Текст книги "Plantation Shudders"
Автор книги: Ellen Byron
Жанр:
Криминальные детективы
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Текущая страница: 4 (всего у книги 15 страниц)
Chapter Seven
When Maggie was eight, Grand-père Crozat shared an age-old joke with her: What’s worse than finding a worm in your apple? Finding half a worm. He told it because she had just lived the joke. After taking a huge bite of a crispy, sweet apple, she noticed only half a worm in its flesh. She never thought she’d feel as horrified and sickened in her life again.
Then Maggie discovered that the handsome newcomer, the man who instantly made her body feel things that it hadn’t felt in way too long a time, was related to Rufus Durand, and she felt worse. But the news was also the slap in the face she needed. It was like falling in love with a gorgeous dress but then seeing its ridiculously expensive price tag and instantly falling out of love. The price on Bo Durand was way too high.
She forced herself to check back into the conversation.
“We’ve got a couple of guys bagging and tagging evidence and taking statements and prints,” Buster was telling Bo.
Bo nodded and then gestured to Gran’ and Maggie. “Have we gotten prints or statements from these ladies yet?”
Buster flushed with embarrassment. The tea and snack repast had registered with Bo. It was obvious to Maggie that under the man’s relaxed charm was one sharp detective.
“Uh, no, not yet, I was easing into that,” Buster said.
“I know we can be tight-asses up in Shreveport, but we’re not big on ‘easing’ into a murder investigation. Get what we need from these ladies—”
“Excuse me, we are not ‘these ladies.’ We have names, sir,” Gran’ said in a tone that had brought better men than Bo Durand to their knees. “I am Charlotte LeBlanc Crozat—Mrs. Crozat to you—and this is my granddaughter, Magnolia Marie Crozat.”
Gran’ glared at Bo, who smiled his lazy smile, completely unfazed. “Nice to meet y’all. Please cooperate with Detective Belloise and answer all of his questions to the best of your ability.” With that, Bo turned and left.
“Really, has there ever been a Durand who had anything resembling manners?” Gran’ took a bottle of bourbon off the kitchen counter, poured a shot into her sweet tea, and then offered the bottle to Buster, who hesitated. “We won’t tell,” Gran’ cooed.
That’s all Buster needed to hear. He gratefully took the bottle, spiked his own drink, and then took out a pad and pen. “Well . . . I guess we best get started.”
Maggie and Gran’ spent half an hour being printed and giving statements, and then Gran’ retreated to recover in her room while Maggie went to check on her parents. As she passed the front parlor, she saw that investigators were using a photo from Georgia One’s cell phone of the Clabbers lying dead on the room’s priceless rug to recreate an outline of Hal and Beverly. Georgia One had scored; when he posted the picture on a social media website, he could brag about how important it was to a murder investigation.
She found Ninette and Tug outside by the generator gas line with Bo, who was examining it. Buster had made his way there too and was hovering over the new detective.
Bo shined a flashlight on the line. “Yeah, I’d say this was tampered with.”
“Sure looks like it to me,” Buster echoed.
Bo turned to him. “Make sure the evidence techs dust for prints and get pictures of this. Of the fuse box, too. And have them bag the fuses.”
“Yes, sir.” Buster’s tone was so officious that Maggie thought he might actually salute Bo, but instead he scurried off to make himself useful.
“It’s lunchtime and I’m sure everyone’s starving,” Ninette said. “Would it be all right if I fixed something for my guests? And your people, too, of course.”
“Normally I’d have my people fend for themselves,” Bo said. “But being that it’s my first day on the job, I’ll go with making a good first impression, so sure.”
“Thank you.” Ninette, who found great comfort in cooking, gave the hint of a smile. It was all she could muster, given the circumstances. Maggie was worried by how wan her mother looked. The fine lines on her faced seemed to have deepened, and she’d dropped weight from her already too-slim frame.
“I’ll help, chère.” Tug put a protective arm around his wife’s shoulder and led her back to the house. Maggie was about to follow when Gopher wobbled up to Bo and gave a deep, territorial bark.
“Gopher, quiet,” she scolded him.
“It’s okay. Hey, buddy.” Bo gave the old dog a pet. He kneeled down, took a long Basset ear in each hand, and rubbed them. “How about some ear love, huh?” Gopher gave up his alpha dog act and moaned with pleasure. Then he fell on his back, paws straight up in the air, begging for a belly scratch. Bo obliged with a brisk rub.
