Prosecco Pink

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Prosecco Pink Page 21

by Traci Angrighetti


  Veronica cleared her throat. "Liam was just saying that the police have given him permission to bury Ivanna."

  I was so surprised to find him at the office that I'd forgotten my manners. "I'm sorry for your loss. You must have been so proud of your daughter. She was obviously a smart, successful, and beautiful woman."

  He smiled. "I like to think that she got her mother's good looks and my head for business," he said. Then he looked down at his hands. "Unfortunately, it wasn't enough for her."

  I cocked my head. "What do you mean?"

  "Ivanna lost her mother, Rosa, when she was sixteen. And she was never the same after that."

  "That's terrible," Veronica said. "How did Rosa die?"

  "Heart failure," he replied in a quiet tone. "But Ivanna was convinced that she'd died of a broken heart, and she blamed me."

  Veronica and I remained silent.

  He sighed. "You see, because of the nature of my work I was away for long periods. And I worked very closely with another doctor. A woman," he stressed as his neck flushed from embarrassment. "Rosa found out about us. She didn't want a divorce because of her Catholic faith, but she returned to her hometown in Italy and took Ivanna with her. She died a short time later."

  His story left a bad taste in my mouth. And I couldn't help but wonder whether this woman had seduced him like Pauline had Bradley.

  Veronica glanced at me, no doubt sensing my discomfort. "Where was Rosa from?"

  "Treviso, in the Veneto region."

  The same region my mother is from, I thought. "How did Ivanna change after Rosa died?"

  "I was getting to that." He grimaced. "Her opinion of me and all men, I'm afraid, changed."

  Understandable, I almost said under my breath.

  "From that point on, men were just a means to an end for Ivanna. And I played along by trying to buy back her affection. So when she approached me about starting her cosmetics company, I was all too happy to fund it. She'd always been obsessed with makeup." He looked down and laughed. "When she was a little girl, she used to crush up berries and flowers from our yard and make her own. Rosa and I were afraid she was going to poison herself."

  A heavy silence fell over the room.

  "Do you think she did?" Veronica ventured. "Poison herself, I mean?"

  "Impossible," he said with a wave of his hand. "I don't know how the belladonna got into her system, but I can assure you she wasn't responsible. Ivanna loved life, and she knew all about the potential hazards of cosmetics. She wouldn't have poisoned herself on purpose or by accident."

  "But there was oleander in the lip gloss she was holding," I said. "So, either she was making poison lip gloss or someone gave it to her."

  "I don't know anything about that lip gloss," he said. "But I know it wasn't the reason she was at Oleander Place."

  I glanced at Veronica. "Go on."

  He closed his eyes and squeezed the bridge of his nose. "As I said, she changed after her mother's death, but it wasn't just in her attitude about men." His eyes opened. "She also became more focused, driven. But not for the right reasons. She was determined to right past wrongs, particularly those that pertained to her mother. And as far as she was concerned, Oleander Place had wronged Rosa."

  I leaned forward in my seat. "What did her mother have to do with the plantation?"

  "Well, Rosa must have sensed her health was failing, because right before she died she started telling Ivanna her family history. And, she told her that she was a descendent of Danielle Benazet."

  Veronica wrinkled her brow. "I'm sorry, but I don't recognize the name."

  "Right, forgive me," he said, holding up his hand. "Benazet was Danielle's married name. Her maiden name was Lacour, and she was Evangeline Lacour's paternal aunt."

  The silence was so thick that you could have heard a pink diamond drop.

  "So, she was looking for the diamond," I said.

  He nodded. "I'm sure of it. She would've wanted to find the diamond to honor her mother's memory. Apparently, Rosa had written to Mrs. Dupré some years before, asserting a claim to the diamond if it were ever found."

  I flashed back to my conversation with Kristy Patterson about Delta's protectiveness of her plantation. "How did Delta respond?"

  "She didn't. When I spoke to her about it yesterday, she said she'd never received the letter."

  A convenient excuse, I thought. "Then, Delta didn't know that Ivanna was related to Evangeline?"

