Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Silver Scream : A Bed-and-breakfast Mystery

    Prev Next


      each of the pillowcases the youngsters held in front of

      them. “Okay, but doesn’t that make you a bit old for

      trick-or-treating?”

      The alligator shook its scaly green head. “We had to

      take our little brothers and sisters out first. Most of the

      people ignored us, so now it’s our turn.”

      “I see,” Judith said. “But it’s still very late. You two

      should head home now.”

      The spaceman laughed and the alligator wagged his

      tail as they headed down the porch steps. As Judith was

      closing the door, they tossed a couple of thank-yous

      over their shoulders.

      In the living room, nothing much had changed. The

      cloud of gloom still hung over the guests, so palpable

      that Judith felt as if she were looking through the

      blurred lens of a movie camera.

      100

      Mary Daheim

      Bill and Joe entered at that moment, each carrying

      more platters of food. Spotting Bruno sitting in his favorite place on the sofa, Bill began to quack in an

      angry tone.

      “Quack, quack-quack-quack!” He pointed to the

      melancholy producer. “Quack!”

      Joe put a hand on Bill’s arm feathers. “Quack off.

      That guy looks pretty grim. Let him be.”

      Bill was slow to respond. “Qu-a-ck,” he finally said

      in a reluctant voice.

      Joe gave Bill a pat, observed the rest of the morose

      gathering, and spoke up: “Anybody care to dance? I’ll

      put on some music.”

      Ellie laughed with a hint of hysteria and wandered

      out into the entry hall just as Winifred appeared with

      her Spanish-costumed duo. She glanced at Bruno,

      winced, and requested a stiff bourbon from Cathy. No

      one else responded to Joe’s invitation.

      Bill turned around, calling to an unseen Renie.

      “Daisy!” he shouted in his normal, if muffled, voice.

      “It’s after midnight. Can we go home?”

      Renie stumbled out of the entry hall. She seemed to

      be having trouble with her webbed feet. “I’ll ask Judith,” she said.

      Judith excused herself and got up from the sofa. “I

      don’t see why you shouldn’t go,” she said in a low

      voice. “This is one dead party. Arlene and Carl can

      help clean up.” She glanced back at the buffet and

      sighed. “All that expensive food gone to waste.”

      “I put some pots and pans to soak in the sink,” Renie

      said. “They should be scrubbed before you put them in

      the dishwasher.”

      SILVER SCREAM

      101

      “Okay,” Judith said. “Thanks for everything. As it

      turned out, I didn’t need so much help after all.”

      Renie nodded, her yellow bill bobbing up and down.

      “A real bomb, I guess.”

      “Right.” Judith hugged Bill and Renie. Joe, who

      kept tripping over the hem of his choirboy’s cassock,

      showed them out the back way.

      When Judith returned to the living room, Winifred

      offered to introduce her to Morris and Eugenia.

      “Morris Mayne is Bruno’s studio publicist,”

      Winifred said, a bit stiffly. “Eugenia Fleming is Bruno

      and Dirk’s agent.”

      Judith allowed her hand to be shaken by the pair.

      Morris’s grip was feeble; Eugenia practically pulled

      Judith’s arm out of the socket.

      “We so wanted to stay here at your charming B&B,”

      Eugenia boomed in a deep voice. She seemed more

      than big; she towered over Judith’s five-foot-nine and

      possessed a bust that could have triumphed in a headon collision with an armored car.

      “There wasn’t room, I guess,” Morris said, then

      cleared his throat. “Especially since my wife unexpectedly joined me on this trip.”

      Judith assumed that his wife was the pioneer in the

      sunbonnet and gingham dress. “I’m sure you’re enjoying the Cascadia,” she said. “It’s the most luxurious

      hotel in the city.”

      “It’s fine,” Morris said offhandedly. “The truth is,

      my wife’s a real homebody. I was surprised that she

      wanted to come along.”

