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Authors: Mary Daheim

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BOOK: The Alpine Legacy
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To my surprise—but probably not to Vida's—Victor looked shaken as well as pale. “What do you mean?”

“I've been perfectly clear,” Vida asserted. “I believe that you drove up to Crystal's cabin the night she was killed. Either you found her already dead, or you heard her talking to the killer. Which was it, Victor? You can tell us. We aren't the police.”

“Then why should I tell you anything?” he asked in a belligerent tone.

Vida started to speak, but I interrupted with a brainstorm. “Because you are a creative genius. Because you shouldn't keep trivial things to yourself. They clutter the mind and fetter the soul.” I didn't dare look at Vida; my soft-soap blather was, as my father used to say, enough to gag a goat. A Merrill goat at that. “Because,” I continued, on a shameless roll, “you don't need to be bothered with the menial matters that vex the rest of us.”

Victor was no fool. The gleam in his eyes told me that. But I'd managed to prick his ego just a little. He closed his eyes and exhaled, as if the letting out of breath was preface to unburdening his troubled heart. Or something like that.

“I saw no one,” he began, his voice growing even deeper. “There was no answer to my knock, yet I knew there was someone inside. This person made much noise. Of course I thought it
was
Crystal. There was no car parked there, except for hers. I couldn't understand why she didn't come to the door, so I went around the side of the house. The hot tub was running, I could hear it. I called to Crystal, but she didn't respond.” He paused, passing a hand over his high forehead. “There was a tree
near the deck, so I started to climb it in order to get up high enough to see into the hot tub. Alas, I kept slipping, then I heard what sounded like the slamming of a door. I started back to the front of the house and saw a figure running down the road. I could not recognize who it was, but I knew it wasn't Crystal. Too large, in every way.”

“A man?” Vida interrupted.

“Perhaps. It was very dark. And,” Victor added on a note of candor, “I was startled. Even afraid.”

“So what did you do then?” I asked.

Victor cleared his throat. “I started back to the front door. But before I could get up the stairs, I heard the motor of a car. Whoever had fled must have been parked off to the side of the road. I hadn't noticed when I arrived. There is, you see, a sort of … what do you call a space to turn around or avoid running into a car coming from the other direction?”

“Turnout will do,” I offered.

“Yes,” Victor agreed solemnly, “a turnout. So I proceeded up the stairs and discovered the door had been left wide open. Perhaps the noise I made outside had frightened off the other person. I went inside, calling for Crystal, looking in the other rooms, going to the deck because I'd heard the hot tub running. Then—” He stopped, closed his eyes once more, and took a deep breath. “Then I saw her. There was no doubt that she was dead. I went quite berserk, I think. Frankly, I do not recall exactly what I did next. I assumed I'd just crossed paths with a killer. Would he return? Was I also to die at the hands of a madman?”

“Or woman?” Vida put in.

Victor frowned. “A woman? Perhaps. But dubious. In any event, I tried to find the phone. Crystal had one of those portable phones, and in my shock and distress, I could not find it. So I weep for a while, and then I am
again afraid. I leave, driving back to the highway with tears in my eyes and shaking in my limbs. That is why I crashed the car. I was in terror and sick with grief.”

“But,” I pointed out, “you didn't mention finding Crystal to the deputy.”

“No,” Victor said in a sad voice, “I did not. I was afraid, you see. I thought the police would believe that I had killed her. In Europe, the police are not always understanding. Or so was my experience when I lived there many years ago.”

“Poor man,” Vida said with what sounded like genuine sympathy.

Victor finally met Vida's gaze. “I almost crashed many times before I reached the main highway. The road is crooked, narrow. Indeed, I missed a tree by millimeters. That's when I saw where the car could have been parked.”

Paula's two Siamese cats, Rheims and Rouen, came out from behind the counter that divided the kitchen and living room. They slithered across the floor and came to rest at Vida's feet. She is not a cat lover, and gave them an intimidating look. The cats stayed in place. They always seem to know who hates them most.

Cars were parked in strange places outside of Crystal's cabin on the night of the murder, then, according to Aaron, again this morning.

The thought of Aaron brought another question to mind. “How well do you know Crystal's husband?”