  "She said she had no idea."

  I had my doubts about that. Delta was too shrewd not to suspect a link between Evangeline and a modern-day look-alike who was poking around her plantation.

  Liam rubbed his forehead and rose to stand. "Please don't think I'm being rude, but it was a long, difficult trip, and I still have to make arrangements for Ivanna's burial."

  "Of course," Veronica said as she escorted him to the door.

  He handed her his card. "If you have more questions, please call. I'm so grateful for your efforts on behalf of my daughter."

  "Thank you," Veronica said, putting a hand on his arm. "We'll do everything in our power to find the killer." She closed the door behind him and turned to me. "Can you believe Ivanna is a Lacour?"

  "No, and yet it was staring us right in the face." I crossed my arms and kicked my feet up on the coffee table. "How crazy is it that she looked just like Evangeline after who knows how many generations?"

  "It's pretty bizarre," Veronica said, sitting on the arm of the couch. "But at least one mystery is solved."

  "Yeah, but so many remain."

  She patted my shoulder and stood up. "You'll figure it all out. I know it."

  "I hope so," I muttered as she headed back to her office. But I wasn't too confident. Because I had the funny feeling that there was something about Liam's conversation that I was missing—some detail, some connection. I just couldn't put my finger on what that was.

  * * *

  I added the last of Liam's information to the Jones case file and leaned back in my desk chair. I kept thinking about his recollection of a young Ivanna mixing makeup with plants from their yard. If she'd used flowers to produce makeup before, then there was every reason to believe she'd done it again with flowers from Oleander Place.

  I quickly formulated a plan and then located Adam Geyer in my phone contact list. I pressed his name and waited.

  "Yes," he answered.

  He sounded annoyed. And based on our previous phone history, I was surprised he bothered to answer at all. "I met with Ivanna's father today."

  "Oh?" His voice oozed sarcasm. "And how is the good doctor?"

  I could tell he'd been drinking for a while, and it was only ten thirty in the morning. "As well as can be expected under the circumstances. He did lose his only child."

  "I'm well aware of that, thank you," he growled.

  I sighed. "Listen, I didn't call to upset you. I have a cosmetics question related to something Dr. Jones said."

  "All right," he said warily.

  "Would crushed pink oleander flowers turn a clear lip gloss solution pink?"

  He paused. "It would turn the color of the flowers, yes."

  Time to go in for the kill, I thought. "So, when you made the lip gloss Ivanna was holding, you used crushed flowers from Oleander Place."

  "I don't know what you're talking about," he spat.

  "Actually, you do," I insisted. "And it would behoove you to tell me where you got those flowers. Because if I tell the police that you got them from Oleander Place, then that puts you at the plantation, and hence, at the scene of the crime."

  It was silent on the line except for the sound of his jagged breathing.

  "It's time to tell the truth, Adam," I pressed. "It will help you in the long run, trust me."

  "Ivanna gave me powdered oleander," he said.

  I bowed my head into my hand.

  "But I didn't think anything of it. The plan was to use the flowers to produce a prototype. We would have never sold a toxic l
ip gloss to the public. You have to believe me."

  "I do," I said, moved by the desperation in his voice. "I just wish you would've told me this sooner."

  "I didn't kill her, Franki." He choked back a sob. "I loved Ivanna, and I'm going to find out who did this to her."

  I started to reply, but the line went dead.

  I stared at the phone as I tried to sort through my muddled thoughts. This was a side of Adam I hadn't seen before. There was so much conviction in his voice. I wanted to believe him, but he'd lied on so many occasions. I couldn't be sure he was telling the truth now.

  "Did I hear you talking to Adam?" Veronica asked, appearing in the doorway. She was balancing her compact mirror and blush in one hand as she stroked her blush brush across her cheek with the other.

  "He just admitted that he and Ivanna made the lip gloss with flowers from Oleander Place."

  Veronica's head jerked up from her compact. "He did?" she asked as her blush fell to the floor. She knelt down. "Oh, darn it."

