Death of a Pumpkin Carver (14 page)

BOOK: Death of a Pumpkin Carver
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Chapter 27
“Your father could have forged that paper,” Hayley said as she set three rows of corn taco shells down on a baking pan and slid them in the oven in her kitchen.
“Sergio doesn't think so. The signature matches a few other signed documents Otis had in a file drawer,” Gemma said, shredding lettuce and chopping tomatoes on a cutting board.
Hayley was deeply skeptical about what the police found after meticulously going through all of the late Otis Pearson's belongings recovered at his cabin in the hopes of finding a reason someone would want him dead.
What turned up was a signed will from Otis, nothing official or notarized, but stating it was his wish that Danny be bequeathed the remaining amount of his life savings in the event of his death.
“So does this mean Sergio's going to drop the theft charge?” Hayley asked.
“It looks that way. Although he was still mad at Dad for jumping the gun and taking the money before the investigation was completed and the will was recovered,” Gemma said, scraping the lettuce and tomatoes off the cutting board and onto the plate.
Hayley stirred a bubbling skillet of seasoned taco meat with a wooden spoon. “Well, he's still in the doghouse. He came here with the Boston Mafia on his tail and put us all in danger.”
“He didn't know they were chasing him until after he got here. And Dad told me he used most of his inheritance from Otis to pay off his debt so those two guys who were following him around have already gone back to Boston. Everything's fine now,” Gemma said, sliding a block of cheddar cheese up and down a steel shredder. “I just hate thinking of him staying all alone in that fleabag motel.”
Hayley tasted a small piece of sizzling taco meat to test the seasoning.
She added some more chili pepper. “If I let him come stay here again, you and Dustin need to know . . .”
“It's only temporary. You're never getting back together. We get it, Mom. Seriously. But we hardly ever see him and he's only going to be in town a few more days and it would be nice having him around,” Gemma said.
“Let me think about,” Hayley said, sighing. “Now go call your brother for supper.”
Gemma smiled, knowing she had won the argument and her mother would cave. She bounced out of the kitchen and called up the stairs. “Tacos are ready!”
Dustin bounded down the stairs with Spanky right behind him.
When Hayley arrived home from work, she hadn't expected to see Spanky hanging out in Dustin's room discussing their film adaptation of his horror novel. And Dustin was surprised his mother so readily invited Spanky to stay for supper, unaware she had an ulterior motive.
The boys took their places at the dining room table as Gemma set out the bowl of taco meat, plate of warm shells, and all the fixings.
Hayley retrieved the homemade guacamole she had prepared earlier from the fridge and then joined the kids at the table as they began making their tacos.
“So how's the book coming along, Spanky?” Hayley casually asked as she watched him stuffing his shell with meat and vegetables.
Spanky shrugged. “Good.”
“Tell us more. It's all very exciting,” Hayley said. “Have you heard from Mr. Cross yet?”
Spanky shrugged. “No.”
“He's not supposed to talk about it,” Dustin said, shutting his mother down.
“Why not?”
Spanky took a big bite out of his taco and chewed.
“Who told you not to talk about it?” Hayley asked.
“My mother always yells at me for talking with my mouth full,” Spanky said, bits of taco shell and strands of cheese falling out of his mouth.
“Well, I'll wait,” Hayley said, determined to find out more.
They all waited as Spanky chewed and chewed and chewed before finally swallowing the food in his mouth in one big gulp.
He went to take another bite of the taco in his hand while the sauce dripped down his hand and onto the table. Hayley reached out and grabbed his wrist before the messy taco could reach his mouth. “Who told you not to talk about it, Spanky?”
“Shane.”
And then he crunched down and bit off another hunk.
“Mr. Cross's writing assistant?”
Spanky nodded.
Crunch, crunch, crunch.
After another big swallow, Spanky wiped his mouth with a napkin and said, “He said it was probably best, at least until Mr. Cross has had a chance to read my book.”
“What else did Shane tell you?” Hayley asked.
But she was too late.
Spanky shoved the remaining taco deep inside his mouth.
Crunch, crunch, crunch.
Hayley waited patiently.
Even Gemma and Dustin were now curious and leaning forward, impatiently waiting for Spanky to swallow.
Spanky smiled at them as he continued chewing.
Taking his time.
Savoring the spicy taco meat.
Finally, after what felt like an eternity, Spanky swallowed and everyone at the table held their breath in anticipation.
“Nothing.”