      Eugenia’s dark eyes were flashing around the room.

      “Excuse me,” she said, “I must speak with Dirk. I

      102

      Mary Daheim

      hardly recognized him in that doublet and the hat with

      those swooping feathers.” With a click of the castanets

      she held in one hand, the agent stalked across the room

      to reach her prey.

      Judith was left with Morris, who kept darting

      glances at Bruno, sitting alone and forlorn on the sofa.

      Sweetums, who must have come in when the Joneses

      went out, had planted his orange-and-white body at the

      producer’s feet. To Judith’s surprise, Bruno patted his

      lap. To her amazement, the cat leaped up and allowed

      himself to be petted. Maybe even Sweetums wanted to

      get into the movies.

      “I should speak to Bruno,” Morris murmured, removing his matador’s cap. He was short, spare, and

      balding. “I simply don’t know what to say to him. Perhaps I’ll get a drink first.”

      Judith watched Morris accept a hefty martini from

      Cathy. The publicist then stood off to one side by the

      door to the front parlor and gulped down his drink.

      Cathy removed her panda head, slipped out from behind the bar, and approached Judith.

      “I’m dying of heat prostration in this stupid suit,”

      she declared, and in fact, her face was dripping with

      perspiration. “I knew I should never have let my

      mother order my costume. I intended to come as Pandora, not a panda.”

      Judith couldn’t help but smile. “That would have

      been more fetching in order to attract Ben Carmody.”

      Cathy shook out her long, damp blond locks. “Another idea of Mom’s! I’m not even a Ben Carmody fan.

      He always plays meanies.”

      “Go home,” Judith urged. “Joe and I can take care of

      the bar. I don’t think this party is going to last much

      SILVER SCREAM

      103

      longer. In fact, your parents might as well leave, too.

      I’ll go out to the kitchen and thank them.”

      Arlene, however, refused to leave Judith with such a

      mess. “Cathy can go, Carl can go,” she asserted, “but

      I’m staying until the bitter end.”

      “I think we’re already there,” Judith said over the

      hum of the dishwasher.

      “I’ll stay, too,” Carl volunteered.

      “Really,” Judith protested, “there’s no need. Joe and

      I can clean up by ourselves. It’s late. Please, we’ll be

      fine.”

      “Not entirely,” Carl said, pointing to the sink.

      “You’ve got a backed-up drain.”

      Judith grimaced. “Renie! She never uses sink strainers. She says they don’t work for her.”

      “What’s to work?” Joe asked, gazing into the eightinch basin of dirty water. “You put them in, turn the

      button on top, and there you go.”

      Judith shook her head. “Not for Renie. She says it’s

      too complicated. I gave her a pair of brand new strainers for Christmas last year and she stuck them on her

      ears and said that’s as close as they’d ever get to her


      double sinks.”

      Carl was still peering at the water. “Maybe if I used

      a plunger . . .”

      “No, you don’t,” Joe said, taking Carl by the shoulder. “Go home, Hansel. Your gingerbread house awaits

      you.”

      Carl shot Joe a dark look. “With Gretel or the

      witch?”

      “Gretel, of course,” Judith said, patting Arlene’s

      arm. “Go on, please. Poor Cathy has to get out of that

      panda suit.”

      104

      Mary Daheim

      With reluctance, the Rankerses exited with their

      daughter. Joe went into the living room to tend bar, and

      Judith scanned what was left of the crowd. On the window seat, Dirk and Angela were speaking with Eugenia in a serious manner. Chips Madigan was standing

      by the piano, framing imaginary camera angles with

      his hands. Dade, Ellie, and Ben were nowhere in sight.

      Winifred stood behind the sofa, where Bruno sat with

      Morris Mayne at his side. Sweetums remained tucked

      in the folds of Bruno’s robes.

      As innkeeper and hostess, Judith couldn’t help but

      take Bruno’s gloom personally. She knew it wasn’t her

      fault, but it upset her to see a guest in distress.