  I looked at the pile of pink powder on my floor and said, "I'll go get the vacuum." I headed for the door and stopped. "Oh my God. Miles!"

  "What about him?" she asked, rising to her feet.

  "That day we went to question him," I gushed. "He was vacuuming up pink powder in the sugar mill!"

  "So?"

  "He told me it was rat poison, but it wasn't. Adam said Ivanna gave him powdered oleander. Don't you see? Miles was in on it! He dried the flowers and ground them into a powder for Ivanna."

  Veronica put her hand to her mouth. "Oh, Franki. Are you sure?"

  "Yes! It explains why he was so nervous that day, and why he was so upset when I asked whether any of the oleander bushes had been tampered with." I grabbed my phone from my desk and dialed the plantation. "Plus, it fits with Liam's remark that Ivanna used men for her own purposes."

  She took a seat in front of my desk. "Are you calling him now?"

  I shook my head. "Delta."

  The phone went to voice mail, but I hung up and tried again. I certainly couldn't leave this kind of information in a message.

  "Oleander Place," Delta answered.

  "Delta, this is Franki," I replied. "I just figured out that Miles knew Ivanna."

  "We just figured that out too," she snapped.

  Something was wrong—I could feel it. I collapsed into my desk chair. "You knew he was helping her make that lip gloss?"

  "All I know is that this morning Troy found Miles inside one of the sugar cane kettles." She paused. "He's been murdered."

  CHAPTER TWENTY

  Hoping to stay below Delta's radar, I drove past the plantation and parked at the swamp. The second I got out of the car, the sight and smell of the fetid water brought me back to that fateful day with Bradley and Pauline. If I'd known then what I know now, I thought, kicking my car door closed, I might've let those gators gobble them up.

  I still couldn't believe Bradley had left me for Pauline. It seemed so out of character for him, and yet I'd seen them together with my own two eyes. He was a lying cheat like all the other men I'd dated, a true truffatore.

  I shook my head in an attempt to force him from my thoughts. Now wasn't the time to lament another lousy love. I had to keep my mind on the Jones case. My life literally depended on it.

  As I made my way along the shore to Oleander Place, I almost wished a gator would pull a Jaws and swallow me whole. At least then I could be sure that I wouldn't run into Delta. Because, at this point, I figured she was either going to fire me or kill me. And the latter option seemed particularly likely given that the suspects in the Jones case were dropping like characters in an Agatha Christie novel—specifically, And Then There Were None.

  All jokes aside, my gut told me that Delta was more than capable of murder. But I didn't think she was the killer. Oleander Place wasn't just her livelihood, it was her legacy, and she'd demonstrated in more ways than one that she was fiercely proud and protective of it. Even if her business was in trouble, I couldn't imagine her sullying the name of her beloved plantation—not on purpose, anyway. Besides, if she'd known who Ivanna was and what she was after, she would've slapped a restraining order on her like she'd done to Kristy Patterson and her father. Problem solved.

  No, Delta didn't fit the profile, but Adam was a different story. He had a motive to kill. According to Ruth, he was an alcoholic on the edge who'd worshipped Ivanna, and she'd repaid his devotion by threatening to ruin him. Then she turned to a plantation groundskeeper for help making her lip gloss. So, Adam could have viewed Miles as a threat to his job or even his relationship with Ivanna and killed them both for their betrayal.

  Another possible scenario was that Adam murdered Miles, believing him to be responsible for Ivanna's death. After all, he had vowed to find the person responsible for her murder.

  But Scarlett? As hard as I tried, I couldn't come up with a reason for Adam or Miles to kill her. Yet I knew her horrific hanging had everything to do with whatever it was she'd warned me I was "messing with."

  As I crept along behind the hedge separating the border of the property from the swamp, I wondered for the thousandth time just what the hell I'd gotten myself into. And I wished Veronica were here with me, helping me get to the bottom of these awful crimes. When this was all over, I intended to talk to her about the way we work our cases—that is, if the killer didn't do me in first.

