Set Sail for Murder

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Set Sail for Murder Page 1

by Carolyn Hart




  Set Sail for Murder

  A Henrie O Mystery

  CAROLYN HART

  To Mary and Bill Price,

  wonderful companions on our Baltic adventure

  Contents

  1

  The telephone shrilled as I stepped inside the house. I…

  2

  The huge airliner, dim except for reading lights such as…

  3

  After I reached the hotel, I wanted to sleep, but…

  4

  Chartered buses awaited our arrival at the Copenhagen airport. I…

  5

  Refreshed by a dreamless sleep, I was in a holiday…

  6

  Music and laughter flowed from Diogenes Bar. Glasses clinked. Bas…

  7

  When I reached the reception area, passengers were moving through…

  8

  I glimpsed my reflection in the mirrors outside the formal…

  9

  Walkers and joggers moved briskly around the promenade, an oblong…

  10

  I called Rosie’s cabin. No answer. I started at the…

  11

  I felt restless and out of sorts after lunch. I…

  12

  I greeted the morning on my balcony, grateful for the…

  13

  The Clio docked in St. Petersburg at noon, gliding up the…

  14

  The bus rolled to a stop in front of the…

  15

  There were two doors in the corridor at the stern…

  16

  The fiery red brick Church of Our Savior on the…

  17

  The pianist played “Some Enchanted Evening.” The mirror behind the…

  18

  The reception area on Deck 4 was dimly lit. No one…

  19

  The bar. On deck. Everywhere. Nowhere. When I got back…

  20

  I found a pair of binoculars in the cabinet of…

  21

  No one spoke as we filed out of the bridge…

  22

  I leaned against the railing on the promenade deck. Preparations…

  23

  I ate an early breakfast Tuesday morning, keeping an eye…

  24

  The sixteen-passenger tender bounced in a choppy sea, plunging up…

  25

  The sea was pond-smooth this morning. There was scarcely a…

  26

  I poured a handful of pepitas, welcomed their salty crunch.

  27

  I found it hard to breathe. Ingrid had been lively…

  28

  My mood at breakfast was savage. I felt as helpless…

  29

  The flaming sun hung just above the horizon, painting crimson…

  30

  The atmosphere was different Friday morning, the last day of…

  31

  I arrived at Sophia’s cabin at a quarter to nine. Glenn…

  32

  I print out e-mails that matter to me. As I waited…

  About the Author

  Other Books by Carolyn Hart

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  1

  The telephone shrilled as I stepped inside the house. I was hot and thirsty, intent upon reaching the kitchen and a frosty glass of Gatorade, but, of course, I picked up the ringing portable phone from the move-scarred walnut table in my front hallway. Old reporters never ignore that imperious summons even when the days of deadlines are long past. I glanced at the small screen. Suddenly I was breathless.

  Caller ID: James A. Lennox.

  This was a call I had never expected to receive, certainly not on a casual summer morning, sweaty and relaxed after a jog on the university track. It was a slow jog at my age, but nonetheless I could still pick one foot up, put it down, take pleasure in exercise.

  The ring sounded again. I struggled for breath, punched TALK. “Hello.”

  “Henrie O.” The clear, resonant tenor was still youthful, without the dour droop of age. A dear voice. Once I had welcomed his calls, come to depend upon them, my spirits lifting when he spoke my name. Jimmy Lennox had long been a cherished friend and, once, my lover, but he took one road and I another. This unexpected call loosed emotions I had thought neatly packaged and filed in the past. I was swept by tenderness, unease, sadness, and a sense of foreboding.

  I should have answered right away, but how do you respond to an old friend and former lover whose proposal of marriage you declined? The last time I saw Jimmy…

  “Henrie O, please don’t hang up.” The appeal was utterly unlike confident, unflappable Jimmy. Lanky, laconic, and clever, Jimmy had become a part of my life with his quick curiosity, wry sense of humor, and lack of pretension.

