Never Say Pie (A Pie Shop Mystery) (20 page)

Read Never Say Pie (A Pie Shop Mystery) Online

Authors: Carol Culver

Tags: #mystery, #cookies, #Murder, #baking, #cozy, #food, #Crystal Cove, #pie, #Fiction, #mystery novels, #Murder Mystery, #cooking, #California, #traditional cozy

BOOK: Never Say Pie (A Pie Shop Mystery)
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“I’m missing my faith in human nature,” he said. “I’ll never get that back. Why couldn’t the guy stay until the end of summer? Why run off like that?”

Had Jacques killed Heath and left in a hurry before he could be apprehended? But why? Not just to avenge the bad review he gave to the Foggy Meadow Artisan cheeses which weren’t even his at all. Maybe Jacques had a problem with Heath somewhere in his past. Jacques was new here and so was Heath. Who came first? Who followed who to Crystal Cove? If Jacques was a suspect, why hadn’t Sam mentioned him? The answer was obvious. He didn’t want me to know. He wanted me to think it was someone else so I wouldn’t do something crazy like come out here looking for him and tip him off.

“I hope you didn’t lose anything else,” I said.

“Isn’t it enough he ruined our trip? We had to cut it short. We lost time and we lost our trust in people,” he said sadly.

I stared at him, trying to figure out if he was for real. Was this angry, introspective farmer as big a phony as Jacques? Was he really Dolan at all? Was he only mad because Jacques took off sooner than expected? I decided to leave before I got pushed in the pool again.

“Sorry about … uh, everything,” I said. “I still think you had an excellent farm-sitter, whatever his flaws.” As far as I knew, he hadn’t stolen anything except some cheese and he’d done a good job of caretaking.

Dolan didn’t answer. He just shook his head. “Wait a minute. What did you say your name is?”

“Hanna Denton.”

“He left a note for you.” He reached into his back pocket and handed me a crumpled envelope with my name on it. It was sealed. I couldn’t believe Dolan wouldn’t have read it. Maybe he had and he’d just re-sealed it.

“Thanks.”

I waited until I was halfway home before I pulled off the road and ripped the envelope open.

“Hanna, sorry I had to leave without saying good-bye. It was good to meet you. I’ll see you again one day. Who knows. About that night—you’re a good sport. Stay well.”

Now I was more confused than ever. I couldn’t believe Jacques would walk out on the Dolans without a good excuse. Especially abandoning the animals who depended on him. If he had an excuse, he didn’t confide in me. Still I was touched he took time to write me a note when he must have been in a big hurry to get out of there. Maybe he wasn’t as irresponsible as the Dolans thought. Maybe he left thinking the day laborers would continue to do all the hard work on their place.

Back at my shop I unlocked my front door, grateful for the padlock hanging on the door. Upstairs I finished cleaning my apartment and washing my clothes. Finally I collapsed on the deck behind my kitchen. On my way outside, I noticed the pouch of letters I was supposed to deliver to Grannie. I should go over there, I told myself. She’ll want to see what she’s got to work with.

I couldn’t help being curious. I too wanted to see what she had to work with. I also wondered if I’d be any good at giving advice. I guess everyone thinks they could do it. I looked inside the bag. There were a lot of letters, maybe twenty-five or thirty. Pretty good for a small-town paper. Not so many as to overwhelm Grannie, just enough to make her feel wanted. Surely the editor Bruce was glad to see what a good response they’d gotten.

I sat down in my outdoor recliner chair which along with the small metal table took up most of the small deck. The air was fresh with the damp smell of the ocean. The neighborhood was quiet. Not a sound from the police station across the street. Speaking of the law, I hoped it wasn’t against the law to take a quick look at Grannie’s letters. Since they were already open, it couldn’t be wrong of me to just read a few. After all, one day I might inherit this job along with the one I had. I reached into the pouch and eagerly read the first one.

