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    Snow Place to Die : A Bed-and-breakfast Mystery

    Page 9
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      Killegrew. “First aid!”

      Grudgingly, the company stepped aside, except for Leon,

      who was still on his hands and knees. Andrea hovered over

      Russell, whose eyes looked glazed. Under the thinning fair

      hair, Judith could see a bump beginning to rise.

      “Mr. Craven,” Judith said softly as she applied the ice bag.

      “What’s your first name?”

      His eyes didn’t quite focus, and he winced when he felt

      the ice. His mouth worked, but nothing came out.

      “What’s your first name?” Judith repeated.

      “Barry,” Russell replied, and passed out.

      Max Agasias had finally simmered down, so much, in fact,

      that he and Ward Haugland carried Russell Craven to one

      of the lobby’s three long sofas. Andrea, who had hurriedly

      helped Leon pick up the rest of his cake, took over from Judith. Her plump, motherly figure was perched on the sofa

      arm where she held the ice bag to Russell’s head.

      “I won’t take back what I said,” Max declared, pouring

      himself a single shot of Canadian whiskey from the make- 70 / Mary Daheim

      shift bar Judith and Renie had set up earlier. “Craven and

      the rest of those R&D bastards don’t know a damned thing

      about marketing.”

      “Now, now,” soothed Killegrew, “let’s not bore more holes

      in the corporate ship, Max. We all have to work together

      and try to understand what goes on in each other’s shop.”

      “That’s my point,” Max railed. “Nobody in this company

      understands marketing! But R&D is the worst. You cut our

      budget for their sake, and we’ll be out selling door-to-door!”

      “You won’t have anything to sell,” Ava put in, “if R&D

      doesn’t come up with new product. Put a sock in it, Max.

      You made your point.”

      He’d also made quite a lump on Russell Craven’s head,

      but at least Max’s victim had come around. Andrea offered

      him a glass of water or a snifter of brandy. Russell said he’d

      prefer coffee, strong and black. Judith started back to the

      kitchen.

      She met Renie in the dining room. “What’s up?” Renie

      asked. “Is somebody else dead?”

      Judith shook her head. “Just wounded. I’m going to make

      coffee.”

      Nadia was still in the kitchen, fussing about, apparently

      trying to find busy work to calm her nerves. “Is Russell all

      right?” she asked when she saw Judith.

      “He’s got a nasty bump on his head, but I think he’ll be

      fine,” Judith replied, removing a regular-sized coffeemaker

      from one of the cupboards. “He should be checked for concussion, though. He seemed a bit confused.”

      “No wonder!” Nadia briefly closed her eyes. “Max hit him

      awfully hard. It was so unnecessary.”

      “Mr. Craven doesn’t strike me as a combative type,” Judith

      said, putting coffee into a copper filter.

      “He’s not,” Nadia responded. “But he’s very protective of

      his R&D people. When someone like Max calls them a bunch

      of dreamers and a waste of corporate funds, Russell

      SNOW PLACE TO DIE / 71

      can become very mulish. Max resents all the other departments because he feels they don’t understand marketing. But

      he despises R&D most of all, because of the way they work.

      Or don’t, from his point of view.”

      “You mean…?” Judith frowned. “They just sit and dream

      up things?”

      “Yes.” Nadia now seemed more relaxed, perhaps because

      she was discussing a subject she knew backward and forward.

      It was beginning to dawn on Judith that many of the OTIOSE

      conferees were like that. They felt on safe ground only when

      dealing with corporate matters. The rest of the world, even

      everyday occurrences, seemed to threaten them. “You see,”

      Nadia went on, “much of the R&D work is conceptual. As

      Russell puts it, his people have to dream a long time before

      they can even begin to cope with reality.”

      That, Judith thought, explained Russell himself, who didn’t

      seem quite plugged in. But it didn’t explain his response to

      her question about his first name. “Did Russell know Barry

      Newcombe?”

      Nadia tipped her head to one side. The stylish platinum

      pageboy had wilted during the past few hours. “I don’t think

      so,” she answered cautiously. “In fact, I recall him asking

      several questions about Barry today. As far as I know, Russell

      probably never met Barry until he drove us up to the lodge

      last January. Why do you ask?” Her blue eyes hardened like

      sapphires.

      Judith shrugged. “It’s not important.” The coffee was almost ready and she didn’t want to waste time bringing

      Russell his cup. “You knew Barry, of course.”

      “Oh, yes,” Nadia replied, her expression softening. “Such

      a well-mannered young man. I’d worked with him before

      when he’d catered some of the other company events. He

      was very good at it, even if he tended to…become distracted.”

      She lowered her eyes.

      Judith and Nadia both returned to the lobby where Russell

      Craven was now in a half-sitting position on the sofa.

      72 / Mary Daheim

      He seemed reasonably alert, and grateful for the coffee. Judith

      offered to pour a cup for the others, but only Andrea and

      Ward accepted.

      “I’ll get it,” Andrea volunteered, taking Russell’s hand and

      placing it on the ice bag she’d been holding to his head.

      “Easy does it,” she said in a soothing voice.

