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Authors: Joan Hess

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“How utterly absurd.”

“I have your dossier in my briefcase. Care to see it?”

Salima’s eyes flickered with anger. “Then you know that I am merely a consultant. I pass along tidbits I overhear when escorting foreign dignitaries around Luxor.”

“Bully for you.”

“Okay!” I said. “That’s it. Go elsewhere and spit at each other.”

Salima looked at me. “Does that mean you really, truly want us to leave? I’ll be much more creative after another martini or two. I can’t promise you a fair fight, however. He’s inarticulate, which is sad when you consider the price of his education. Perhaps it’s adequate to charm brainless debutantes.”

“Or yours,” Alexander inserted, “to charm Cambridge tutors who can’t keep their pants zipped.”

Peter opened the door. “Have a lovely evening.”

We could hear them bickering all the way to the elevator. I wondered if we’d be invited to the wedding. We retreated to the balcony.

“I suppose Caron and Inez will be back any minute,” I said.

“Bakr has orders to drive them to the Hilton near Karnak for dinner. I thought we’d order room service and have a quiet meal.”

“No haddock, I hope.”

“Not a chance.” He stroked my back. “You’re not a member of any covert organizations, are you?”

“Just the ACLU and the independent booksellers outfit. Neither of them offered me a decoder ring. Just think how much easier this would have been if we’d had a nice, calm meeting two weeks ago, and everybody volunteered the name of his or her covert agency. Did I mention that Sittermann had my apartment searched? Luanne called to tell me, but I didn’t believe her. I do, now. If my bookstore was searched as well, I do hope they straightened the files. I could barely get the drawer closed.”

“You want me to do anything about it?”

“No,” I said. “I want to sit here and hold your hand and gaze at the mountains and listen to the parties on the ships across the corniche. That’s not entirely true. I have some other ideas in mind, but I’m afraid Abdullah will show up and stare disapprovingly at us. ‘One hears things,
Sitt
,’ he’ll intone, in his ominously soft way.”

“Mahmoud told him to take a vacation for a few days, so we don’t have to worry what he might hear. Mahmoud keeps him on the payroll, since guests have been known to speak indiscreetly in front of the staff. If we turn on the taps in the bathtub, we’ll have about twenty minutes to find some way to occupy ourselves before we go for a dip. We can have a leisurely soak, then order dinner and talk about Cairo.”

“No more American Embassy?”

“We won’t even drive by it in a taxi. I told Mahmoud we didn’t have hotel reservations, so I couldn’t leave a number. We both knew I was lying. All this murder and conspiracy and stolen antiquities business can wait for a few days.”

“Caron and Inez are eager to see the pyramids at Giza,” I said.

“We can take carriages and see them in style. Are you going to allow yourself to be photographed on a camel? It’s traditional.”

I shook my head. “Not in a million years. The last thing I’m going to do is be bullied into sitting atop one of those nasty, flea-ridden, smelly beasts that would spit in my eye given half a chance. I will never be photographed sitting on a camel. Trust me on that.”

AUTHOR’S NOTE

In Feburary 2005, Dr. Barbara Mertz (aka Elizabeth Peters, author of the Amelia Peabody Egyptology mysteries set in Victorian times) graciously allowed me to trail after her to Egypt. Rumor had it that KV63, possibly the greatest discovery in the Valley of the Kings since Tutankhamun’s tomb in 1922, was about to be opened. Although we missed the high drama by two weeks (excavations move exceedingly slowly), I still managed to have many Very Cool experiences.

Because Barbara is so esteemed within Egyptology circles, we were invited inside the yellow tape at the KV63 site to sit under a canvas awning, drink tea, and watch the workmen bring up rubble to be sifted and examined. I was introduced to the key players, who no doubt felt required to be nice to me. No one, by the way, was murdered.

We shopped at cramped, dusty shops, where we were invariably offered tea while various bits of jewelry were presented for our approval. Dr. Ray Johnson of Chicago House gave me a private tour of Luxor Temple and invited us to dinner with the group in residence there (including a Canadian mason). Dr. Marjorie Fisher invited us on a three-day cruise on the Nubian Sea. Bill and Nancy Petty served us a lovely dinner on their
dahabiyya.
Dennis Forbes and I debated the propriety of allowing artifacts to be displayed in museums outside of Egypt. Dear Joel Cole offered a much-needed arm as we walked on rough, rocky surfaces at the
sites, saving me from several potentially embarrassing tumbles. Salima Ikram, who has the energy of a well-shaken bottle of champagne, brightened every experience with her wit and knowledge.

