Read When the Cookie Crumbles Online

Authors: Virginia Lowell

When the Cookie Crumbles (20 page)

BOOK: When the Cookie Crumbles
12.64Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
Chapter Thirteen

Wielding a pastry bag filled with fire engine red royal icing, Maddie swirled a crooked grin on the face of a running gingerbread man. “
C’est magnifico!
I just get better and better.”

“Well done.” Olivia glanced up from the gingerbread girl she was decorating. “That was two languages in one exclamation.”

“Drat,” Maddie said. “I’ll never get the hang of French. What did I do wrong this time?”

“Not a thing. It’s just that
c’est
is French and
magnifico
is Italian, which makes you multilingual.” Olivia squeezed two drops of icing to create baby blue eyes for her gingerbread girl. “Besides, I continue to feel impressed and horrified that you managed to guess my email password. Now I have to change it to another French phrase, one I never use but might have a shot at remembering.” She moved her finished cookie to a drying rack and selected another.
“How many more dozens do we have left to decorate?” Olivia asked, glancing up at the kitchen clock. “It’s already eight p.m. Aren’t you and Lucas going to the dance in the park?”

“At least five dozen, and Lucas flaked out,” Maddie said. “He’s tired, so he decided to go home and to bed. I think the real reason is he thinks he can’t dance. I’ve been teaching him.”

“Maybe that’s what wore him out.” Olivia decided on aqua for her gingerbread man’s hair and beard. After all, Maddie wasn’t the only one allowed to veer beyond the limits of reality.

“Nonsense,” Maddie said. “Lucas is nearly ready for
Dancing with the Stars
. He’s shy, that’s all. But no matter. We have work to do, you and I, and I don’t mean mere cookie decorating.”

“Good,” Olivia said. “I didn’t want to keep you away from the dance, but I wasn’t looking forward to traveling the Internet on my own.”

“That’s why I brought my laptop. I’ll crank it up while you tell me your plan. Because I know you have one.” Maddie finished decorating a gingerbread man with black eyes and red fangs. She dribbled a few drops of icing blood down his chin and placed him with the growing collection of finished cookies.

“My plan is more like a list of questions.” Olivia counted the remaining cookies with misgiving. They were destined for The Gingerbread House’s booth at the Sunday afternoon fete, so they had to be designed with skill and imagination. When it came to decorating cookies, Olivia was excellent, but Maddie was superb. Maddie was also superb at navigating the Internet. Olivia wasn’t even in the running.

Olivia stretched her back, loosened her shoulders, and reached for a gingerbread boy. “First, I’m dying to know if that story Hermione told about Karen Evanson has any truth to it. Hermione said it happened sometime in the 1980s. Would something that far back be on the Internet?”

“We can but try,” Maddie said. “Members of the British nobility can be tracked down through a number of avenues, especially when they’ve been involved in a scandal. What were the names again?”

“Sir Laurence and Lady Ariana.” Olivia squeezed her pastry bag too hard and left a red glob at the corner of the gingerbread boy’s mouth. She added more icing and formed clown lips. “I wish we’d gotten their last name. Hermione said they lived in London and then moved to the country after the scandal. It might be someplace with a private hospital or rest home.”

After several minutes of rapid clicking sounds, Maddie sat back and grunted.

“No luck?” Olivia asked.

“Not yet, but not to worry. I’ve come up with lots of Arianas, with one ‘n’ or two, and Laurences in numerous spellings, but not the two together, except…I wonder…” After more tap-tapping, Maddie said, “I’ve returned to a site that I dismissed earlier because I thought it wouldn’t be relevant. Sir Laurence and his wife Ariana are listed as characters in a London play called
Malice and Teacakes
that tanked in 1986. It lasted about three weeks. I don’t recognize the playwright’s name, probably for a good reason.”

Olivia longed to pull a chair next to Maddie, so she could see the site for herself, but the silent cries of naked gingerbread people kept her working. “Are the actors’ names listed? Anybody we might know?”

“Good idea.” Maddie clicked through several screens. “Here they are. Nope, don’t recognize a one. I was hoping to see Hermione’s name; if there’s anyone who screams failed actress, it’s Hermione. She could have used a stage name, of course. There’s one character in the script that also reminds me of Hermione—a betrayed wife in her thirties, named Doris. Let me see if I can find a photo of the cast.”

