She was making herself angry, she thought as she approached the front door. There was no sense in going over how Warren might have wronged his wife. That was what Lily was tearing herself apart over and for what? It wouldn’t bring back Tamara. And Warren had certainly paid a heavy price for his wrongs. Someone had evened the score.
Someone had evened the score. The sentence tolled in Natalie’s head. Was someone trying to even the score for Eugene Farley by killing the children of people who’d been involved in his downfall? Or had Warren died because someone thought he had killed Tamara? Who would feel passionately enough to exact revenge for Tam’s murder? Oliver or Lily?
“Natalie, thank God you’re here!” Lily stood in the doorway, her blond hair escaping from the bow, her eyes anxious. “I cannot get through this without you.”
Natalie swallowed. She couldn’t manage a smile when ten seconds earlier she’d been wondering if her best friend murdered Warren. Slashed his throat. And Charlotte’s.
“Nat, what’s wrong?” Lily reached out with her strong, long-fingered hand. “You look . . . frozen.”
“It’s just a weird day.” What a creative answer, Natalie thought. “I need a drink.”
“You’ve come to the right place. I feel like I’m at Truman Capote’s famous Black-and-White Ball. Viveca has outdone herself.”
When Natalie walked in the house, she had to agree with Lily. None of the somberness of other funeral receptions she’d attended prevailed here. Instead, waiters circled with trays of canapes. Vivid flower arrangements flourished. Candles burned and music played loudly in the background. An open bar operated in the dining room. Natalie felt almost dizzy.
“Lily, isn’t that the waltz from Die Fledermaus?”
“Yes. Any minute I expect someone to start dancing. Either that or the next musical selection will be ‘Bolero.’ I don’t know what Dad is thinking. Or even if “he’s thinking. He has to know Tam would hate this. And my mother would be turning in her grave!”
Natalie shook her head. “You’re right, I don’t understand. Viveca usually has good taste.”
Lily emitted a modified snort. “From what I’ve heard she threw a similar shebang for her husband. Former lover Eugene Farley didn’t rate the same treatment.”
Natalie stiffened at the mention of Farley. She didn’t want to talk about him, but Lily had just given her a perfect opening. She girded herself emotionally. “Did you know Eugene?”
“Yes, a little.”
“Tell me about him.”
Lily gave her a bemused smile. “Are you trying to take my mind off all this?” Natalie smiled back enigmatically. “Well, whatever. Let’s see. He was extremely good-looking. Pretty-boy good-looking. He came into the store once right after he moved to town. He said he wanted something for his mother. He bought a cameo pendant. He was friendly and somehow seemed younger than his age. He also talked a lot about his mother. Anyway, the second time he came in he wanted more jewelry. I asked if it was for his mother and he said no, someone younger. He actually blushed when he said it. I’d heard he was seeing Dee Fisher. I couldn’t imagine I’d have anything she’d want. He chose an antique garnet brooch set in eighteen-carat gold. It was pretty expensive. I remember he put it on a credit card. I know now it was for Viveca.”
“Did you like him?”
“He was okay. Too shy and formal for my taste. Of course, you know me—I always go for the dangerous types that break your heart.” She paused. “I hope Viveca didn’t break your father’s.”
“I think she barely fazed him, which must have bruised her ego. Maybe she turned to Eugene because she wasn’t having the desired effect on Dad. He’s wary of women after Kira. I’m surprised he dated her at all.”
Lily shrugged. “Maybe he was just amusing himself or trying to show the town he hadn’t turned into some weird old misogynist. By the way, how are he and his new lady friend getting along?”
“I haven’t quite gotten a bead on that relationship yet. Dad is being even more cagey than usual. Ruth certainly seems nice.”
“You like her.”
“Yes. And I don’t want Dad to be alone, but he’s spent so long dodging serious relationships I don’t have a lot of hope.”
Lily smiled mischievously. “Well, if things don’t work out for them, I want Ruth for Dad.”
