ANNIE WAITED UNTIL Max slammed his door and turned on the motor. “So who rigged it?”
“The single gardenia?” Max’s tone was dry. He drove cautiously down the drive. “Damned if I know. But that’s why the lights went out. In addition to setting a spooky stage, the lights had to go out.”
Annie understood. It would be a little awkward simply to pull the posy out of a pocket. That lacked any otherworldly connotation. No, the gardenia had to arrive unseen and thereby appear to be proof of an active spirit attempting to communicate with those still earthbound. In the early twentieth century, attendees at séances marveled at flowers presumably created from ectoplasm by the medium’s control. Annie didn’t believe in materialized ectoplasm, nor in poltergeists, unruly spirits usually linked to destruction. She agreed with skeptics who wondered wryly why any spirit would waste its time in eternity cavorting about tooting horns, flinging flowers or communing under control names ranging from Chief Sitting Bull to Sister Corinna. Annie shivered, but not from a waft of icy otherworld air. The car was cold and she didn’t like the picture in her mind, someone at the table waiting until the perfect moment, somehow cutting the lights, then tossing that sweet-smelling flower toward a deeply vulnerable woman.
“Marguerite’s a mess, isn’t she?” Annie leaned back in her seat, glad to be free of the house and its seething, volatile, distraught occupants. “But I’d say somebody made a big mistake. Swanson definitely came out the winner.”
“I guess so.” Max’s tone was thoughtful. And puzzled.
Annie peered at him. “Guess so? Oh hey, Max. The flower simply reinforced Marguerite’s conviction that she was communicating with Claude. Or I suppose she’d say that Claude was communicating with her. A gardenia! You’d think she’d have better sense. Anyway, I looked at Swanson just as the lights came on and I swear he was absolutely astonished. Now, I know the man’s an actor, too, but just for an instant there was complete surprise.”
“Then what?” Max asked slowly.
She was sure Max had watched Swanson, too. “Oh well, he played along. Who wouldn’t?”
Max braked, then turned into the street, the thin headlight beams illuminating the live oaks. Silvery swaths of Spanish moss were briefly glimpsed, then gone. He drove slowly, alert for wandering deer. “So you think one of the others rigged the lights and threw the flower, with the net result that Marguerite’s even more convinced that Swanson is her link to Claude?”
“No doubt about it. I’ll bet whoever did it is simply sick.” Annie doubted the flower thrower could appreciate the irony.
“That would be pretty stupid.” Max strained to see, prepared to stop for either raccoons or deer. “Funny thing is, I don’t think anybody there is stupid.” He shot her a glance, husbandly ESP, and said swiftly, “Happy’s not stupid. Sweet and even a little silly and credulous, but not stupid. Besides, if anyone there besides Marguerite was tempted to credit Claude with the flower, it was Happy.”
Annie recalled Happy’s wide, amazed look, her tremulous voice, and grudgingly agreed. “Okay.” She ticked them off on her fingers. “Swanson was shocked, then bland. Happy wasn’t sure it was Claude, but she was damned scared it might be. Wayne immediately accused Swanson of fakery. Terry and Donna also thought Swanson threw the flower, and Alice Schiller…” Annie frowned. “Max, Alice looked worried.”
Max picked up speed. The road was fenced on both sides for a stretch. “I’m with Alice. Because the appearance of the gardenia didn’t make any sense. Oh sure, if Swanson set up the flower, it made lots of sense. But if he didn’t, someone is playing a very strange game. Why reinforce Marguerite’s belief in the supernatural? That’s what someone did.”
“It’s ugly,” Annie said bluntly.
“Ugly and dangerous.” Max frowned.
Annie said crisply, “I’ll bet Alice knows who threw the flower.”
Max glanced at Annie.
She moved impatiently in her seat. “Alice is about as savvy as Marguerite’s nuts. The way Alice looked at Marguerite—I think she’s frightened for her.”
Max slowed again as the fences ended. “Marguerite was too busy playing to the house to get a feel for the audience. I came away with a singularly nasty feel. She’s infuriating a bunch of people. You’d think Swanson, just for his own good, would have tried to keep her quiet about plans to turn her money over to him.”
“To the Evermore Foundation,” Annie corrected.
Max shrugged. “Same thing. And they all know it. But you have to hand it to the old dame, she can put on a good show.” He turned the Ferrari into their road.
