Chapter 25
Detective Adam Bryant and Sheriff Ted Bixby walked into DeeAnn's living room. The scrapbookers all looked up from the paper dolls and sat back in their chairs, watching the two men.
“Good evening, ladies,” Bryant said. “Change your locale?”
“Well, DeeAnn's back has been out so we thought we'd have the crop here,” Sheila said.
“Yes, we talked to your husband,” the sheriff said. “Good evening, ladies. We won't bother you too much. Just have a few questions for you.”
Annie sat back and crossed her arms. This was odd. The county sheriff and Detective Bryant working together. She knew they didn't like one another.
“Never thought I'd see the day you two would be walking into my house together.” Leave it to DeeAnn to say what they were all thinking. “Has hell frozen over?”
Both men smiled, but did not look at one another and shifted their weight around in discomfort.
“We're pooling resources on the Martelino cases,” Bryant said, holding up a plastic bag with a scrapbook page in it.
The sheriff held his own plastic bag up. “Same paper. The labs could tell us nothing. Meaning, there are no fingerprints. Nothing distinguishing about the paper or the photos.”
The two of them set their papers down on the card table.
It was fairly typical scrapbook paperâgreen with a floral pattern. Each page had one photo. One of them featured a black-framed picture of a group of people at a picnic. Along with the picture, someone had started journaling in Spanish. Annie couldn't decipher it. The handwriting was difficult to read.
“The writing there is about Marina's new home. How lovely it is. How she loved the mountains,” Bryant said.
Annie's heart sank. Once again, a woman killed in her prime.
The other scrapbook page had orange-framed photos. The picture was of a group of womenâincluding one of the sisters, Esmeralda.
“Check out that picture,” Sheila said. “Look at the background . . . on the picnic table. There are scrapbooks and paper and I think . . . some embellishments.”
The detective nodded. “Yep, these women scrapbooked together regularly.”
“Holy shit,” DeeAnn said.
“Turns out you're not the only scrapbookers in town,” Sheriff Bixby said.
“Well, of course, we aren't. I run a scrapbooking business and at least half the women in this town have bought materials from me,” Sheila said. “But I don't think these in the pictures have ever come to my basement to buy supplies.”
“What can you tell us about this paper? These women?” Detective Bryant asked.
“The women look vaguely familiar, but I don't know that paper,” Sheila said. “It's not in my line of products.”
Annie recognized one of the women. She was the same woman who had been behind the counter at the apartment complex. Annie kept that bit of information to herself.
“Are you certain?” Bryant asked Sheila again.
Sheila thought a moment. “If we carry it, it's very old. It's possible that I don't remember it.”
“It looks familiar to me,” Cookie piped up.
“You've seen one floral design, you've seen them all,” Paige said and waved her off.
“No,” Cookie persisted. “This is different. The green isn't typical. It's very dark.”
“True,” Paige said. “But for a while, that was all the rage.”
“Two years ago,” Sheila said, “all of our floral paper had that antique look to it.”
Cookie stood up. “I think I have this paper.”
“What?” Bryant said, lurching back.
“Let me see.” She walked over to her bag where she stored her paper supply and rifled through it. “Yes. Here it is.”
“Where did you get it?” Sheriff Bixby asked her.
“I don't remember,” she said automatically. “I'm sorry. But I never buy my supplies from anybody but Sheila.”
“Well,” Sheila laughed nervously. “I guess that answers that question.”
“Oh, look at the other side,” Paige said.
Cookie turned the page over and set it in the middle of the table. The back of the page was black and the corners looked ragged, with bits of green coming through. The top of an orange moon peeked up from the bottom of the page.
“Ah,” Sheila said. “Yes, now I remember this paper. It was a part of the Summer Dream pack from two years ago, I think. I can look that up for you.” She opened her laptop.
Paige went back to her project in front of her, as did Randy. Annie watched as DeeAnn watched Sheila with her laptop, her fingers moving quickly over the keyboard.
