I looked around. Everyone was staring. Even Michael, up on stage, was watching, and suppressing laughter. Then he bowed very deeply to Josh, who sat up a little straighter and smiled again.
Michael went on with the show. Josh, to my relief, remained silent, and mostly still. Though I could tell, from the way his mouth often moved, and the fact that his hands occasionally twitched in an almost imperceptible echo of Michael’s hands, that he was planning to hold me to the notion of doing a performance of his own at home.
And the rest of the show went just fine. Even though I could repeat large chunks of it by heart, I never tired of hearing Dickens’s words in Michael’s voice. And all of the English holiday traditions Dickens described—and I suspect helped create—were exactly what I had grown up with. When the Ghost of Christmas Past took Scrooge to Fezziwig’s party, with its mince pies and dancing, I felt nostalgic for the family parties of my childhood and eager to see the boys enjoy this year’s celebrations.
When the Ghost of Christmas Present arrived laden with “turkeys, geese, game, brawn, great joints of meat, sucking pigs, long wreaths of sausages, mince-pies, plum-puddings, barrels of oysters, red-hot chestnuts, cherry-cheeked apples, juicy oranges, luscious pears, immense twelfth-cakes, and great bowls of punch” I began looking forward to the upcoming holiday meals and thanking my lucky stars that Michael’s mother was in charge of providing them. And when Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come showed Scrooge the sorrow the Cratchits were suffering from losing Tiny Tim, audible sniffles could be heard throughout the theater, and I looked down the aisle to make sure the boys remembered that thanks to Scrooge’s reformation Tiny Tim would not die. Jamie looked anxious and was holding tightly to Mother’s hand, but Josh was fine—he was practicing the look of grave sorrow with which Michael read Bob Cratchit’s words: “I promised him that I would walk there on a Sunday. My little, little child! My little child!”
The idea of being without one of the boys was bad enough—but at Christmas! I sniffled a little myself, and wanted to cheer when Scrooge woke from his ordeal and exclaimed “It’s Christmas day! I haven’t missed it.”
As everyone in the audience slowly filed out of the theater, exclaiming about the show and exchanging Christmas greetings as they went, I caught Rob’s sleeve.
“Rob,” I said. “I need to borrow one of your employees. Have you got an online Sherlock who can find out anything about anyone?”
“Sure thing.” He pulled out his phone and turned it on, scrolled through his contacts for a few moments, then nodded.
“Boomer’s your guy,” he said. “I’ll e-mail you his info.”
“Great,” I said. “How early can I call him tomorrow?”
“Tomorrow?” Rob sounded amused. “Call him now.”
“It’s past eleven,” I said. “It could be midnight before I find a quiet place to call him.”
“He’s up,” Rob said. “He keeps vampire hours. If you wait till tomorrow, I wouldn’t call him before three or four in the afternoon.”
“And he works for you?”
“Flextime,” Rob said with a shrug.
So while everyone else went backstage to congratulate Michael, I lagged behind, found a quiet corner, and called the number.
“Yeah?” said a voice on the other end.
“Hi, is this Boomer?”
Silence.
“This is Meg Langslow,” I went on.
“Rob’s sister,” Boomer said.
I waited for a few moments, but clearly he thought that was enough of a response.
“Rob told me you could help me find out about someone,” I said. “A guy named Claiborne Spottiswood.”
“Spelled?”
Well, at least Boomer’s terse style was efficient. I spelled the name and reminded him also to look under “Clay” and every possible misspelling of “Spottiswood” he could think of.
“Standard operating procedure,” he said. “I’ll call you when I find something.”
When, not if. I liked the way Boomer thought.
“Thanks,” I said, but he’d already hung up.
I pocketed my phone and headed for the dressing rooms. But along the way I stopped, almost by force of habit, by the rack that usually held copies of the student newspaper. It was empty. Not surprising this late in the evening. Well, I could check their Web site tomorrow to see if they’d run an article on the show house, or for that matter, on the murder.
