Murder at the Spa (2 page)

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Authors: Stefanie Matteson

BOOK: Murder at the Spa
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Charlotte tried to ferret out more information, but Paulina, as usual over the telephone, was cryptic. She demanded that Charlotte come to the spa immediately. The details could wait. Ever imperious, she alluded to the fact that she wasn’t used to being disobeyed.

Charlotte hesitated at first if for no other reason than she wasn’t used to being bossed around; a rude demand was apt to make her dig in her heels. But she quickly realized that it was a good idea. Paulina had been urging her to visit the spa ever since it had opened five years ago. (“Having the stars—it’s good publicity,” she always said.) Charlotte had turned her down, but now she was tempted. She needed a rest—a real rest, not one in which she had to play general contractor, which was what she’d be in for if she hung around home. She had never stayed at a spa before. She didn’t usually approve of indulging herself. She had a streak of the kind of Yankee asceticism that embraces cold showers and Spam, a streak that had been nurtured by her revulsion for the excesses of Hollywood. But this time, she felt as if she deserved to be pampered like a star. Because she
was
a star once again.

And so she agreed.

Although she had never been there, she knew quite a bit about Paulina’s precious spa. For years, it had been Paulina’s dream to open a spa—not a spa like That Woman’s famous spa in Maine, which was little more than a fat farm for overweight celebrities, but a spa like the continental spas to which she retired every year for the cure, returning recharged with her legendary energy. For Paulina, as for other Europeans, the annual spa visit was a vital necessity to health. The European spa had never fallen out of favor like its American counterpart; it had remained in the medical mainstream, promoted by European balneologists who studied the therapeutic virtues of the mineral waters. The idea of a spa had also appealed to Paulina because of its link with her roots: like most Hungarians, she had spent hours in the tub rooms at Saint Gellert or Széchenyi; no other city in the world was as richly endowed with mineral springs as her native Budapest. But she had also been shrewd enough to recognize that a European-style spa would never go over in the United States. Even the most luxurious of them had a depressingly clinical air, vaguely reminiscent of an old-age home or a mental institution. Her dream had been to create a new hybird, a spa that rejuvenated its guests like a traditional European mineral spa, that pampered them like a luxurious American beauty farm, and that prodded them into shape with diet and exercise like the spartan camps of the natural hygienists.

A decision by the New York state legislature to lease a run-down upstate spa to a private investor provided her opportunity. The time was ripe: interest in health and physical fitness was at an all-time high, and only someone like Paulina had the money, vision, and power to realize such an undertaking. Two years and twenty-one million dollars later, it was finished—the Paulina Langenberg Spa at High Rock Springs. From the moment it opened its elegant bronze doors, it was a fabulous success, the jewel in the crown of the Queen of Beauty that Paulina had hoped it would be. But it wasn’t just a showplace; like all of Paulina’s enterprises, it was a moneymaker as well. The rich and famous paid four thousand dollars a week and more to be soaked, whirlpooled, massaged, manicured, pedicured, and coiffed. To say nothing of being starved on a diet of twelve hundred calories a day—a diet that was a feast for the eye, but for the eye alone. And the clientele wasn’t mostly women as it was at other spas. Paulina had recognized early on that in order to make real money, she had to attract men. To do so, she had spent a small fortune to groom the overgrown fairways and lumpy greens of the existing golf course to smooth green perfection. Lured by the golf course, the husbands flocked to the spa for its famous cardiac rejuvenation program. And if golf held no appeal, there was indoor tennis and outdoor tennis, an indoor pool and an outdoor pool, skeet shooting, bridle paths, cross-country skiing—you name it. The ratio of staff to guests was a sybaritic three to one. In short, the spa offered everything the most demanding spa-goer could ever want.

Charlotte was looking forward to it.