  When I spoke, I spoke with my heart. “I’ll never hang up on you.”

  His appeal and my response held a world of meaning for both of us. I knew Jimmy was upset. He knew I cared for him still, would never be quite certain how much was friendship and how much was love.

  Ultimately I’d felt there was not enough love for me to marry him. That decision haunted me still. I missed Jimmy, missed him intensely, but now he was married. I would always care for Jimmy. He’d achieved a measure of fame as a newsman and later as a biographer. In my memory he moved with his usual grace, lithe and lean, with an air of placidity that often fooled his interview subjects into thinking him a trifle slow. That was a mistake.

  “What’s wrong?” We never minced words with each other. I swept off a calico headband, swiped at my perspiring face. In the mirror above the table, my cheeks still flamed from exertion and my silvered dark hair curled in damp ringlets.

  “I don’t have any right to call on you. But you’re the only person who can possibly help me.” He was uncertain, reluctant.

  I’ve never been able to stay on the sidelines when someone I love is in trouble. “What can I do?”

  He drew a deep breath. “I haven’t talked to you since I married Sophia.”

  Deep in sleepless nights, I still willed away the emptiness I’d felt upon receiving the wedding invitation. Sophia Montgomery. I remembered her well. I doubt she recalled me. Sophia lived in a blaze of excitement, attention, and achievement. She’d succeeded hugely in documentary films, recording everything from genocide in Rwanda to the shrinking of the polar ice cap. I’d met her when she was in Mexico cataloging the struggle of insurrectionists in Chiapas. Along her way to fame, she’d married an actor and later a financier. Twice a widow, she was now Jimmy’s wife. She was now in her fifties, almost fifteen years younger than Jimmy. And me, of course.

  I looked again in the mirror at deep-set dark eyes in a narrow face with lines that mapped a lifetime of happiness and sorrow. Not a young face.

  I’d sent an elegant cut-glass bowl as a wedding gift. She and Jimmy had married last year at her home near Carmel. The nuptials were a celebrity-studded extravaganza. I’d read about the glamorous guest list in People. Clearly, something had gone awry in this celebrated union. “Of course. How is Sophia?” Smart as ever? Intense as ever? Brilliant as ever?

  “She won’t listen to me. I keep warning her, but she won’t listen.” Anger warred with despair. “I’ve got to have help or—”

  I felt a twist of irritation. That easygoing Jimmy might end up at odds with Sophia came as no surprise. Sophia had a genius for barreling straight to the destination of her choice, disregarding both approval and opposition. I wouldn’t have expected Jimmy to seek me out as a mediator for a troubled relationship. I almost cut in to say I’d left my Ann Landers hat in someone else’s closet, but he continued, the words anguished.

  “—she may die.”

&nbs
p; I felt cold. I reached out, turned off the air-conditioning. “Cancer?” Sophia was in her fifties, the age when so many women are struck by that devastating disease. Was she a woman who would not take care, ignored danger signals?

  “God, I wish. You can cut it out, right? Even Sophia would pay attention to cancer. When a boulder crashed down a cliff yesterday and missed her by a foot, hey, that’s just an unfortunate accident. Accident, my foot. Somebody pushed that boulder and it has to be one of the family.”

  I shivered in my clammy T-shirt and shorts. I walked down the hall into the cheerful kitchen, with its yellow tile floor, white counters, yellow walls, white kitchen table, and chairs. If I hadn’t known Jimmy for almost a half century, known him in good times and bad, I might have dismissed his fear, as Sophia obviously had. But Jimmy was never an alarmist.

  I squeezed the phone between my head and shoulder, pulled open the refrigerator, retrieved the Gatorade, poured a huge tumblerful. “Five W’s and an H, Jimmy.” It was the old journalism litany: who, what, when, where, why, and how? I grabbed a notepad from the counter and sat at the kitchen table, pen in hand.