Wait—the rack wasn’t empty because of the late hour. We were on winter break. The newspaper wouldn’t be putting out another issue until the students came back, in two weeks. There might be a few students still hanging around for the holidays—students from the area, grad students, students on tight budgets who couldn’t afford the fare to go home for the holiday, and students who had something to do in town, like the ones working backstage at Michael’s show. Presumably Jessica was one of the few still here. Maybe she was whiling away the long dark days on the near-deserted campus by pursuing stories from the wider community. But by the time the paper’s next issue went out, the show house would be over, so an article wouldn’t do us any good.
“Blast!” I muttered. I remembered all the time I’d spent talking to Jessica—time I could so easily have spent doing something more immediately useful. And who knew how much of the designers’ time she’d wasted?
Ah, well. At least if she did the article it might get the decorators some publicity. And there was always the chance that once the chief caught up with her he might find something useful in the photos she took.
I ran into Randall in the throng of family and friends crowding Michael’s dressing room.
“Everything go okay at the house after I left?” he asked.
“Yes,” I said. “Ivy was the only one still there when I left to come here. I’m going to drop by on the way home and make sure everything’s locked up.”
“I’ll do it,” he said. “You go home and rest.”
“I’ll think about it,” I said.
Jamie was asleep on Michael’s shoulder by the time we got to the Twinmobile. Josh was busily discussing the costume he needed to have for his Dickens show, and was so wide awake that I was afraid I’d have to start assembling his miniature Victorian dress suit as soon as we got home. But a few seconds after I strapped him into his booster seat, he fell silent and his head lolled to one side in the sort of awkward position that never seems to bother children, though any adult who tried it would probably end up with a semipermanent sore neck.
Michael took off with the boys, and I headed up the street to where I’d parked my car. The streets that had been lined with cars belonging to shoppers and people going to the theater were nearly empty now that the stores were closed and the show over.
I was enjoying the peace and quiet and the crisp night air until I suddenly noticed the sound of footsteps behind me.
Chapter 14
Was I imagining the footsteps? I stopped and bent down as if to adjust my boot fastening. I stole a look behind me. There was no one in the street. And I heard no footsteps nearby.
Yet when I walked on, I heard it again. My footsteps made just a little more noise than they should. And the noise varied ever so slightly, as if someone was walking behind me, taking a step every time I did, and almost—but not quite—disguising the sound of his footsteps.
I walked along at a slow saunter until I came to a corner. Then, instead of crossing the street as I’d originally planned, I ducked around the corner. Once I had a building to keep me out of sight of anyone following me, I sprinted till I came to an alley in the middle of the block. I ducked down the alley and hid behind some trash cans.
I waited there, peering out from behind the trash cans to the mouth of the alley.
It wasn’t my imagination. I could hear footsteps in the street I’d left. Soft footsteps approaching the mouth of the alley.
“Meg? Are you all right?”
I started, and whirled to find Muriel, owner of the diner, standing the
re with a full black plastic garbage bag in one hand. Not surprising, since this was the alley that ran behind the diner.
“You startled me,” I said, a lot more softly than Muriel had spoken. “I thought someone was following me.”
We both fell silent and listened while peering toward the end of the alley, but we didn’t hear anything. At least I didn’t, and after a few moments Muriel shook her head.
“You sure you’re not just feeling spooked?” she asked. “What with finding a body last night and all?”
“Could be.” I stood up and dusted my pants off. “Sorry if I startled you.”
“No problem,” she said. “Hey, just in case someone really was following you, how about if you walk me to my car and then I’ll drive you to yours?”
“It’s a deal,” I said.
She deposited her garbage bag in the Dumpster and locked the back door of the diner behind her.
When we got to the mouth of the alley, I paused to look up and down the street. No one visible. Plenty of places to hide.
But was there a reason someone had left a brick lying on the snow just outside the mouth of the alley?
