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Synopsis
In the latest novel from the author of Ill-Gotten Panes, Georgia Kelly has made a home for herself and her stained glass business in Wenwood, New York. But not everything in the sleepy Hudson River town is as transparent as it seems…
While Georgia has come to love her new hometown, her stained glass windows haven’t exactly been raking in the dough. So when her best friend, Carrie, offers her the opportunity to create a made-to-order window for Wenwood’s latest bed and breakfast, Georgia jumps at the chance.
But when Carrie’s ex-husband’s office suddenly burns to the ground and Carrie’s own office and apartment are robbed, Georgia has to put down her glass and cutter to get to the bottom of the trouble. Carrie insists she doesn’t have enemies, but Georgia is determined to do everything in her power to find out who’s targeting her friend—and why—before anyone else’s life is smashed to pieces...
Release date: July 7, 2015
Publisher: Berkley
Print pages: 304
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Death Under Glass
Jennifer McAndrews
1
“It was not my idea,” I said.
“Yes, Georgia, it was.” As Carrie removed the keys from the ignition, I pushed open the passenger door and stepped out onto the curb. Creeping past the midpoint of August, the sunny, dry days and warm nights of early summer had progressed to rainy nights, hazy mornings, and steamy afternoons. We had arrived at the large blue pseudo-Victorian home during that atmospheric sweet spot between clear sky and muggy, with patches of ground still damp and soft after an overnight storm.
“You said,” Carrie continued, slamming the driver’s door behind her, “that I shouldn’t be spending all my time at the antiques store.”
I waited for her to join me on the newly poured sidewalk. Mud pooled in the gullies on either side of the pristine concrete, spicing the air with a sweet, moist-earth fragrance. Near the apron of a neighbor’s driveway, a trio of chickadees splashed in a curbside puddle. “I never said that. Why would I tell you that you were spending too much time in the shop you own? That’s crazy. When did I allegedly utter this craziness?”
Carrie sighed and resettled her purse on her shoulder, careful to avoid catching her soft brown curls beneath the strap. “I don’t remember exactly. It was during that whole to-do with Pete.”
“Ohhh.” While the whole town of Wenwood called my grandfather Pete, to me he would always be Grandy. A couple of weeks after I’d moved back to town and into Grandy’s spare bedroom, we’d suffered a little misfortune that Carrie was being kind in downplaying as a “to-do.” The whole story involved Grandy being unfairly accused of murdering the owner of the local hardware store. In all the anxiety and heartache of those days, I could have said any number of crazy things before the real murderer was locked up. “That explains why I don’t remember. But I still don’t think I should be held responsible for anything I said during that time. I was under duress.”
Carrie stifled a chuckle. “Duress or no, you said it and it got me thinking and now here we are.”
She gestured toward the old Victorian, and I gazed up at the sprawling house at the end of the long, straight walkway. Like so many homes in Wenwood, this one had seen better days. Missing balusters gaped like lost teeth on the porch, and gutters hung low in places beneath a much-patched roof. As with very few homes, the owner of this one was investing in bringing the house back to its original beauty, what with the new sidewalks and unpainted patches framing newly installed windows. Revitalization and renewal. The new battle cry of Wenwood.
Carrie took in a deep breath and started up the walk. “The reality is, there’s no reason for me to be in the shop every day. Weekends, sure, but Tuesdays? Wednesdays? They’re just not big days for antiques hunters. Not really worth the cost of air-conditioning, you know?”
As I trailed along behind her, the front edge of my flip-flop scooped up a wet mimosa blossom, its delicate pink stamens slipping under my toes like bubble-gum-colored seaweed. Funny how even the simple act of walking up a path proved problematic for me. “What about all the online sales?” I asked, wriggling my toes and tapping my foot in a foolish attempt to dislodge the blossom. “I thought that was a big piece of the business.”
She shrugged, tossed me a too-bright smile. “Nothing wrong with expanding. This could be a whole new revenue stream for me, working with renovations, finding just the right luminaire or even a fainting couch.”
