Tricia sidled through the narrow passage between the Have a Heart romance bookshop and the Stoneham Patisserie, turned the corner, and peered through the front window. Already tourists jammed the store, loading up on cookies, scones, and other portable pastries. Nikki brushed back a loose strand of hair and took an offered bill, ringing up a sale at the register. Harried but happy was an apt description of her. She looked up, saw Tricia, and flashed a smile. Had she heard about Zoë’s death? Probably not, but now was not the time to break it to her. It had been Nikki who had suggested Tricia invite the author. No doubt she’d feel terrible—possibly responsible—to learn of her death.
Tricia gave a quick wave and moved on. She crossed her fingers, wishing Nikki good luck with the bank loan, and headed down the street to the crosswalk. She looked left and right for traffic, waited for a green pickup truck to pass, and gave a mental sigh of relief that the WRBS news van was nowhere in sight.
So far, so good.
Frannie Armstrong was not one to gossip about the members of the Chamber of Commerce. She’d made it clear that putting her job as a receptionist in peril was something she would not consider. But none of the players in last night’s drama had been members of the Chamber, except for Russ, Angelica, and Tricia herself. As the eyes and ears of the Chamber, Frannie came across an inordinate amount of useful information. From painting paneling to renting farm and other equipment, Frannie knew where to go or how to do it, and if she didn’t, she could direct you to someone who did.
Tricia pushed open the bright, red-painted door and entered the charming little log cabin that served as the Chamber’s headquarters. It had once been the home office of Trident Log Homes, which had gone bankrupt a decade before. Though it wasn’t her taste in architecture, Tricia could appreciate the charm of the chinked walls, the timbered beams, the daylight flowing through the skylights and brightening the whole interior, and the way its designer had chosen to incorporate a soaring cathedral ceiling instead of a second-floor loft.
She found Frannie dressed in a blue and white calla lily Hawaiian shirt over dark slacks. Thanks to posters of the fiftieth state lining her workspace wall, she needed only a flower lei to look like she was auditioning for a community theater production of South Pacific.
Frannie was on the phone, but waved a cheery hello in Tricia’s direction, then motioned for her to seat herself on one of the comfortable leather couches. On a little wooden stand near a rack of brochures was a self-serve airpot of coffee. The plate of store-bought cookies next to the pot reminded Tricia what her real mission was supposed to be. She pushed down the guilt and took one of the tea biscuits, nibbling on it while she waited for Frannie to finish her conversation.
A minute later, Frannie hung up the phone. “Hey, Tricia, I tried calling you this morning, but the answering machine kicked in saying Haven’t Got a Clue is closed. Isn’t it a shame about poor Zoë?”
“Yes.” And about the sheriff shutting down her store, too, although she kept that opinion to herself.
Frannie shook her head and tsk-tsked. “I heard you found her. Was it too awfully terrible?” The gossip network was obviously working at peak capacity.
“It wasn’t fun.”
“I feel just terrible for you. And after what you went through last fall, too.” She tsk-tsked again. “Have they arrested that appalling niece for Zoë’s murder?”
“Not that I’ve heard. In fact, I haven’t heard anything. I was hoping you might have.”
Frannie allowed the barest hint of a smile to touch her lips. “Well, I do like to think of myself as being well-informed, but the gossip mill hasn’t really had a chance to get started on this one yet. For my money, it’s that nasty niece. You heard the way she talked to her aunt.”
“And the way she talked to you,” Tricia reminded her.
“And me,” Frannie said. She shook her head ruefully. “I’ve lived in this town almost twenty-one years, but I never ran across that young woman before. Then again, why would I? I never had kids, so I never met many. Except the children of Chamber members, of course, at the annual picnic, et cetera.”
“Had you met Zoë before?”
Frannie thought about it. “I suppose I must have, but it’s nothing I remember. The people I know best are affiliated with the Chamber, or work at the library or the grocery stores in Milford. Other than that—” She shrugged. Then her expression shifted, and a sly glint entered her eyes. “Course, they say Miz Carter was mixed up in the whole Trident Homes disaster.”
“Oh?”
Frannie leaned forward, lowered her voice. “Embezzlement.”
“Zoë Carter?”
Frannie nodded. “I don’t have the whole story, and it seems to me it was all rather hushed up. I mean, if it wasn’t—wouldn’t I, of all people, know?”
Yes, she would. “What happened to Zoë?”
“She didn’t go to prison. Seems to me she got off with a suspended sentence. And it wasn’t long after the whole sordid incident that she got published.”
If Zoë didn’t go to jail, there had to be mitigating circumstances. But this was at least ten years ago, and if the town gossip didn’t know the details, who would? Russ had owned the Stoneham Weekly News only three or four years, but he did possess the bound volumes of years past. Had the former editor chronicled the story? She’d have to check.
“I wonder if Zoë was well-known at the library,” Tricia mused aloud. “Her historical mysteries had to be researched somewhere.”
“Lois Kerr is the head librarian. Have you met her?” Trisha shook her head. “She’s a bit stern, but that’s because she’s old school. Still, she’s the one who pushed for the village budget to include Wi-Fi access at the library. She’s a real whirlwind of energy.”
“I believe I’ve spoken to her on the phone, but . . . I haven’t even had time to get a library card. I mean . . . I really only read mysteries, and I order everything I want and then some from distributors, as well as buy from people willing to sell their collections.”
“It wouldn’t hurt for you to talk to Lois in person. Maybe get yourself a library card. Libraries are the best value you can get for your tax dollars.”
“Yes, ma’am,” Tricia murmured with respect.
Frannie laughed. “Any other questions?”
“Who would know Kimberly Peters?”
Frannie frowned. “Her high school teachers, I suppose. I don’t know much about her. Russ Smith might, though. I mean, if she ever got in trouble—and it wouldn’t surprise me, with that attitude of hers—it would’ve ended up in the Stoneham Weekly News crime blotter.” That column was often only a paragraph or two long—if it even ran.
“You might also try Deborah Black,” Frannie added. “She’s only a few years older than Kimberly. Maybe she remembers her from school.”
“Great idea. Thanks.”
Frannie craned her neck to look beyond Tricia. “There they go again,” she said, and shook her head.
Tricia turned to see a line of Canada geese marching down the sidewalk, no doubt heading for Stoneham Creek. It was the only running water in the area, and it seemed to be the attraction that kept luring the geese from the relative calm of the outlying retention ponds.
“Can’t the Chamber pressure the Village Board to do something about them?” Tricia asked.
“They could get the state and the federal government to approve roundup-and-slaughter operations,” she said matter-of-factly.
“What?” Tricia asked, horrified.
“Yup, that’s what they call it. They wait until the geese are molting and can’t fly, then they herd those poor birds into boxes and gas them with carbon dioxide.”
“But I thought they were protected—and that’s why the population keeps growing.”
“Hey, it’s happened. In Washington State, Minnesota, and Michigan. I read about it on the Internet,” Frannie said, her voice filled with disapproval. “I’m willing to put up with a little inconvenience—cleaning off the sidewalks—if it’ll save just one of those beautiful birds.”