“I’d better get over there and see what’s going on,” Ben said, and he rose out of his chair and headed across the room.
“Maybe we should call the paramedics,” Judy Crockett said from across the table.
There was no need. A clerk appeared with smelling salts in hand, and she soon brought Liam around, though he stayed in a prone position. A guest who happened to be a nurse performed a cursory examination, feeling for his pulse and checking for injuries.
Assured the experts were on the job, most of the guests returned to their conversations, recongregating in groups and duos or heading off to the bar or to find their seats.
Maggie walked into the midst of it, bewildered.
She stood just inside the French doors, taking in the chaotic scene, her gaze wandering in disbelief from the groggy Liam to the distraught Wanda, around to all their respective attendees, and back again. Finally she looked across the room and caught Candy’s eye.
Candy waved and pointed to the seat next to her. Maggie nodded and, giving the group gathered around Liam a wide berth, headed across the room.
“What in heaven’s name happened here?” she asked, aghast, “and how in the heck did I miss it?”
“I’ve seen some strange things lately,” Candy told her friend, “but this takes the cake.” And quickly she explained what had happened as Maggie sank into the seat next to her.
Maggie was dressed elegantly yet rather sedately, in a stylish burgundy waist-length jacket with wide faux fur lapels, a white ruffled blouse, ankle-length gray wool skirt, and elegant silver jewelry. As Candy finished, she looked her friend up and down. “You look great, by the way. But where have you been?”
Maggie glanced around the room, as if looking for someone. “He called and said he was running late. He asked if he could meet me here. We were supposed to rendezvous at seven thirty.”
Candy checked her watch. “It’s just past that and—”
“Oh, there he is,” Maggie said, suddenly animated. She stood and waved.
Candy turned to see Preston Smith approaching them. “Ah, here you are, Mrs. Tremont,” Preston said, all smiles and twinkling eyes as he approached her. He wore a well-tailored black jacket with silk lapels, gray tie and vest, and a white shirt, well starched, giving him a crisp, classic look. His longish gray hair was disheveled, as if he’d failed to comb it that day, and he’d switch out his wire-rimmed glasses for black ones, which gave him a different look—more distinguished, perhaps. His thick gray moustache seemed thicker than usual.
But he was no less enthusiastic, and as he approached, he bowed dramatically from the waist, lifted Maggie’s hand, and kissed it lightly. “My apologies, my lady, for inconveniencing you this evening. It was regrettable, I assure you, but I’m afraid it couldn’t be helped. There have been a number of developments, as you may well know.”
“It really wasn’t much of an inconvenience at all,” Maggie said, waving a hand toward the other side of the room, “except I apparently missed the only real action this town has seen in weeks—other than the murder, of course.”
“Hmm, yes, nasty business that,” Preston said with an air of distaste. “I’ve heard they have a number of suspects in mind, including”—he turned just slightly to glance over his shoulder—“some people in this very room.”
“No kidding,” Maggie said, and she turned toward Wanda and Liam.
Candy looked too. They had Liam sitting up and were attempting to move him to another room. Ben was talking to one of the hotel staffers, and Wanda was fanning herself dramatically, milking her role in the evening’s events for all it was worth.
Candy was struck by a sudden thought, and she scanned the room. She realized several people were still missing. She double-checked herself but knew she was correct. Colin and Oliver were obviously busy behind the scenes, so their absences were explainable. Baxter Bryant had told her yesterday that he and Bernadette wouldn’t be attending, as they were headed home Sunday morning and wanted to get an early start.
But that left Felicia Gaspar. And Gina Templeton.
Candy could understand why Gina wasn’t here. Her husband was dead, allegedly murdered. She was obviously distraught. Candy imagined she’d talked to the police, though there’d been no official word on that. If she wasn’t currently talking to the authorities, she was probably holed up in a hotel room somewhere or making funeral arrangements for her husband.
She must be going through a terrible time, Candy thought. Her husband’s body had been found in a snow bank, and abandoned in the woods earlier.
What had happened to him? Candy wondered. How had he wound up in a snowdrift at the bottom of a gully?
That was the key, she realized. If she could figure that out, it might help her solve the mystery of Victor’s death. Had he been murdered in the woods with the hatchet, or had he been killed somewhere else, and then dragged into the woods and dumped?
Either scenario was possible. But Candy wondered if the stolen toboggan had anything to do with this. It all seemed a little too coincidental—the toboggan, the car, the room. Had he been murdered at the motel and then hauled into the woods on the toboggan?
That made sense, she thought. But what about the time frame? When would he have been dumped in that gully?
She considered the question for a few moments. She still didn’t know Victor’s time of death but figured it must have been sometime early Thursday morning.
That sparked a memory, something that had been bugging her for a while. It was a burr in her brain, a detail she had missed, a clue that seemed to lurk in some out-of-the-way corner of her consciousness. But suddenly it clicked, and she knew what it was.
She turned abruptly to Preston, who was chatting pleasantly with Maggie. “Excuse me, Preston, may I ask you a question?”
He stopped in midsentence and turned to her. “Ms. Holliday, I am your obedient servant. Please, ask away.”
“Well, something’s been bothering me for the past day or two, and I finally realized what it was. It involves you.”
“Really? I’m intrigued. Please, continue.”
“Well, correct me if I’m wrong, but yesterday morning you and I ran into each other in Town Park, and you handed me a cup of coffee. We talked for a while. Do you remember that encounter?”
“Every second of it,” Preston answered truthfully.
“And you said something to me then, if I remember correctly.”
“Um, yes, and what would that be?”
“Well, you said you’d heard from Victor. You told me that he’d pulled out of the exhibition.”
Preston considered her statement for a few moments and finally nodded. “Yes, I believe that’s correct. Was I in error?”
“You said,” Candy continued, “that you had received a communiqué—I believe that’s the word you used—from Victor the previous evening, which would have been Thursday evening. But according to the timeline I’ve been able to establish, Victor was killed sometime early Thursday morning. The body was cold when Solomon Hatch found it, so it must have been there for a while, so let’s say he died sometime around dawn on Thursday, give or take a few hours. But if that’s true, it would have been impossible for him to contact you on Thursday evening, since he would have been dead about twelve or fourteen hours by then.”
Maggie gave her a questioning look. “What are you saying?”
Candy shrugged. “I don’t know. I’m just pointing out a few facts.”
“All of which are more than likely easily explainable,” Preston said.
“Really? How?”
“Well, it’s quite simple. You see, Victor contacted me via e-mail, which I accessed from my iPad at a wireless café here in town—although I also have wireless in the hotel, of course. He could have sent the e-mail at an earlier time, several hours, or even several days, before I accessed it. Or he could have written it at an earlier time and delayed the sending of it via an automated setting. Or perhaps someone else sent me a phony message in Victor’s name.”
Candy considered that. It was possible, she thought, but she wasn’t buying it. “That’s not how you presented