Though she sounded much like she was trying to convince herself, I couldn’t argue her reasoning. In fact, she was probably onto something. The town of Wenwood had steadily grown smaller and older after its main industry—the riverside plant that had churned out building and paving bricks for nearly a century—had closed. For years residents had moved out and moved on, leaving crumbling roads, empty houses, and shuttered businesses behind.
But nearly a year ago, the Stone Mountain Construction group had bought up the property on which the old brickworks sat and started building a marina in its place. Many remaining residents were hoping a marina would generate tourism sufficient to reenergize the town. A number of folks, in fact, were banking on it, including the woman on whose property we stood. In their quest to bring homes back to their former glory—or, perhaps more accurately, back to their turn-of-the-century roots—who better to advise owners on their decorating or to acquire those hard-to-find pieces than the local antiques expert?
As we climbed the steps to the porch, Carrie pointed to the transom above the door. “That’s the window Trudy and I thought you could do something special with.”
By “something special,” Carrie meant a custom stained glass piece. I gazed up at the window, at the beams of wood keeping the sun off the porch and keeping the heat from our heads. Stained glass was at its most brilliant when sunshine streaked through bringing the spectrum of color to life. Here, where the sun’s rays were blocked, artificial light would be needed to make the glass burst with color. But once the lighting was in place, the effect might possibly be stunning.
“Custom glass was your idea?” I asked.
Carrie nodded and rang the bell. Before I could count one Mississippi, a furious barking erupted on the other side of the door. Neither the yap of a small dog nor the deep timbre of a large dog, the mid-range noise was filled nonetheless with ferocity.
Heart rate instantly increasing, I slid backward a step.
“Don’t worry,” Carrie said. She smiled reassuringly, but I decided the safest place was behind her.
“I’ll wait here,” I said, as a woman’s voice carried through the door, saying hush, hush. The dog did no such thing.
The knob rattled moments before the door swung inward, and a flash of tan and white flew at us.
“Fifi, no,” the woman shouted.
The bulldog ignored her command. With her jaws gaping and her weight vibrating the porch boards, she rushed straight for Carrie. Before Carrie could grab the dog’s collar, Fifi skirted around her and mashed her muzzle against my shin.
I skittered sideways, half fearful, half shocked by the cold nose. But Fifi backed and came at me again, hindquarters rolling side to side in doggie glee while she snuffled at my feet.
“She’s quite harmless, I assure you,” the woman said. “Fifi!” She clapped her hands twice, but Fifi ignored her, preferring instead to drool all over my bare feet.
“She smells that creature,” Carrie told me.
“Friday is a kitten,” I said, defending the now four-month bundle of mischief I’d found behind Carrie’s store. “She’s not a spawn of the underworld.”
“Your opinion,” Carrie muttered.
“I’m so sorry.” The woman—slender and tall with gray hair and a somewhat pinched expression—advanced, crouching and reaching for the dog’s collar. “She’s not accustomed to heeding my commands.”
The dog had settled into sniffing my feet, and I reached down to pat her head. “She’s fine, actually,” I managed to mutter. My heart rate slowed and I could once again draw full breath as I stroked a hand across the silky fur of the dog’s head. Thus alerted to my attention, Fifi gazed up at me with huge brown eyes that would put a stuffed animal to shame. I might have mumbled something about her being a good girl but not loud enough for Carrie to hold against me in the future.
Presumably seeing that the dog was no threat to me nor me to it, the woman abandoned her quest for the dog’s collar and straightened.
Her gaze scraped me head to toe, her lips tightening at the sight of my unruly red hair, kitten-holed T-shirt, and dog-slobbered plastic flip-flops. “Have we met?” she asked, blinking.
I couldn’t find words to answer. Seeing her that still, that formally posed, made me pretty sure I’d seen her play the evil stepmother in a Disney cartoon.
Carrie stepped into the breach. “Trudy, you remember I told you about my friend who does stained glass, right? This is Georgia.” As she introduced me, she turned in my direction and held both palms to the heavens in the manner of a spokesmodel presenting a car.
“Georgia Kelly,” I said, reaching a hand toward the woman.
