck, we were due to have dinner in an hour or so, and I’m starving. I wonder how a fatal accident will affect that plan.” I stopped myself before I said more. “That’s a terrible thing to say. I know I shouldn’t be thinking about food at a time like this. You’re one hundred percent sure that it was an accident?”
“Of course it was an accident.” Bud sounded very sure of himself. Maybe a bit too sure? “I’m glad to see you’ve pulled yourself together enough to be thinking about your stomach.” He smiled, but I noticed Siân shaking her head in disbelief. “Cait, you need to drop this idea of yours that there are hordes of murderers all around the world just waiting for you to show up so they can go ahead and kill someone.”
His grin widened, and I finally returned his smile; my habit of encountering foul play was our little “joke,” though not a very amusing one to an outsider, or the victims in question, of course.
Bud looked serious as he continued, “We managed to be here in Wales for a whole eight days in October without so much as a hint of a body showing up, so let’s just accept that this is a very unfortunate accident and move on as best we can.”
I nodded, though there was something about his tone that made me feel uncertain.
“Besides,” he continued, fiddling with one of the buttons on the arm of his chair, “I cannot imagine that anyone would have a good reason to push a choirmaster down a flight of stairs—unless he was a terrible conductor, of course.” He tried raising an eyebrow in my direction, but merely ended up looking surprised. He’s not a pro at eyebrow manipulation, like me.
“Bless you for trying to cheer me up, Bud Anderson,” I said. “It’s working.”
He cocked his head lovingly and said, “Good, I’m glad. You deserve to be happy, especially this weekend—the only time in your life you’ll be a bride. Besides, I happen to know he lived here, so you’d think anyone who wanted him out of the way would have chosen a time to kill him when there wasn’t a retired homicide detective and a famous criminal psychologist staying here, right?”
I shrugged my agreement. You’ve thought this through, Bud. Why?
“Don’t forget me. I’m here too,” added Siân. “I might not be a super-sleuth like you two seem to be, but I could do my bit in an emergency. Remember, before I had the kids I was a very accomplished theatre nurse. I could do the medical assessment of a body.”
Bud tilted his head toward Siân and winked. “If we happen to find a corpse that needs a physical exam, we’ll call you, Siân. But Mrs. Jones told me she found the body and it was clear he’d fallen. So let’s leave it at that. This is nothing for us to get involved with, Cait. It’s terribly sad, but there’s nothing we can do and no need for us to get involved at all. I dare say the authorities might want to speak to us when they get here, because we were on the premises when the poor guy fell. I cannot imagine it will affect anything important that we’ve arranged but—you know what—?”
“What, oh my dearest fiancé?” I quipped feebly.
“If, for some reason, it looks like all this is going to get in the way of us having our ceremony here on Monday, the way we want, then we three will just find ourselves some hotel rooms in Swansea, and we’ll do it there. At the register office itself, if necessary. It might not be your dream wedding, but we will, at least, be married on time.”
My practical nature kicked in. “Look, Bud, the location of the marriage is specific to the license. They are very particular about that sort of thing. The rules say we must each have been resident in Swansea for seven consecutive days to be able to apply for the license in the first place. That’s why I had to negotiate cover for my lectures so we could come here to visit for a week back in October. The rules also say that we have to be married at the location listed, so in other words here, at Castell Llwyd, within one year of that week of residency, or else get another license.”
Bud looked grim for a moment, then brightened. “That’s that then. It has to be here, and while we’ve technically got until next October to be married, Monday is the last day of the year, and I will marry you this year, Cait Morgan. We will begin the New Year as a married couple. Got it?”
We each left our respective seats and met in the middle of the room. As we hugged, I heard a melodramatic sigh from Siân, then she added, “If we weren’t all in your bridal boudoir, Cait, I’d say ‘get a room,’ but that’s enough of the mush for now, okay?”