“Really? That's it? That's all we get?” Gemma said, throwing her napkin down on the table.
“Shane's really nice. I think he wants to be a writer too. That's why he's trying to help me out. We have a lot in common.”
Spanky reached for another taco shell and began filling it up.
Hayley wasn't ready to tell the poor boy she had seen his original manuscript lying on top of Crystal Collier's desk.
No, she had to find out more about this Shane Hardy first.
Chapter 28
“I remember Shane had a very strong taste for older women. He used to hit on all his female professors. Including me,” Judith Ann Moore said as she walked with Hayley across the campus of the College of the Atlantic, located just outside of town where Professor Moore had an office. “He was also a very driven young man, dare I say ruthless, willing to do anything to become a published author,”
It was a brisk afternoon, leaves blowing all around from a gusty wind, and Judith Ann buttoned up her fleece coat to keep warm. She was an attractive woman in her early seventies, with a heart-shaped face and infectious smile. She had to keep tucking her long dyed-blond hair behind her ears to keep it from blowing around and covering her eyes.
That morning Hayley had asked Sal during the staff meeting if he had heard of Shane Hardy. Sal knew the name but didn't know much about him. But it was Bruce who recalled the young man applying for an internship position at the
Island Times
a few years back, when he was still in college, to shadow a reporter and learn more about the day-to-day workings of newspaper journalism.
After Sal adjourned the meeting, Hayley searched the files on her computer and very quickly found Shane's application. His résumé lacked experience, which wasn't surprising for his young age, and his essay on why he wanted to work at the paper was brief and uninspired, but he still had been brought in for an interview.
Only after meeting with Sal here at the office was he rejected for the position.
Sal had no recollection of meeting with him, nor what they talked about, or why he wasn't hired. Bruce remembered running into Shane the day he came in to meet with Sal, and did recall thinking at the time that he was a rather “odd bird,” but beyond that, he made very little impression on anyone.
Hayley figured she must have been running an errand or out that day dealing with a “kid emergency” because she had no memory of him whatsoever.
One detail on his application did stand out.
He purported to have studied with Judith Ann Moore, a writing professor at the local college.
Judith Ann and Hayley's mother, Sheila, had grown up together. They lived next door to each other when they were little girls until the famous 1947 Bar Harbor fire swept through town ravaging homes and businesses not to mention acres of forests in Acadia National Park.
Hayley's grandparents' house on Greeley Avenue where her mother lived had been hosed down and spared but Judith Ann's house right next door was decimated. Her family had to move in with relatives until they could rebuild. Sheila and Judith Ann remained friends throughout the years, the devastating loss from the tragedy bonding them even more, and they were still tight to this day. Once a year when her classes were not in session, Judith Ann would book a cheap flight down to Florida and spend quality time with her childhood best friend.
So it was easy for Hayley to pick up the phone and call Judith Ann, and see if she would mind Hayley swinging by the college that afternoon to ask her a few questions about a former student.
“‘Ruthless' is a pretty strong word,” Hayley said, her lips quivering from the chilly late fall air. “How ruthless?”
Judith Ann took a deep breath. “I had a student, Connor Newman, who was very talented and well respected by his peers for his exceptional writing ability. He came to me and accused Shane of plagiarizing one of his short stories. He had asked Shane to read it and give him some notes, and Shane had come back with several pages of thoughts and so Connor decided to write a new draft. But before he was able to finish the revisions, his original story was published in the student literary journal under Shane's name. I brought Shane in and asked him about it and he adamantly denied any wrongdoing and said if anyone had stolen the story it was Connor. I couldn't prove that Shane had plagiarized the story because according to Connor he never showed anyone else the piece before Shane. So it was Connor's word against Shane's.”
“But your instinct told you Shane was the guilty party,” Hayley said.
Judith Ann nodded. “I was certain. But there wasn't anything I could do about it.”
“And that was the end of it,” Hayley said.
“Not quite,” Judith Ann said, trying one more time to tuck her long hair behind her ear to keep it out of her face as the winds whipped up all around them. “Connor wouldn't let it go. He tried to involve the student peer committee, the college president, the board of trustees. The more actions he took the angrier he made Shane and there was a rumor . . .”
“What rumor?”
Judith Ann hesitated.
“What rumor, Judith Ann?”
“Let me be clear, Hayley, the rumor was never substantiated. It was just talk.”
“I understand. Please tell me.”