Annie felt warmer. The heater was working and they were almost home. She leaned forward, glimpsing the twin lights on their porch. “Oh well, it isn’t our problem. God, what a house and what a zoo. I don’t like any of them. Marguerite Dumaney’s a self-centered, crazed old harridan. I wouldn’t trust Emory Swanson with a wooden nickel, much less a fortune. Happy lets her sister push her around and, worse than that, she didn’t stick up for Rachel. Wayne cultivates that tweedy professor image, but he has the eyes of a lion tamer. Donna has all the charm of the alligator in our pond. Terry looks like a blackjack dealer in a casino. And Joan should have stayed home if all she can do is glower at her ex.” Annie’s eyes narrowed. “I’d be interested to know what Alice thinks about her boss. But”—and the relief was evident—“I don’t have to give a damn about any of them.”
Max said softly, “Annie, you talked to Pudge.”
She wanted to cling to their discussion of unexplained gardenias and unattractive people. Yes, she had talked to Pudge and she liked everything about him: She liked his kind face, she liked the sound of his light tenor voice, she liked the feeling it gave her to sit next to him.
There was still a core of coldness around her heart. Pudge Laurance couldn’t be trusted. That’s what she had to remember. Now and always. He could not be trusted. Ever.
The Ferrari lights swept over their front lawn. Annie grabbed Max’s arm. “Max, look, on the porch….” A small figure huddled on the wooden bench.
Max jammed on the brakes. Annie was out of the car and running. Max’s door slammed. He left on the lights.
A thin, bloodless face turned toward them. Her brown eyes vacant and glazed, Rachel’s stare didn’t waver. A tracery of blue veins stood out against gauze-white skin.
Annie reached out, gently touched a cold cheek. “Rachel, let’s go inside.” Annie pulled the girl to her feet as Max held open the front door. Annie put her arm around the bulky oversize jacket hanging from thin, slumped shoulders. She led Rachel into the living room to an overstuffed sofa. As they sank into its comfort, Annie murmured, “Max, some hot chocolate. And an afghan.”
Max turned toward the hall.
“Rachel”—Annie gently held icy hands—“they’ll be worried.”
The girl’s eyes flickered. Her mouth twisted. “Nobody cares about me.” She swallowed. Her words came at intervals, as if it took all her strength to speak. “You were nice to me tonight.”
Annie’s throat ached. Words should never be that hard to say, not for anyone and certainly not for this bewildered, drained girl.
Max stepped softly near and handed Annie a beige and blue afghan.
Annie squeezed Rachel’s unresponsive hands, then gently spread the warm afghan over her. “Rachel, what’s wrong?”
Red-rimmed eyes stared stonily ahead. Rachel’s lips quivered. “Mike wouldn’t talk to me.”
Annie had a cold sense of foreboding. Mike was the nineteen-year-old gardener. Happy thought he was too old for Rachel. At dinner, Marguerite said she had found it easy to discourage his interest in Rachel. “Tonight?”
Tears slowly trickled down Rachel’s white cheeks. “I called and he hung up on me. I rode my bike to his house. I went up to the front door and his mom opened the door. She’s always been nice to me before, but tonight she shook her head and said Mike was busy.” One hand straggled out from beneath the afghan, swiped at her cheeks. “She looked sad. Then she shut the door. I went around to the back. Mike’s room is by the back steps. I knocked on his window. I’ve done that lots of times.” Her high voice was open and guileless. “Sometimes it would be real late and he’d push the screen out and I’d climb in.” She pulled the afghan up to her neck. “He opened the window and told me to go away, told me to go back to the big house. He said—” She swallowed jerkily. “He said he never wanted to see me again.”
A spoon clinked as Max placed the tray on the coffee table.
Annie picked up a mug, held it out. “You’re cold, Rachel. Max has fixed some hot chocolate for us. Here, he makes great cocoa, I promise.” She talked and tried desperately to think. What should she say to Rachel? What could she say? What, actually, did Annie know? There was Marguerite’s cruel statement that Rachel’s “Romeo prefers money to her.” The inference was clear. Marguerite offered Mike money to dump Rachel, and he accepted.
Rachel took the cocoa, sipped, but her eyes clung to Annie.
