by Maddy Hunter
Ira and Gladys exchanged glances. I think they were trying to smile at each other, but their expressions never quite made it. “Like logs,” said Ira. “We always sleep like logs. It’s the result of having proper nutritional equilibrium in our diets.”
“I heard some weird sounds next door,” said Ernie. “I think it was the honeymooners. Remember when we used to boink like that every night, Ethel?”
“That was the pre-Viagra era,” Ethel commiserated. “Sex is a lot more expensive these days. If you’re on a fixed income, who can afford it?”
I felt a hand on my shoulder and looked up to see Alice Tjarks standing behind my chair. “I’m sorry to bother you, Emily, but is it true? Have two people died in the last two days?”
Uh-oh. So much for trying to keep our little secret under wraps and not causing a panic. “Um…What did you hear?”
“Bernice complained to the desk clerk this morning that her room hadn’t been properly cleaned yesterday, and the clerk said she could probably expect the same today, what with two of the cleaning staff having dropped dead in the last two days.”
Leave it to Bernice. She could stir up trouble even when she wasn’t trying. “I guess it’s probably true then.”
“Do you know what killed them?” Alice pressed.
“I can tell you what killed them,” announced Ira Kuppelman. He flung his hand toward the buffet table. “Breakfast! Look at the toxins these people cram into their bodies. Dead animals. Unhealthy fats. Massive doses of carbohydrates. Who can exist on a diet like that and live? And if you eat what they’re serving, you’ll be next!”
Alice, who ate a full country breakfast at the Windsor City Perkins every day of her life, sucked in a sharp breath. “Is that right, Emily? Did they die from eating too many Irish breakfasts?”
I hedged, not knowing what would cause the greater panic—bacon with too much fat or a ghost with deformed feet. I decided to play middle of the road. “Well, I have it on good authority that even the Samoans have switched to Special K.”
Alice gave me a puzzled look. “I see. Thanks. I’ll pass the word along.”
“Who died?” asked Ethel when Alice left.
I stared at her through narrowed eyes. What a con artist. As if she didn’t know. “A maid and a custodian have both been found dead since we arrived. Curious, huh?”
“Why is that curious?” she asked, digging into her cereal. “People die all the time back home.”
“Not under circumstances like this, they don’t,” I said in a ghoulish voice.
Gladys’s spoon slipped from her hand and clattered against her bowl with a sound that gave us all a start. “What kind of circumstances are you talking about?” she asked in a rush of breath.
“Hey, there’s Ashley,” Ernie interrupted. “She’s on crutches. With a cast on her foot. Must’ve broken something.”
I glanced over my shoulder to see a few men hurry over to Ashley, their body language smacking of genuine concern. She was all smiles as she tossed her blond hair over her shoulder, looking helplessly pathetic as she allowed herself to be escorted to a nearby table, cooing and fluttering like an injured bird. I rolled my eyes. I was developing a keen aversion to the drop-dead-gorgeous people of the world.
I returned my attention to Gladys Kuppelman, picking up the thread of our conversation. “The authorities found a set of extremely suspicious footprints beneath the first body, and they’re pretty sure that if they find the person who made the footprints, they can prove the deaths were murders instead of deaths from natural causes.” Of course, the authorities had made no such claim, but I might as well make Ethel squirm a little. Let her know I was on to her.
“There’s a murderer on the loose in the castle?” gasped Gladys, her eyes showing terror, but her face wearing the same placid expression she always wore.
Ethel flipped her an “Aw, go on” gesture. “What are you worried about, Gladys? Who’d want to murder you? I’ve gotta agree with Ira. It’s probably the saturated fats and trans-fatty acids that got ’em.”
Aha! Just what I thought she’d say. Talk about trying to shunt guilt away from yourself. She was in my trap. All I had to do now was tighten the noose.
“Excuse me, Emily,” said Osmond Chelsvig, coming up behind me. “Alice just mentioned that a couple of people on the tour dropped dead from mad cow disease over the last couple of days. Is that true?”
I craned my neck to look up at Osmond. “They weren’t on the tour. They were on the castle staff. And I’m not sure about the mad cow disease. I don’t know what they died from.”
He nodded and returned to his chair. I was glad I’d decided not to tell Alice about the ghost. She’d already gotten the story wrong, but I guessed that was to be expected, considering how many years she’d spent working in the media.
“I’m worried, Ira,” Gladys complained. “What if someone finds out I’m related to Oliver Cromwell? Everyone in Ireland hates Cromwell. What’s to stop them from hating me as well? And killing me. I could be dead by morning! This is serious. You’re one of the people in charge, Emily. What do you and Ashley intend to do to protect me?”
I stared at her bowl of cereal. Section two of my Escort’s Manual had dealt with “Protection,” but if memory served, its main concern was to list new products designed to assist with bladder control. “Uh…”
From my left I heard the digital tones of “New York, New York.” Ernie Minch fished his cell phone out of his shirt pocket and flipped it open. “It’s Junior,” he said, checking the readout on the display screen. “What’s up?” he asked into the phone.