Trudy laid the tips of her fingers against mine, and I ended up clutching her hand as though I were about to kiss it rather than shake it. She repeated my name, a deep furrow forming between her eyebrows, emphasizing the wrinkles she’d earned in her lifetime. “You seem so familiar and yet I don’t recall your name at all.”
“But I told you,” Carrie said, a note of patience coloring her voice.
The older woman waved dismissively. “Yes, yes, I mean aside from that, dear. Well, no matter.” She stepped backward into the house, sweeping her arm toward the interior in invitation. “Please come in. Fifi, you come inside, too.”
Fifi trotted along beside me as I followed Carrie inside. My flip-flops smacked against the worn wood floor, Carrie’s low heels clicked, and the dog betrayed us both by padding along soundlessly. As Trudy tended to the door, we waited in the small entry foyer, cool air washing over us and the scent of lemon cleaner tickling my nose.
The front door clicked shut, and Trudy strode between Carrie and me, with a simple, “This way” as she passed.
She led us out of the foyer to our right, through an arched doorway and into the sort of space I’d only ever seen in magazines . . . or hotel lobbies. Three tall and narrow windows faced the front of the house, bathing the room in light, while the yellow painted walls helped create the illusion the room sat directly at the end of a sunbeam. I walked slowly through the slanted rays to the couch Trudy pointed us to, and sat on the low-backed ivory couch with the sun warming my back. Ahead, French doors with floor-to-ceiling windows on either side provided a view of an abundance of roses in the backyard.
Fifi jumped up onto the couch beside me, eliciting a “Fifi, no!” from Trudy. But Fifi ignored her, stretching out, and Trudy sighed. “I just can’t make that dog listen.”
“Try giving orders to a cat,” I said.
She gave no indication of hearing me. “It would be different, I suppose, if I had raised her from a pup,” Trudy said. “But her original owner was a bit more—how should I put it?—indulgent.” She lowered herself into one of the striped damask wingback chairs facing the couch, her spine straight and her head tipped to the side. “Georgia Kelly,” she said again, that same pinch across her brow announcing that she was forcing her mind to a question.
I shot a look at Carrie, who leaned forward and smoothly drew Trudy’s attention. “Georgia repaired a Tiffany lamp for me,” she said.
“Tiffany-style,” I said, “not the genuine article.” Repair a real Tiffany piece? I did that in the same dreams in which I was independently wealthy and had a glass workshop in the south of France.
“Still beautiful,” Carrie said, while Trudy gazed appraisingly at me. “And of course I’ve sold several of her other pieces. Stunning, really. So naturally when we talked about that window over your door I thought of her and those roses you have out back. I thought it might be a nice idea to carry that motif into the transom.”
Afraid I might start squirming if Trudy kept staring at me like I was some sort of specimen prepared for dissection, I sprang from my seat and crossed to the French doors. In the center of the little slate patio ringed by roses sat a wrought iron table and a pair of chairs I recognized from the back room of Carrie’s antiques shop.
“And would the name of my business be incorporated into this motif?” Trudy asked.
I looked over my shoulder and met Carrie’s eye, certain she would share my bemusement over motif, but she only raised her brows in question. “What do you think?” she asked. “Can you work it in?”
“Depends on what exactly the name is going to be,” I said, wandering away from the doors and toward the fireplace yawning along the western wall. “Whether you’re going to go with simply Trudy’s or Trudy’s B&B or—”
“Oh, my dear,” Trudy said, managing to get a shudder into her words. “There will be no B&B, thank you very much.”
I bit my lip to keep back a giggle. For someone who didn’t get too distraught by a dog on the furniture, Trudy seemed to be working awfully hard at being classy.
Carrie shifted forward in her seat. “Did you have another name in mind?”
Trudy’s chin lifted a notch and her tone carried a melody of pride. “I’ve registered the business as Magnolia Bed and Breakfast.”
From where I stood I tried to peer through the white sheers on the windows to see if there was, in fact, a magnolia tree on the property that I had failed to notice. But all that was visible was the fronds and blossoms of the mimosa, all pink and green and looking like the nineties exploded on the lawn.