“You don’t have to do that,” Maggie said. “Once you start, he won’t let you stop. He’s going to follow you around the rest of the day.”
“Not a problem,” Bo said. “I had a Basset. My wife got him in the divorce. It was okay, my son’s pretty attached to Beignet. But I miss him. The dog. And my son. Of course I miss my son.”
“Beignet? That’s a great name for a dog.”
“When he was a pup, he got into a bag of ’em.” Bo finished Gopher’s tummy rub and stood up. “So I hear you’re to blame for my marriage breaking up.”
Maggie stared at him. “I’m sorry—what?”
“The curse your family put on us, damning all of our relationships.”
There it was. The curse that turned the Durands and the Crozats into the Louisiana version of the Hatfields and McCoys.
The Crozats managed to reinvent themselves after the Civil War and, if not prosper, at least survive reasonably comfortably. The Durands, however, degenerated into low-rent victims who blamed hard luck on everyone but themselves. And they especially blamed it on the Crozats—because the swinish former fiancé of Magnolia Marie Crozat, the man she was rumored to have put a curse on in the mid-1800s, was none other than Henri Durand, the great-great-great-grandfather of Rufus. And Bo.
Bo smiled slightly. Was he making fun of the curse? Was he serious? Maggie didn’t know him well enough to tell.
“I’m sorry about your divorce,” she said, “but I really don’t think you can hold some nineteenth-century hocus pocus responsible for whatever happened.”
Gopher started barking again, this time with genuine anger. The target of his wrath, Rufus Durand, came around the corner of the house. It was a steamy day, the kind that made sweat pour off some people, and Ru was one of those people. He glared at Gopher, who barked even louder.
“Gopher, shush,” Maggie said, reaching to pet and calm him.
“I’m looking forward to the day when I find that mutt loose and can ship him off to the pound,” Ru said. “Hey, Coz, glad you made it okay. I’m guessing you met the Crozat clan by now. If they give you any trouble, just let me know.”
“So far they’ve been very helpful,” Bo said as he shook Ru’s hand. “Thanks again for working out my transfer. I owe you.”
“I’ll remember that. What’s the line from that movie, The Godfather? ‘Someday I may ask you to do me a favor.’ Or something like that.” Ru turned to Maggie. “Bo’s ex remarried and the guy got a job on one of the rigs, so they moved down this way with his son, Xander. I got Bo Buster’s job so he could be closer to his boy.”
“That was really nice of you,” she said with genuine sincerity.
“Family is number one, as I’m sure you Crozats know.” Rufus gave Bo a poke in the ribs. “So remember the family that brought you here . . . and the family that brought your marriage down in the first place.”
Rufus gestured for Bo to follow him back into the house. As soon as they left, Maggie groaned and threw herself on the grass next to Gopher. “Can you believe that idiot, Goph? If there was ever an excuse for a poisoning by arsenic—”
She bolted up from the ground, her memory jogged. She knew where she’d seen arsenic before. She sauntered slowly away from the main house, and then as soon as she was out of anyone’s eye line, broke into a run.
Maggie was out of breath by the time she reached the plantation store. She was about to go in when she realized that she didn’t have the key. “Dammit,” she said, giving the door a frustrated pound. She almost fell into the store when the door unexpectedly swung open. She checked the door handle and lock. It didn’t take a law enforcement expert to see scratches on the metal where someone had jimmied it open, something that wouldn’t be too hard to do on an old door that was half off its hinges.
She stepped into the room and studied all the shelves until she found what she was looking for. There were a few cleaning products left on a shelf once dedicated to them, all covered with dust. But there was also a clean, empty rectangle. Clean because someone had taken the product that had been sitting there untouched for eighty years—a box of rat poison with a skull-and-crossbones insignia and, in large letters, the words, “DANGER—ARSENIC.”
Chapter Eight
Maggie stared at the empty spot on the shelf. All of Crozat’s guests except for the Clabbers had accompanied her on the plantation tour. Any one of them—including the Ryker kids—could have easily slipped back into the old store and taken the poison. Then again, so could anyone who lived in Pelican—or who knew the area. It was like looking at one of those online maps that started in tight on a location and then widened out to Planet Earth.
