She popped the trunk, which, surprisingly, was in the front of the car. It barely held my carry-on, so the porter loaded the rest of my luggage in the backseat. I slipped a few bills into his hand and he tipped his cap jauntily. “Enjoy your visit, ladies.”
“Elegant, isn’t it?” Dolores said as she unlocked the car doors.
“Oh my, it certainly is.” I burrowed into the passenger seat. “And so comfortable. Sometimes these fancy cars look a lot better than they feel.”
“Willis constantly says there is nothing too good for his doll. That’s me. I’m his doll. Seat belt on?”
I gave my seat belt a reassuring tug. “On and secure.”
Dolores glided the car out of the parking space and headed toward the exit. “I always say there is nothing like a decent man and a flashy car to keep a lady smiling. So, what do you think, Jess?”
“I think you seem bubbly, energized. Happier than I have seen you in years. You are a totally different woman than you were at our last reunion. When was that, four years ago?”
“Just about. Right after husband number two emptied our bank accounts and ran off with mistress number ninety-eight or ninety-nine, whichever she was. Not a problem I will ever face again. Like any man, Willis has his quirks, but philandering isn’t one of them. I can work around the silly quirks he does have. . . . Most of the time he treats me like a queen.”
Most of the time? I didn’t like the sound of that. I wondered what went on in the spaces in between.
Dolores chattered along. “Instead of taking Main Street to Route 321, I am going to wander off our path just a smidge and drive along Taylor Street. I can’t wait to show you all the marvelous things Columbia has to offer. The art museum is exceptionally noteworthy—the children’s room is really a treat. Then there’s the Mills House and Gardens. And of course we must tour the State House. So much history. It wouldn’t hurt us a bit to do some shopping in the lovely boutiques that are popping up all over downtown.”
I was already tired from my long train ride, and Dolores’s enthusiasm began to drain what little energy I had left.
“We can do all our girl talk and catching up while we wander around the city,” she continued, “but all that is for another day. Here is our first and only stop. Look.”
Look? Oh my, I couldn’t miss it. Looming ahead of us: a gleaming silver fire hydrant standing taller than most of the surrounding buildings.
I gaped. “What on earth?”
“Welcome to Busted Plug Plaza,” Dolores crowed. “I bet this is a first even for the well-traveled mystery writer J. B. Fletcher.”
“It certainly is. I’m at a loss for words.”
Dolores turned off the engine. “Dazzling, isn’t it? Local artist and sculptor Blue Sky designed it. Jump out and I’ll take a quick snap of you in front of the world’s tallest fire hydrant. A picture will be all the evidence you need to prove to those Mainers in Cabot Cove that we Carolinians have a thing or two they can’t match.”
The size of the hydrant was hard to take in and I stopped a few feet in front of it. Dolores waved her hand, signaling me to move backward. “You have plenty of room. Plenty. I promise, even if you stand right underneath the lowest outlet cap with the thick chains hanging down, it would still be way above your head.”
Dolores held her cell phone high. “Oh, too much sun. I’m going to move left. Can you turn to your right? Great. Stay there. Don’t move.”
For the moment I felt awkward, as I always do when asked to pose for a picture, but then I relaxed and smiled gamely. In a minute Dolores pronounced us done and hustled me back into the Porsche.
“Now, no more touring for you, young lady. I’ll hit Main Street, which will lead us right onto Route 321 and out into the countryside.”
“I must say, the last thing I expected was a gigantic hydrant. Who did you say designed it?” I asked.
“Blue Sky. Oh, he has another name, but around here he is Blue Sky, famous local artist. And the hydrant is forty feet high and weighs over six hundred thousand pounds. Can you imagine the work that went into designing and building it?”
I admitted I couldn’t fathom it.
Dolores continued. “But now the treasure I want to show off is my home. Wait until you see Manning Hall. Built in the late 1890s, it is a replica of the old plantation that preceded it but was burned to the ground during the Civil War. The Ribault family owned it for generations but they fell on hard times, and luckily, Willis’s star was in the ascendant. I never dreamed I would live in such a house. Why, it’s almost a castle.”
I leaned back on the headrest and smiled. Dolores had been through a lot of ups and downs in her life. More downs than ups, to be honest, so I was doubly delighted to see her so happy.
“And I have a grandchild.” Dolores’s voice softened. “Oh, Jess, wait until you meet her. Abigail is nine years old. Everyone calls her Abby. Such a sweet girl. And smart! She loves to wear her hair in braids, just as I did at her age. So we have that in common. Of course, she never got to meet her real grandmother. Willis’s first wife died nearly twenty years ago, so I think