On most evenings, we sat on the balcony of our suite at the Old Winter Palace, watching the feluccas drift on the Nile as the sun set behind the mountains. Muezzins wailed from the numerous mosques. Drummers performed on the pier across the corniche. We did not drink tea. We spent a few days at the end of our trip in Cairo, where we attended a reception at the American Embassy. Charles Roberts, an old friend of Barbara’s from Maryland, joined us, and he and I rode in a carriage to view the pyramids. I would speak more kindly of him had he not suggested I stand next to the camel for a photograph.

All in all, I had innumerable Very Cool experiences, all due to the graciousness of Barbara Mertz. She introduced me to fascinating people, led the way through the temples and the Valley of the Kings, translated hieroglyphs, made the arrangements to minimalize wear and tear on my bad back, and answered my idiotic questions with patience. She was a perfect traveling companion and will always be a perfect friend.

Joan Hess
October 2007

P.S. I depicted the Old Winter Palace with fairly reasonable accuracy, but there were certain elements that I changed because of the plot. Get over it. Also, there are several ways to spell words taken from ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs and contemporary Arabic words. I relied on my travel guides and several Web sites. Please don’t send me letters telling me I got it wrong.

Keep reading for a sneak peek at Joan Hess’s next mystery

Busy Bodies

Available May 2009 from St. Martin’s Paperbacks

CHAPTER 1

I am not an adept liar, which I think speaks well for my character. However, this deficiency has propelled me into sticky situations in the past, and I had a foreboding feeling it was about to do so again.

“Tea, Miss Parchester?” I said into the telephone receiver. “I’d love to, but I—I simply don’t see when I could—well, I was planning on organizing my files, and I promised Caron that I’d drive her and Inez to the mall, and—”

Miss Emily Parchester had taught high-school students for forty years before her retirement and therefore was unimpressed with my sputtery excuses. “Oh, do bring the girls with you. I so enjoy their youthful enthusiasm. I’ll see all of you at five o’clock.”

Groaning, I replaced the receiver. In that my bookstore was bereft of customers, I received no sympathetic, curious, or even incurious glances. The die was cast: Miss Parchester, a mistress of manipulation, was expecting us for tea. In the past, I’d masqueraded as a substitute teacher in order to come to her rescue when she’d been accused of embezzling money from the journalism accounts
and
poisoning the principal. I’d done extraordinary things (among them being
charged with three felonies—a personal best) when her basset hounds were kidnapped by an unscrupulous lout. Although the concept of a cup of tea should have sounded innocuous, it didn’t.

I picked up the feather duster and attacked the window display. In the fierce August sunshine, pedestrians ambled by the Book Depot without so much as a look of longing at all the worthy literature crammed inside its musty, cramped confines. Business had been poor all summer, as usual, but it would pick up shortly when several thousand earnest students arrived to improve their minds, as well as their chances for lucrative employment, by enrolling at Farber College. Very few of them would do so in the liberal-arts department. Business and accounting textbooks had spilled onto the shelves once reserved for Mr. Faulkner and Miss Austen. I stocked enough slim, yellow study guides to pave the road to the Emerald City.

It occurred to me that I would be forty years old by the time the semester began. I peered at my reflection in the dusty glass, wondering if said anniversary would coincide with an outbreak of gray hair and the awakening pangs of arthritis, rheumatism, bunions, and all the other maladies that accompany old age.

I concluded I was holding up fairly well. My curly hair was predominantly red, and my mostly svelte body had not yet capitulated to gravity. This isn’t to say there weren’t some fine lines around my eyes and a few gray hairs. All were the result of being the mother of a fifteen-year-old girl with a propensity for melodrama and an enduring ability to keep me speculating about the quality of life at the nearest rest home. The one occasionally favored by Miss Parchester had seemed congenial, although I doubted they served cocktails in the evening. On a more positive note, visiting hours were restricted.

But not at the Book Depot. Caron burst through the door, accompanied by her ever-loyal sidekick, Inez Thornton. Caron shares my physical attributes but not my imperturbable personality—or my lack of proficiency in matters
requiring mendacity. For her, right and wrong are nebulous concepts defined solely by her personal objectives at any given moment. She’s not so much immoral as she is egocentric. Copernicus would have loved her.

Inez is quite the opposite, which is why I suppose they’re steadfast friends. She’s a composition in brown and beige, all blurred together like a desertscape done in watercolors. Her eyes are leery behind thick lenses, and her mouth is usually pursed in speculation. She has not yet mastered the art of speaking in capital letters, but she has a talented mentor.

