Body in the Bookcase
( Faith Fairchild - 9 )
Katherine Hall Page
Stretched almost to the limit by the capricious demands of a Boston Brahmin bride-to-be, caterer and minister's wife, Faith Fairchild, faces real tragedy when she discovers the body of an elderly friend. Sarah Winslow had apparently surprised burglars ransacking her Aleford, Massachusetts, house. No sooner has Sarah been laid to rest than the Fairchilds find themselves the next target -- the parsonage is stripped of all their most precious possessions. Devastated and furious, Faith takes action, scouring pawnshops, antique marts, and auctions. As she turns up some of their stolen property, she is drawn onto a dangerous path of larceny and corruption in New England's venerable antique business -- a path that soon leads Faith straight to a killer!
Amazon.com Review
Katherine Hall Page won an Agatha Award for her first Faith Fairchild mystery, The Body in the Belfry, and since that debut she has developed a rich cast of characters around her beloved amateur sleuth. Now, in her ninth outing, Faith embarks on an adventure that draws from Page's personal experience with the burglary of her home in 1995. A former New Yorker, Faith is settled--or at least settling--into life in the small Massachusetts town of Aleford. Her husband, Tom, is a minister, and Faith feels called to make the rounds of the parish. But her first visit leads to a grim discovery: Sarah Winslow, the town librarian and a collector of antique books, lies dead in her home, tied to a chair. Sarah's house has been pillaged. Only a day after the funeral, Faith returns home to discover her own house has been torn apart, and many of her prize possessions--silver, jewelry, keepsakes--have been stolen, too. Of course, Faith does what any self-respecting minister's wife would do: she begins an investigation that leads her into a market of illegal antiques deals and shady pickers. Along the way she encounters even more murder and mayhem.
As with other books in the Faith Fairchild series, one of the graces of the novel is the too-funny-to-not-be-real portrait of New England life. And the culinary components of this mystery once again derive from Ms. Fairchild's catering business, Have Faith. The recipes--from Avocado Bisque to Chocolate Oatmeal Goodies--are presented in tantalizing detail at the close of the book. But you won't be drawn to Page's series just for the food.The Body in the Bookcase serves a brisk mystery populated with a quirky cast of New Englanders you'll be sad to see depart.
KATHERINE
HALL PAGE
BODY
i n t h e
BOOKCASE
A FAITH FAIRCHILD MYSTERY
For Julie Arden and Charlotte Brooks,
my dear friends and precious guides
The robb’d that smiles steals something from the thief.
— WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
One
Night had fallen in Aleford, Massachusetts, and its inhabitants—those who were still awake—were involved in a variety of pursuits.
At the First Parish parsonage, Faith Sibley Fairchild was sitting in the living room with her husband, the Reverend Thomas Fairchild, before the unlighted hearth. It was an attractive room, stretching from the front of the house to the back.
A deep blue Oriental rug bequeathed by some previous inhabitant lay on the floor, its colors repeated in the room’s drapes and upholstery. A few spindly chairs, also hand-me-downs, had been supplemented by the Fairchilds’ own, more comfortable furniture. Their belongings decorated the walls, personalized the tabletops.
Their two children, Ben, five, and Amy, twenty months, were mercifully sound asleep upstairs.
The morning paper and the book she was reading lay untouched on the coffee table in front of Faith.
She was enjoying the rare sensation of doing nothing and her mind drifted to thoughts of May—thoughts of the current season.
Although she had lived in Aleford for six years, Faith had never become used to spring in New England. It was such a tease. Spring in Manhattan, where she had lived previously, went on and on forever. First, a certain ineffable warmth crept into the air. It was followed by the whiff of new soil, which infused the odor of exhaust fumes with promise. Central Park began to look like something from a Disney movie, daffodils playfully bending their heads to gentle breezes, beds of pansies with faces like kittens lining the walks, and animated robins hopping about on the velvet green of the Great Lawn. A brilliant swath of tulips stretched as far as the eye could see down Park Avenue. Swelling pale green buds on branches made veils of the trees in Gramercy Park.
