In the time since Angelica had moved in, she’d been working ten-hour days in her store, which hadn’t left her a lot of time to set up her home. Retaining employees had quickly become her single biggest problem. Angelica blamed them all for laziness, but it was her own perfectionism (or perhaps anal retentiveness) that had them quitting in droves. The fact that she’d lost five employees in the past two months should have given her a clue as to what the problem was.
Miss Marple survived the trip in the dumbwaiter just fine, and Tricia had unloaded everything and sent the lift down for the rest of her baggage, which made the return trip in record time. She’d carried some of it into the living room by the time Angelica made it to the third floor.
“Throw your stuff anywhere,” she told Tricia as she picked up the last few items and headed for the living room, but there wasn’t anywhere to put it.
“I need to set up Miss Marple’s litter box. And it’s way past her dinnertime.”
Angelica frowned. She was definitely not a cat lover. “The box can go in the bathroom. You can put her food and water bowls on the kitchen floor—home place I won’t step on them, if you please.”
Tricia looked around the warehouse of a living room.
She hadn’t seen the apartment in at least a month, but it didn’t seem to have changed a bit. “Where am I going to sleep?”
“The couch is a sofa bed . . . but I don’t think there’s room to pull it out. It would take too long to restack these boxes. And anyway, I have no clue where the sheets and blankets are. In one of these boxes . . . somewhere. I have a king-size bed. You can either bunk with me or sleep on the floor.”
“Ange, how can you live like this? It’s so not you.”
“Tell me about it. I haven’t exactly had all the time in the world to sort through everything and find a home for it. And there’s no one around here I can hire to do it. Believe me, I’ve asked.”
Soon a wary Miss Marple had been freed from her carrier and shown where to find her litter box and her food. But the cat had concerns other than eating, and disappeared among the jungle of boxes to explore the confines of her temporary home.
The kitchen overlooked Stoneham’s quiet main drag, but Tricia was drawn to the center island with its low-hung, Mission-inspired chandelier and its high-backed stools. Though not the most comfortable places in the world to perch for any length of time, the chairs at the dining table currently offered the apartment’s only functional seating.
The alternative was the bed, and Tricia was too wired to sleep. “Got any wine, Ange? After what I saw tonight, I need something.”
“And I’ll bet you haven’t eaten all day. I’ll whip you up some comfort food. What would you like?”
“Something totally bad for me. Fried chicken.”
Angelica turned to inspect the refrigerator’s interior. “No can do. How about I make you an omelet? At least the eggs came from a chicken.”
Too weary to suggest anything else, Tricia nodded. She plunked one elbow on the counter and rested her head in her hand. “What if the sheriff keeps Haven’t Got a Clue closed for a week? That woman hates me,” she groused. Angelica pulled out a carton of organic brown eggs and a half-empty bottle of chardonnay, shoving the fridge door shut with her hip. “Well, you did steal her boyfriend.”
Tricia sat bolt upright, remembering the incident from the previous September. “I did not. I had lunch with him. Once. It wasn’t even a real date.”
Angelica shrugged, snagged a couple of glasses from the cupboard, poured, and handed Tricia the wine. “What do you want in your omelet? Veggies? Cheese? A big scoop of pity?”
“Hey, be nice to me. You said yourself I’ve been traumatized by finding poor Zoë dead on the toilet.”
“Not where I want to be found when it’s my turn,” Angelica said, and opened the fridge once again. “I’ve got cheddar or mozzarella. Which do you prefer?”
“Mozzarella. It’s gooey and probably more fattening. Toss in peppers, onions, and anything else you’d find on a pizza.”
“Right. Mushrooms, and I think I’ve got a tin of anchovies in the cupboard.”
Tricia shuddered. “Let’s not get too crazy.” She tapped her right index finger on the granite counter. “The sheriff is going to make this as unpleasant for me as she can.”
“Then I suggest you hold onto your temper,” Angelica said, as she grabbed a knife from the block to chop an onion.
“I don’t have a temper.”
“No, but it wouldn’t be hard to develop one if you’re forced to interact with Sheriff Adams for any length of time.” She waved the knife in warning. “I don’t care how long she keeps your store closed. Don’t rile the woman. I’ll talk to Bob. We’ll let him handle it.”
“What?” And be beholden to him? “No way.”
“Yes, way! Or do you want Wendy Adams to shut you down indefinitely?”
“She can’t do that.”
“Do you really want to take the risk?”
Tricia looked away. No, she didn’t. Somehow, she’d have to make nice with the sheriff, or be prepared to wait a very long time to reopen her shop.
Three
The telephone rang at six a.m., waking both sisters. Angelica groped for the bedside phone. “H’lo?”
Tricia rolled over onto her stomach, squeezing her eyes shut.
“What?” Angelica said, sounding a bit less sleepy. The bed jostled as she sat up. “Yes, I was.” Pause. “No, I didn’t.”
Pause. “She’s my sister, why?”
Tricia opened one eye.
“Oh. Well, okay. Yes, I will. Have a nice day,” she replied by rote and hung up the phone.
“What time is it?” Tricia asked. The clock was on Angelica’s side of the bed.
“Six oh two.”
“And what was that all about?” Tricia asked.
The telephone rang again.
“The Manchester Union-Leader. They wanted to know about—”
“Zoë’s death,” Tricia finished for her, and pulled herself into a sitting position.
“Yes.” Angelica reached for the phone again.
“Don’t answer that!” Tricia said, and swung her legs over the side of the bed.
The phone bleated again.
“If I were you, I’d unplug the thing. That is, unless you’re willing to be interviewed again and again—and again.”
“They’re certainly not catching me at my best,” Angelica said, and pulled at the cord, which led her to the jack just above the baseboard by the side of the bed. She unplugged the phone, but the extension in the kitchen continued to ring. “You take your shower first, Trish, while I go unplug the kitchen phone and get the coffee started.”
“Deal.”
Fifteen minutes later, and still toweling her hair dry, Tricia entered the kitchen to find Angelica bent over the kitchen island, coffee mug in hand, reading the morning paper.
Angelica straightened, her expression wary.
“What’s wrong now?” Tricia asked.
“Why don’t you have a nice cup of coffee,” Angelica offered sweetly, and stepped around to the countertop to grab a clean cup from the cabinet.
Tricia hung the towel around her shoulders and moved to take Angelica’s former position. “I suppose they’ve already got all the dirt about the murder,” she said, and folded back the front page of the Nashua Telegraph. There, in full color, was Zoë Carter’s smiling face—and the blouse she wore looked very familiar. Tricia squinted to read the photo’s copyright. “Russell Smith?” she read in a strangled voice. “Russ—my Russ—sold one of the photos he took last night to a competitor? Talk about blood money.”
“Now, Trish, dear, you don’t know that he sold it.”
“Well, I’m sure going to find out.”
Tricia stomped over to the phone, which lay on the counter where Angelica had left it after wrenching it from the wall. She picked the thing up, trying to find the connector, and mashed it against the wall. It immediately started to ring. She lifted the receiver and set it down again, effectively cutting off whoever was on the other end, then snatched it up again and punched in Russ’s telephone number.