      As if sensing Judith’s consternation, Eugenia

      slipped off the window seat and moved quickly across

      the room.

      “I’m wondering if Bruno shouldn’t leave for L.A.

      tonight,” she murmured. “Of course it’s none of my

      business, really. I’d mention it to Winifred, but she and

      I don’t speak.”

      “Oh.” Judith glanced from Eugenia to Winifred. “I

      see.” She didn’t really, but couldn’t think of anything

      else to say. She hesitated, feeling Eugenia’s hard-eyed

      stare. Judith cleared her throat. “Is there something I

      can do?”

      “Why, yes,” Eugenia replied. “You could ask what

      Winifred thinks of my suggestion. Only don’t mention

      that it came from me.”

      “I don’t think there’s another flight to L.A. tonight,”

      Judith said. “The red-eye leaves shortly after midnight.”

      Eugenia waved a hand that was encased in fingerless black lace gloves. “Bruno doesn’t fly commercial.

      He has his own jet.”

      SILVER SCREAM

      105

      “Oh.” Judith started toward the sofa, aware that

      Winifred was also giving her a steely-eyed stare. Taking

      a deep breath, she decided to approach Bruno directly.

      His eyes were dull as he gazed up at her from under

      the hood of his burnoose. “Yes?”

      “Mr. Zepf,” Judith began. She shivered slightly. The

      fire had burned out on the hearth, and the wind created

      a draft. Roman fashion wasn’t intended for a chilly autumn evening in the Pacific Northwest. “Mr. Zepf,” Judith repeated, “I want to say how sorry I am that your

      movie wasn’t well received. Someone suggested that

      perhaps you’d like to fly back to Los Angeles tonight.

      What do you think?”

      Bruno looked blank. “I don’t think. I can’t think. I

      mustn’t think. Could you get me another Scotch?” He

      pointed to his empty glass on the coffee table between

      the matching sofas.

      “Of course,” Judith responded, and went over to Joe

      at the bar just as Dirk and Angela headed upstairs.

      “Zepf needs zapping,” Judith said in a low voice. “I

      feel sorry for him. Do you suppose it’s as bad as he

      makes out?”

      “Judging from the funereal pall around here,” Joe

      said, opening Bruno’s favorite brand, “I’d say yes. I

      don’t know much about the movie business, but a flop

      can ruin a career. And I don’t mean just Bruno’s.”

      “I never thought of it that way,” Judith said softly,

      then gazed around the living room. Of the original

      guest list, Chips Madigan and Winifred Best remained.

      And Bruno, of course. Judith realized that even she

      was beginning to consider him an afterthought. In a fit

      of uncatlike compassion, Sweetums was still curled up

      on Bruno’s lap.

      106

      Mary Daheim

      Joe pointed to the elaborate buffet. “I’ll wrap up

      some of the food and put it in the freezer. There’s no

      sense in letting it go to waste.”

      Judith nodded. “They’re not the type to take doggie

      bags with them. I’ll start putting away some of the

      things from the bar in the washstand cabinet.”

      As she took the first half-dozen unopened bottles

      that belonged to the B&B into the dining room, Morris Mayne was at her heels.

      “I must be on my way,” he said. “There’s not much

      more I can do for poor Bruno. Besides, as strange as it

      sounds for people in the picture business, my wife and

      I keep regular hours. Thank you for your hospitality.”

      He ducked his head and scurried off toward the front

      door.

      Judith was putting dirty dishes on a tray when a subdued Winifred Best came up to her. “I think Bruno

      wants to sit for a while with his thoughts,” she said.

      “I’m going to retire for the night.” Slipping her hands

      up the sleeves of her nun’s habit, she seemed to strain

      for the next words: “Thank you for all you’ve done.

      I’m sorry this couldn’t have been a happier event. Perhaps next time—if there is a next time—Bruno will

      want to stay in a hotel.”