A bead of sweat dripped from Maggie’s forehead into her eye, stinging it. The room’s air was so oppressive that it had actual weight, and she needed to escape. As she closed the door, Maggie checked to make sure no one had seen her and then headed into the woods. She kept walking until she came to an old tree stump, where she rested and contemplated her next move.
Maggie knew that she was bound by law to share this information with Bo. But he owed his job to Rufus, who could use the discovery against the Crozats. The store was on their property, and the Clabbers were incredibly annoying guests—Hal in action, Beverly by association. She could just see Ru trying to twist that into a motivation for murder, painting it as a crazy, last-ditch effort on the family’s part to get rid of an unwanted guest. On the other hand, there was something about Bo that read, “I’m my own man.” Maybe she should trust him and avoid the possibility of going to jail for withholding evidence. She’d seen enough television lawyers use this threat against suspects to assume it happened in real life.
Maggie groaned. She desperately needed to get advice from someone. Her parents would insist on following the proper procedure, as would Lia. Why was she surrounded by such decent people? Maggie got up from the stump and made her way out of the woods. She needed someone who was comfortable occasionally making a dodgy moral choice.
*
“Hmmm,” Gran’ said after Maggie finished filling her in a half hour later. The two sat in the shotgun’s living room, where a ceiling fan above them whirred at top speed, decapitating any hapless mosquito that wandered into its blades. “Hmmm,” Gran’ said again.
“What do I do, Gran’? Do I tell, don’t I tell? What do you think?”
“I think we need to clear out our minds and give space for the answer.”
Gran’ closed her eyes, as did Maggie. Both sat quietly as the fan’s hum provided a lulling white noise. While no Crozat or Doucet ever claimed to be clairvoyant, the family did boast well-developed intuition, a sort of sixth sense that they could tap into, given some intense focus.
After a moment, both women opened their eyes. Gran’ spoke first. “I believe we can trust Bo.”
“I got the same sense.”
“I believe he will share the information with Rufus because he has to. But I think he’s clever and fair and won’t be swayed by personal obligations. If he feels he owes Ru, he can pay off the debt with a case of cheap beer. But that does not mean he’ll do us any favors, especially since at the end of the day, Ru is still family and we are not.”
“Yes,” said Maggie. She hesitated. “My intuition is telling me that Beverly Clabber’s murderer isn’t some stranger who snuck in off the road.”
Gran’ nodded. “Mine is telling me the exact same thing. Someone at this plantation or in this town knew that woman well enough to want her dead.”
“Exactly. But who? And why? She seemed like a harmless old lady.”
“Well, you know, the thing about us ‘old ladies,’ dear, is that we’ve put in a lot of miles on this God-given ground, and there are sometimes events in our past that we hope time will render a distant memory at worst, or at best, erase completely. Unfortunately, there are times when that simply doesn’t happen.”
“We need to know more about Beverly Clabber. And you know what that means.”
“Indeed I do,” Gran’ said gleefully. She got up, walked over to a small rococo desk, and pulled her iPad out of a drawer. “An Internet search.”
“Exactly,” Maggie said, pulling her own tablet out of a tote bag.
The two sat in silence, conducting separate searches for any and all information pertaining to Beverly Clabber. “I’ve come up with plenty of references to Harold Clabber, Conway professor, but only one mentions his wife, Beverly,” Maggie said.
“That stands to reason; they were newlyweds, after all. What we need is her maiden name.”
“I’ll search for ‘Beverly Clabber, the former . . .” Maggie typed it into her tablet. “A post or two on a couple of social media sites and that’s it. This woman had a low online profile.”
“By choice or not? That’s the question.”
“She didn’t seem the type to put effort into cleansing her Internet presence. We need her maiden name.”
“And other married names,” Gran’ added. “Mrs. Clabber also didn’t seem the type who’d stay single for eighty years. I doubt Hal was the first man to put a ring on it.”
Maggie laughed. “Gran’, listen to you.”
“I’ve got a radio in my car,” Gran’ said. “I’ve heard that Beyoncé. She’s good. I keep up with the kids.”
“I haven’t found anything remotely useful, have you?”
“I’m afraid not. I wonder if Mrs. Clabber left any clues in the Rose Room,” Gran’ mused.
