I swallowed away a lump of uneasiness. Dooley made a good point. “Maybe we should move next door,” I suggested. “I’m sure Odelia’s house isn’t built on an ancient burial ground.”
“Who knows? Maybe this entire neighborhood is built on an ancient burial ground, and we’re all in mortal danger.”
“In that case we’ll make a run for it,” I said. “But until the first skeleton pops its head out of the ground, I’m staying put.”
And as I tried to go back to sleep, it irked me a little bit that every time I opened my eyes, Dooley was staring intently at the ground, waiting for the first skeleton to appear.
Chapter 14
Marge arrived at the library just when the first fat drops of rain started pummeling the world below. She hurried inside, and was glad to be out of the rain. Odd, she thought. She checked her weather.com app every morning and also at night before going to bed, and it hadn’t mentioned rain for Hampton Cove or the surrounding towns. But then weather prediction wasn’t an exact science, and it was notoriously hard to know what surprises the weather gods had in store for mere mortals like her.
And she’d just hung up her coat and moved to the shelf where returns were delivered to start collecting them on a trolley, when the first visitor walked in. It was old Mrs. Samson from down the road. Mrs. Samson, a frequent visitor of the library, loved romance novels—the saucier the better—and faithfully dropped by every week to stock up on a fresh selection of reading material.
“Marge,” she said by way of greeting as she ventured into the library, then suddenly turned back. “I just want you to know that I don’t believe a word of what people are saying. Not a single word.”
“And what are people saying?” asked Marge, though she had a pretty good idea by now.
“Oh, just this and that. About that skeleton, I mean. I’ve known Vesta for years and years and years and even if she did kill your father I’m sure she must have had her reasons and has never killed again. And if anyone says otherwise I’m putting them straight and telling them that as a dear friend of the family I know, and they don’t.”
“Thanks, Mrs. Samson,” said Marge. Even though Mrs. Samson wasn’t exactly a friend of the family it was still touching she was prepared to jump to their defense like that.
“I mean, there are so many violent men out there, and I, for one, don’t blame the women who kill them. It’s self-defense, isn’t it? And with the law being on the side of the perpetrators, a woman has to take the law into her own hands or else she doesn’t know what will happen. That man might as well kill her one day if she doesn’t kill him first.”
“Mrs. Samson, I can assure you that my mother never killed anyone. When my dad died they had been divorced for many years, and it wasn’t my mom that killed him but a heart attack.”
“Uh-huh,” said Mrs. Samson, though it was obvious she didn’t believe a word Marge was saying. “Just look at that poor Nicole Kidman in that Big Fat Lies series.”
“Big Little Lies,” Marge corrected her.
“That’s what I said. Nicole bravely pushed her husband down the stairs because she had to, otherwise that horrible pig would have bashed her head in. Oh, yes, he would have, no matter what Meryl Streep has to say about it.”
“First of all, Nicole Kidman didn’t push her husband down the stairs,” said Marge. “And secondly, like I said, my parents were long divorced before my dad died. And also, my parents never lived in the house on Harrington Street. Tex and I only moved in there twenty-five years ago, and Mom only moved in with us ten years ago, when she felt the house where she was living had become too big for her and so she sold it. So you see, that body in the basement can’t possibly be connected to us. That body has been there from way, way before we ever moved in.”
“Uh-huh,” said Mrs. Samson, then placed a kindly hand on Marge’s cheek. “It’s so sweet of you to defend your mother like that. I just wish my son would come to my defense more often.” She retracted the hand, then said, chipper, “Tell Vesta that I’m on her side. Us women have to stick together, like just like those women in Fat Big Lies do.”
And she pottered off in the direction of the romance section, to load up on a fresh collection of bodice rippers.
Marge watched her totter off with a shake of the head. If the whole town was thinking what Mrs. Samson was thinking, they were about to face some difficult times.
Odelia arrived at the apartment complex on Grover Street and parked her car across the road. It was a nice new building, in beige brick, and it looked really modern, the way only new apartment blocks can look. There were six apartments, with balconies both front and back, one of which was Rita Baker’s. She stepped up to the front door and entered, already practicing her opening statement. She searched the name on the bell.
“Yes?” a melodious voice called out.
“Hi, my name is Odelia Poole. You probably remember me. I bought your house.”
“Oh, of course! Come in, Odelia.” And immediately the buzzer buzzed and Odelia hurried to push open the door.
Moments later she was mounting the stairs and when she arrived on the second-floor landing, Rita was already there, greeting her with a smile and open arms.
She looked exactly like Odelia remembered: a lady in her seventies, with a lot of soft white curls, and a kindly pink face. She looked a little older, her face a little more lined, but otherwise still the same kindhearted woman. Odelia had bought the house directly from Rita, without the intervention of a broker, which Rita had said she despised for the exorbitant commissions they extracted, and the way they kept raising the price and scaring off potential buyers. Rita had wanted to sell quick, and she didn’t mind knocking off a big chunk of the price when Odelia and her parents had expressed an interest.
“Hey, honey,” said Rita now. “How have you been? And how are your folks?”
“Great,” said Odelia as she stepped inside. “Mom and Dad, too,” she added as she removed her shoes at Rita’s instigation and accepted the slippers she handed her.
“I’m sorry about that,” said Rita. “I run a clean house, so I keep annoying people by making them take off their shoes.”
“Oh, no, it’s fine,” said Odelia. “I walk around in slippers at home, too. It’s a lot easier to clean, isn’t it?”
“It’s because I have so many carpets,” Rita said, indicating a nice Persian rug in her living room. “And hardwood floors. If it were tile, like I had in Harrington Street, I wouldn’t mind so much. Tile is so easy to clean. These floors and carpets, though.”
The house looked squeaky clean, Odelia had to admit. In fact it looked a lot cleaner than her own place, but then she was a busy bee, and so was Chase, and with four cats it was hard to keep up. Or at least that was her excuse and she was sticking to it.
“So what can I do for you?” asked Rita as she took a seat in the living room salon, where several couches were lined up around a big-screen television. Flowers were everywhere, and plants, and it was obvious Rita missed having her own backyard. She’d been an avid gardener back in the day, and had intimated it was the only thing about having a house that she would miss when she moved into the apartment.
“This is a little delicate, Rita,” said Odelia. “And maybe you shouldn’t hear this from me, but…”
Rita frowned. “What’s wrong? Did something happen?”
“My mom has issues with her plumbing,” said Odelia, deciding to take this from the top.
“Oh, well, I’m not sure I can help you with that. Back when we lived there, there were always issues with the plumbing. Old house, you know. What can you do?”
“I know. So she had Gwayn Partington come over, and he knocked out a piece of wall in the basement, looking for the connection to the water main.”