“Yes,” Sheila said finally. “It was two years ago and it was part of a pack. I gave out several of these at a public Fourth of July crop last year. Let's see, I gave out . . . twenty-six.”
“Did you keep the names?” Sheriff Bixby asked.
“I have the names of everybody who attended the crop, but not who received which pack as prizes,” Sheila said. “If they bought the pack, I have those records.”
“Sounds like a good start,” Annie said.
“Indeed.” Sheriff Bixby looked at her, once again, with an approving glance.
Bryant picked up on it and shot daggers with his eyes toward her.
What the hell?
she thought.
“
I can print the list of Fourth of July croppers for you,” Sheila said. “And a list of people who bought the paper.”
“No need. Just e-mail it to us.” Bryant handed her his card. “We can print it.”
After the sheriff gave Sheila his card, too, he looked over the table with the food. “What do you ladies have there?”
“There's plenty here,” DeeAnn said. “Pumpkin bread, muffins. Chocolate. You should try the chocolate. Vera's really getting good. I'd like to sell her stuff at my shop.”
“Oh, DeeAnn!” Vera blushed. “Thanks so much. Maybe I will take you up on that offer. I love making it.”
“You're a fabulous student,” Randy said. “You pick things up quickly.”
“How are you doing?” Sheriff Bixby asked Randy as he patted him on the back.
“I'm doing okay,” Randy said. “I'm fine. Every day I feel a little better.”
People had stopped asking Annie if she was okay. They had assumed, of course, that she was because, well, she had seen so many dead bodies, so many murder victims. But it truly never got much easier for her. She was so looking forward to the next stage of her life . . . when she wouldn't have to will away the bad dreams at night.
“We were trying to reach the Martelino family,” Annie said.
“For what?” Bryant asked, his mouth half full of chocolate.
“We wanted to express our condolences,” she said.
“Well, that's mighty kind of you,” Sheriff Bixby said.
“Mama tried to find them through their employment agency. So far, nothing.” Vera said.
The detective and the sheriff exchanged uncomfortable glances.
“Pamela doesn't seem to know much either,” Annie said.
“Pamela is a shrewd businesswoman. She knows she has to be careful what information she gives out,” Sheriff Bixby said, pausing. “I know it's the tendency of good-hearted women like yourselves to reach out at times like these, but I think in this case, it's better left alone.”
“I agree,” Bryant said.
Annie's pings of intuition started up again. Anytime a cop said to “leave it alone” it meant there was more to the story than what they wanted to tell.
“It's a complicated mess,” Sheriff Bixby said. “And as far as we can tell, the girls' family is long gone.”
“Did they have any other family here?” DeeAnn asked.
“No,” Bryant said a little too quickly.
“They lived together over on Druid?” Annie asked.
He nodded. Once again, uncomfortable looks were exchanged between the two officers.
“Well, I guess we better go. Thanks, ladies, for the goodies.” Bryant loved his sweets. He was a man who knew good food.
“Before you go,” Vera said, “can I ask you about these gang rumors?”
“It's more than rumors, I'm afraid,” Bryant said.
“In Cumberland Creek? Absurd!” Vera set her scissors down with a thud.
“Everywhere,” Bryant said. “Cumberland Creek is not immune to the vagaries of modern life, ladies. I thought you'd know that by now.”
“Is it just over there on Druid?” DeeAnn asked with a note of hope in her voice.
“Much of it, but not all,” Bryant said and paused. “As I told Annie, it's best to stay away from there. Don't go alone, in any case.”
“Hmmm,” DeeAnn said.
“Don't get any crazy ideas, DeeAnn, not with your back out,” Sheila said.
“I'm getting better every day,” DeeAnn said indignantly.
Detective Bryant looked at the sheriff and rolled his eyes.
Chapter 26
Beatrice grabbed Jon's hand. “Let's go.”