  He didn’t waste words or time. “Sophia walks to her office—”

  I remembered a pic included in the wedding layout. Sophia’s office was a glass and redwood structure on a headland with a panoramic view of the Pacific. Caption: Filmmaker’s Eagle’s-Eye View.

  “—at eight o’clock every morning. Not a minute earlier, not a minute later. You could set Greenwich time by her. Yesterday, right on schedule, she’s coming around a bend in the trail when a boulder crashes down on the cliff path. It’s a hundred-foot drop from there to rocks and high surf. If she’d been hit—” His indrawn breath left no doubt about the outcome.

  I pictured a flailing figure tumbling to destruction.

  “The boulder didn’t hit her.” My tone was neutral. Boulders are known to bounce down unstable hillsides in California.

  “It would have if she didn’t have the luck of children and fools. You know why it missed her?” His voice rose in disbelief. “She has a thing about snails. Sure, gardeners hate them. Trust Sophia to have a soft spot for snails. She’s hurrying along the trail because she always hurries and there’s a big snail right in the middle of the path. She stopped to watch the snail ooze across. The boulder missed her by a foot.”

  Children and fools. Or maybe Sophia’s angel breathed purpose into a snail. Or maybe Sophia Montgomery still rode the wave of luck that had lifted her to the top. To succeed as the world measures success, it helps to be good, but you have to be lucky.

  “I heard the rumble and came out on the balcony of our room. I saw the scar on the side of the cliff where the boulder snagged and bounced and there was Sophia looking down at the water. One more step…”

  Jimmy was struck by the small distance between life and death. I was focused on the huge leap between accident and willful murder. “Boulders come loose.”

  “That’s what Sophia said. Why then? Why at the precise moment she’s walking to her office as she does every morning? I checked it out. I went up the side of the cliff. Pines screen that part of the cliff from the house, making it easy for anybody to get up there and back to the house without being seen. I figured out where the boulder came from. It was part of an outcropping behind a big fir. It looked to me like there were some depressions in a blanket of leaves where somebody could have stood and prized it loose and pushed. I think there were gouge marks where it had broken off. I came back down to the house, tried to find out where everybody was when it happened. Nobody could vouch for anyone else.”

  …looked to me like…somebody could have…think there were…Nobody could vouch…

  I sketched a rugged Big Sur cliff studded with pines and mounds of broken rock. “No real evidence.” No clear footprints. No one sighted. Possible scratches on split stone. No alibi for anyone but the hour was early. Nothing definitive to show a police detective. Nothing but Jimmy’s dogged conviction.

  “You haven’t heard the rest. The big why.” Jimmy sounded grim. “Sophia might as well be treading water surrounded by barracudas. She’s all that stands between her stepchildren and the kind of money you and I can’t even imagine.”

  I drew jagged teeth in the snout of a torpedo-shaped fish aimed at a stick figure.

  “They were here, every last one of them. She married Frank Riordan—”

  Venture capitalist Riordan had been Sophia’s second husband. The first was long dead and long forgotten. I have a good memory, though, and it snagged a name: Joe Dan Holbrook, a short-lived movie actor. After a few less-than-memorable westerns, a fiery car crash after an all-night party in Tijuana—sans Sophia—marked the finale. As I recalled, Sophia was in a Latin American jungle at the time. She didn’t make it back for a service, but had his ashes flown down and scattered from a mountaintop. Quintessential Sophia. This was pre-People, but the tabloids gave it a big play. My late husband and I had been in Mexico City then and I’d read about it over breakfast one morning.

  “—who was a widower with four kids. Not exactly the Brady Bunch. Sophia promptly got them settled in boarding schools. She wasn’t the mean stepmother. She was the titular stepmother. Since she never had kids of her own, she didn’t have a clue that kids need a personal touch. Frank ran a corporate family and he had never been the all-American dad anyway. The only exception to his boardroom rule was Sophia. She dazzled him until the day he died. That accounts for his will, which has him yanking strings in his children’s lives from the other side of the grave.”