“What do you think, Georgia? Can you do magnolias in stained glass?” Carrie asked.
Pausing to admire the collection of china knickknacks above the fireplace, I caught sight of myself in the mirror hung above the mantel, heartlessly reflecting an image of my hair. The humidity was not being kind. I looked like I Love Lucy’s home perm episode.
I turned my back on my image. Out of sight, out of mind, right? “Magnolias are one of the classic flowers in stained glass,” I said. “Tiffany frequently featured magnolias in their windows and lamps because they’re so lovely. I could bring some designs by and some examples.”
“Tiffany’s did?” Trudy didn’t sit up straighter as much as her neck sort of elongated. I supposed Tiffany was the perfect antidote to B&B.
I smiled and nodded, not bothering to educate Trudy on the difference between jewelry store founder Charles Tiffany and the stained glass innovations of his son Louis. It was all in the family as far as I was concerned. A Tiffany was a Tiffany. And it seemed to please Trudy.
“That sounds marvelous,” she announced. “What color can you make the blossoms?” She shifted her attention to Carrie. “Can we bring the color into this room? Drapes? Pillows? Throw rugs?”
As Carrie and Trudy batted ideas back and forth, I reclaimed my seat next to Fifi. The pooch had rolled onto her back and let out a grumbling whimper as I sat. She stretched and pushed her nose against my thigh. Hoping it was attention she wanted and not some flesh to nibble on, I reached out and carefully rubbed her exposed belly while admiring the rhinestone-ringed name tag hanging from her collar. The sparkle stirred my mind, and I belatedly wondered where Trudy was getting the money for the renovations to the house. Of course it wouldn’t be impossible that she simply had a good deal of money socked away somewhere. And perhaps the hints of neglect outside and in were the result of frugality rather than financial limitations. But Wenwood had been known more for its work ethic than its wealth, and yet there Trudy sat, spine straight in her wingback chair, gold watch heavy on her wrist and precious gems winking over her fingers.
The theme song from Mission Impossible blared from Carrie’s purse, making her flinch, wide-eyed, and bringing me back from my contemplation of Trudy’s bank balance. Carrie and I spent a fair amount of time together, and I recognized that particular tune as her default ringtone for calls from people outside her contact list.
“I’m so sorry,” Carrie said, glancing back and forth between me and Trudy. “I thought I switched it off . . . I . . .” She tugged open her purse, dug frantically for the phone. “I’m sure it’s nothing. I’ll just—” Her eyes fell on the display screen and the number appearing there. The pink flush of embarrassment drained as quickly as it had bloomed, leaving her skin magnolia pale. “I’m sorry,” she said softly, standing. “I need to take this.”
While Carrie ducked into the foyer, I smiled at Trudy, searching my brain for the right question to engage her with while I worried over who or what might have caused such a reaction in Carrie. “So, um, Fifi had a different owner. How did she end up with you? Did you adopt her from a shelter?”
Trudy peered closely at me as though looking for an answer to a question only she knew. “Georgia Kelly,” she said again.
“Why do you keep saying that?” I asked.
She shook her head slowly, the movement barely disturbing her drop earrings. “There’s something about you, dear. Something not right with you being a Kelly.”
I fought to keep the surprise and hint of offense from showing on my face. I had no idea what she was talking about, but I didn’t figure it was anything good, or possibly, you know, sane. I opened my mouth to ask her what she meant by such a remark in the same moment Carrie rushed back into the room.
“We have to go,” she said, reaching over me to grab her purse. I froze in response to her sudden haste; Fifi scrambled to her feet, alert to the new charge in the air.
“What is it? What’s wrong?” I jumped to my feet, steeling myself for whatever news she might hurl my way.
Swinging her purse over her shoulder, she said, “My husband’s business is burning. I have to go.”
2
“Do you want me to drive?” I asked, rushing down the path away from Trudy’s house.
“It’s fine. I’m not upset.” Carrie fumbled the keys and they hit the sidewalk with a heavy metallic thud. She hissed a curse, grabbed the keys, and continued stomping her way to the car.
