“I’m sorry I’m late,” she said, pulling off her coat and putting it over the back of the chair. “I had to set a golden Lab’s leg.”
“What happened?”
“Hit by a car.” Roma shook her head in annoyance. “It’s slippery. If the dog’s running loose and meets a car, the car is the one that’s going to come out unhurt.” She pushed the sleeves of her sweater back. “Why don’t people understand that?”
Before I could say anything, the Kings were back with a drink and plate for Roma, steam rising from the food.
“Thanks,” Roma said.
“Are you alone?” Ella King asked with a sly smile. Roma gave her a puzzled look. “No, I’m with them,” she said, pointing from me to Maggie, who was eating like food was going out of style. Roma noticed the teenager then. “Hi, Taylor. How’s Horton?”
“He’s good,” the girl said. “Kind of stiff in the cold, though.”
“Yeah, me too these days,” Roma said. “I’ll be out the first of the week to see him.”
Taylor gave her a warm smile. “Thanks, Dr. Davidson,” she said.
Roma unrolled her napkin, placed it in her lap and picked up her fork.
“Horton?” I asked, grabbing my knife so I could cut a piece of ham.
“Her horse. Horton Hears a Who! Dr. Seuss. It’s Taylor’s favorite book.”
A woman I didn’t know passed in front of us in the aisle between our table and the next. “Hi, Roma,” she said, with a grin and an obvious wink.
Roma lifted a hand in hello. Her mouth was full.
The other woman looked around. “By yourself tonight?” Before Roma could say anything, the woman’s grin got bigger. “Yeah, playing hard to get is a good plan.”
Maggie kept her head over her plate and her eyes on her food, but her shoulders were heaving with laughter. It was clear the rumors about Roma and Eddie Sweeney were all over town.
I started on the scalloped potatoes and hoped I wouldn’t laugh, too.
Roma set down her fork and slid her chair back a bit. “Spill it,” she said.
I leaned over, trying to catch Maggie’s eye, but she kept them on her food, stuffing in more beans and shaking with laughter. Roma folded her arms. My food was getting cold and Maggie was letting me sink. Roma waited, staring expectantly at me.
“Well, there’s kind of a rumor going around that you’re . . . seeing someone.”
“Whom am I supposed to be seeing?”
I swallowed. Maggie was not going to rescue me. “Eddie.” I blurted.
“Eddie?” Roma said with a frown. “Eddie who?”
Maggie almost choked. Roma thumped her on the back a couple of times, then turned her attention back to me again. “Eddie who?” she repeated
“Eddie Sweeney,” I said staring down at my plate. If I looked at anyone I was going to laugh, too.
Her mouth fell open. “Eddie? The hockey player? Maggie’s mannequin?” Maggie looked up at last.
Roma glared at her. “This is all your fault.”
“How is it my fault?” Maggie asked, trying to look innocent and not laugh herself silly at the same time.
“I was driving your”—Roma gestured wildly with her hands—“creation around. And now people think I’m having a fling with the real Eddie. I’m old enough to be his”—she paused—“older sister, for heaven’s sake.”
“Since when do you care what people think?” I asked, wiping mustard from my chin.
“Since always,” she retorted.
Maggie lips were twitching. Trouble. “Tell you what,” she said. “When Winterfest is over, I’ll give you Eddie. Then you really will be a couple.”
Roma picked up her fork. She was trying to look mad, but I didn’t think she really was. I kept looking at her until she looked at me.
“Every time I let you two in my car, things end up going south,” she said. “Every single time.”
I realized she was thinking about the time Maggie sort of hijacked Roma and her SUV because we were trying to follow someone.
At the end of the table, beyond Officer Craig and his girlfriend, was a family I had seen in the library a few times, lots of Dr. Seuss and Max and Ruby books. Dad and the four-year-old were doing patty-cake, the girl’s blond curls bouncing.
“Patty-cake, patty-cake,” the little one chanted, her high, clear voice carrying down the table. But instead of saying, “bake me a man,” she said, “make me a man.”
Maggie looked at Roma and said, “I did.” Then she put her head on the table and collapsed in laughter. Roma whacked her with a paper napkin and went back to eating.
I decided this would be a great time to go in search of coffee, even though I knew it would make me restless this late in the day. “I’ll be right back,” I said.
The coffee and tea table was over by the kitchen. I wound my way around tables, smiling and saying hello to everyone I knew. Rebecca and Mary, both in the same long white aprons that all the servers seemed to be wearing, were deep in conversation at the tea table.
I picked up a mug, added sugar and reached for the stainless-steel coffee carafe.
Mary noticed me then. “I’ll get that for you,” she said, taking the cup from my hand. “Would you like regular, decaf or chocolate hazelnut?”
I wasn’t much of a fan of flavored coffee, but maybe just this once.
“Chocolate hazelnut,” I said. “Please.”
Rebecca lightly touched my arm. “Kathleen, is Justin Anders the young man Ruby’s been seeing?”
“Yes, he is,” I said, taking my cup back from Mary. “Why?”
“You haven’t heard?” Mary asked. “Turns out it wasn’t a rumor after all.”
“What?” I asked, wondering what new piece of town news they had.
Mary shrugged. “Agatha left Ruby’s boyfriend half a million dollars.”
11
I glanced from Rebecca, who looked apologetic, to Mary, who could be described only as smug. I set the coffee on the edge of the table. I was afraid I was going to drop it.
“Agatha left money to Ruby’s boyfriend?”
“Yes.” Mary grabbed the carafe to pour a cup of coffee for one of the servers.
I was dumbfounded. Then I thought about the rumor going around that Roma was seeing an NHL hockey player ten years her junior. “You certain?” I asked. “I didn’t realize he even knew her.”
Mary handed the cup over to the young server. “Yes, I am.”
Rebecca brushed the front of her apron. “The information came from Bridget,” she said.
I had forgotten that Mary’s daughter, Bridget, was the publisher of the Mayville Heights Chronicle. “But half a million dollars? Where would Agatha get half a million dollars?” I remembered the tiny, spare house.
“Agatha was very frugal,” Mary said, smiling at another server on her way to the kitchen.
“What about her son? Why would she leave money to someone she didn’t know instead of him?”
Mary shrugged. “All I know is some lawyer from Red Wing did a new will for Agatha. She signed it the day before she died.”
I shook my head slowly. “That doesn’t make any sense. Peter Lundgren was Agatha’s lawyer.”
“Apparently not anymore.” Mary swept a few crumbs off the table.
It couldn’t be true. But it was going to hurt Ruby. “This is getting messy,” I said to Rebecca.
She patted my arm. “I know.”
I picked up my coffee and wound my way back to the table. Maggie glanced over at me as she scraped the last few baked beans from her plate. Something in my face made her take a second look. “What is it?” she asked.
Roma turned to look at me, as well. I pointed toward the tea table.
“According to Rebecca and Mary, Agatha left half a million dollars to Justin.”