“Husband?” Victor frowned. “Which one?”

“The second one, Aaron Conley.” I eked out an encouraging smile. “He spoke rather sharply to you after the funeral. We talked about it later, at the reception. You criticized his kind of music.”

“Justifiably,” Victor responded. “That kind of so-called popular music is grease that escapes from the roasting pig.”

“Yes,” I said without conviction. The cats were now rubbing against Vida's boots. She gave them each a nudge, but they persisted. “Aaron and Crystal were never divorced. Perhaps you knew that.”

Victor shrugged. “It is of no importance now, is it?”

“Not to you,” I said carefully, “though I wondered how you knew Aaron.”

“I didn't,” Victor replied. “It is only his kind of music I know. Trash, excrement, debris on the musical path to what really matters in composition.”

“I see.” I didn't, but the musical path seemed to have reached a dead end as far as I was concerned. “May I borrow your phone?”

Victor hesitated, then gave a nod. On my way to the counter divider where the phone was kept, I picked up Rheims and Rouen. They wriggled in my grasp and let out that unearthly piercing cry that is typical of the Siamese breed.

As I walked away, I heard Vida mutter, “Wretched pests. Of what use are they?”

As I picked up the receiver, the cats escaped and raced off to their food dishes by the stove. Back in my log house against the mountains, the phone rang four times before again switching over to the answering machine. This time I left a message, saying that I would meet Tom at the diner around one. Maybe he'd figure out that I was trying to call him. On the other hand, it was almost twelve-twenty. He'd probably already left and was sitting in a booth at the diner, twiddling his thumbs.

Vida had put her coat back on and was starting for the door, offering profuse thanks to Victor along the way. I, too, thanked him, and then we were gone.

“Whose car was pulled off the road?” Vida asked as we got into the Buick.

“Your guesswork in approaching Victor was brilliant,”
I remarked. “Mine wasn't so bad, either. The car belonged to Nat Cardenas.”

“Of course.” Vida put the Buick into reverse and turned around. “So Nat wasn't drunk, and Victor wasn't as bad a driver as he pretended. Now, why didn't Nat call the police when he discovered that Crystal was dead?”

“The same reason that Victor didn't,” I replied. “He was upset, in shock, and afraid that he'd be the prime suspect. Incidentally, you're making an assumption.”

Vida's head swiveled. “Which is what?”

“That Crystal was dead when Nat got there.”

“True.” She grew thoughtful as we headed out onto the highway. “You know him better than I do. Would he do anything as insane as killing Crystal? You've said he's very political.”

“That's right, but it cuts both ways,” I answered. “He was protecting his reputation. Let's say he went to see Crystal to reason with her, beg, plead, whatever. She laughed in his face. She certainly laughed in mine. So Nat goes berserk and—” I stopped and shook my head. “It doesn't wash. The murder was carefully planned. I think you were right the first time. He found Crystal dead when he got there and then conducted his search. He came up empty and left in a panic. Maybe he heard Victor outside. All that tromping around and tree climbing must have made some noise. Victor isn't exactly a puma cat.”

“Cats!” Vida exclaimed. “Especially Siamese. How do people put up with that awful cry they make? It's inhuman.”

“That's because they're cats,” I said. “Paula adores them. She's had them as long as I've known her. She couldn't keep cats in some of the other places she lived, especially apartments.”

“Silly,” Vida declared. “Can you imagine what they'd do to Cupcake?”

I could, and it was not a pretty sight. Yellow feathers drifted before my eyes. “Paula named them after two of the French cathedrals, Rheims and Rouen. For the stained glass.”

“Ridiculous,” Vida scoffed. “How can you be friends with anyone who'd name their pets after
windows?”

I decided to drop the subject. We were passing the turnoff to Crystal's cabin again. All seemed quiet, but of course it was impossible to see beyond the first bend in the road. Who had been hanging around the cabin this morning? One of the Eriks clan? Dean Ramsey? Paula? No, not Paula. She drove a minivan. But I could imagine her stopping by to ask Aaron for a keepsake. As strange as it seemed, Paula had been fond of Crystal.

“We're going at this all wrong,” I declared. “Instead of motive, we should be looking for a certain type of person, someone with an organized mind, an eye for detail, and a lot of patience.”