In Aleford, however, April meant six feet of snow and May was a big maybe. Toward the end of the month, a few of the flowers promised by the showers, or moisture in a more solid form, struggled into the light of day. Then Mother Nature did a fast-forward and everything happened at once.
Fruit trees burst into blossom. Birds returned and sang. The bulbs that the squirrels and deer hadn’t eaten bloomed. It was beautiful. Briefly beautiful.
Then the region lurched into summer, the temperatures soaring, narcissi withering. Faith had immediately understood the local mania for forcing bulbs indoors, as well as branches of forsythia and flowering quince, or virtually anything with swelling bark one might find to hack down, cart inside, and plunge into containers of water. Forcing—an apt term—as in “If X wants a hyacinth, X will be forced to force it.”
“Nice to finally be able to turn the heat off,” Tom said cheerfully, interrupting his wife’s somewhat resentful thoughts. She walked over and sat on the arm of the wing chair where he was sitting, planting a kiss on the top of his head. There were certain compensations to New England’s drawbacks, the primary one was her husband, a native son.
“You’d have turned it off in March if you hadn’t married such a thin-skinned New Yorker.
Admit it!” Tom was wearing a T-shirt with the slogan if god is your copilot, change seats, given to him by one of his parishioners, while Faith was in a turtleneck and sweater. Both kids seemed to have inherited Tom’s heat-generating genes. One of Ben’s first full sentences had been,
“I don’t need a jacket, Mom.” And it was a struggle to keep Amy from stripping off most of her clothes once they were on.
Tom wisely decided not to pursue the subject of thermostats any further and instead asked,
“What’s your schedule tomorrow? I may have some time late in the afternoon, and we can take the kids to Drumlin Farm. See the spring lambs.” It sounded terribly quaint and was just the sort of thing Faith hoped her children would remember when they grew up, not the fact that she was the meanest mother in the nursery school because Ben couldn’t have Nintendo. Or at least if they remembered these other things—and there were sure to be plenty—she could always come back with “But what about all those nice times, like taking you to see the spring lambs?” She had observed Pix Miller, her friend and next-door neighbor, try this tactic with her adolescents, with varying degrees of success, but at least the am-munition was there.
“Spring lambs sound great, and I think I’ll make some parish calls in the morning.” Tom looked skeptical. Faith had said the same thing the previous night.
“I know, I know—I’ve been putting them off, but I really haven’t had a spare minute.” Faith had awakened that morning, fully intending to make some. She’d been filled with the kind of vernal energy that impels some women to attack grime on their windows and dust bunnies under the radiators—or the ironing, which, in Faith’s case, threatened to erupt like Mount Vesu-vius from the spare-room closet, flow down the stairs and out the front door, entombing hapless passersby for eternity. But then she’d had to help out at the last minute at Amy’s play group and something had come up at Have Faith, her catering company. Suddenly, it was time to make dinner, and all her be
st intentions were exactly where they’d been that morning.
“You know, you don’t have to do them,” Tom said, drawing his wife from her perch to a more comfy place on his lap.
Even before they were married, Tom had been adamant that the “gig,” as he occasionally referred to his calling, was his alone. While recognizing her husband’s thoughtfulness, Faith was also well aware of the naïveté of the notion. She’d grown up in a parish. Her father was a man of the cloth, as was his father before him. In Manhattan, the parsonage had, at Faith’s mother’s insistence and expense, taken the form of a roomy duplex on the Upper East Side, yet it remained a fish-bowl, despite the doormen on guard. In every congregation on earth, it’s an immutable law of nature that even the most well-meaning member will feel obliged at some point to express an opinion about the minister’s spouse, child-rearing practices, and behavior of said children. Faith and her sister, Hope, had sworn to avoid a repetition of this part of their childhoods. Hope had succeeded, marrying an MBA; Faith had not. Tom Fairchild hadn’t been in clerical garb when they met, and by the time they got to the “What do you do?” part of the conversation, Faith knew she wanted to see this man again—and again and again. Yes, it was all well and good for Tom to say she needn’t involve herself in his work, but she knew the territory, and it meant, among other things, parish calls.