  Where there’s a will…

  But this was far afield from an errant boulder tumbling to the sea. I shifted uncomfortably on the wooden chair, aware that I was sticky and damp and increasingly puzzled by Jimmy’s call. Almost half the continent distant from California, what could I be expected to do about Sophia and the possibly dangerous Riordan clan? Wasn’t it the foolhardy will that influenced him, made him see dark design in a near accident?

  Jimmy and I had always spoken frankly to each other, even when truth was not especially welcome. “You need to talk to Sophia, not me. If that won’t work, send the guests home. If you can’t do that, cause a scene. Announce that you know one of them tried to kill Sophia and any more near accidents and you’re going to the police.”

  “God, I love you.” His voice almost held a hint of laughter. “Direct as a bullet and twice as deadly. I’d do it in a heartbeat if that would shake us free of them. But it won’t. Thursday we all catch a flight at LAX to London. We overnight at the Heathrow Hilton, then take a Qantas flight Saturday morning to Copenhagen, where we board the Clio for a two-week cruise in the Baltic. It’s all because of Frank’s will. Sophia got a letter from the lawyer. Each heir has been receiving income—subject to Sophia’s approval, and that’s another story—from a five-million-dollar trust, but this year the oldest child turns thirty. That triggers a provision where Sophia determines whether the trusts should be dissolved and the heirs receive full control.”

  “Sophia?” It seemed a great deal of power to accord to a not-very-engaged stepmother.

  “That’s how Riordan set it up. He ran his family with an iron hand and he couldn’t give up control even when he was dead.” Jimmy’s disgust was clear. “If she decides one or all of them would be better served to have the trusts remain in place, there won’t be another consideration for ten years and it’s up to her whether they get the income during the interim. As for the rest of his estate, Sophia has a life interest. Upon her death, all of it will be divided among the children. Talk about setting up motives for murder! The irony is that she doesn’t care a whit about money. Never has. She’s made plenty. She puts the income from Frank into accounts for the estate. But she feels she owes it to Frank to try and make the best decisions possible for the future of his kids. She’s been crossways with them the last few years, but she decided to invite all of them to take this cruise. Her hope is to smooth things over and at the same time figure out if they’r
e ready to handle big bucks.”

  “A command performance.” It wasn’t a question.

  “You bet your life.”

  Or Sophia’s.

  “Henrie O, I’ve reserved a cabin for you, got plane tickets—”

  “Wait a minute, Jimmy.” I sounded stiff. I felt stiff. It wasn’t a command performance for me. “There’s nothing I can do to help.”

  “You’re the best reporter I ever knew.” He spoke quietly but with conviction, a tribute from one professional to another.

  That was another lifetime. I remembered old-time newsrooms with the clack of typewriters, unceasing deadline pressure, a heavy fog of cigarette smoke, and front pages hot off the press with ink that smeared. I remembered as well computers and quiet, college-educated reporters who could no longer read type upside down.

  My career had spanned both. Newsrooms, whether noisy or quiet, always held a sense of urgency and excitement. I remembered. I’d been good. But I wasn’t a reporter now. I didn’t teach journalism any longer. I lived the life of a retiree: travel, books, plays, films, family, friends. Friends…

  “You have a knack. You read people.” The plea returned to his voice. “If anyone can spot trouble, it’s you. Maybe I’m nuts. I’d like for that to be true. Maybe I’m seeing phantasms that don’t exist, but I can’t take a chance. Not with Sophia’s life. And you’ll know. Maybe we’ll have a drink one night and you’ll tell me to stop seeing monsters under the bed. Look, I’ve got it figured out.” He was cajoling, insistent. “You keep out of sight until we get to the ship. We’ll run into each other on the ship and it will be a big deal, bumping into an old friend. I’ll invite you to hang out with us. Maybe there won’t be any danger, but it has to make things easier, lessen the tension, if we have an outsider involved.”

 

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