She left the next day. Paulina’s secretary had booked her for the Ten-Day Rejuvenating Plan, which started on Monday. She set out in her rented car late that morning, happy to be getting out of the city. Although it had been cool, a heat wave had been forecast, and there was nothing worse than New York in the heat. It took only a little more than three hours to follow the Hudson a hundred and twenty miles north to the plateau at the foot of the Adirondacks where the town of High Rock Springs was situated. From the exit on the Adirondack Northway, she turned onto a local highway, and from there onto the approach road leading to the spa, a narrow road lined by a double row of majestic pines that wound its way through a two-thousand-acre state park to the spa. At the end of a curve, the Avenue of Pines, as it was called, opened up onto a vista of hotel and spa complex laid out in symmetrical splendor against a background of pine groves and misty blue mountains. Charlotte turned left onto Golf Course Road and headed toward the hotel: an imposing building of red brick whose neoclassical facade was dominated by a glass outdoor elevator (a Langenberg addition that allowed the guests to view the distant Adirondacks) and by a columned entrance portico in front of which stood a fountain in the form of a phoenix, symbolizing the rejuvenative powers of the mineral waters. To either side of the portico were screened verandas where busboys in red jackets were setting up for dinner.

After dropping off her car keys at the rental desk, she checked in and took the glass elevator to her room. Her room was at the rear of the hotel on the sixth floor, which was the top floor (except for the seventh, which was occupied by Paulina’s penthouse). It faced south, overlooking a lovely lake called Geyser Lake, which, the bellman explained, took its name from the geyser that spouted from its island center under the pressure of carbonic acid gas from an expiring underground volcano. Charlotte counted; every three minutes, the geyser magically erupted, shooting a plume of white water ten feet into the air. The bellman proudly informed her that it was one of seven geysers at High Rock Springs—the only spouting springs east of the Mississippi. Her room was luxurious: large and high and filled with the sweet fragrance of fresh lilies. It was decorated in typical Paulina Langenberg style. If one were to give it a name, one might call it riotously eclectic: a chrome-based glass coffee table stood next to a marble-topped Empire dresser; an abstract expressionist reproduction hung above a Greek caryatid lamp. The effect was dramatic, original, sumptuous; it made Charlotte feel spoiled. Which was the whole idea. After settling in, she called Paulina to announce her arrival. Then she took a few minutes to study the program for the Ten-Day Rejuvenating Plan (herbal wraps and mud packs and Swedish massages—it sounded delicious) and to read the literature on the spa. After that, she headed out. Her destination was High Rock Spring, the famous spring from which the spa took its name.

The spring stood at the center of a long lawn called the esplanade, which was spread out in front of the hotel like a carpet of green baize. The esplanade was crisscrossed by gravel paths, but they were deserted; there were no people to mar the geometry of the neatly spaced rows of pollarded plane trees. It was the time of late afternoon naps or of before-dinner “cocktails” (which here consisted only of fruit punch lightly laced with white wine). In the hazy afternoon sunlight, the atmosphere was one of peaceful tranquillity. The muffled clink of silverware drifted across the esplanade like the sound of wind chimes. Even the grass had taken on a golden glow over which the shadow of the pavilion that housed the spring fell like the reflection on a lake. The only note of color was a bold Chinese red, a color known as Langenberg red for its association with Paulina’s theatrical style in the same way that a delicate shade of floral pink was associated with the more ladylike style of That Woman. The geraniums that hung in baskets from the wrought-iron lampposts were Langenberg red. As were the park benches that lined the walkways and the roses that were planted in beds in the center of the lawn. Both Paulina and That Woman had varieties of hybrid tea roses named after them, but there were no pink roses here. For that matter, there were no pink flowers at all. Paulina would never have stood for it.

At the pavilion, Charlotte took a seat facing the cone of the spring—the “rock” of High Rock. The cone, which had been built up over the millennia from minerals deposited by the mineral water—stood about six feet high and about twelve feet wide. From a well in its center the water gushed, pulsing with the pressure that would thrust it skyward. Like the spring at the center of the lake, it was a geyser. On its surges, it shot a column of water twelve feet into the air. At its ebb, it bubbled fitfully, occasionally regurgitating a belch of water that would overflow the lip of the well with a gurgle of satisfaction. For eons, it had been thus: the salty, mineral-rich waters of a primeval underground sea had been forced to the surface of the earth by a charge of carbonic acid gas. In the last century, she had read, inquisitive scientists had raised the cone with a giant crane to find out what lay below. They had found only layer upon layer of muck and mineral, and, at the bottom, seventeen feet below the apex, the charred remains of a three-thousand-year-old campfire. The mysterious aboriginal people who had built their campfires here were lured by the abundance of game, which was attracted by the water’s salty taste. Later came the Indians of the Iroquois Confederacy, who called it the Medicine Spring of the Great Spirit. On the lintel of the pavilion were engraved the words of a Mohawk Indian song:

Far in the forest’s deep recess
,

Dark, hidden, and alone
,

Mid marshy fens and tangled wood
,

There rose a rocky cone
.