Dear Maggie,

I’m afraid my husband is fooling around. When I confronted him, he denied everything and he said he’d never do it again. Should I believe him?

Confused

My mind was spinning. For some crazy reason I thought it might be from Nina. Which would explain her husband’s absence and her red-rimmed eyes. Or was I getting paranoid, thinking of nothing but Heath’s murder?

Dear Maggie,

My brother and I are in business together. I take care of the nitty-gritty, he does the PR. In other words I do the hard work, and he gets all the credit. I’m afraid to walk out on him because he needs me. But I think he’s done something illegal like cooking the books because he’s acting weird. If I don’t report him, am I guilty too?

My Brother’s Keeper.

Oh, no, this could easily be from Bill or Dave. Was the “something illegal” killing Heath?

I put the letters back in the bag and leaned back in my chair. But I couldn’t stop reading. I was addicted. I reached into the bag again.

Dear Maggie,

I’m a woman in business for myself. I’m smart, successful, and not bad looking. I’m playing the field for now but I don’t want to end up alone when I’m old and tired. The problem is I live in a small town and there aren’t many single men. Should I go after the only eligible man in town who by the way is smart, handsome,and sexy, or move to a big city where I’ll have a wider choice?

Miz Biz

I read the letter again. Was I crazy or was this letter from Lurline? And if it was, by “the only eligible man in town” did she mean Sam? He was definitely smart, handsome and sexy. I put the letter back and took another. Maybe this wasn’t a good idea, having an advice column in a small-town paper. If I guessed who wrote the letters, wouldn’t everyone else guess too? Or was that the idea? Maybe that was part of the fun, trying to figure out who wrote what about who.

Dear Maggie,

I’m a single guy living in Smallsville, California. I have some secrets in my past I don’t want anyone to know. Nothing terrible, just private stuff, you know? But what happens when I meet a woman who wants to get close? How do I keep things to myself when she wants to bare her soul (and her body) to me? In the past I always just break things off and move on. Or I make her break up with me. She’s married by the way, but her husband is out of the picture.

Roaming Romeo

I couldn’t help thinking it might have been Heath who wrote this before he was axed. But if it was Heath, who was the woman? There were plenty of married women in this town. How many husbands were “out of the picture”? How would Heath even know there was an advice columnist if it was him? I didn’t know and it was my own grandmother. Maybe they’d announced it at a staff meeting and Bruce had asked for submissions to get the ball rolling. Or was it Sam? I shook my head. Sam writing to an advice columnist? Not in this lifetime. Sam involved with a married woman? Impossible.

I took another and then another letter.

Dear Maggie,

I’m not normally a violent person, but I lost my temper the other night and hit my spouse who deserved it. I know it was wrong to take matters into my own hands, but I couldn’t help it. Someone called the cops and now I’m afraid I’ll pay the price. I need help. Or I might strike again.

Scared

I stood up and took a several deep breaths. That last letter had to be from Nina, I just knew it was. The other wasn’t. Nobody would write two letters to Ask Maggie. The part about the cops was the clincher. But what to do? The first thing I had to do was to stop reading these letters. I had to stop thinking about Heath’s murder. It wasn’t my problem. Sam said it and I knew it. Everyone I met, everyone I talked to was a suspect. Only they weren’t.

I paced back and forth on my little deck trying to decide how I could help Nina before she struck her husband again even though he doubtless deserved it. God only knew what he’d done. Killed Heath? Why? Because he’d written a flattering review of his wife’s caramels? That didn’t make sense. Nothing made sense.

I had to do something. I was tired of thinking about the murder. Tired of talking about it. It was time to take action. I couldn’t sit by while my house was broken into. I couldn’t just wait here for something else to happen like a helpless wimp. I had to make it happen on my terms. I would go to see Nina and find out why she smacked her husband. If she did. If not I would gracefully slip away. If need be, I would offer my support. There are places where abused wives or abused husbands can find shelter. No one deserved to be abused. I would sympathize with her or him and convince them to separate.