“From the construction site three blocks over,” Muriel said, seeing me studying the brick.
“But what’s it doing here?” I asked.
She looked at the brick for a few long moments.
“My car’s this way,” she said.
I was glad when we reached her car, and even gladder that she waited until she’d seen me start my car and drive off.
But I hadn’t gone more than a few blocks before I began to suspect that a car was following me. A car with oddly distinctive headlights. Two sets of headlights, one on top of the other, with the bottom set slightly farther apart. And there was something on the inside of each top headlight that made it seem as if the car was looking at me cross-eyed. And frowning.
Maybe I’d been listening to the boys too much. Lately they’d developed very strong automotive likes and dislikes, based mainly on their impressions of the cars’ faces, as they called the headlights and front-end decorations. Some cars looked as if they were smiling, others frowning. Some were sad, some happy. Josh was particularly fond of Corvettes, and Jamie thought most Audis looked mean. Once he’d burst into tears because a “mean car” was following us.
Was a mean car following me now? All I could see was those odd double headlights. Could be just a coincidence—there weren’t that many streets in Caerphilly.
I took a leisurely detour through a residential neighborhood. The distinctive headlights never turned off, and never got any closer, even when I idled for a couple of minutes in front of a house well known for having some of the most over-the-top holiday lights in town.
Before moving on, I pulled out my phone. And then hesitated. Should I call the police?
I called Randall instead.
“What’s up?” he said.
“Are you still at the show house?” I asked.
“For another minute or two. What do you need?”
“Could you stay there a few minutes longer? I think someone’s following me. I’d call the police, but maybe everything that’s happened lately has just got me jumpy. I don’t want to look like a nervous idiot.”
“What can I do?”
“Get in your truck, but don’t leave yet. I’ll drive by the house in a few minutes. If there’s someone following me—”
“I’ll get the license, call 9-1-1, and follow both of you till the police get there.”
I felt better already. I took off again, and the headlights that had been stationary the whole time I’d pretended to enjoy the light show continued to follow me.
I cruised slowly past the show house. It was completely dark, but I spotted Randall sitting in his truck.
I went up a couple of blocks, then went around a block. Just as I was about to make a left turn to go past the show house again, the car behind me suddenly speeded up. It passed me, then turned sharply so it blocked the whole street. The driver’s door popped open and a man jumped out and ran back toward my car.
I clicked the button to make sure all four doors were locked and then put the car in reverse and began slowly backing up as I picked up my cell phone to dial 9-1-1.
The man ran up to my window and banged on it, hard. Startled, I slammed on the brakes.
“Where is she?” he yelled. “I know you know.”
“Meg, help’s on the way,” Debbie Ann, the dispatcher, said. “Randall just called to tell us about the guy who’s following you.”
“He’s not following me anymore,” I said. “He’s banging on my car.”
“I’ll kill that bitch when I find her!” the man was shouting.
I turned my cell phone toward my window and took a picture of the angry red face pressed against it. But while I was still figuring out how to e-mail it to the police, the man suddenly flew backwards away from my window and landed in a snowdrift. Randall now stood just outside my window. I could hear sirens in the distance.
“Don’t move,” Randall shouted to the man. “And keep your hands where I can see them.”
“Randall Shiffley’s here,” I said to Debbie Ann. “He’s … confronting the guy.”
The angry man was trying to struggle up.
Just then a police cruiser pulled up. Vern Shiffley, Randall’s cousin, jumped out just in time to see the man lurch to his feet and aim a punch at Randall. Randall dodged neatly. Vern wasn’t as lucky, but maybe it wasn’t entirely a bad thing that my stalker had just opened himself up to a charge of assaulting a police officer.
Another cruiser pulled up and Aida Butler hopped out. By the time Chief Burke pulled up, she and Vern had the stalker handcuffed in the back of Aida’s patrol car and Vern was holding a handful of snow on his injured eye.
“Are you all right?” the chief asked me.