Natalie glanced up. Viveca stood right behind Lily. She raised a carefully penciled eyebrow and swept away, her head high. Had she been hurt by what she’d overheard or merely insulted? “Lily, Viveca heard that,” Natalie murmured.
“Who cares? She knows I don’t like her.”
The front door opened again. Nick Meredith stepped in. “What do you know?” Lily said. “The heat has arrived.”
Natalie excused herself and walked toward Nick. His cheeks were flushed, his gaze restless. “Why did you leave the church so fast?” she asked bluntly.
“Nothing gets by you, does it?”
“I usually notice cars speeding away from funerals. What was it?”
Nick lowered his voice. “I saw Lindstrom.”
“At the funeral?” she blurted.
“Don’t announce it to the whole room,” Nick said. “Yes, at the funeral. I saw him leaving.”
“Killers come to funerals.”
“Now don’t get carried away with all those murder mystery clichés. Sometimes they come to the funeral.”
“What other reason could he have?” Natalie asked. “He didn’t know Tamara. What excuse did he give you?” She paused. “You did catch him, didn’t you?”
“Yes. He said he wants to write a book about the killings. You know—true crime.”
“And you believe him?”
“He claimed to be a reporter with the Cincinnati Star. I checked it out. He was a reporter for them until about three weeks ago. The editor said he’d left, but even though the guy wouldn’t discuss details, I got the impression Lindstrom was fired.”
“So he lied. What about the earring?”
“He says he found it on the road. Thought it might be Tamara’s, was going to bring it to me, but when he got home he didn’t have it. And he didn’t mean to scare you out on that road. Says he was just curious. Also got a little carried away with himself because you’re pretty and he didn’t want to end the conversation.”
“My looks had nothing to do with the way he was acting, Nick.”
“Probably not. Not to underestimate your considerable looks.”
“I wasn’t fishing for a compliment.”
“I know. If you had been, I wouldn’t have given you one.”
Natalie grinned. “Goodness, you’re a hard case.”
“Tough as nails, lady.”
“What about Mrs. Bishop saying she saw him talking to Charlotte?”
“Mrs. Bishop didn’t say she saw Lindstrom. She just gave a vague description of someone resembling him. Of course, he says he didn’t know Charlotte and didn’t have any interest in her at that time.”
“Why no interest?”
“She wasn’t a corpse, yet. Anyway, after all this bullshit he had the damned nerve to ask if he could be part of the investigation. Promised me an acknowledgment in his book.”
“And your heart of steel melted.”
“I was putty in his hands.”
“The truth, please.”
“I told him if he didn’t butt out, I’d have him arrested.”
“Do you think you scared him off?”
“Hell, no. He knows I can’t stop him from asking people questions, and so far that’s all he’s done.”
“So far?”
“I’ve met a hundred guys like him, Natalie. He’s a sleaze, but he’s cool enough under pressure to tell lies without blinking an eye. I don’t trust him.”
“You don’t trust who?”
Natalie and Nick looked up at Alison. They were both so startled by her smiling face they stared. “Cat got your tongues?” she asked archly. “Do you like cats? I do.”
“I
have a cat,” Nick said, then looked surprised at the sound of his perky voice. He sounded as if he were speaking to a child. “His name is Ripley.”
Alison frowned. “Why Ripley?”
“She wasn’t supposed to, but my daughter saw the movie Aliens. It scared the daylights out of her, but she loved the main character Ripley.”
Alison looked at him as if he’d lost his mind. “Sigourney Weaver played Ripley. Ripley is a woman. Wow, didn’t you get that?” Nick colored as Alison’s voice rose. “Your male cat is named after a woman!”
“My daughter liked the name,” he muttered. “I don’t believe she really thinks about sex.”
Alison leaned toward him confidentially. “All girls think about sex.”
“My daughter is eleven,” Nick returned stiffly.
“Far beyond the age of innocence,” Alison sneered. She winked at Natalie. “Am I right?”
Natalie was flummoxed. “I guess it depends on the girl.”
“Well, with a mother like mine . . .” Alison rolled her eyes. “Hey, what’s the difference between a whore and a courtesan?”