She didn’t mind paying most of them; plus, she always liked seeing the insides of other people’s houses. Before happening upon her true calling—food—she’d contemplated real estate because of this innate curiosity. But the selling part would have been difficult. It was hard enough when someone trying on a dress in a department store asked for her honest opinion. A house cost considerably more, although her last trip to Barneys had left her in shock.
The parish calls she invariably kept putting off were what she termed the “And now about me” calls—the whiners. Faith had sympathy to spare, even though Tom was more apt to cry at the movies. But the whiners tended to be people with too much time and too little to do. Their small problems became their whole existence, whereas the people who were facing real hardships seemed to soldier on in silence, minimizing their own pain, even seeking to help others. Like Sarah Winslow.
Sarah was number one on Faith’s current list of calls. Sarah had had a bad case of pneumonia last winter but had returned to church in late March.
On Sunday, her usual spot had been empty—left side, right-front pew, the same seat she’d occupied since leaving Sunday school over sixty years ago. Her parents and siblings were long gone, leaving her the last Winslow in Aleford.
Tom had phoned immediately after church and she had said it was nothing to be concerned about; she’d been a bit tired. That was all. Yet Sarah didn’t get tired without a reason, and no matter what else came up, Faith told herself, she’d see Sarah tomorrow.
One of the pleasures of visiting the retired librarian was talking about books. Her house was bursting at the seams with volumes, many of them valuable first editions, lovingly collected over the years. There were books on shelves, books on chairs, books stacked neatly on the floor. Some who never married regarded their pets as children. Sarah felt that way about her books. The love of her life was reading.
“I’ll start with Sarah Winslow, then go down the list,” Faith said, standing up and stretching.
“Are you hungry? I could make you a sandwich.
I’ve got pastrami and some good dark rye. Or do you want to go to bed?”
Tom stood up and held his wife close. He could rest his chin on her smooth blond hair. He loved the way she smelled, Guerlain mixed with something reminiscent of freshly baked bread.
“Now, what do you think?” he whispered in her ear.
Before she let herself slip into sleep, Faith recalled the other reason she always liked seeing Sarah Winslow. Sarah didn’t make her feel like the outsider Faith, in fact, was. And it had been this way since Faith had first arrived in Aleford. While others had looked askance at the minister’s new wife with her fashionable haircut and a wardrobe that did not contain even one Fair Isle sweater with matching wool skirt, Sarah had been openly appreciative of Faith’s New York edge, poking gentle fun at the others. Even Tom, despite protestations to the contrary, maintained deep down the typical New Englander’s view that the Dutch had been taken to the cleaners. And why hadn’t they wanted to hold on to those beads anyway? You never know, they could have come in handy sometime—like short pieces of string and rumpled tissue paper, both neatly stored away in many a local dwelling. If the Dutch had kept their shiny objects, they just might have been able to trade them for a really great island—say, Nantucket. But they lost their chance.
Sarah reveled in Faith’s descriptions of growing up and living in the city. Unlike some of her fellow New Englanders, she was aware that Manhattan was inhabited by more than commuters and tourists. She’d read so many books set there that she was even more familiar with some parts of the city than Faith was. Sarah traveled far and wide from the confines of her small clapboard house. Travel. Faith was almost asleep. It was time for a visit home. Aleford was her home now, but New York would always be home, home. So dangerous, people said when she mentioned an upcoming trip. The truth was, she felt safer there than here. Something about New England. The Salem witch trials, closed shutters, Lizzie Borden, dark woods. Things seemed pretty innocuous on the surface of a place like Aleford, yet you were never sure what the stick you poked into this particular pond might dredge up. She drew close to Tom. She felt his warmth steal over her, and with a slight shudder at her last thoughts, she let them melt away into unconsciousness.