“You said you’d drive us to the mall.” Caron began accusingly. “I finished doing my hair an hour ago, and we’ve been Absolutely Sweltering on the front porch waiting for you. I came within seconds of having a heat stroke. Inez had to help me upstairs so I could get a glass of ice water. My face was bright red, and—”

“I said I’d take you at five o’clock, dear,” I said. “I can’t close the store in the middle of the afternoon.”

She rolled her eyes. “And disappoint all these customers lined up at the cash register? I hate to break it to you, Mother, but you could get rid of the books and start selling auto parts—and no one would notice.”

Reminding myself of the legal ramifications of child abandonment, I went behind the counter and perched on the stool. “I’d notice,” I said mildly. “I can’t read a carburetor in the bathtub. In any case, you, Inez, and I have been invited to have tea with Miss Parchester. I’ll take you out to the mall afterward.”

Inez drifted out from behind the romance rack. “I thought she eloped while she was on that bus trip to the Southwest. Wouldn’t that make her a missus-somebody-else?”

Caron was not interested in anyone else’s marital status. “Tea?” she croaked, as horrified as if I had mentioned an invitation for a cup of arsenic. “We can’t go to some dumb tea party this afternoon. I need to shop before school starts. Otherwise, I’ll have to show up Stark Naked on the first day. Not only will I be expelled, but I’ll be the laughingstock of Farberville High School and will have no choice
but to kill myself on the steps.” Clutching her throat, she staggered out of view to find a book on expediting death in the most gruesome manner within her budget.

I nodded at Inez. “Miss Parchester did indeed elope. She and Mr. Delmaro were married just across the border in Mexico, but he succumbed to a heart attack that very night while they were”—I paused to search for a seemly euphemism, even though the girls had gone through a period of reading every steamy novel in the store and undoubtedly knew more than I—“consummating the marriage. It turned out he already had a wife who’d purchased his-and-her cemetery plots, so Miss Parchester sent the remains to her and resumed her maiden name when she returned to Farberville.”

“They had sex?” whispered Inez “Miss Parchester’s got to be as old as my grandmother, or maybe older. I don’t think my grandmother …”

“That’s disgusting,” Caron called from the vicinity of the self-help books. “Sexuality is a function of youth. Old people should devote their energy to gardening or playing cribbage.” Her head popped up long enough for her to glower at me. “Or drinking tea.”

Inez was edging backward as if she expected her best friend’s maniacal mother to come out from behind the counter with an ax. “My grandmother plays duplicate bridge three times a week. She says it’s really a lot of fun, especially the tournaments.”

“I’d like to think I have a few good years left before I need to find a hobby,” I said. From behind the racks came the sound of someone humming “Happy Birthday.” This did nothing to brighten my mood. I picked up the feather duster and was preparing to stalk the miscreant when the bell above the door jangled.

Peter Rosen hesitated in the doorway, possibly bemused by the ferocity of my expression and the disembodied humming. He has dark hair, a beakish nose, a perpetual tan, and white, vulpine teeth. He dresses like a very successful Wall Street mogul, from his silk tie right down to the tips of his
Italian shoes. When he chooses, he can be charming. His mellow brown eyes twinkle playfully and, at more intimate times, downright provocatively.

There are other times, alas, when his eyes turn icy and his bite is quite as bad as his bark. These worst of times coincide with my civic-minded attempts to help the Farberville CID solve crimes. Peter Rosen is my lover; Lieutenant Rosen is my nemesis. Frankly, lectures and accusations of meddling do not make for a harmonious relationship.

“Are you under siege by mellifluous hornets?” he asked.

“I wish I were,” I said, reluctantly lowering my weapon. I told Caron and Inez to return at five and shooed them out of the store. I then lured Peter into my office, where there was such little space that we had no choice but to press our bodies together. Certain events of the previous weekend were discussed in endearing murmurs, and when we finally returned to the front room, my face was as red as Caron’s allegedly had been earlier.

Peter peered behind the racks to make sure the girls hadn’t crept back inside the store. “What’s the current crisis?”

“We’re having tea with Miss Parchester. This ghastly scenario means they won’t get to the mall until six o’clock and Caron will be forced to commit suicide in front of the entire student body.”

He gave me an odd look before picking up a paperback and pretending to study its cover. “Miss Parchester lives on Willow Street, doesn’t she?”

“You should know, Sherlock. You and Farberville’s finest staked out her house for three solid days. It’s a good thing I found her and convinced her to turn herself in before she was tackled by an overly zealous rookie.” I paused in case he wanted to engage in a bit of repartee, and then added, “I’ll give you a ten percent discount if you want to buy that book. I haven’t read it myself, but according to the catalog, it’s the best of the alien slime time-travel fantasies.”