I heard chairs scrape the floor behind me and looked over my shoulder to see a quartet of Iowans head for the buffet table. I watched them as they bypassed the warm chafing dishes and clustered around the huge bowls of cold cereal at the end of the table.
“Okay, okay,” Ernie said into the phone, then to Ethel, “Junior says your podiatrist left a message on our machine that they wanna change your next appointment to the day after we get back from vacation. That okay with you? Junior will call them back.”
“I suppose, but have Junior tell that doctor I don’t like all this changing-around business.” Her face grew stern. “These hoity-toity doctors think their schedules are sacred, but they think nothing about telling us to change ours.”
Alice Tjarks blew by me in a rush to join the other Iowans around the cereal section of the buffet table. Hands flew every which way as she tried to muscle her way toward the remaining bowls. I frowned at the commotion but dragged my attention away to focus on Ethel. “You have regular appointments with a podiatrist, do you?” I asked matter-of-factly.
“Honey, these feet have put all five of his kids through college. I’m there once a month, every month. When the pain gets bad, I’m there more.”
“I guess it must hurt having your toes all stuck together like that.”
She looked taken aback. “Why would that hurt?”
Osmond Chelsvig raced past us to join the huddle at the cereal table. I startled as a bowl crashed to the floor. “Don’t your toes get sore not being able to operate individually?”
Ethel laughed. “That’s why I had them sewn together. They were all cockeyed before, crossing over each other, crossing under each other. Now they’re just fine.”
“You did WHAT?”
Bernice and George popped out of their seats and charged toward the swell of bodies fighting over the stash of cereal bowls. I couldn’t help noticing that Bernice looked unusually stylish this morning with a print scarf turbaned around her head.
“I—had—them—sewn—together,” Ethel enunciated slowly for my benefit. “You never heard of that? My podiatrist does it all the time.”
“You weren’t born with webbed toes?” I asked, feeling a bit like champagne that had lost its fizz. But what about the ghost? What about Michael Malooley? She’d just ruined my theory. She’d ruined everything! I jumped as another bowl hit the floor.
“Sh
oot, I had them stitched together forty years ago,” Ethel said.
“So how come you have to see the podiatrist so often if you already got your toes fixed?” asked Gladys.
A white-coated server flew out from the kitchen and dashed toward the sound of breaking glass, dustpan and broom in hand. Five more Iowans followed in his wake to join the fracas.
“I keep telling you,” grated Ethel, “my metatarsus is deformed. How many times do I gotta tell you that? You ever think about listening when people talk to you? They’d have me in orthotics if I’d let them.”
“Junior says hi,” said Ernie as he slipped his cell phone back into his pocket.
Ethel turned on him. “You hung up without letting me talk to him? I wanted to talk to him! Why’s he up at three o’clock in the morning? Don’t you wanna know what he’s doing up at this hour of the morning? Call him back. Is he sick? Are the kids sick? Do you hear me, Ernie?”
“I’m not calling him back, Ethel.”
“If she wants to talk to her kid, let her talk to her kid,” griped Gladys.
“Anything to shut her up,” said Ira.
Ethel shot him a hostile look. “I beg your pardon?”
“You’re causing disharmony in the environment!” he shouted at her.
“Are you going to let him talk to me like that?” Ethel screamed at Ernie.
Drawn back to the commotion beyond Ira, I watched in stunned silence as my polite, well-behaved fellow Iowans knotted themselves into a gridlocked clump of bobbing heads, writhing limbs, and flying elbows. Yup. They really knew how to queue up at the buffet table. I heard grunts and heavy breathing, a cry of “Get off my foot!” then watched a fistful of what looked like Cheerios geyser haphazardly into the air. “Cut that out!” someone shouted. “You’re wasting it!”
“Stop!” cried the server, waving his dustpan and broom at them. “There’s other food besides cereal for you to be eating!”
“Not on your life!” I heard Bernice wail from somewhere within the center of the throng. “Everything else has botulism!”
I rose calmly from my seat. “Would you excuse me?” I skirted around tables cluttered with abandoned plates heaped with full Irish breakfasts. I shook my head as I headed toward the melee. Good going, Emily. Did I know how to avoid causing a panic or what?
When I left the dining room sometime later, Etienne was at the front desk handing something to the female clerk I’d spoken to yesterday—the one with the name of a deep-sea monster and the body of a football tackle. I admired him from afar for a moment. His style. His elegance. His really nice trousers and Italian knit sweater. I crept up behind him and wrapped my arms around his waist. “Top o’ the morning.”
He stroked my hands with his fingertips and turned around, placing a kiss on the tip of my nose. “Good morning, darling.”
I wrinkled my nose at him. “Is that the best you can do?” This didn’t bode well. I hoped he wasn’t still miffed about the change of plans last night.
“My best is for private consumption only. Hold still. You’ve something in your hair.” He spent a half-minute plucking things from the crown of my head, then offered them up for my inspection.
