Part 24 (1/2)
”No,” I said. ”I don't know anything about him, except what you've told me. He represented someone I knew.”
Marisa was very sharp. ”Your fiance?”
”Yes.” There was no point in evading the issue now. ”Mr. Vitani's firm may have represented the newspaper chain that Tom owned.”
”I doubt it,” Marisa said. ”Good Lord, what are you thinking? That these people who've come to town have some connection with Mr. Vitani? I don't mean to pry, but I've heard rumors, of course, including that they're somehow related to Tom. How painful this must be for you!”
”Yes,” I confessed, ”it's been tough. Very tough. But I'm not selling, and that's that. Why did you say that Mr. Vitani wouldn't have represented Tom's business? His name was on a list of emergency contacts.”
”Mr. Vitani-his first name was John, I think-handled mostly estates, probate, that sort of thing,” Marisa explained. ”And high-profile divorces, which might have seemed like a motive for murder, though no serious suspects were ever found. Why kill the attorney instead of the estranged spouse? Anyway, one of the other senior partners, either Bowles or Mercier, could have handled Tom's business. They're both more into corporate law, if I recall correctly.”
”If that's so,” I said, keeping my eye on the time, which was almost eleven-thirty, ”then the firm may still represent the Cavanaugh children.”
”That's very likely,” Marisa agreed. ”Does that mean if you get involved in some legal complications, I could be going up against those high-powered San Franciscans?”
”I doubt it'll come to that,” I said. ”They can't sue me for not selling them the Advocate. Still, it's very curious how linked everybody seems to be. It is a small world sometimes.”
”It is,” Marisa replied, ”particularly if you limit it to the West Coast. Even here in Alpine I find myself dealing with firms from Mexico to Canada. The law is a bit like a big fraternity, though often as adversaries, not allies.”
”I suppose that's true,” I said. ”And speaking of adversaries, I have to pick up Tom's daughter in a few minutes and take her to lunch.”
”Ah.” Marisa uttered a little laugh. ”That should be interesting. Or,” she added, sounding more serious, ”will it be awkward?”
”Both,” I said. After a couple of cliche pleasantries, we rang off.
Coming back from a quick trip to the restroom, I found Vida arguing fiercely with-I guessed-one of her relatives. ”You're not a working woman,” she a.s.serted, tapping the desk with a pencil and making a sound like an angry woodp.e.c.k.e.r. ”And don't tell me how much you do around your house or your garden. I have all that to keep up, too. Just because you worked two jobs and raised a family a hundred years ago doesn't mean-” Vida stopped talking. ”Well!” She banged the receiver down in its cradle. ”The nerve! Mary Lou hung up on me!”
Mary Lou Hinshaw Blatt was another sister-in-law, and equally strong-minded. The two women had never gotten along. ”I gather,” I said, ”you're stuck with Ella.”
Vida leaned back in her chair, fists on hips. ”That's right. Ella's related to I don't know how many able-bodied people around this town, and yet I'm the one who has to get her home and settled in. It's simply not right!” Suddenly she sat up, whipped off her gla.s.ses, and began that ferocious habit of grinding away at her eyes with her fists. ”Ooooh! If this doesn't beat all!”
I had moved closer to Vida's desk, trying to ignore the unsettling sound of her eyeb.a.l.l.s squeaking when she punished them so harshly. ”So Ella won't be going to rehab?”
Vida stopped the irksome rubbing and looked up. ”Rehab? Oh, for goodness' sakes! It wasn't that serious a stroke. More like the vapors, if you ask me.” She sighed, her big bosom heaving and her broad shoulders sagging. ”I'd better go fetch Ella now. She's already been discharged.”
I got out of the way as she put on her gla.s.ses, plopped the big orange straw hat on her head, grabbed her purse, and sprang from her chair. ”I'll be back by one,” she called over her shoulder.
The newsroom was empty, except for me. Curtis and Ed had both gone out, though where I didn't know. I could only hope they were actually working. After getting my own purse, I headed outside, pa.s.sing Ginny, who was on the phone taking a cla.s.sified ad.
On the short drive to the ski lodge, I thought back to what Marisa Foxx had told me about John Vitani's unsolved shooting death. I couldn't help but wonder if there was any connection between that case and our local tragedies. It seemed unlikely, though, so I put it out of my mind. Dealing with Kelsey Cavanaugh Platte was my priority. I sensed that our lunch date was going to be painful for both of us. I decided there was no point in trying to connect the dots between Mr. Vitani, Maxim Volos, and Leo.
