“Like who?”
At that question, Bob suddenly looked ill. “Like my son Robbie.”
Thirty-Eight

“It’s that boy that got us into this,” Bob said, a pained expression on his face. “And those damned poker games of his.”
“Poker?” Candy couldn’t believe what she was hearing. “Is that what this is all about?”
“Yeah. That’s part of it at least. But there’s a lot more.”
“So why don’t you tell me all about it.”
He waved a hand at her. “I’m getting to it, I’m getting to it. Things have been moving so fast I haven’t been able to keep track of it all myself — and now, with Old Man Sedley gone, and Charlotte too, well, the whole thing has heated up to the boiling point, hasn’t it?”
“It sure has. So, did you have anything to do with either of their deaths?” Candy asked point-blank, crossing her arms.
“Me? ’Course not. Well, not directly, I guess.”
“But you were involved?”
Bob gave her a piercing gaze. “Not in the way you’re suggesting.”
“Then what about the tarp in your shed?” Candy pointed toward the corner. “It’s just like the one Mr. Sedley was wrapped up in after he was killed. And what about that fishing line on your workbench over there? Charlotte was strangled with fishing line, you know.”
Bob looked horrified. “She was?” He shook his head. “I hadn’t heard that.”
“What about it, Bob? If you didn’t kill them, who did?”
“I don’t know.”
“Then what
And it worked. He sputtered a bit and gave her a dark look, but he started talking.
“Charlotte’s the one who came to us,” he said finally, reluctantly. “It was all her idea, and that’s the truth.” The pained look in his eyes returned. “Robbie... well, Robbie ran into some trouble with one of his games — several of them, actually. He was doing okay for a while, making some money at it. I warned him not to get himself in too deep, but he wouldn’t listen to me. He got cocky — and reckless. He started playing in these high-stakes games over near Bangor, run by some rich guy out of Boston — Marblehead, I think he said. The guy’s name was Paul or Pete or something like that. Old-money type of thing. Anyway, Robbie got in over his head.”
“How much?” Candy asked, her voice quieter now, encouraging him.
Bob hesitated before he answered. “Twenty-five thousand dollars, maybe a little more.”
Candy let out a low whistle through pursed lips. “Wow.”
“Yeah.” Bob ran a hand through his sandy hair. “It was a shock all right. When he told me that, he might as well have hit me with a brick. I was stunned. But he’s my son, you know?” He paused, averting his eyes for a few moments. He took a deep breath before he continued. “Robbie said they brought in some ringer, backed by this moneyman. So this guy strings Robbie along for a while and then cleans him out. Takes everything. ’Course, Robbie thinks he can win it back, so he goes in deeper. He lost a lot of money before he realized it was time to quit. The poor kid came to me asking for help. And I wanted to. But I didn’t have it either.”
“So you went to Charlotte,” Candy said, jumping ahead in the story.
But Bob held up a finger. “Well, not exactly. Like I said, she came to me.”
“So how’d she find out about it?”
Bob puffed out his cheeks. “Captain Mike, I guess.”
“Captain Mike?”
“Yeah. I had to talk to someone about it. So one day I told him what happened. Charlotte must have overheard us talking. That’s the only thing I can figure out, and it makes sense, since she was snooping around a lot, trying to find out what Wanda was doing. The next day she came to me, when I was working out here in the shed. She said she had a proposition for me.”
“Let me guess. She offered to lend you the money if you stole the recipe for her.”
“No, not lend.” Bob shook his head. “She offered to
“Wow,” Candy said again. “She was that desperate to get the recipe?”
“I guess so. I was pretty surprised too.”
“And you agreed to do it?”
“Of course I agreed to do it. People were starting to lean on the kid, make veiled threats. Time was running out. I didn’t have a choice.”
Both of them were silent for a few moments as they considered Bob’s predicament. Finally Candy said, “So you agreed to steal the recipe, but you said you didn’t go through with it. What happened?”
It took Bob a long time to answer. “I was ready to do it. I really was. Charlotte gave me the money, and I gave it to Robbie, so he could pay off those vultures. She told me exactly when she wanted me to break into the house. I think she might have been staking out the place. She seemed to know when Wilma Mae came and went. She even had this costume she wanted me to wear — old man’s clothes and a wig she’d made. She was pretty good at that sort of thing, you know.”
Candy remembered. Charlotte had dressed the mannequins in the museum’s new exhibit. She’d even made the wigs, she’d told Candy that day she first visited the Keeper’s Quarters.
It seemed she had used her skills for another, more sinister purpose.
It also seemed like she had everything well planned out.
Bob confirmed that thought. “I think she even took photographs of Old Man Sedley when he was out here volunteering — told him it was for a brochure or something like that. That’s how she got the costume and the wig so exact. Anyway, she told me if I dressed up like Mr. Sedley I could slip into Wilma Mae’s house without anyone noticing. That was the plan, at least. Get in, get the recipe, and get out.”
“But someone noticed,” Candy said as an image of Mr. Sedley wrapped in the tarpaulin sprang into her mind. She shivered as a chill overtook her, but she shook it off.
“Yeah, I guess so,” Bob said. “But they didn’t notice me, ’cause I’m not the one who broke in and took the recipe. In the end, I just couldn’t do it.” He paused. “I thought about it a long time, but I knew deep down I didn’t have it in me. I’m not a criminal, no matter how much I needed the money. So I pulled out at the last minute.”
“Charlotte must have been pretty mad about that.”
Bob gave her a strained look. “You have no idea. I’ve never seen her that mad before. She threatened me in all sorts of ways. She said she’d have me fired. She said she wanted her money back, but of course I didn’t have it anymore. She even threatened to go to the police, though she was just bluffing about that. We both knew that would never happen. I told her I’d pay her back somehow.”
“So if you didn’t break into Wilma Mae’s house, who did?”
Bob shrugged. “Charlotte did it herself, I guess. As far as I know, she dressed up in the clothes she’d made, put on the wig, and broke into the place. She told me she already knew where the recipe was located — something about a secret drawer. But I don’t know nothing about that.”
The pieces were finally starting to fit together.
“Do you think she killed Mr. Sedley?”
Bob shook his head. “I don’t know nothing about that neither.”
“So what happened after she stole the recipe?” Candy asked.
“Well, you saw her that day when you were here,” Bob said. “She was tense, but she was a pretty cool cookie too — especially if she’s the one who killed Mr. Sedley. And she was still pretty furious at me, as you can