      Frank Killegrew had resumed his place of dominance in

      front of the fireplace. His shrewd gaze traveled from Renie

      to Judith. “We’re going to get back down to business now,”

      he said, hands clasped behind his back. “It’s been a terrific

      session this evening, right up until the…” He glanced at

      Russell, then at Max. “…the controversy. So this train has

      to make up for lost time. It’s just about nine o’clock, and we

      can keep the old locomotive running until say, ten-thirty. If

      you’ll excuse us, Ms. Jones, Ms.…” His voice trailed off.

      “Flynn,” Judith said, barely above a whisper.

      “We’re gone.” Renie waved one hand, then trotted out of

      the lobby.

      Judith followed. In the dining room, they met Andrea,

      who was carrying two cups of coffee. “I checked Russell’s

      eyes,” she said. “They seem normal. Pay no attention to his

      mention of Barry. Russell didn’t know him.”

      “So I’ve heard,” Judith replied, ignoring Renie’s puzzled

      look.

      Andrea’s pretty face flushed slightly, an attractive combination with her silver hair. “I understand why he said what

      he did. Russell is terribly sensitive. I’m sure the news of

      Barry’s death upset him. You know how creative types tend

      to overreact.” She bustled off to the lobby.

      “I’m creative,” Renie said in an ingenuous voice. “Do I

      overreact?”

      “It depends,” Judith said, continuing on into the kitchen.

      “I don’t think I’ve ever described you as sensitive.”

      “What’s with this about Russell calling h
    imself Barry?”

      Renie picked up her plate but dumped her milk into the sink

      and poured out a fresh glass.

      SNOW PLACE TO DIE / 73

      Judith explained as they went up the back stairs. Renie

      thought Andrea’s rationale was probably correct. Judith

      didn’t comment further.

      It was after ten when the cousins finished their meal. The

      storm had not abated. Judith dared to open the window to

      get a better view.

      “Brrr!” she exclaimed, closing the casement quickly. “It

      must be down in the teens, with a wind chill factor of minus

      about a hundred. Look at the way the snow is drifting on

      the windowsill.”

      “It’s drifting, all right,” Renie said without enthusiasm.

      “The fire’s almost out. Do you want to stoke it or go to bed?”

      Involuntarily, Judith yawned. “It’s getting cold in here

      without the fire. We might as well sleep. I’m tired.”

      Renie tapped her fingers on the arm of the chair. “I’m

      hyped. I always get this way after a big presentation. Finding

      a dead body also makes me a little…edgy.”

      Judith was leaning against the honor bar. “You’re scared?”

      “Aren’t you?”

      “Sure. But I’ve been scared before. After nineteen years

      with Dan McMonigle, I can face almost anything.”

      “You do and you have,” Renie said dryly. “Of course

      nobody wants to kill us. We’re insignificant bugs on the

      corporate highway of life.”

      Judith smiled. “Roadkill?”

      “That isn’t what I meant.” Renie got out of the chair and

      lighted a cigarette. “One for the road,” she said. “Or should

      I say one for the corporate highway?”

      “If you must,” Judith responded, then turned to make sure

      she’d latched the window properly. “Coz!” she hissed.

      “There’s that light again!”

      Renie rushed to join her cousin at the window. This time,

      she, too, saw a faint, blurred light somewhere out in the

      swirling snow. “Jeez! Who could it be?”

      74 / Mary Daheim

      “Maybe it’s not a who,” Judith muttered. “Maybe it’s a

      what.”

      “You mean some sort of beacon?” asked Renie, all but

      pressing her nose against the window pane.

      “Yes. Some kind of weather-related signal. Did you notice

      anything like that when we were outside today?”

      “No. But I’m not even sure where we’re looking,” Renie

      pointed out. “We were on the other side of the lodge.”

      The light went out, or perhaps it was swallowed up by the

      thick flakes that blew past the lodge with renewed frenzy.

      Renie paced the small room, puffing and scowling. “Nobody

      in their right mind would be outside in this weather,” she finally said. “Maybe there’s a ski lift nearby. The storm might

      have shorted the wiring.”

      “That’s possible.” Judith moved away from the window.

      She tensed as she heard muffled voices in the hall, then the

      closing of doors. “The OTIOSE gang must be wrapping it

      up for the night. I hope nobody else got hurt. Say, do you

      know why Andrea got so mad at Margo this afternoon?”

      Renie shook her head. “I couldn’t guess. Women talk a

      great line about helping each other in the business world,

      but believe me, the sisterhood is a myth. Look at Nadia and

      Andrea—there’s bad blood there, too, probably because

      Andrea is an officer and Nadia isn’t. It’s every girl for herself,

      just like it is with the boys. Maybe more so, because it’s

      tougher for women. The old boy network still seems to

      function.”

      “They’re sure a testy bunch,” Judith remarked. “Frankly,

      I’m surprised. I would expect better of people in executive

      positions.”

