Crime in the Café. Фиона Грейс
bumped into one another, then both took a step right, another left, attempting to avoid a collision but ending up in comical synchronization. The slapstick routine ended with Tom theatrically bowing, so Lucia could pass on his left. He flashed her one of his bright-kilowatt smiles as she did.
Lacey’s stomach clenched at the sight of them. She couldn’t help it. Jealousy. Suspicion. These were all new emotions for Lacey, ones she seemed to have only acquired since her divorce, as if her ex-husband had slipped them within the pages of their divorce documents in order to make sure her future relationships were as fraught as possible. They were ugly feelings, but she couldn’t control them. Lucia got to spend significantly more time with Tom than she did. And the time she spent with him was when he was at his best—energized, creative, and productive, rather than snoozily watching television on her couch. Everything felt unbalanced, as if they were sharing Tom and the ratios were massively skewed in the young woman’s favor.
“Pretty, isn’t she?” came Taryn’s voice in Lacey’s ear, like the devil on her shoulder.
Lacey bristled. Taryn was just stirring the pot as usual.
“Verrrrry pretty,” Taryn added. “It must drive you mad to know Tom’s over there all day with her.”
“Don’t be stupid,” Lacey snapped.
But Taryn’s appraisal was, to use a Gina idiom, “bang on.” That is to say, she was totally right. And that just made Lacey more frustrated.
Taryn smiled thinly. A malevolent sparkle appeared behind her eyes. “I keep meaning to ask. How is your Spanish man? Xavier, wasn’t it?”
Lacey bristled even more. “He’s not my Spanish man!”
But before they could enter into a spat, the doorbell tinkled noisily, and Chester began to yip.
Saved by the bell, Lacey thought, hurrying away from Taryn and her snakelike suggestions.
But when she saw who was waiting, she wondered if it was a case of out of the frying pan and into the fire.
Carol, from the B&B, was standing in the middle of the shop floor with a look of abject horror on her face. She seemed panicked, and was panting as if she’d run all the way here.
Lacey felt her stomach lurch. A horrible sense of déjà vu overcame her. Something had happened. Something bad.
“Carol?” Gina said. “What’s the matter, ducky? You look like you’ve seen a ghost.”
Carol’s bottom lip began to tremble. She opened her mouth as if attempting to speak, but then closed it again.
From behind, Lacey heard the clip-clip sound of Taryn’s heels as she hurried over, presumably wanting a ringside view of the unfolding drama.
The anticipation was killing Lacey. She couldn’t bear it. Dread seemed to be flooding through every fiber of her body.
“What is it, Carol?” Lacey demanded. “What’s happened?”
Carol shook her head vigorously. She took a deep breath. “I’m afraid I have some terrible news…”
Lacey braced herself.
CHAPTER TWO
What could have happened?
An accident?
A… murder?
God forbid, not another one!
“Carol?” Lacey asked, her vocal cords feeling squeezed.
The look of fear in Carol’s eyes as she paced back and forth across the shop floor was sending lightning bolts of panic straight through Lacey. Her stomach started somersaulting, as if she’d driven her secondhand Volvo off the side of the cliff and was careening toward the ocean below. She felt her hands begin to tremble as a succession of memories invaded her mind: Iris’s body lying on the floor of her manor house; Buck’s sand-smeared mouth as he lay deceased on the beach. Then the flashing images were joined by the sudden screech of police sirens in her ears, and that awful crinkly sound of the silver blanket the paramedics wrapped around her shoulders. And finally, she heard the voice of Superintendent Turner, echoing his warning in her mind. “Don’t leave town, okay?”
Lacey grabbed the counter to steady herself, braced for whatever awful news Carol was about to deliver. She was barely able to focus on the woman who was pacing around the shop floor.
“What is it?” Gina asked impatiently. “What’s happened?”
“Yes, please hurry up and drop your bombshell,” Taryn said, lazily, waving the Edison lamp carelessly as she spoke. “Some of us have lives to get back to.”
Carol finally stopped pacing. She turned to face the three of them, her eyes rimmed with red.
“There’s…” she began, snuffling on her words. “A… a… a B&B opening!”
A beat of silence passed as the three women let the revelation—or lack of one—sink in.
“Ha!” Taryn finally exclaimed. She slapped a twenty-pound note down on the counter beside Lacey. “I’ll leave you to deal with this crisis. Thanks for the lamp.”
And with that, she waltzed away, leaving a scent of smoky cedar perfume in her wake.
Once she was gone, Lacey turned her attention back to Carol, staring at her in disbelief. Of course, a new B&B was terrible news for Carol, who would be facing even stiffer competition for the tourist trade than she already did, but it didn’t make one jot of difference to Lacey! And considering the awful misfortune the town had experienced with the murder of Iris Archer and the more recent murder of Buck, she ought to know better than to run around town screaming over something so trivial!
All Lacey seemed able to do was blink. Her fury seemed to have routed her tongue well and truly to her palate. Gina’s tongue, on the other hand, was as loose as ever.
“That’s it?” she bellowed. “A B&B? You nearly gave me a bloody heart attack!”
“A B&B in Wilfordshire is terrible news for everyone,” Carol cried again, frowning at Gina’s response. “Not just me!”
“Really?” Lacey said, finally finding her voice. “And why would that be exactly?”
Carol shot her a daggered look. “Huh, well I should’ve known you wouldn’t understand. You are an outsider, after all.”
Lacey felt herself flame with rage. How dare Carol call her an outsider? She’d been here for several months, and had contributed to the local town in a myriad of ways! Her store was as much a part of the fabric of the high street as anyone else’s.
She opened her mouth to respond, but before she did, Gina snatched up a box of tissues from the counter and stepped forward, creating a physical barrier between her and Carol.
“Why don’t you take a seat?” Gina said to the B&B owner. “Let’s talk all this through.” Then she flashed Lacey a look that said, I’ll handle this, because you’re about to blow.
She was right. The panic Carol’s non-event had induced in Lacey was starting to subside, but she really could’ve done without it in the first place. And she certainly could’ve done without Carol calling her an outsider! If anything could rile Lacey, that was it.
As Gina guided Carol to a red leather loveseat, offering her a tissue—“Here. Take one of these for your snoz”—Lacey paced away and took several calming breaths. As she did, Chester looked up at her and let out a sympathetic whinny.
“I’m all right, boy,” she told him. “Just a bit rattled.” She bent down and patted his head. “I’m okay now.”
Chester whined as if in reluctant acceptance.
Bolstered by his support, Lacey went over to the loveseat to find out what was really going on.
Carol was full on sobbing now. Gina slowly rolled her eyes up until her deadpan expression locked with Lacey’s. Lacey made a shooing gesture with her hand. Gina