It is mid-October and unexpectedly cold in Ballynagh, the small Irish village that Torrey Tunet, the young American translator and sometime amateur sleuth, calls home. She has just built a fire of peat and coal to warm her cottage when a window frame collapses, letting in drafts of icy air. Asking around for the services of a carpenter, she hires local teenager Dakin Cameron to do a few repairs.
Dakin is an unusually helpful and likable young man with something on his mind. When he receives a threatening phone call at the cottage, Torrey resolves to try to help him. It seems that Dakin is the son of Natalie Sylvester Cameron, a beautiful heiress whose husband died tragically two years before. Dakin is distressed because someone is trying to blackmail Natalie-and even more distressed when the blackmail attempts lead to a case of murder.
At times like these, Torrey gets what her friend Winifred calls a "dragon-slaying look" in her eyes. Determined to uncover the truth no matter what the cost-including the ongoing enmity of the local police inspector--Torrey Tunet must call upon all of her wits and courage to solve the latest Ballynagh mystery.
Release date:
March 14, 2003
Publisher:
St. Martin's Publishing Group
Print pages:
256
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1
From where he stood hidden among the trees, he could see the cottage. The American girl was leaning against the doorpost in the sunlight. She wore a red turtle-necked sweater and jeans. She was chatting with her worker, the boy, as he cut lengths of lumber on a plank set up on two sawhorses. Ah, the boy! Dakin. Tall for a sixteen-year-old. Dark-haired, narrowly built. The photos had shown an aristocratic-looking face with a high-bridged nose. Aristocratic. A bit of irony there.
A few feet from Dakin, a kid in skinny black pants and sweatshirt and wearing a brimmed cap was sitting on a log, whittling. It would be Dakin's sister, maybe ten years old. She didn't concern him. It was Dakin. Only him. Dakin was the key. So easy! So easy!
He pinched out his cigarette, unfolded his cell phone, and dialed. Watching, he saw the American girl an instant later lift her head at the sound of the ringing phone. She said a word to Dakin, then turned and went into the cottage.
Torrey came from the cottage and held out her portable phone. "Dakin? It's for you." She smiled at him. There was a faint blue bruise on his cheekbone, courtesy of the bigger of the two young thugs who'd yesterday tried to knock her offher new Peugeot bike on the access road. Pedaling on the road with her groceries from Ballynagh, she'd seen the driver of the Dublin-to-Cork bus order the pair of them off the bus, heard his furious "Off my bus with yor fookin' drugs!" Then, standing on the road, they'd spotted her. Well, too bad for them--and lucky for her--that two minutes later Dakin, then a stranger to her, had happened along on foot.
Funny, the coincidence, that it was Dakin who'd turned up this afternoon. Last night she'd called Winifred Moore up at Castle Moore. It was mid-October and unexpectedly cold. She'd built a fire of peat and coal to warm the kitchen, but a kitchen window frame, well over a hundred years old, and rotting, had collapsed, letting in drafts of icy air. She'd needed a carpenter. In the village, a half mile down the road, smoke rose from chimneys up and down Butler Street, from O'Malley's Pub to Miss Amelia's Tea Shoppe, to Nolan's Bed and Breakfast.
"Lucky you called me," Winifred had said. "I've somebody who does carpentry. He's just finishing up a bit of work for me; I'll send him over tomorrow afternoon."
Dakin had arrived at three o'clock next day, his kid sister tagging along. "You!" Torrey had said, and laughed with pleasure at seeing her defender again, but sorry about the blue bruise on his cheekbone in her defense. The Peugeot had been new, she'd paid three hundred pounds for it. But it was the ugliness of the encounter, something feral in the two boys on pipestem legs and in leather jackets who'd wanted the bike--or her?--that had been so disturbing. Anyway, it was over. Yesterday's news.
By four o'clock, when the phone call came for Dakin, he had measured and cut narrow lengths of lumber for a new window frame, carefully selecting pieces from a miscellany in the back of his jeep. The sun shone down on his dark head. Torrey, handing him the phone, was thinking of offering himand his little sister a mug of hot cider, maybe with a cinnamon stick; she was sure she had a jar of--
"If what?" Dakin, holding the phone to his ear, listening, was staring blankly back at Torrey, his eyes wide, startled, "If I don't what? You'll what? My mother? Are you crazy? Who is this? I said, who--" He broke off. Torrey could hear the crackle of the caller's voice. Abruptly Dakin clicked off the phone.
At once the phone rang again. Torrey looked questioningly at Dakin. His face had gone pale, perspiration dampened his brow, he looked sick. Something cruel and ugly was happening. The phone kept ringing. "Shall I? ..." Torrey began, and hesitated, looking at Dakin. He shook his head.
But because Torrey was who she was, she impulsively snatched the phone from him, clicked it on, and said sharply into the receiver, "Enough of that! Who is this?"
Silence. Then, "Ah," the voice said softly, a man's voice, "you who live in that groundsman's cottage. Meddling, are you? Unwise. Even dangerous." A monotone, the voice, it made her shiver. She knew the accent. Couldn't quite place it.
"You--" she began. But the phone went dead.