According to what she had learned of the spa’s history, the first white man to visit the spring was Sir John Williams, the Superintendent of Indian Affairs for the British crown. The early explorers had heard tales of the healing powers of the waters that spouted from a rock in the forest, but until Williams, the Indians had kept its location a secret. Williams, who was much beloved by the Indians, first visited the spring in 1767. He was carried there on a litter by Iroquois braves for treatment of a wound. He recovered, and word spread of the spring’s powers. Before long, a settler named Elisha Burnett had opened a tavern where visitors could quench their thirst with stronger stuff than that which issued from the spring. And so the spa at High Rock, as it came to be called, grew. The Elisha Burnett Tavern was enlarged again and again. By the Civil War, it had become the High Rock Inn, and by the turn of the century, the High Rock Hotel, a faux French extravaganza modeled after the palace at Versailles. At the time it was built, the High Rock Hotel was the largest in the world, with a thousand rooms, a mile of piazzas, and a dining room a city block long. New springs were discovered. The Union and Sans Souci springs became almost as famous as High Rock Spring. The Washington Bathhouse was built, where Victorians suffering from dyspepsia, arthritis, and the general debility known as “nerve fag” or “Manhattan madness” took the cure in the effervescent mineral waters. And when the spa outgrew the Washington Bathhouse, the Lincoln Bathhouse was built—the world’s most modern and luxurious. The spa had become the playground of the nouveau riche.

And then, in 1900, it burned. Only the cone survived, the mineral waters spilling down its sides saving it from the conflagration. The spa lay idle for a while, but by the twenties, it had become the dream of Dr. Rudolph Flexner, a German balneologist, to build a new spa that would rival the great European spas like Baden-Baden and Montecatini. Dr. Flexner didn’t live to see his dream come true, but his son, Samuel, did. Samuel, a friend of the governor of New York, Franklin D. Roosevelt, interested Roosevelt in the scheme. It wasn’t difficult; Roosevelt was a proponent of mineral baths, having taken the waters at Warm Springs, Georgia, for his polio. Roosevelt’s interest in the spa continued once he was elected president. It was built in 1935 with New Deal funds: two and a half acres of red-brick neo-Georgian buildings. Nothing was spared in terms of quality: the finest craftsmen were imported to lay the floors of multicolored Italian marble, to raise the Doric columns of pale pink Indiana limestone, to forge the ornate wall sconces of heavy wrought iron. The result was dignified, patrician, elegant.

The new spa enjoyed enormous popularity, until the war. The war ushered in a new era in medicine. The generation that had put its faith in the healing powers of mineral waters was replaced by a generation that believed in antibiotics and inoculations. The number of spa-goers dwindled. The buildings fell into disrepair. Rain poured through holes in the slate roofs. The paint peeled; the masonry crumbled; the marble floors became coated with a layer of slime. Mineral deposits clogged the pipes. So precipitous was the spa’s fall from grace that by the fifties the elegant Hall of Springs was being used as a storage depot for Civil Defense equipment. What to do about the spa became a public issue. After long debate, the legislature decided to lease the spa and the bottling plant, which still bottled High Rock, Union, and Sans Souci waters, to private investors.

It was then that Paulina stepped in.

And so Charlotte sat in the High Rock Pavilion, a replica of the rustic Victorian pavilion that had burned in the great fire, sipping a glass of the famous mineral water. She knew that sipping wasn’t what you were supposed to do. Sipping didn’t allow the bubbles to perform their miracles on the digestion; you were supposed to toss it back like a belt of whiskey. She also knew that the water was best taken on an empty stomach, preferably before breakfast. But she wanted to sip, to taste the hint of iron, to feel the fizz of bubbles in her nose. She slowly drank the rest of her glass. It had a not-unpleasant saltiness, like something you’d gargle with for a sore throat. A rustic sign mounted on a column proclaimed: “High Rock Spring: A naturally carbonated saline alkaline mineral water. Contains more minerals than any other water in the world.” Another sign asked visitors not to chip souvenirs off the famous mineral cone.

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