      Judith watched Winifred leave the room, then noted

      that only Bruno and Eugenia Fleming remained. The

      agent was nibbling on truffles and standing at the

      piano, her free hand playing the fate motif from Car-

      men. Notes composed by the devil himself, Renie had

      once told Judith. An exaggeration, perhaps, but the

      minor chords certainly sounded like doom and gloom.

      Out in the kitchen, Joe had just come up from the

      basement. “We’ve run out of room in the freezer,” he

      SILVER SCREAM

      107

      announced. “How much of that stuff in there is worth

      keeping? You’ve got dates on some of those packages

      from six, eight years ago.”

      “Really?” Judith looked sheepish. “Then we’d better toss anything that old. Come on, I’ll get some

      garbage bags and go down with you.”

      Joe looked up at the schoolhouse clock. “It’s going

      on one in the morning. Can’t it wait until tomorrow?”

      Judith shook her head and put a sweater on over her

      Roman costume. “I want as much of this done tonight

      as possible. Otherwise I’ll have a big mess in the

      kitchen come morning. That makes getting breakfast

      awkward. It won’t take that long. Let’s go.”

      But like so many household tasks, it took longer

      than Judith had predicted. Almost half an hour later the

      Flynns trudged back upstairs. Joe headed directly for

      the garbage cans outside while Judith returned to the

      kitchen.

      Or almost. She rounded the corner into the hall and

      saw Bruno bending over the sink. Her initial reaction

      was that he was throwing up. Not that she blamed him.

      A sudden gust of wind roared over the house. She

      heard a garbage
    -can lid rattle, roll, and clank outside.

      She knew that Joe must be swearing a blue streak.

      “Mr. Zepf,” she called softly, moving down the hallway. “Can I help you?”

      Bruno didn’t move. His robes sagged around him

      and the headpiece was askew. Judith moved closer. She

      couldn’t see his face above the sink.

      Then, as she reached the kitchen table, she realized

      that Bruno’s face was in the standing water from the

      plugged-up drain.

      “Mr. Zepf!” she cried, fear seizing her like an iron

      108

      Mary Daheim

      clamp. She lurched at him, shaking his arm. “Mr.

      Zepf!” she cried again.

      Bruno Zepf slumped farther into the sink, his burly

      upper body carrying him forward. With trembling fingers, Judith searched for a pulse. There was none. She

      felt faint, but kept shaking Bruno’s arm. Then she noticed that the broken cupboard door was wide open.

      And above the sink, suspended from the single light

      fixture, was a big black spider.

      SEVEN

      JUDITH DIDN’T HEAR Joe come running down the

      hallway. She was aware of his presence only when

      he grabbed her by the shoulders and gently but

      firmly pushed her out of the way.

      “Call 911,” he ordered in a calm but emphatic

      voice. “I’ll try to resuscitate him.”

      A flicker of hope sparked in Judith’s breast.

      “He’s alive?”

      Joe didn’t reply. He hauled Bruno onto the floor

      and started CPR. Judith couldn’t remember where

      she’d put the phone. She finally buzzed the receiver

      from its base and heard it beep from the opposite

      kitchen counter.

      How could she explain that a man might have

      drowned in the kitchen? Not a swimming pool, not

      a bathtub, not a hot tub, but a kitchen sink. Fumbling with the buttons on the phone, Judith felt

      giddy. She wouldn’t give the details. She was afraid

      to, for fear of becoming hysterical. Or worse yet,

      disbelieved.

      Finally she got a grip on her composure and informed the operator that there was a man near death.

      Or already there, Judith thought dismally. Help was

      110

      Mary Daheim

      required immediately. The operator told her to stand

      by, someone should arrive at Hillside Manor in just a

      few minutes.

      “But,” Judith said in amazement, “I haven’t given

      you the address.”

      “Our system showed it on the screen,” the female

      voice replied. “Besides, you’ve called here before,

      haven’t you?”

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026