“Are you sure? I only ask because you seem a little, um, wound up.” And I didn’t want either one of us to die in a motor vehicle accident. I stood beside the car, waiting for her to reach the driver’s side, waiting for her to change her mind and hand me the keys.
Instead, she took the time to meet my eyes over the top of the sedan. “Why would you say that? I’m fine.”
Once she was in the car with the door shut behind her, I climbed into the passenger seat. “I say that because we’re speeding off to a fire at your ex-husband’s business.”
“And?”
“Your ex-husband. This is Russ you’re rushing to help. The guy you divorced. And you’re going off with lights and sirens and a death grip on the wheel. Any reason?” I pulled my seat belt into place without taking my gaze off of Carrie. I had never had the pleasure/experience/bad luck of meeting her ex; they were divorced before I even met Carrie. But over the past couple of months, she and I had shared a good number of tales of woe featuring our former flames. As could be expected, she had little good to say about Russ, though I knew—even though I could be faulted for the same behavior—she was hardly being unbiased in her complaints.
She maneuvered the car into a smooth U-turn, and we sped up the block of grand old houses, centennial trees shading lawns and road alike. I sat in silence for a while, giving Carrie the time she needed to gather her thoughts and answer my question. I did not want to prompt her, or pressure her, and in any case had learned from the beginning that she wasn’t one to stay quiet for long.
“It’s hard, you know?” she asked as she signaled a turn onto the highway. “Well, you do know. You go for so long thinking of someone as your husband”—she shot me a glance—“or your fiancé, your partner, and when everything’s calm and normal you remember they’re not that person anymore. But when things get stressy and crazy . . .”
I did know, she was right. There had been more than a few times in the past eight-plus months after our engagement ended when life events had gone pear-shaped and the first person I thought of was Eric. When things got tough, my addled mind still prompted me to seek his shoulder for comfort. It always took a few tough moments to remember no, he was no longer the person I ran to, no longer the rock in my life—for better or worse. Luckily, that breath-stealing moment of realization was getting shorter and shorter.
Still, I folded my arms across my chest and gave Carrie a stern stare. “I just think it’s best you remember there was a time you might have derived a little guilt-ridden satisfaction from seeing his business burn to the ground, so there’s no need to risk a speeding ticket, or our necks for that matter. You said no one was hurt, right?”
“Right.”
“Then maybe slow down, huh?”
Carrie gave the steering wheel one long last white-knuckle grip, then softened her hold and let up on the gas. “Okay.” She nodded. “Okay. Good point.”
We settled into a legal speed, cruising past trees in full green and wild flowers in full bloom. A general fragrance of flowers snuck into the car with the air-conditioning. Or maybe that was the candle-scented air freshener dangling from the glove box.
“Why did you get the call, anyway?” I asked. “Doesn’t he have anyone else he could call? You said he got all the friends in the divorce. Couldn’t he beg one of them for help?”
“It wasn’t Russ who called. It was the police department.” She kept her gaze fixed on the road ahead. “I’m still part owner of the building.”
We cruised past half a dozen ancient oak trees while I attempted to process that information. “‘Part’ as in equitably divided during the divorce?”
Her grip on the steering wheel tightened again. “As in purchased when we were married. After the divorce, he wanted to buy my half but he didn’t want to go into any more bank debt. And I’m embarrassed to say I wasn’t kindhearted enough to offer him any kind of private loan.”
“Doesn’t he have anyone who could front him the money? What about family?” I shifted in my seat, making a futile attempt to lean my arm up against the window ledge all casual-like but my elbow kept slipping down the curve of the door. “Brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles?”
“His brother Gabe . . .” She shrugged and shook her head as if she were shaking away a memory not worth revisiting. “Well . . .” She let the statement fade and I opted not to push.
“What about his folks?” I asked. “Are they still around to help out Russ?”
Carrie tipped her head from side to side, lips pressed tight as she considered my question—or how best to answer. “They don’t have the best relationship.”
“No?”
“No, they . . .” She took a bracing breath. “They helped me pay for the divorce.”