That, of course, was a big mistake.
SIXTEEN.
KELSEY PLATTE STOOD NEXT TO ONE OF THE GRANITE pillars that supported the lodge's porte cochere. She looked forlorn and maybe apprehensive. I stopped my car and waved at her. After peering at me for what seemed like a long time, she walked over and opened the pa.s.senger door. Before getting in, Kelsey glanced into the backseat. Maybe she was checking to see if I had an accomplice stowed away.
”I'm not very hungry,” she announced before I could offer a greeting. ”Does this diner serve a lot of grease?”
”It is a diner,” I said, slowly driving away from the lodge and trying not to look at the crime scene tape that still marked the spot where Leo had been shot. ”They have nice salads, though.”
”I'm into the Kus.h.i.+ Macro Diet,” Kelsey said. ”It's been a nightmare up here. n.o.body knows about Gobo Misso Itame or even azuki beans and konbu algae.”
”That's a shame,” I said, wondering what the h.e.l.l she was talking about. ”How will you manage when you move here?”
”Mr. Bardeen told me there was a really big Asian food store in Seattle called...I forget. I wrote it down.”
”Uwajimaya, I'll bet. It's in Seattle's Chinatown,” I said as we headed down the road that led to Alpine Way. ”It's huge and has all sorts of items you can't get anywhere else.”
”That's a relief,” Kelsey said with a little sigh. ”I can't get over this town. It's so...remote. I feel like I'm in a time warp. What do people do around here?”
”That's an interesting question,” I replied, attempting to encourage her to talk to me. ”In the early days, Alpine was a logging camp. There was no road into the town. It could be accessed only by train or climbing a mile up Tonga Ridge. Families were allowed to live in the camp, and while there were never more than two or three hundred people, they managed to come up with their own entertainment. The winters were harder and longer in those days, too, but Alpine was always a closely knit-”
”Who's that?” Kelsey interrupted, pointing to the statue of Carl Clemans in Old Mill Park.
”The town's founder and mill owner, Carl Clemans,” I replied. ”He'd come west to attend Stanford and organized the first Sigma Nu chapter on campus. He was also the quarterback and captain of the first Stanford football team that-”
”Hunh,” Kelsey said. ”Why would somebody from Stanford become a logger?”
”He was a businessman,” I explained. ”He bought other parcels of land around the state, including-”
”A couple of my friends went to Stanford,” Kelsey said. ”I never wanted to go there. I took some cla.s.ses at Mills for a while, but I couldn't see the point. Life's about living, not just learning.” She turned to look at me as I pulled into the diner's parking lot. ”Where did you get those tan slacks?”
”I don't remember,” I admitted. ”I've had them for several years. Nordstrom's, maybe.”
”I like Nordstrom's,” she said. ”I go to the one on Market Street.” Kelsey pointed to the sleek chrome structure that had been built to resemble a fifties roadside diner. ”Is that it?”
”Yes.” I felt like asking her what else it might be, especially with the bright red neon sign proclaiming ”THE DINER-Good Eats.”
As I'd expected, the restaurant hadn't yet begun to fill up at ten to twelve. Terri Bourgette seated us toward the rear and shot me a questioning glance. I looked back at her with an I-think-I-know-what-you're-wondering expression but couldn't say anything to identify my companion. I figured that Terri, who is a very sharp young woman, had probably already guessed.
Kelsey ordered iced tea; I asked for a Pepsi. For the next few minutes we studied the menu in silence. Or rather Kelsey did, as I already knew I wanted the rare beef dip.
”This is really awful,” my guest said with a deep frown. ”I'm going to order the navy bean soup with a side of whatever greens they've got.”
Our waiter, a young man named Royce, took the orders without argument. ”Carrots, radishes, celery, and black olives on the side,” he repeated in an amiable voice. ”Got it.”
”So,” I said, leaning forward in the booth, ”you're definitely buying the Bronsky house?”
”I guess,” Kelsey said vaguely. ”Dylan wants to. He skis.”
”Do you?”
”Sometimes. I don't really enjoy it.” Her blue eyes gazed at our booth's divider panel. ”Why do they have all these pictures of old-fas.h.i.+oned people? Are they from around here?”
Given that she was referring to black-and-white still shots of Leave It to Beaver, Dragnet, and The Honeymooners, I was appalled at her ignorance. ”Those were popular TV shows in the fifties,” I replied. ”All the decor here is from that era, including pictures of movie stars and singers.”