“The police went through it pretty carefully.”
Gran’ waved her hand dismissively. “That would be Cal Vichet and Buster’s son, Artie Belloise. And I believe the last time they CSI’d a murder scene would be never. Now if we were looking for a lost pet or someone to supervise a crew completing their court-ordered community service, they’d be our go-to fellows.”
Gran’ was right. Pelican PD was the kind of small-town department where all the officers did a little bit of everything, calling to mind the phrase, “Jack of all trades, master of none.” It didn’t help that Chief Rufus set the bar low when it came to overachieving. An enthusiastic rookie was more likely to be chastised for making his fellow officers look bad than lauded for putting in extra effort. Given their inexperience with murder scenes and the culture of indolence endemic to PPD, there was a strong possibility that Cal and Artie had missed a vital clue.
“Plus,” Gran’ pointed out, “neither of those boys knows how to think like an old lady.”
“And how would an old lady think? Hypothetically speaking.”
Gran’ leaned back in her chair, iPad on her lap. “I will do my best to tap into the mind-set of a female senior citizen.”
“I know it’s hard, Gran’, but I have faith in you.”
“If that was sarcasm, it was not appreciated. Now, when a senior woman travels, it’s pretty much a given that she unpacks her belongings. We are not a people who live out of our suitcase like some grad student at a youth hostel. A senior woman also tends to bring her valuables with her, not trusting them to be left at home. This can be jewels, papers, meaningful mementos. Anything important to her.”
“If she decides to hide these valuables somewhere in her hotel—or B and B—room, what would she consider a great hiding place?”
“Oh, that’s easy,” Gran’ said. “Her ‘unmentionables’ drawer.”
“Okay, Gran’, this is the twenty-first century, not the nineteenth—which may be the last time anyone referred to bras and underwear as ‘unmentionables.’”
“Still, I would guess Beverly would consider that drawer inviolate. And I would also guess that neither Cal nor Artie would feel particularly comfortable pawing through her undergarments during their search, so they might speed through that particular task.”
“Interesting.”
“I’d love to see if my theory is right.”
“Of course, there’s no way of telling without taking a look at the room. Which is locked and off limits.”
“True,” Gran’ stretched, then put her iPad on the desk and stood up. “I could use a little air. Why don’t you keep me company? But you might want to change out of your church clothes.”
Maggie went into her bedroom and changed from her skirt and clingy top into shorts and a T-shirt sporting the colorful Cooper Union logo. Then she followed Gran’ outside and onto the wraparound ground-floor veranda of the main house. The older woman stopped at the French doors that allowed access into the Rose Room from the outside. Gran’ glanced around to make sure she and Maggie were alone and then jiggled the door handle. It was locked, but after a few hard jiggles, the ancient latch popped open.
“Rufus wasn’t wrong when he mentioned we have terrible security,” Maggie said. “I think some upgrades may be in order.”
“Put them on the list.”
“That list is a study in deferred maintenance.” Maggie pulled the doors open a few inches and peeked inside the room, which showed no sign of being a crime scene. “I wish I could take a look in those drawers. I wonder when the police will allow us to go back in.”
“Why wait?” Gran’ said. She gave her granddaughter a hard shove, and Maggie tumbled into the Rose Room.
“Gran’, what are you doing?”
“You’re in now, and if anyone asks, you can blame it on me,” Gran’ stage-whispered into the room, making sure to look in the opposite direction. “If you work quickly, no one will even know. I’ll make myself comfortable here on the veranda so that it looks like I’m just relaxing, but I’ll be on guard for you. Remember how I used to love bird watching? It made me quite good at keeping an eye out.”
“But what if someone uses the inside entrance to the room instead of this one?”
Gran’ gestured toward Crozat’s front lawn. “I saw the police all head into that mobile van of theirs, probably for some kind of confab. I can see it from here, so if I notice anyone head into the house, I’ll give you a sign. I know—I’ll say, ‘Go away, you awful mosquitoes.’ Oh my goodness, that works on two levels, because mosquitoes are annoying and these police officers are as annoying as mosquitoes. Quite clever by accident, if I do say so—”
“Excuse me, but I’ve just broken into a crime scene. Can we move this along?”
“Fine. Go spy.”