“A . . . what?” Nick blundered.
“C-O-U-R-T-E-S-A-N,” Alison spelled loudly. “So? Anyone know?”
“I . . . well . . .” Natalie longed for another good, stiff drink. Nick looked like he was considering plunging out a window. Alison gazed at them with a twelve-year-old’s innocent face and avid, ferreting eyes. “Let’s talk about something else,” Natalie managed finally. “You said you like cats. What about dogs? I have a dog.”
“I love animals, but my mother never let me have one. I know about yours, though. You have the dog that stayed with Tamara when she died. I’m not supposed to know that.” She gave each of them a canny look. “However, I know all kinds of things I’m not supposed to know.”
“Alison, darling, I’ve been looking for you.” Viveca appeared behind her daughter, placing her hands on each of Alison’s thin shoulders. “Have you had anything to eat?”
All the air seemed to flow out of Alison. “I’m not hungry.”
“Nonsense. There is some lovely foie gras—”
“I-am-not-hungry,” Alison said through clenched teeth. “You only want me to eat so I’ll be quiet.”
“Darling, that’s not true—”
Alison uttered a guttural sound and flung away. Viveca looked at Nick and Natalie, shrugged, and emitted a high-pitched trill of laughter before darting after her daughter. “Good God,” Nick muttered.
“Never a dull moment around here. My father dated Viveca. Alison could have been my stepsister.”
“What saved you?”
“Viveca dumped Dad for Eugene Farley, then Eugene for Oliver. I think she might marry Oliver. Lily will be furious. She hates Viveca.”
Nick frowned. “Tell me about her husband.”
“Alison’s father was Damon Cosgrove.” Nick’s eyebrows raised. “Yes, the writer. Two critically acclaimed best sellers. Then the poor sap came to his aunt’s summer cottage in Port Ariel and met Viveca. They married, had Alison, and he never published another book. Not even a short story.”
“Why not?”
“I don’t know. Maybe he was just one of those writers who only has one or two books in them. Or maybe he felt overwhelmed by Viveca. I think she was about ten years younger than he but still quite the femme formidable, as my Grandmother St. John would say. Damon died when Alison was five or six. He was electrocuted to death in front of her.”
Nick cringed, thinking of a five-year-old Paige seeing something so ghastly. “Viveca blames Alison’s problems completely on the accident,” Natalie continued, “but I’ve heard she wasn’t exactly a well-adjusted child before it happened.” She took a deep breath. “And now I’m guilty of pernicious gossip but I comfort myself with the thought that the more you know about us, the quicker you might find the killer.”
“It’s true that the more I know, the better, especially because Alison is directly involved as a potential victim and a suspect.”
The music changed to “Try to Remember” from The Fantasticks. Nick looked around with a mixture of bewilderment and humor. “Viveca’s idea,” Natalie said. “She seems to think we’re mounting a Broadway play.”
“This whole thing is like a play,” Nick grumbled. “And the more time I spend waiting for all this nonsense to end, the more I put Lily and Alison and you in danger. I want to talk to Viveca and Oliver now.”
“Now? Can’t you wait until all of this is over?”
“This could go on for hours. There’s Viveca hovering over Alison. Find Peyton for me, Natalie. Tell him I want to see him and Viveca.”
Natalie didn’t know Nick well, but she could already tell when he was deadly serious. She also knew he was not someone to be argued with when he’d made up his mind.
“Mr. Peyton, the sheriff would like to speak to you,” she said softly when she located Oliver speaking to the mayor.
Oliver made a swatting motion as if she were a gnat. “I’m busy. I’ll speak with him later.”
“He wants to talk to you now.”
Oliver’s lips pressed together. “Young lady, I don’t mean to be rude, but I have said later and I mean later.”
“Mr. Peyton, it’s important.”
Oliver Peyton gave her a coldly furious look. Then Lily said in a steely voice, “If Natalie says it’s important for you to speak to the sheriff, then it’s important.” She gave the mayor a polite smile. “I’m sure you understand.”