  Halfway down the hedge, I arrived at the back of the slave quarters. I assumed that the police were keeping Troy there or at the big mill where he'd found Miles' body. I dashed to the command post window and peered inside. Troy was sitting at the table with a blanket around his shoulders. His face looked ashen, like a man who'd just seen a ghost. Or a corpse.

  An officer passed by the window, so I ducked down. I heard him say something to Troy, and then he exited the building.

  I waited until I saw the officer enter the house and then slipped inside the command post. "Troy! Are you okay?"

  He blinked a few times as though struggling to recognize me. "I guess."

  I glanced back toward the door. "Listen, where's Delta?"

  "She's with Officer Quincy in her office." His voice was monotone, like he'd been sedated.

  Hopefully they stay there, I thought. I had neither the time nor the inclination to get thrown in jail by Officer Quincy. "Good. I was hoping to talk to you alone. I'm trying to make sense of what happened to Miles."

  Troy met my gaze, and his blue eyes looked as though their usual sparkle had been extinguished. "I got a call from Delta Sunday morning. She was in a panic because Miles hadn't shown up for the photo shoot, so she asked me to sub for him."

  "I take it he never came."

  He shook his head. "But during the shoot, I found his car parked behind the big mill. Delta was worried that he might be injured somewhere on the grounds, so we started searching."

  "Whose idea was it to look in the kettles?" I asked. It was well known in police circles that the person who found the body was often the prime suspect.

  "No one's." His speech had dropped to almost a whisper. "After we'd looked everywhere we could think of, we were on the back porch trying to figure out what to do next when we saw Delta's dogs circling the grande kettle."

  Like little vultures moving in for the kill, I thought.

  "So I offered to go take a look," Troy continued. "He was hit over the head with a cane syrup ladle, maybe more than once." He swallowed and averted his eyes. "The ladle was in the kettle with him, covered in blood."

  I grimaced and put my hand on his forearm. "Who do you think is behind these murders?"

  He stared at his coffee. His face was as blank as the plain white mug he held between his trembling hands. "When I was little, my ya-ya told me that the three Fates determined life and death. Clotho spun the thread of life on her spindle, Lachesis measured its length, and Atropos cut it short with her horrible shears."

  Now was clearly not the time to press Troy for details. He was in shock. "Y
ou've been through a traumatic event. Have you thought about seeing a doctor?"

  "I can't." He placed his mug on the table, taking care to center it on the coaster. "I have to help Delta tomorrow."

  I recoiled at his comment. "You're going to keep working here after everything that's happened?"

  "I couldn't even if I wanted to. Delta's closing Oleander Place tomorrow."

  Now that was news. "Permanently?"

  "Until they catch the killer," he replied.

  That was a good plan. If she'd shut down the plantation earlier, Scarlett and Miles might still be alive. "Are you planning to come back to work when it reopens?"

  He looked away. "It's a great job for a grad student."

  It was hard for me to believe that anyone would describe working for Delta as great, but I kept my feelings to myself. "I guess you have to do what you think is best," I said, rising to my feet. "Anyway, I need to get going before Officer Quincy catches me here. Take care, Troy. And be careful."

  I dashed from the room.

  "Franki?" he called.

  I ran back to the doorway, and I was struck by the intensity in his eyes.

  "Stay away from Oleander Place," he said in his strange, flat tone. "It's not safe."

  The understatement of the century, I thought as I darted for cover in the hedge.

  * * *

  I walked across the street to Thibodeaux's, shielding my eyes from the cemetery. I'd had enough death for one day. I pushed open the door and saw Veronica and Glenda sitting at the bar and watching the evening news on a flat screen TV.

  "Hey." I tossed my bag on the barstool next to Veronica and began digging for my wallet. Despite a persistent hangover, I was ready for happy hour.

  "I ordered you an absinthe," Veronica said.

  My head shot up.

  She pressed her fingers to her lips, repressing a smile. "Glenda told me about your escapades at Shore Leave, so I thought I'd order you a cocktail worthy of a corsair."

  I sealed my lips tight. I wasn't going to say a word in case there was something about last night I didn't know and didn't want everyone at the tavern to know either.

 

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