As Olivia began decorating a gingerbread clown, a familiar longing for a cookie made her reach toward a small gingerbread boy dressed in a sea green sailor suit. She mentally slapped her own hand and drew it back.

“Here’s a cast photo,” Maddie said. “It labels the character names and the actor playing the role, which undoubtedly caused endless embarrassment, given the snotty reviews.” Her finger on the screen, Maddie twisted her head toward the worktable. “Livie, come look at this, will you? It’s the actress who played Doris, the betrayed wife. Tell me what you think.”

Olivia capped her icing bag and scrunched next to Maddie on the roomy kitchen chair. “Way too tall to be Hermione Chatterley,” Olivia said. “Hermione can’t be more than about five foot two. This actress is closer in height to the other female cast members, so she’s got to be at least five foot six. She looks like she’s in her midthirties.”

“Ah, the wonders of greasepaint,” Maddie said with a grin. “Get this, the actress’s name is Karin Evensong.”

“No.”

“Yes.” Maddie tapped the screen at a list of actor names. “Our mayor in a New Age moment. I will enjoy having this information.”

“You wouldn’t—”

“Only if pushed beyond human endurance,” Maddie
said. “Anyway, this actress might be Karen Evanson, which would indicate that she was in London in the 1980s, as Hermione claimed. Karen couldn’t have been more than nineteen or twenty then.”

“If this is Karen, it means Hermione might have had some connection with her, at least through this play. Hermione used the names of the main characters in her story about Karen’s alleged affair. Why would she make up such a story?” Olivia reluctantly returned to her mammoth cookie-decorating task. “Does anyone else in the cast look familiar to you?”

“Nope,” Maddie said. “None of the male characters is small enough to be Paine Chatterley. It’s always possible that Hermione worked backstage, I suppose. I can’t imagine Paine doing manual labor, especially volunteer.” Her fingers bounced over the computer keys. “I’ll check a few more sites.”

To speed up her decorating progress, Olivia placed three gingerbread men side by side. She gave one of them yellow hair, the second got a yellow shirt, and the third acquired yellow shoes.

“Hey, this is interesting,” Maddie said. “It’s a British tabloid article from about five years ago. Someone posted it recently because one of the people in the article died. The names are different, but the story is exactly the same as the one Hermione told us. Young American woman leaves art school in Paris, visits London, has affair with much older member of the aristocracy, wife has stroke, and so on. Only there’s a photo of the young woman, and she wasn’t Karen.”

“So Hermione lifted her story from a tabloid exposé,” Olivia said. “Then she changed the names, using characters from a play in which Karen performed? That’s a lot of work. Hermione must have prepared that story in advance.”

“Maybe Karen and Hermione knew each other, and not in a friendly way,” Maddie said. “Hey, what if the man Karen had an affair with was—”

“Paine Chatterley!” Olivia squeezed her pastry bag, inadvertently squirting a ribbon of magenta icing into the air. It landed on the table, less than an inch from a row of decorated cookies. “Oops.”

“Put the pastry bag down, Livie, and no gingerbread people will get hurt. Remind me not to get you a firearm for your birthday.”

“Duly noted.” Olivia dragged a chair over to the computer. “Break time. Let’s look up Paine and Hermione.”

“Excellent.” Maddie typed in their names and hit return. “Huh. Not much there, except recent articles about their arrival in Chatterley Heights and Paine’s untimely departure.” She checked several pages of listings. “I don’t see anything from the UK here.” Maddie pulled up a site that promised to find anyone, anywhere. She added “London” to their names and requested an address. No reference popped up. Since Paine had been reported dead, Maddie tried Hermione’s name alone. “Nothing,” she said. “That’s weird. Maybe they were using assumed names. They did have passports, right?”

“Del confiscated them,” Olivia said. “He’d have said something if they were using different names. How accurate are these sites?”

“I wouldn’t bet Clarisse’s cookie-cutter collection on them. With a little time and hacking, I might be able to locate an official site; that would be more accurate. Still, it’s odd that Paine and Hermione don’t show up anywhere except here in Chatterley Heights. I’d assume they were impostors, but Aunt Sadie totally recognized Paine.”

A stray lock of auburn hair fell across Olivia’s eye, and
she smoothed it behind her ear. “I meant to ask you,” she said. “When I visited Aunt Sadie and Paine, or his evil twin, was there, she complained about a hand tremor. I hate to even think this, but could she have something neurological going on?”

