It worried me to see Eileen drinking again. I wondered how Jack felt about having first an older wife, then an older girlfriend, who overindulged in alcohol. Fiona I didn’t know about, but Eileen never used to drink more than a glass of wine in an evening. Then, she’d caught her husband—the very successful president of a pharmaceutical supply company—mainlining heroin with his girlfriend in the Druckmans’ home library. Eileen had started buying champagne by the case. At first she drank to console herself, then she drank to celebrate receiving ten and a half million dollars for the sale of her husband’s company. He’d been jailed briefly on drug charges, been warned out of the medical supply business, and had moved to Florida.
And then Eileen had met Jack. She’d told me he made her so happy she didn’t want booze. But with the death of Doug Portman, she seemed worried and morose. And drinking more than she should.
I asked Eileen, “What’s the bottom line here?”
“Arthur Wakefield,” Eileen replied promptly. She gestured at the newspaper article with her glass. “Arthur has not had an open conflict with Jack since Jack’s been working for me. But now with Portman suddenly dead, I’m afraid Arthur’ll try to use the local paper to stoke public opinion. Maybe he wants Jack out of town and my restaurant closed. Who knows?” Her voice turned bitter.
I looked at Jack. He shrugged. He said, “That’s all I could think about when I was incarcerated. Who hit me over the head? Who pushed Fiona over the cliff? And why?”
I’d heard a lot of theories this morning, too many to keep straight. On the other hand, I’d seen Tom barely nod at one hypothesis about a crime, laugh at two more, discard a fourth, and jot down his own ideas about a fifth.
“What I don’t understand,” Jack continued quietly, “is all these stories I’ve been hearing from folks in town. Portman had a ton of cash on him when he died. Why?”
I sighed and shrugged. I didn’t want to tell them about my connection to Doug and the unconsummated sale of the skis. I finished my coffee and set the cup down on the saucer. “Thanks for the goodies. I’ll report to Tom everything you told me.”
I nodded to them and they smiled. From habit, I rose and put my dishes in the sink next to the dirty crystal glasses. When I turned back around, Eileen had clasped Jack’s hand in hers.
I let myself out.
CHAPTER 10
Moments later, I was lost in a condo maze. Despite the curving roadways’ fanciful names—Sweethearts’ Summit, Lynx Lane, Mogul Avenue, and Snowcone Court—all the houses were painted monotonous tones of gray or beige, and featured yards piled high with identical mountains of snow. I was baffled
Arthur had said he lived on Elk Path. Bouncing along the snow-pocked street, I saw signs for the Elk Ridge Nature Trail and Picnic Area, and followed them to a parking lot. I wound between day-skiers unloading equipment from the backs of sport-utility vehicles. A couple of fellows directing traffic did not understand my question, and said I was
It was nine o’clock. I wasn’t due at Arthur’s until ten. One sure way of finding any residence in Killdeer was to locate the street on the town map. It was a smaller version of Big Map, and it was conveniently located next to Cinda’s Cinnamon Stop. Come to think of it, I could get a quadruple-shot espresso there, too! A mind-clearing detour could help, especially since I’d just discovered all kinds of things about Arthur Wakefield that had never emerged in our five weeks of work together.
I parked in one of the gondola lots, trod carefully across the snowpack to the Killdeer map, and found Elk Path. I had missed a turnoff that I had mistaken for a driveway; Arthur’s house was less than five minutes away. I growled and headed for the back of a lengthy walk-up line at Cinda’s. If no one was allowed to ski until the cops finished their investigation, I couldn’t imagine what kind of boom was happening for the shopkeepers and restaurant folks at the base. From inside the shop, though, a waiter recognized me and waved. A moment later, he brought out a quadruple-shot espresso. “PBS lady, right? No charge.”