Over on Maple Street, Patsy Avery wasn’t even trying to sleep, despite the lateness of the hour.
After a futile attempt, she’d slipped out of bed, leaving her husband, Will, snoring slightly—a good-sized mound under the bedclothes—and gone down to the kitchen for something to eat.
Most of the time, she slept just fine in the new house; then there would be a run of exasperating nights when sleep eluded her. It was so damn quiet in the suburbs. She couldn’t get used to it—and “quiet” was one of the reasons why they’d moved from Boston.
Not that there wasn’t noise in Aleford. More birds than she thought could possibly find room for nests in one place currently greeted the dawn with a cacophony of screeches, some holdout usually continuing for hours. At dusk, and on into the darkness, insects she didn’t even want to think about made odd belching and sawing sounds.
Then there was the house itself. It creaked. It moaned. The radiator covers occasionally fell open, hitting the floor with sharp retorts like gun-fire, or—more likely here—backfire. The furnace itself hummed, the refrigerator was a candidate for Name That Tune, and branches slapped the windows.
But in essence, it was as quiet as the grave. No sounds of traffic, no sirens, no music from car radios or other apartments, no people talking as they passed by under the apartment windows—talking and sometimes shouting, but signs of life.
Patsy had never heard a single voice from inside her new house. A dog barked every once in a while from a few yards away, but nothing that could be called human. She pulled the drapes shut at night, more as a ritual. No one could see in, and there wasn’t a streetlight poised directly outside, as there had been in the South End. There they’d had to get heavy shades and drapes to keep the orange glow from their bedroom.
She opened the refrigerator, which had re-verted to a single monotonous note, took out the milk, and poured herself a glass. She put a brownie on a plate, then added another. A new friend, Faith Fairchild, a caterer, had dropped a batch off. Brownies, Patsy thought, as she bit into the dense chocolate appreciatively. What are we brownies doing out here in white-bread land?
Out here in the stillness of the night, stuck in the heart of Boston’s secluded western suburbs—a heart that beat so slowly at times that it was in desperate need of CPR? She laughed softly at the image.
It had been Will’s idea. “We sh
ould invest in a house now in a good location, before we have kids. Get everything the way we want it. With our salaries, we can do it.”
“With yours, you mean,” she’d countered. Both of them were lawyers. They’d met at Harvard Law, southerners, from New Orleans, though their paths had never crossed in Louisiana. After graduation, Will had risen fast in his firm, and there was no reason to believe he wouldn’t keep on going up. Patsy was a public defender, specializing in juvenile cases. Will’s job allowed her to do what she had always wanted to do. Had always intended to do, since . . . She shook her head. Don’t you be thinking about all that now, child. Not at this hour. She finished the second brownie and put the plate in the sink. Holding the glass of milk, she went to the window and switched on the porch light. The trees in the large backyard sprang out of the darkness. Will was right: Aleford was a good place for kids. She could see them running around the yard here, a swing set by the back fence. She planned to put in a vegetable garden as soon as this Yankee soil warmed up. Maybe she’d have some decent tomatoes and peppers by the fall.
Yes, they’d come to Aleford for the schools, the peace and quiet. Security. She drank her milk.
When her mother—up on her first visit to the house—had walked through Aleford center, she’d told Patsy it looked like a movie set. “The one about those Stepford ladies. You’d better watch out, honey,” she’d teased. And Patsy had laughed, yet the thought had stayed with her. It wasn’t that people were unfriendly. No, that had been worse in Boston. She’d never forget the sweet-looking white-haired old lady on the MBTA who had angrily shouted at her, “Why don’t you people stay in the projects, where you belong?” It had been her first year at law school and she had seriously thought of transferring to Tulane. Will had pointed out that there were plenty of crackers who’d say the same thing if she happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time, and she well knew the geography of hatred and stupidity crossed all state lines. So she’d stayed and toughened—a bit. But you never got used to it—Red Sox games with Will—they both loved baseball—the only people of color for rows and rows. A drunken man’s angry slurred epithet as they left.
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