If Nina was afraid she couldn’t make it on her own, I’d tell her there was big business in candy. Look at Mary See and Fannie Mae. I would help her get a leg up the way Grannie helped me get the pie business restarted after her retirement.

But how to broach the subject without letting her know I’d snooped in the Ask Maggie mailbag? That was my challenge. I know. I’d take a pie. Who can turn down a friend, and I like to think I’m a friend, or at least a farmstand colleague who comes to the door with a pie or a cake in hand?

What if Marty answered the door? Not likely since he was a vet. He had to be at work and if he was there, I’d simply hand over the pie and say good-bye. I’d try not to stare at his black eye and I definitely wouldn’t mention it. But I would offer my support as I would to any spouse who needed it.

First I went to Heavenly Acres and gave Grannie her mailbag.

“I’m nervous,” she said. “What if I give the wrong advice? And things get worse.”

“They can’t get worse,” I said. “I mean, if someone is so needy they have to turn to an advice columnist they’ve never met, then they’ve reached bottom and have nowhere to go but up.”

She frowned. Maybe I wasn’t making sense. Maybe my mind was on poor Nina. “Anyway, you are the most level-headed person I know. The people of this town are lucky to have someone like you to turn to. Obviously they have no one else or they wouldn’t be writing to you.”

“Dear Abby was always spot on,” she said. “She’s my idol. She was funny too.”

“You’re funny,” I assured her. “And some of the letters are funny too. I mean I imagine they might be funny.” Like the husband who was fooling around and vowed he’d never do it again, even though he denied doing it in the first place.

Grannie went to her bookcase and held up a leather-bound copy of
The Best of Dear Abby.
“This is where I got the idea for my column. I can never be as good as she was, but I’m going to try.”

“If you need any help,” I said, “I’d be glad to do whatever I can.”

“Thanks,” she said, “but this has to be my project. Ever since I gave up the shop and moved up here, I’ve felt something was missing. Not that I don’t love my life here. I do. But I need a challenge.” She waved the bag of letters. “This is it.”

I left her contemplating her bag of letters. Maybe in a little while she’d get up the courage to delve into the bag. She’d have good advice for all those writers like “Scared,” “Roaming Romeo,” “Miz Biz,” and “My Brother’s Keeper.” I felt a little guilty that I’d horned in on her new job. The good thing was she’d never know. She had an entirely different approach to the job than I did. Because it wasn’t my job. She wouldn’t try to figure out who the writers were like I did. And she definitely wouldn’t go to their house to help them out. But just as I had to run the pie shop my way, she had to answer the letters her way.

I drove to Mulberry Street and parked down the block from Nina and Marty’s house. I walked slowly up the street, hoping I wouldn’t run into any neighbors who might recognize me. Or realize that I was a stranger in the neighborhood and therefore out of place. So far, so good.

There was a man mowing his lawn. He didn’t give me a second glance. There were kids playing baseball in a back yard. They hit the ball over the fence and I knew I shouldn’t touch it but I reached down and tossed it back to them with one hand. I didn’t think they knew who threw it.

I gave up trying to be invisible. Instead I marched up the walk to Marty and Nina’s house and knocked on the front door, holding my pie in the other hand. I had an excuse for being there.

Nothing. Not a sound. I rang the bell. I waited. Then I walked around the back of the house. The lawn was beautiful and the hibiscus along the fence were in full bloom. They obviously had a gardener. If I were married to a vet I’d have one too. I’d have a shed in back for garden tools and seedlings like they did. I sighed. Some day.

I crossed a brick patio lined with flower boxes and went to the back entrance. I knocked, then waited and finally I tried the door. It wasn’t locked. That’s the kind of town this was. People didn’t lock their doors. Except me. I was supposed to padlock mine. I hadn’t done it. If someone broke in again tonight I had only myself to blame. I wouldn’t even call Sam. I’d just button my lip and accept my punishment.

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