“Not Aunt Sadie,” Maddie said with certainty. “That tremor is a nerve thing caused by excessive embroidery, or that’s what the doctor says. She’s supposed to lay off for a while, but you know Aunt Sadie. She insists that the tremor goes away when she embroiders, so now she’s doing even more of it. I told her, we’ll have to sell all her aprons to get enough money for the whopping surgery she’ll wind up needing. But did she take me seriously?”

“I’m guessing not?”

“Good guess.” Maddie squinted at the computer screen. “Here’s something interesting.” She pointed to a listing that read “The legendary Chatterley cookie-cutter collection…” Maddie clicked on the link and up popped an article by a collector whose name Olivia recognized. As she remembered, the woman had passed away two or three years earlier.

“When did the article first appear?” Olivia asked.

“2007.”

“I’d better get back to decorating,” Olivia said, “but I’m curious. Read the article out loud.”

“Excellent, a command performance,” Maddie said. “Okay, here’s the text:

“The legendary Chatterley cookie-cutter collection might be more than a legend. The Chatterley family died out years ago, and their nineteenth-century home, located in the quaint little town of Chatterley Heights, Maryland, is now a historical landmark. The small mansion has seen better days, both inside and out, and few visitors make it a
destination spot. Of course, most avid cookie-cutter collectors have made the pilgrimage to the Chatterley Mansion at least once. None has found so much as a single battered biscuit cutter, not one item worthy of the famed Chatterley collection. Legends die hard, though, and some collectors still believe that generations of Chatterley wives and mothers brought cutters from Europe; acquired more cutters from itinerant tinware peddlers; and, during periods of prosperity, commissioned cookie cutters in unique designs from tinware artists.

“To find out more, I spoke with two knowledgeable individuals from the cookie-cutter-collecting world.

“Livie, listen to this,” Maddie said. “The two collectors she interviewed were Anita Rambert and Clarisse Chamberlain. Clarisse insisted the Chatterley collection was a complete myth, that it never really existed.”

“Clarisse said that? But…” Olivia’s pastry bag was aimed at a gingerbread man’s chin, where she’d planned to put a red beard. Instead, several beads of fire engine red icing dripped on the man’s neck. She decided to change him into a woman with a necklace and short skirt. “That article was published before I moved back to Chatterley Heights,” Olivia said, “but still, Clarisse and I talked endlessly about cookie cutters, and I never heard her deny the Chatterley collection ever existed. She did think it was long gone, maybe even thrown away, piece by piece, over the generations. She said many housewives were more practical than sentimental.”

“Maybe she wanted to protect her town from hordes of fanatic collectors,” Maddie said. “Anita Rambert hedged a bit, too. When it comes to local antiques, no one knows more than Anita. All she said was the Chatterleys probably acquired some unique cookie cutters during their wealthier
periods, but they wouldn’t have thought of them as potentially valuable. If they got bent or broken, Anita agreed that Chatterley wives would have tossed them or perhaps given them to the servants.”

“Anita is a shrewd antiques dealer,” Olivia said. “She’s always thinking ahead. If anyone ever does find a collection, she’ll want to acquire it quickly and quietly. It’s in her best interest to dampen expectations. I could give Anita a call and ask her, but I’m afraid she’d think I’d learned something that might lead to—”

Olivia was interrupted by a series of explosions, like spitting gunfire. “What was that? Oh right, fireworks.” A louder boom was followed by an unearthly howl coming from The Gingerbread House sales area. “Oh no, I left Spunky in the store.” Olivia bolted toward the kitchen door. “He’s fine with thunder, but fireworks terrify him, as we discovered last Fourth of July.” As she opened the door, a brindled streak flew into the kitchen. He came to rest in a quivering ball inside the tiny kitchen bathroom. Olivia sat down on the bathroom floor next to Spunky, and he slunk onto her lap. “Poor little guy,” she said. “Tell you what. You stay in here, and the health department need never know.”

BOOK: When the Cookie Crumbles
12.64Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Drop Dead Beautiful by Jackie Collins
After the Dark by Max Allan Collins
Dangerous Gifts by Mary Jo Putney
Bloodheir by Brian Ruckley
Another Snowbound Christmas by Veronica Tower
New Lives by Ingo Schulze
From a Dream: Darkly Dreaming Part I by Valles, C. J., James, Alessa