My mouth dropped open but no words fell out; I had none. Maybe the reason Carrie didn’t speak much about her marriage to Russ—other than to inform me he was a talentless slacker with a ready smile, a quick promise, and nothing to back up either—was because its dissolution had divided his family.
She peeked at me from the corner of her eye, then shrank a little in the driver’s seat, looking abashed. “I know. I know. You don’t have to say it.”
I almost laughed, my belly clenching in discomfort at the awkwardness of it all. “I can’t say anything. I don’t know what to say.” Or think. All I seemed capable of doing was picturing the special joy of dinner with Russ’s family. Holidays were undoubtedly the stuff of Tim Burton’s nightmares.
I kept silent for the rest of the ride, leaving Carrie the opportunity to share more surprises with me or not. Uncharacteristically, she chose not, so that in the relative quiet of the car, my thoughts bounced from those of Russ’s family to my own. My mother had been home from her honeymoon with husband number five for nearly a month and I’d yet to visit them. I really had nothing against new husband Ben, the latest in a line of men Mom married in a peculiar effort to fill the shoes of my late father—Mom’s “one true love.” Since Dad had passed before I turned two, I had no true memory of him, only memories I created around the stories my mother told, so I never saw the subsequent husbands as trying to fill my father’s shoes. To me they were just a series of guys I got accustomed to thinking of as stepdad du jour before my mother moved on.
To the best of my knowledge, though, none of my family members had ever felt opposed enough to any of my mom’s husbands to pay for a divorce. Given the way Grandy had taken to referring to my former fiancé as “that swine,” I reasoned he would happily fork over any money it took to end a bad situation. I deeply wanted to ask Carrie for more details about her former in-laws but I risked only one more inquiry into whether she would prefer I drove, before maintaining silence until, finally, after a twenty-five minute ride, we turned onto the town of Newbridge’s main commercial road. Small businesses with gold-lettered windows and retail shops with colorful awnings edged the road on either side, its full length blocked by a police cruiser.
Unable to proceed any farther by car, Carrie steered onto a side street. Little more than a wide alley divided the commercial strip from residential property. Single family homes with narrow lawns and empty driveways flanked the street where Carrie eased the car to a stop alongside the curb. As calm and cool as she was pretending to be, her choice of vacant spot betrayed the true tumult within. I climbed out of the vehicle after her, calling over the roof of the car, “Are you sure you want to leave this here?”
She stutter-stepped to a stop. “Why? Is there a sign? Can we not park?”
I pointed upward, toward the unimpeded view of a wide blue sky. “There’s no shade.”
Carrie moved to reopen the car then shook her head. “It’ll be fine,” she said. “Let’s just go.”
Slinging my purse strap over my shoulder, I rounded the car and joined Carrie in the middle of the side street, quiet save the occasional woof of a dog and the shouts of a couple of boys on bicycles.
We walked diagonally across the road to the corner from which we could once again see the squad car blocking access. Clusters of people stood along the sidewalk, talking quietly, shaking their heads. I followed the angle of their quick glances. Eyes on the scene beyond the squad car, I walked full stride into a gutter puddle.
I huffed out a sigh. It was going to be one of those days.
Water swept over my foot and splashed against my ankles. I had just enough sense to keep my other foot dry, and hopped over the remainder of the puddle to join Carrie on the sidewalk.
Side by side, we walked toward the center of the area cordoned off by police with a combination of caution tape, vehicles, and cruisers. My footsteps squeaked from the water coating the sole of my flip-flops and droplets of water splashing up the back of my calf, handily undermining the aura of High Noon that hung over the street.
A Pace County police officer climbed out of the squad car at our approach. “Excuse me, ladies,” he called. “This road’s closed to non-business owners.”
Carrie stopped short. She fluttered a hand against her throat, looked left and right as though searching for someone to give her stage directions. “I—I was asked to come,” she said.
The officer moved toward us, one hand on the butt of his gun in classic patrolman style. “Sorry, can you speak up?” Not to say that I didn’t respect the Pace County PD, but the officer’s toes-out stride, gangly frame, and peach fuzz goatee made him look like a boy scout who’d donned the wrong uniform. And I had never been able to
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