Judith Ann took another deep breath. “I've never spoken about this to anyone because it's in the past and nothing was ever proven. But just as Connor seemed to be making progress with the administration and there was actually talk of a formal investigation . . .”
“Go on . . .” Hayley said, unable to stand the suspense much longer.
“Connor dropped out. He had his parents pick him up and take him home to Connecticut.”
“Why? What happened?”
“Nobody knows. But there was a story going around campus that Connor was at a party and Shane brought him a cocktail made with lemonade as sort of a peace offering. But very quickly Connor got sick and had to be rushed to the hospital. He almost died. The doctors assumed he had drunk too much and was suffering from alcohol poisoning. They pumped his stomach and mercifully he pulled through. But there were some very scary moments until they were able to stabilize him.”
“Did Connor have a lot to drink before running into Shane?”
“No. He claimed he had just arrived at the party and was stone-cold sober. Alcohol poisoning didn't make any sense.”
“So what caused him to get sick?”
“Apparently there was a girl at the party who saw Shane spiking the lemonade with some kind of poison . . .”
“He was trying to
kill
Connor?”
“Or scare him so bad that he would stop trying to come after him.”
“I guess it worked,” Hayley said, stunned. “Did the police talk to the girl who witnessed Shane spiking the lemonade?”
Judith Ann shook her head. “No. Like I said, it was just a story. And the girl didn't want to come forward and get involved. Connor left town shortly after that without taking any tests to prove it was something else besides too much alcohol in his system. So with no witness or any physical evidence, the whole matter was dropped. And frankly, the administration was relieved. What would it look like if one of their students was caught trying to poison a classmate?”
“And so Shane continued his studies as if nothing had happened?”
“Yes. And that story he purportedly stole won a national student literary award. He even got a small cash prize.”
Hayley couldn't believe it.
Just like Judith Ann's instinct, Hayley's gut was telling her the rumor was true.
And history was about to repeat itself.
She was certain Shane Hardy had no intention of ever showing Spanky's horror novel to Norman Cross.
He was going to steal it and claim it as his own.
Island Food & Spirits by Hayley Powell
My ex-husband, Danny, who has been visiting the island recently, took my two kids to the Cross House of Horrors last night, and I decided it was a good time to face my own house of horrors when I noticed a dust bunny the size of a small rodent floating across my living room floor. The house was in dire need of a thorough cleaning. So after whipping up a batch of my yummy Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies for when my kids returned home later that evening, I decided to get to it.
I had only done a quick dusting and sweeping of the living room, when I thought I heard a Pumpkin Mojito calling my name. I thought for a second I should wait to reward myself until I at least finished cleaning the downstairs, but true to form, I ignored that thought and found myself rummaging through the cupboards for a bottle of rum.
I served Pumpkin Mojitos to Danny on the first Halloween after we got married and it quickly became an annual tradition. A lot of people wondered why Danny chose me to marry when he had his pick of any girl in town, given his good looks and charming ways. Danny loved flirting with his admirers and there was no denying he had a roving eye for the pretty ladies. I begrudgingly accepted this basic fact until one night after we returned home from a cocktail party where I might have been slightly over served with alcohol. I was steaming over his ignoring me at the party while talking up a set of pretty blonde triplets. I warned him that if he didn't start paying more attention to me he might be better off making other living arrangements in the near future!
Apparently he took my threat seriously because the next thing I knew we were in a cabin on Moosehead Lake in Greenville, Maine, ice fishing for a week. Just the two of us. Not exactly the romantic getaway to Paris or Belize I would have preferred, but I was going to take what I could get!
Danny wasn't exactly one to plan ahead. He mistakenly thought that eating our ice fishing catch of the day would be a romantic adventure, two people off the grid, living off the land, in love in the wild. Well, after almost three days eating fish for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, with a side of peanut butter on bread, we had both had enough! So he decided to take the car and drive to a general store in town and stock up on some much needed meats, vegetables, potatoes, and junk food! I opted to remain cozy by the roaring fire happily reading my new Danielle Steel novel.
Well, I was so engrossed in my book that I didn't realize how long he had been gone until my stomach began to rumble and I glanced up at the clock and was surprised to see it was already six
PM
! Danny had been gone for three hours!
That's when I remembered the general store was also attached to the local bar and restaurant. Groceries, my butt! That cad probably popped into the local watering hole and was now drinking a few beers and chatting up some dewey-eyed, adoring bimbo.