Maggie was dubious about following a plan concocted by a woman whose only knowledge of detection work came from 1960s Pink Panther movies. But given that she was already in the room, she decided to grab the chance to take a pass at it.
A quick glance around showed Cal and Art had been respectful during their search. Everything was in order and the only evidence of their presence was dust from where they’d lifted fingerprints.
Well aware of how squeaky Crozat’s old floors were, Maggie tiptoed over to the room’s beautifully carved walnut chest of drawers and slowly opened the top one. Since all the Clabbers’ personal items had been removed as potential evidence, the drawer was empty and its lining lay flat against the bottom. She felt safe in assuming that like most women, Beverly would only have used one of the top two drawers for her undergarments. She ran her hand along the bottom of the drawer but felt nothing unusual. She closed it and opened the second drawer, which was also empty. Maggie ran her hand along its bottom and felt a slight, almost undetectable rise in the back right corner. She lifted up the lining and found a thin envelope taped to the bottom of it.
Maggie removed the envelope but resisted the urge to tear it open, knowing that her time was better spent searching the room for other clues. She didn’t debate long where to look next. Maggie knew from past guests that seniors often still naïvely believed there was no better hiding place than under the bed.
She got on the floor and shimmied her way under the heavily canopied nineteenth-century bed whose intricate design matched the room’s chest of drawers. She was relieved to find the area spotless. If we survive this nightmare and ever have any extra income, Marie and Bud are getting a bonus, she thought as she ran her hands along the ancient springs that held up the mattress, feeling for anything unusual.
“Hello.”
Maggie froze, heart in her mouth. The voice was male and she knew exactly who it belonged to. She hid the envelope in the back pocket of her shorts and pulled her shirt down to cover it. Then she slowly wiggled out from under the bed and found herself staring up at Bo Durand, who was standing in the inside doorway. Maggie wondered how he’d escaped Gran’s professed skill at sentry duty.
“Oh, hey,” she responded as casually as possible for a woman caught on the floor of a room where she’d just conducted an illegal search. “I’m glad you’re here, I was looking for you.”
“Really. I don’t know whether to be flattered or insulted that you thought I could fit under there.”
“Well, I mean, I was going to look for you.”
“After you finished unlawfully entering this room?”
Maggie bounced up to her feet. “Look, Mr. Big Shreveport Detective, you don’t know anything about us or how this town works. Cal and Art are great guys and decent police officers, but in addition to the fact they’ve never actually searched a murder scene before, they, like all of Rufus’s hires, are good old boys who couldn’t be less interested in trying to think how a woman thinks and letting that steer their search. So I was actually trying to help you.”
“Which is why you entered this room without first requesting permission.”
“My grandma made me,” Maggie said a little sullenly as she resorted to her last defense. This elicited a burst of laughter from Bo. “It’s true.”
“Oh, I don’t doubt that at all. I met your grandma.”
“I did find out something. Not here, but in the plantation store.”
Maggie filled Bo in on her memory of where she’d seen arsenic and the empty space where it no longer sat.
“Good lead.”
“Uh, you’re welcome,” Maggie said. She decided to dial back the sarcasm and be honest with Bo. “I know your cousin would love to see us fail with Crozat, but it’s not just our home and our business—which my family desperately needs to survive, by the way—it’s also a landmark, something for Pelican to be proud of. Between hurricanes and oil spills and a crappy economy, this state and this town have had such a rough time, and Crozat’s survival is a tiny triumph. When we make visitors happy, they go home and tell their friends, and then more visitors come, which is good for everyone. I’m not naïve enough to ask you to help us. All I’m asking, I guess, is that you not hurt us.”
Bo looked at her thoughtfully. As she waited for his response, Maggie’s mind drifted to wondering how she’d blend colors to create the rich, dark-chocolate hue of his eyes. Then, annoyed at herself, she forced her attention back to the moment at hand.
“Go out the way you came in,” Bo said. “I’ll pretend this didn’t happen. But if I ever catch you contaminating a crime scene again, I will instantly haul your ass to jail.”
Bo’s harsh words wiped out her dreamy reverie. She left without a word through the room’s French doors, glad that she hadn’t shared the envelope from the chest of drawers with him—or the gold-and-diamond ring that she’d found hidden under the bed between the mattress and the spring coils.