Annie took a deep breath, wished for wisdom and felt the beginnings of a slow, deep anger. Who the hell did Marguerite Dumaney think she was? Perhaps she acted on impulse. Perhaps Rachel, sullen and hateful, had made her angry. Perhaps, giving Marguerite every benefit of every doubt, she had felt it was quite all right to use any means to protect Rachel from an unwise alliance at an unwise age. And, Annie realized in a rush, Happy must have acquiesced. Was it in reference to this that she’d said so obscurely at the time, “Even Marguerite is right sometimes?” If confronted, the aunt and mother would with some justification retort that their fears had been well founded or Mike would never have traded “love” for money. They could feel pleased that they had protected Rachel. But why hadn’t they weighed the cost? Were they so old, so benumbed with age and experience and cynicism that they had no inkling what this would do to Rachel? Rachel’s heart and mind were reaching out beyond herself for the first time, foreshadowing what would someday be a full and frank search for love. But this was just the tentative beginning, the budding of a delicate, fragile trust. Marguerite’s brutal, public destruction could sear Rachel’s heart, make her incapable of ever trusting anyone. Annie knew, knew better than she wanted to admit, just how indelible are the effects of broken trust.
“People can mean well and do the wrong thing.” Annie’s eyes slid away from Rachel. Damn, how could she tell her?
“Annie…” Rachel’s voice was as faint as the beat of faraway wings.
Reluctantly, Annie met her gaze.
Her eyes boring into Annie’s, Rachel placed the half-filled mug on the coffee table. She pushed back the afghan, slowly came to her feet. “What do you know?”
Annie reached out, but Rachel took one step back, another. “Tell me what you know.” Her thin young voice was harsh.
“At dinner…” Annie searched for words, but there weren’t any good words, not for this moment. “Marguerite said”—no, Annie couldn’t put it on money, she couldn’t do that to Rachel—“that she’d persuaded Mike not to see you anymore.”
Rachel wrapped her skinny arms around herself.
“They don’t understand,” Annie said quickly. “They don’t mean—”
“They?” Rachel looked at her intently.
“Marguerite and your mother. They—” Annie stopped. What had she done? She shouldn’t have linked the two. If Rachel ever discovered that Happy agreed with Marguerite, perhaps even approved of Marguerite offering Mike money, Rachel would be shattered. But, of course, she would find out. If nothing else, Marguerite would tell Rachel, would take enormous pleasure in telling her, would likely spell out the exact amount, describe whether the sum was handed to Mike in a check or cash. Oh damn, damn, damn. “Rachel, please, grown-ups do the wrong things sometimes.” Like Pudge going away. The thought was deep inside. She pushed it away. “You’re very special. Someday you’ll find someone to love, someone who loves you—”
“They’ve taken Mike away. I hate them. I’ll make them sorry.” Rachel whirled and ran for the door.
Annie glimpsed her face, burning eyes, a rising flush of anger, lips pressed hard together. The door banged.
“Wait,” Annie called. She ran after Rachel, Max close behind her. On the porch, they stared out into the darkness.
Max turned. “I’ll get a flashlight—”
“It’s too late, Max. She’s on her bike.” Annie clattered down the steps, started for the car, stopped. “We can’t catch her. There are too many trails. Max, I’m frightened. Where do you suppose she’s gone? We should have taken her home.”
“I’ll call Pudge.” It took him only a moment and then he was back to the porch, Annie’s cashmere shawl in one hand, a heavy-duty flashlight in the other. “I got him. He’ll watch for her. But just in case, let’s drive out, see if we can spot her. Pudge will call us on the cell phone if she comes in.”
As the Ferrari moved slowly up the road, Annie hung out the open window, shining the flash toward the bike trail that sometimes hugged the road, sometimes plunged deep into the pines. They were a half mile from the Dumaney house when the cell phone rang.
Annie snatched it up. “Hello.”
“Annie, she’s home. I’ll talk to her.” Pudge’s pleasant voice was tired but reassuring.
Annie felt like a storm-tossed castaway thrown a thick lifeline. Pudge would take care of Rachel. He would keep her from harm. “Thank God.” The awful sense of fear and responsibility receded, leaving her almost light-headed with relief. Her voice bubbled. “Tell her that…” she paused, then plunged ahead. “Tell her that her big sister”—Annie felt an odd flood of surprise and warmth and uncertainty—“is counting on her. Tell her everything will be all right.” Annie knew that her message couldn’t bind a gaping wound, but words of love always help, no matter how deep the pain. She knew also that nothing would ever erase this night from Rachel’s memory.