      “Not so,” Renie said, turning back the spread on the nearest

      twin bed. “These people are under tremendous pressure,

      from within and without. As a public utility, OTIOSE is

      watched closely by the state and federal commissions, not

      to mention the public and the media. So when

      SNOW PLACE TO DIE / 75

      they go off on a private retreat like this, they’re supposed to

      vent and let their hair down. It’s only natural that their

      emotions boil over and they behave badly.”

      “They sure do,” Judith agreed.

      “They’re spoiled brats,” Renie said. “I’ve tried to explain

      that.”

      “I know. I’m just not used to it,” Judith said with a shake

      of her head. “I’ve never been involved in corporate life. Oh,

      there were politics and a pecking order within the library

      system, but it wasn’t like this.” Slowly, she wandered around

      the room, hugging herself to keep warm and absently taking

      in the modest decor: another mountain-scape, a brightly

      colored Native American throw rug, a photograph of the

      lodge under construction. The handwritten date in the corner

      read August 21, 1936.

      “This must have been a public works project,” Judith

      mused. “You know—one of FDR’s efforts to put the unemployed to work during the Depression.”

      “Probably,” Renie agreed. “It has that look—spare, but

      functional. Of course the recent owners from the private

      sector have tried to jazz it up. Like the fancy kitchen, and

      the conference rooms.”

      “Speaking of kitchen,” Judith said with a sheepish expression, “I wouldn’t mind getting a little extra something.” She

      pointed to her empty plate. “How about you?”

      Renie waved her cigarette. “I’m good, but I’ll be your

      bodyguard. It’s probably not wise to go off by ourselves.”

      The lights in the corridor had been dimmed. Judith and

      Renie decided to use the elevator now that they assumed the

      lobby was vacant. Again, it appeared that Nadia—or somebody—had tidied up. A single lamp glowed in a corner by

      one of the sofas. In the grate, the fire had died down to a

      few crimson embers. The wind moaned in the big chimney,

      and the pennants that hung from the rafters rustled gently

      above the cousins’ heads.

      The dining room was dark, but Renie found the switch.

      76 / Mary Daheim

      A pale, sallow patch of light followed them into the kitchen.

      Judith started to feel for the on-off button by the sink, but

      stopped abruptly.

      Something was wrong. She could make out the marbletopped counter and the glass dessert plate. She could also

      see that someone’s face was lying in what was left of the

      angel food cake.

      SIX

      NEITHER JUDITH NOR Renie screamed. Instead, they held

      onto each other so hard that their fingernails practically drew

      blood. Finally, after what seemed like hours, but was probably only a minute, they stood back and stared at their discovery.

      “It’s Leon Mooney,” Renie said, stunned and hoarse. “What

      happened to him?”

      Reluctantly, Judith went around to the other side of the

      counter. Leon’s small body sagged against the counter, his

      knees buckled, his arms dangling at his sides.

      “He is dead, I gather?” Renie still sounded unnatur
    al.

      Judith felt for a pulse in Leon’s frail wrist. “I’m afraid so.”

      Her own voice was shaking. “It could have been a heart attack.”

      But Judith knew better. As soon as Renie’s fumbling fingers

      managed to turn on the lights, Judith saw the ugly bruise on

      the back of Leon’s head. Then she spotted a heavy-duty

      plastic freezer bag next to his feet. The bag had something

      in it. Judith bent down for a closer look.

      Through the transparent plastic, Judith could see the

      soapstone Eskimo carving. “Good God!” she breathed,

      wobbling on her heels. “It’s that same carving Max used to

      conk Russell!”

      77

      78 / Mary Daheim

      “Poor little Leon!” Renie sounded genuinely moved. “I

      hardly knew him, but he seemed the most harmless of the

      bunch.”

      Judith sat down on the floor and held her head. “This is

      awful. I feel kind of sick.”

      Renie, who had propped herself up against the refrigerator,

      scanned the kitchen. “I hope whoever did this isn’t lurking

      around here someplace. Is he still warm?”

      Judith nodded, then tried to focus on the digital clock. “It’s

      ten to eleven. Didn’t Killegrew say they were going to cut

      the meeting off at ten-thirty?”

      “I think so,” Renie replied. “That’s about when we heard

      the noises in the hall.”

      “Dear heaven.” Judith rocked back and forth on the floor.

      “We have to do something.”

      Renie gestured at the phone. “Should we at least try to call

      for help?”

      Judith hesitated. “Yes. We have to.”

      “I’ll do it.” On wobbly legs, Renie went to the phone.

      Judith averted her eyes from Leon’s pathetic body. If the

      little man had seemed wizened in life, he now appeared utterly wraithlike in death. But, Judith thought, that’s what

      he’d become—a wraith. She felt an unaccustomed bout of

      hysteria surging up inside.

      “Damn!” Renie slammed the phone back in place. “I can’t

      get a dial tone! The lines must be down.”

      The announcement snapped Judith out of her emotional

      slide. She started to get up, still trying not to look at Leon.

      “We can’t do anything about that,” she said, using the

      counter’s edge to pull herself to a standing position. “How

      do we deliver the bad news?”

      Renie twisted her hands together. “Nadia, I suppose. We

      start with her. Or should it be Margo? She’s p.r.”

     


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