I gave her a sisterly pout. “Hey, there’s no such thing as too much mush when a girl is getting married,” I said. “And I do know that, at forty-eight, I am stretching the meaning of the word ‘girl’ to its limit—” Siân nodded vigorously, “but I suppose we can restrain ourselves, if we must.”
We perched on the edge of the bed beside each other. “So, Bud, tell us how you happened to find out about the accident.”
“Well, after we’d all met up and chatted over coffee, I went back to my groom’s room knowing I could manage with just a quick shower and a shave, so I’d look my best for my bride.” Bud’s eyes twinkled wickedly. “Then I rushed downstairs for a secret meeting I was due to have with the choirmaster, whose name was David Davies by the way—”
I interrupted. “It’s pronounced Day-vis, not Day-vees as you said it. The name ‘Davies’ is pronounced Day-vis here in Wales.”
Bud rolled his eyes in mock annoyance. “Okay, David Day-vis didn’t show for our meeting, so I went to look for him. This place is vast, and parts of it are like a rabbit warren. I don’t think they planned how to join the wings to the main body very carefully. So I got a bit lost. It’s weird, my sense of direction is usually excellent, but I got completely turned around.”
I nodded. “You’re not wrong about the construction. I read up on the history of the place before we got here. Castell Llwyd was built by two generations of the Cadwallader family, in three different architectural styles, between 1845 and 1900. It’s why it looks like three entirely different places from both outside and inside.”
“You can give us our lesson on architecture, history, and culture later—much later—” piped up Siân, her now-Australian twang very pronounced, “because I know you well enough to know there’ll be one. But, for now, I want to hear what happened next.”
Bud nodded. “When he didn’t show, I wandered about a bit and I ended up pushing open a swinging door tucked underneath the main staircase, where I quite literally bumped into Mrs. Jones, who was just about to come out through the same door. I told her I was trying to find David Davies, and she told me I wouldn’t find him because he’d just fallen down the kitchen stairs and broken his neck.”
“Did she seem upset by his death?” I asked. Sometimes I can’t help myself.
To be fair to him, Bud gave my question a moment’s thought before he replied, “Cait Morgan, do not go there. Her demeanor is irrelevant. In any case, people react to a su
dden death in many different ways. But that’s not the point—this is not our problem. Got it?”
Bud gave me a warning glance as he continued. “Of course I asked if there was anything I could do, but Mrs. Jones said no, she was quite sure he was dead. Then she shooed me away and said she was off to let the Cadwalladers know, and they’d call the doctor. I suggested she call the ambulance and the cops, saying I really didn’t think that a family doctor would be the right person to contact in the case of an accidental death, but she implied that, as a foreigner, I wouldn’t know the right thing to do. Well, okay, she didn’t imply it, she just straight out said it. And she made it clear that it was a family matter, so I left it at that.”
“Not possessed of the most winning manner, is she?” I observed wryly.
Bud sighed. “You’re right. Acerbic, to say the least. But that’s that, Cait. It’s a blow, my darling, but, like I said, it’s over to the family and the authorities to sort it all out.”
Siân’s tone was sympathetic. “I’m so sorry, you two. It’s a great shame. Who’s Mrs. Jones, by the way?”
I turned my attention to her. “Of course, you only met Idris Cadwallader, when he greeted you. You don’t know anyone else who lives here. Bud and I met Mrs. Jones when we visited in October. She’s the cook. A face like a hatchet and a tongue just as sharp. Wears one of those old-fashioned crossover pinafores. Hair in a net. Like Gramma Morgan used to wear. In fact—you’ll get this, though Bud won’t—she looks just like Ryan Davies, from Ryan and Ronnie, you know, when he used to dress up as that ‘Mam’ character?”
Siân’s mouth made a big O. “You’re kidding?”
I shook my head, and we shared a chuckle.
“I’m guessing this is a Welsh thing?” asked Bud.
Still grinning, I replied, “A TV show we used to watch back in the 1970s. Very funny.”
Bud shook his head. “I knew I was going to feel like an outsider on this trip, where you know the culture, and all that, but I guess I’ll get used to it.” He sounded resigned.