They had parked their car at the far end of the park and were walking up one of its ancient, twisty trails. Leaves were crunching beneath their feet and the sky was bright blue, with the sun warm enough that the brisk air didn't matter.
Beatrice led Jon off the trail.
“Where are we going?” he asked.
“I'm curious about something. Bear with me. I remember that I used to walk over here and stop by and see Emma Drummond. They were an old Cumberland Creek family. Farmers, most of them.”
“What happened to them?”
“Most of them died off. I think Emma's still over at that assisted living place. I can never remember the name of it. Maybe it's Mountain View?”
They stepped over a small mound and Beatrice stopped. “Yes, the house is still there.”
“It's barely standing, from what I can see.”
“And look over there,” Beatrice pointed to the apartments on Druid. They could see only a part of them from where they stood. “That was the Drummond apple orchard.”
“I don't see any apple trees,” Jon said, squinting.
“Gone,” Beatrice said in a hushed tone. Swirls of sadness moved through her, mixed with a longing for simpler days. But were they really simpler? Or just slower? Or was it another one of those tricks of time?
“âYou must have been warned against letting the golden hours slip by; but some of them are golden only because we let them slip by,'” Beatrice said, quoting J.M. Barrie.
Jon clicked his tongue on the roof of his mouth.
Beatrice started moving again, searching for the clearing in a small forested spot on the Drummond property where she and Emma used to sit with their babies and chat about life. How had they lost touch? Beatrice had loved her.
“Too bad about those apples,” Bea said. “The flavor of those apples has never been matched. The family had been farming this land for two hundred years. They'd been given a land grant by Washington himself. The apples were what they call heirloom today. They were tasty, not like the crap you get at the grocery store.”
“Shiny and beautiful but no flavor,” Jon said, moving away some brush for Beatrice to continue walking.
“There it is.” She pointed to a rock large enough for both of them to have a seat. They sat down, with a little groaning from both of them.
“Nice spot,” Jon said after a few minutes.
“The Drummonds thought it was important to leave a little of the land wild. Emma and I found this little clearing and the girls would play here and we'd chat,” Bea said. Her memories of that place and time had been buried long ago.
“What happened? Why have you never talked about her before?” Jon asked.
Beatrice mulled over her time with Emma. “You know me. I can't stand most people.” She tried to laugh it off, but memories pricked at her brain. “I think it had something to do with her husband . . . I couldn't stand the man. The way he treated her. And I couldn't keep my mouth shut.”
“Of course,” Jon said.
After they had been sitting quietly together for a few minutes, Jon spoke again. “Let's find her and visit her.”
“Good idea,” Bea said. The thought of it excited her and filled her with shame. She had let her good friend down. She looked toward the apartment buildings and saw the apple orchard in her mind's eye.
Old fool. I am an old fool,
she thought, willing away the tears.
Jon's arms went around her and pulled her toward him. “The past is gone. And we are here, now. Let's make the most of it, shall we?”
Sweet Jon. So in tune with her emotions. He was a good husband, a good man.
When they got up to leave, a tiny sparkling something caught Beatrice's eye and she moved in the direction of it, toward the old farm house. “What is that?” she said and blinked.
An old rose bush had been hung with trinkets on its branches. They moved closer to it and saw that the trinkets were something from the dollar store, cheap metallic charms and beads. A cross. Dollar symbols. Peace symbols. Hearts.
“Lawd,” Beatrice said. “I haven't seen one of these in years.”
“What is it?” Jon said.
“It's what we used to call a fairy tree,” Beatrice said. “Emma used to make themâmuch prettier than this one. This is like a cheap rendition of the real thing. It's like a prayer and a warning all in one.”
“That this place belongs to someone else?” Jon asked after a moment.
Beatrice nodded as tears streamed down her face.
“What is this? Why the tears?” Jon asked quietly.
“I think it also means that the Drummonds haven't given up completely. They were an old Scotch Irish clan and clung to some old ways. This tree gives me great comfort. The family is still here,” Beatrice said. “We just have to find them.”