I got so riled up I grabbed my heavy coat, hat, and gloves and ran outside. Of course there was no car. Danny had taken it into town. And there was no way in hell I was going to walk the three long miles in freezing bear country! I was stuck here while Danny was enjoying himself and doing God only knew what! Suddenly I noticed to my left the snowmobile that came with the cabin for our personal use. I had been riding them since I was a kid, and so I jumped on it, cranked the key, and took off flying down the plowed road ready for a showdown with that no-good husband of mine!
The ride was bitterly cold and I couldn't feel my face as wet slush kicked up by the snowmobile covered me from head to toe. I kept my eyes peeled for a rogue moose or unsuspecting deer that might inadvertently step in front of me. Luckily I made it into town safely. Bundled up and covered in snowy slush, I must have looked like a wild, crazed mountain man as I stomped into the general store/bar/restaurant. Several patrons turned and stared at me, and I think I may have growled at them to keep their distance as I scanned the room.
And then I spotted him. His back was to me. He was in a booth with a toothy redhead in a tight-fitting red wool sweater. Danny's head was bobbing up and down seeming to hang on every word that poured out of her bright red painted lips. Dolly Parton's “Jolene” was playing on the jukebox. And Dolly's words pierced through me as she sang her lyrics about not taking her man just because you can.
I love Dolly.
I stormed across the bar, grabbed a full pitcher of beer off a table much to the surprise of the two men who were just about to pour themselves a glass, marched straight over to my husband, and dumped the entire pitcher of cold beer down over his head while yelling, “I've caught you red-handed, you lying, good-for-nothing cheat!”
And then I turned to that sneaky harlot sitting across from him. “In case you didn't know, Jolene, he's married!”
The room fell silent.
The girl looked at me dumbfounded. “My name is Sally Ann.”
I didn't miss a beat.
“In case you didn't know, Sally Ann, he's married!”
And then I set the pitcher down on the table and without saying another word, I turned on my heels and walked with what dignity I could muster toward the exit back into the store. Halfway there I froze in my tracks. There in front of me was Danny Powell standing in the doorway holding a bag of groceries in one arm and a dozen red roses in the other (the general store also boasted a florist shop). His mouth was agape and his eyes were wide open after witnessing his wife's dramatic scene.
I just looked up and whispered, “Oh Lord, please just take me now.”
Luckily Danny is also a smooth talker and his charm works on men as well as women. He's a likable guy. And after some fast talking and a promise to pay for the couple's bar bill and dinner, we were finally on our way back to the cabin, leaving the snowmobile to be picked up the next day when it was light out.
Danny quietly told me on the car ride home that he got a flat tire on the way to the store. He didn't have a replacement tire so he hitched a ride into town from some high school kids passing by on the main road, had our tire repaired, and then hitched another ride with a snowplow driver back to change out the flat before driving back into town for the groceries. The timeline added up to three hours. Oops.
Let's just say after that, I was the one in the doghouse! But true to Danny's nature, after six months of good behavior, I caught Danny flirting with Bethany, the cute cashier at the Shop 'n Save, and he was back in the doghouse once again, right where he belonged!
Hayley's Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies
Ingredients
1 stick of butter melted (½ cup)
¼ cup brown sugar
½ cup granulated sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
6 tablespoons pumpkin puree
1½ cups flour
¼ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon cinnamon
¼ teaspoon nutmeg
¼ teaspoon ground cloves
½ cup chocolate chips
 
In a bowl mix your melted butter, brown sugar, and granulated sugar together. Whisk in the vanilla and pumpkin puree.
In a large bowl mix together your flour, salt, baking soda, baking powder, cinnamon, nutmeg, and cloves. Pour your wet ingredients into your dry and mix together. This dough will be soft. Mix in your chocolate chips and cover and chill in the fridge for at least 30 minutes or up to 3 days.
Line your baking sheets with parchment paper and remove dough from fridge. Take rounded tablespoons full of dough, make balls, and place on cookie sheets. Lightly flatten with your hand. Bake in a preheated oven for 10 minutes then remove from oven. Cool slightly and then place on wire rack to finish cooling.
 
Pumpkin Mojito
Ingredients
8 mint leaves
1 tablespoon brown sugar
1½ ounces rum
1 tablespoon pumpkin puree
Juice of half a lime
2 ounces club soda
 
Add your mint leaves and brown sugar to the bottom of a cocktail shaker and muddle together.
Add your rum, pumpkin puree, and lime, and shake until very well mixed. Strain into a glass and top with club soda.

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