“I’m fine,” I said.
The chief strode over to Aida’s patrol car and stood looking down at my stalker.
“Mr. Granger,” he said. “What’s the meaning of this?”
Someone known to the chief. I decided that was a good thing.
“She knows where my wife is,” Granger said.
I controlled my impulse to protest that I didn’t even know who his wife was, much less where she was.
“And what if she does?” the chief asked. “You do realize that you’d be violating the protective order if you followed her to find your wife, don’t you?”
Granger shut his mouth as if determined not to say anything else.
“Take him down to the station,” the chief said.
“I didn’t go near the bitch,” Granger protested. “I don’t even know where she is.”
“No, but you just assaulted a law enforcement officer while he was engaged in performing his duties,” the chief said.
He waved to Aida, who got in and started up her patrol car. As she drove off, the chief walked back over to me.
“You willing to press charges against this clown?” he asked.
“Gladly,” I said. “Though I’d really rather wait till tomorrow to do it, if it’s all the same.”
“Tomorrow will be soon enough,” he said. “You want an escort home?”
I shook my head. I had the feeling Mr. Granger, whoever he might be, was the only person after me tonight.
Not that I wasn’t glad when I got home and saw the house still brightly lit. And when Michael came out onto the porch to meet me.
“What took you so long?” he asked. “I was just about to call the police to have them check the ditches.”
“We had a little excitement.” I followed him and told him about Mr. Granger, while he went through the downstairs, performing his nightly ritual of shutting off lights and checking doors and windows.
“Quick thinking,” he said, when I’d finished my tale. “But who is this Granger character, and why would he think you know anything about his wife?”
“No idea,” I said. “I’ll ask the chief tomorrow.
”
Though I had a feeling it would have something to do with the Caerphilly Women’s Shelter. A good thing Granger hadn’t been following me earlier in the day.
“Has the excitement given you an appetite?” Michael asked. “Want to join me in the kitchen?”
He never ate much before a show. He claimed it wasn’t due to nerves but part of a deliberate plan to keep himself sharp for the performance. Whatever the reason, he was always starving afterward and ready to pig out.
“I won’t eat much, but I’ll keep you company,” I said.
“Busy day tomorrow?”
“Two more days till we open,” I said. “So yes. Remind me again why I ever agreed to do this.”
“To protect this,” he said, waving a hand around in a gesture that took in not just the foyer where we were standing but the surrounding rooms. “It was the price we had to pay to keep your mother from insisting on having the show house here. Having all those crazy designers invading our space, redoing rooms we’ve finally got looking the way we like them, letting hordes of strangers tramp through our home—madness!”
“Not to mention the possibility that we might have had a murder in our own master bedroom instead of someone else’s,” I said.
“Exactly.”
Michael continued down the hall to the kitchen. I followed more slowly, looking around as I went, taking in the Christmas decorations in the foyer. I’d expected us to have to survive with minimal holiday decorations this year, since Mother, who normally insisted on decorating for us, would be totally immersed in the show house. But the day before she started work on her room, Mother showed up at seven in the morning with a dozen or so friends and relatives, and they’d transformed the whole house. The usual tall, narrow tree graced the foyer, this year completely decorated in red and gold with a musical theme—gold ornaments shaped like harps, trumpets, fiddles, drums, pianos, and French horns shared branches with chanting angels and singing choirboys. We had about the usual number of poinsettias, though this year most of them were plain red, which I preferred to the white or pink ones. Plain red dusted with a hint of gold glitter, anyway. This year Mother had put up red velvet ribbons crisscrossed on all the foyer walls, with little clips on them to hold Christmas cards. Every afternoon, providing they’d behaved themselves, the boys were allowed to take all the newly arrived Christmas cards and add them to the display. Mother had also festooned every corner of the room with so many tiny battery-powered LED candles in red-and-gold votive holders that the room sparkled like a convention of fireflies.
The Nightingale Before Christmas Page 13