He hastily replaced it and took out a handkerchief to wipe his fingers. “So Miss Parchester invited you for a
cozy tea party? Did she say anything about the purpose of it?”

“The purpose of a cozy tea party is to drink tea while balancing a plate of cookies on one’s knee and making genteel conversation about the weather.”

“We’ve had a lot of complaints from Willow Street residents. May I assume you haven’t been to visit Miss Parchester lately?”

I shook my head. “What kind of complaints, Peter? Is she doing something to cause problems?”

Grinning, he headed for the door. “I wouldn’t dream of spoiling this particular surprise. Can I come by tonight if I bring a pizza and a six-pack?”

I agreed and watched him as he crossed under the portico and headed up the sidewalk in the direction of the campus. I tried to decipher his cryptic remarks, but I had no luck and was cheerfully diverted when that rarest of creatures, a customer, appeared with a fat wallet and a hunger to put some romantic intrigue in her life.

At five o’clock I closed the store and retreated to the office to wait for Caron and Inez, who were no more than fifteen minutes late. After a spirited argument, I allowed my darling daughter to climb into the driver’s seat. Caron’s sixteenth birthday loomed as alarmingly as my fortieth; she anticipated not only pink balloons and overnight popularity but also a shiny red sports car. My attempts to save her from debilitating disappointment thus far had been ignored.

“This car is a slug,” she said as we pulled out of the parking lot. “Rhonda Maguire’s getting a new car. She can’t decide if she wants a convertible or a four-wheel drive.”

Inez leaned over the seat and said, “The only reason she wants a four-wheel drive is that the boys on the football team are always drooling over them. Rhonda thinks they’ll drool over her if she has one.”

I closed my eyes as we lurched into the traffic flowing up Thurber Street. “Rhonda ought to be introduced to Miss Parchester’s basset hounds. They’ll certainly drool over her.” I leaned my head against the seat and listened to the ensuing
derogatory comments regarding Rhonda Maguire’s latest foray into perfidy, which centered as always on her attempts to ingratiate herself with a certain junior varsity quarterback.

“What’s going on?” Caron said irritably.

I opened my eyes and frowned at the cars inching around the corner to Willow Street. On the street itself, traffic was barely moving. Those on foot were making noticeably better progress; as I stared, a group of children cut across the nearest yard and jostled a more staid couple in matching Bermuda shorts. Fraternity boys who’d arrived early for rush week were drinking beer and telling what must have been hilarious jokes as they walked up the sidewalk.

“How many people did Miss Parchester invite to tea?” Inez asked with such bewilderment I could almost hear her blinking.

“Just us, as far as I know,” I said, equally bewildered by the scene. Willow Street runs through the middle of the historic district. At one time, the mostly Victorian houses were the residences of the highest echelon of Farberville society, including the honorable Judge Amos Parchester. Now some of the houses had been subdivided into apartments, while others struggled like aging dowagers to maintain their facades. I couldn’t conceive of any reason why the street was worthy of all this interest, but clearly something odd was happening; something, I amended, that was causing a lot of complaints to be made to the police department.

Caron continued past the corner. “I’m going to park behind the library so we won’t get stuck later—when it’s time to go to the mall. You Do Remember that we’re going to the mall, don’t you?”

“Yes, dear,” I said, trying not to concoct any wild hypotheses about Miss Parchester’s involvement. As we walked up the sidewalk, I was relieved to see that the crowd was gathering in front of the house beyond hers. A great tangle of shrubbery blocked my view of whatever was taking place, but from the expressions of those farther up the sidewalk, it was a doozy.

“Claire,” Miss Parchester trilled from her porch, “I’ve already
put on the kettle. Oh, and I see the girls are with you. What a lovely little party we’ll have.” She clasped her hands together and beamed at us as if we’d done something particularly clever by finding her house.

She may have been impervious to the traffic jam and the swelling crowd, but I wasn’t. “What’s going on next door?” I said as I herded the girls toward her house.

“It’s rather complicated,” she said. She ushered us inside and closed the front door. “And annoying, I must admit. As you know, I am a staunch defender of our constitutional rights, but I’m not sure our forefathers took this kind of thing into consideration when they penned the document.”

The living room had not changed since I was last there, unless the dust was thicker and the scent of camphor more pronounced. Stacks of yellow newspapers and faded blue composition books still teetered precariously, and the moth-eaten drapes still blocked most of the daylight. Miss Parchester appeared to be wearing the same cardigan sweater, frumpy dress, and fuzzy pink bedroom slippers.

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