“Not to mention,” Vida said as we passed the Skyko-mish Ranger Station, “someone who had no qualms about pinning the murder on you.”

“Which reminds me,” I said in a waspish tone, “I hold you at fault for getting my poor Jag wrecked. You and Milo both, with your goofy plan to make people think I really did do it.”

“Nonsense!” Vida huffed. “You agreed. How could we know someone would behave so viciously?”

“Viciously?” The word brought me up short. “It
was
vicious, wasn't it? I wonder. What if it wasn't just an irate subscriber? What if the killer did that to my car?”

“To what purpose?” Vida asked.

“I'm not sure. Maybe to make it look as if people really think I killed Crystal. Reinforcing the idea.” I gave an impatient wave of my hand. “Never mind. I don't want to sound paranoid.”

“Personalities,” Vida mused as she turned off to Alpine. “You're quite right. Let's consider the Eriks clan. April appears to be a bit insipid, though I suppose that may mask something more sinister. Mel is mentally lazy. I see nothing cunning about him. Melody, I suspect, is easily led, especially by her brother. Yes,” she said with emphasis, “I could see the two of them planning such a crime. Or Thad, acting alone.”

We were crossing the bridge over the Sky. “Why don't you drop me off at the diner?” I said. “Tom's probably waiting for me there.”

“Oh. Certainly.” Vida took a left onto Railroad Avenue. “Do you see his car out front?”

I gazed at the parking lot, which was almost full. “No,” I said, frowning. “There are at least two Tauruses, but neither of them is Tom's rental. He must have gone over to
The Advocate
to find out what happened to me.”

“No doubt,” Vida remarked, turning up First Street. “Goodness,” she said, her eyes darting up and down Front, “couldn't Fuzzy Baugh find some money in the city treasury to buy new civic decorations? That gold tinsel and those artificial wreaths are beginning to look a bit shopworn.”

“The city and the county can't find money for the women's shelter,” I pointed out. “Or so they tell us. It's odd, isn't it? Crystal's fifty grand could have gone a long way toward making one of her pet projects a reality.”

Vida turned to stare at me. “Are you saying that since she'd made a will, she should have left money to a shelter fund?”

“That's right.” I paused as Vida backed into the diagonal parking place in front of the office and I scanned the street for Tom's car. “She didn't put her money where her mouth was.”

We got out of the Buick and trudged through what had
become dirty slush in the last twenty-four hours. “I don't see it,” I said in a worried voice.

Vida was opening the door to
The Advocate.
“Crystal's attitude, you mean?”

I lingered on the sidewalk. “No. Tom's car. I don't see it anywhere.”

“Well,” Vida said, tapping a booted foot, “come inside. I'm sure he's been inquiring about you.”

Except for Kip MacDuff, who'd gotten takeout from the Burger Barn, the rest of my staff hadn't yet come back from lunch. Kip had seen only a couple of people placing classified ads.

“I've been in the back shop mostly,” he said between bites of cheeseburger. “But when we get visitors, they buzz me and I come right out.”

“I know you do,” I reassured Kip. “You're very conscientious.”

We left Kip and returned to the news office, where I immediately hurried into my cubbyhole to check messages. There were several, but none from Tom. Then I noticed the folded sheet of paper on my desk.

I opened it with shaking hands. I was already sensing the worst, and the bold, slightly illegible penmanship justified my feelings.

Dear Emma
, the letter read.

I feel like a heel. But I called Kelsey this morning to check on her, and she's having some problems with her pregnancy. In fact, she was on the way to the hospital. It seems she's developed some bleeding, and the doctor fears a miscarriage.

I debated with myself

an agony, I assure you

but realized that my duty lies with my daughter. I'm heading for Sea-Tac and hope to catch a one-forty flight to San Francisco.

Please try to forgive me. Our time together was precious, wonderful, magical I pray that it won't be long before we can be together again. I'll call you tonight and let you know what's happening.

I love you. I really do. Don't be angry, don't be sad. Yesterday was the third Sunday of Advent, when the pink candle is lighted as a sign of hope. Remember that. Please.

BOOK: The Alpine Legacy
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