“Cereal,” I confirmed, peeking at the smattering of toasty brown crumbs in his palm. “There was a run on cornflakes at breakfast. I probably have Cheerios on me too,” I said, patting down my cowl-neck sweater, “but I don’t know where they are.”
“I won’t ask how you ended up wearing your food instead of eating it. You Americans do have peculiar ways about you.” He deposited the crumbs in the nearest ashtray, then caught the desk clerk’s attention. “Nessa, could I trouble you to hand me the note I just asked you to place in Miss Andrew’s box?”
A note? Uh-oh. Notes were bad news.
With freshly penned note in hand, he motioned me to accompany him into the lobby. We sat down on a velvet settee nestled in an alcove guarded by two sentinels wearing highly polished suits of armor. “I guess that’s for me, huh?” I said, staring at the paper in his hand.
“Something’s come up, I’m afraid, darling.” His tone was apologetic as he unfolded the note for me. I read his words aloud.
Emily,
My superiors contacted me this morning to inform me that there might be an Irish connection to the case we’re working on in Lucerne. Unfortunately, darling, this means I must spend the day interviewing some likely suspects in a nearby village. I’ll return as quickly as possible, but I fear this means I’ll miss the day tour again today. However, we’ll be together tonight, no matter what. This I promise you. I know you’ll understand my dilemma. You’re always so accepting of the duties and limitations of my job. That’s one of the things I love about you.
E.
My face fell with disappointment, but it was kinda hard for me to rage and whine when he’d made me sound like Mother Teresa. However, a warning bell clanged in my brain, alerting me to the possibility of trouble ahead. Would it be like this after we were married? Would his job always come first? Was he such a workaholic that we’d be forced to lead separate lives even when we were together? I’d already chalked up one failed marriage. I didn’t want to risk another. That clinched it. We needed to have a long talk about our relationship, only I couldn’t let on about it. Men enjoyed relationship talks about as much as they enjoyed a visit to the proctologist.
I let out my version of the long-suffering sigh. “So when are they going to let you enjoy your holiday? You are on holiday. Remember?”
“I shouldn’t have rung them up to have them look into the O’Quigleys. It was too vivid a reminder that I was already over here and available to do their footwork for them. But you’ll be happy to know, they have complaints about this castle on file, so, amazingly enough, the wheels of progress are turning. They’re checking out your O’Quigley angle and might even be asking assistance from Interpol.”
Terrific. The wheels of progress take off like gangbusters for once and I have to bring them to a grinding halt. “About the O’Quigleys.” I winced. “There’s a good chance…I’ve sent you on a wild-goose chase.”
“I’m sorry?” His eyes probed my face, as if he’d misheard.
“Ethel Minch came clean at breakfast. She wasn’t born with webbed toes. She had them sewn together. Deliberately. Her feet are deformed, but not in the way I thought they were. So unless all her relatives have had their toes sewn together, which is highly improbable, the O’Quigleys are a dead end. Our ghost is a web-footed being with another last name.”
“Are you sure Mrs. Minch was telling the truth about her condition?”
“She sounded pretty convincing. She was using words like metatarsus and orthotics.”
“I suppose metatarsus isn’t a word one throws around casually.” Sparks leaped behind his eyes as he considered his next step. “I could phone the department and tell them not to waste their time on the O’Quigley link, but I don’t think I’ll do that. Who knows? Maybe they’ll turn something up. Unfortunately, if they don’t, we’ll probably find ourselves back at square one.”
“No! Not at square one. I made a discovery last night. Did you hear the cries in the hall around three in the morning?”
Etienne shook his head. “I followed your example and bought earplugs when I was in town yesterday. I have to confess, I didn’t hear a thing.”
“Well, I heard it, and I’m convinced you’re right. Whatever is happening is originating from the dungeon. All the chambers down there are closed off by doors that are rusted shut and cocooned with cobwebs. All except one particular chamber that was sporting a new door with shiny hinges and a set of wet footprints that I’m positive belong to—Are you ready for this?—Michael Malooley.”
“The bus driver? You think he could actually find his way into the dungeon?”
“Trust me. He’s smarter than he looks. I thought he was in cahoots with Ethel, but maybe he’s running the operation by himself. You’ve seen him. I don’t mean to stereotype, but have you ever seen a
more shady, unfriendly character? He’s the culprit. I know he is. If we could coax his shoes off him, I bet we’d find he has webbed toes. Could you flash your badge and commandeer his shoes and socks so we could check?”
Etienne laughed softly and lifted my hand to his lips. “You’ve become a footprint expert, have you, darling? Might I inquire how you decided these particular footprints belong to Malooley?”
“It wasn’t the footprints exactly. It was the smell. It’s pretty hard to disguise a stench like that.” He feathered kisses across my fingertips with a gentleness that lifted the down on my arm from my wrist to my shoulder. Unh. Okay, maybe a long talk wasn’t as necessary as I thought. So he was a workaholic. I could live with that.