“Of course,” he said. “Go right ahead, Oliver.”
Oliver walked beside his daughter, frowning furiously. “I think you’ve lost your mind,” he snapped at Lily. “I do not answer to Sheriff Meredith or Natalie St. John!”
“Please save the high-and-mighty act,” Lily said tiredly. “You don’t scare me like you did Tam, and you certainly don’t scare Meredith. He and Viveca are waiting for you in your study.”
“Viveca!” Oliver exploded. “What does Viveca have to do with this? Lily, I know you don’t like her, but if you are talking your friends into bullying her—”
“No one bullies Viveca, Dad.” Lily opened the door to the study. “Here’s your shrinking violet now. I’ll leave you alone.”
“Lily, I’d like for you and Natalie to stay,” Nick said. “Close the door, please.”
“My daughter—” Viveca began.
“Your daughter will be fine for a few minutes, Mrs. Cosgrove,” Nick said. “I don’t want her to hear what I have to say.”
“Hear what?” Viveca asked. “What can’t she hear?” She leaned toward Oliver and clung to his arm, frightened and helpless. Natalie exchanged looks with Lily. What an actress. Viveca Cosgrove could organize and lead an army into battle. “Oliver?” she implored tremulously.
“This is ridiculous,” Oliver burst out. “You are alarming Mrs. Cosgrove. What is this all about?”
“If you’ll all be quiet, you’ll know what it’s about,” Nick said repressively. “I believe I see a possible connection among these murders.” He then calmly, almost tonelessly, laid out the story of Eugene Farley and how Viveca and Oliver played into the drama of his death. “Therefore, you need to be especially careful about the welfare of Lily and Alison.”
Viveca and Oliver stared at him for a moment. Then Natalie watched color slowly drain from Oliver Peyton’s face. Even his lips paled. He looked ill and touched his left arm. For a moment she thought the man might be on the verge of a heart attack.
Viveca paid no attention to her supposed great love. She, too, had grown pale, but she came out fighting. “I think this theory of yours is absurd, Sheriff Meredith. I never did anything to Eugene.” Nick stared her down. “Oh, we dated some and it didn’t work out, but beyond that—”
“Beyond that he embezzled two hundred thousand dollars from Bishop Corporation to win you back,” Lily lashed out.
“Well, that wasn’t my fault!” Viveca returned hotly. “I didn’t ask him to do it. And poor Oli
ver here defended him.”
“And lost the case,” Nick said.
“Once again, that was not his fault!” Viveca retorted. “It’s ludicrous to hold us responsible for Eugene Farley’s death!”
Nick looked at her coolly. “Mrs. Cosgrove, I’m not holding you responsible for Farley’s death. I think someone else holds you responsible.”
“I don’t understand. Oliver, why don’t you say something!”
“Maybe he’s afraid to.” The door had opened quietly and Alison stood there, glaring at Oliver Peyton. “Why don’t you tell them what I know?”
“I . . . I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Peyton stammered.
“Alison, go in the other room!” Viveca ordered.
“No.” She looked at Nick. “People in this town were awful to Eugene. He was wonderful—handsome and sensitive and kind, and they caused his death.” Tears streamed down her cheeks. “They all caused his death!”
“Alison, you don’t know what you’re talking about,” Viveca said in the harshest voice Natalie had ever heard her direct toward her daughter. Her gaze flashed back to Nick. “If you’re looking for someone who’s bitter about Eugene’s death, look to Dee Fisher. She’s that trampy nurse he dated when he first got to town. She stole drugs from the hospital. She even accused Andrew St. John of negligence and claimed he let Eugene die during the operation. She’s crazy! She was also obsessed with Eugene. She threatened me when I was seeing him. She told me I’d pay for taking him away from her! She’s crazy, I’m telling you!”
“Yes, you’ve told me twice,” Nick said mildly. “And I’m aware of Dee Fisher’s possible involvement in all this. But I’m not here to talk to you about my suspects. I’m only warning you and Mr. Peyton that Alison and Lily might be in danger.”
Don’t Close Your Eyes Page 24