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    Silver Scream : A Bed-and-breakfast Mystery

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      an ox. You know how hearty those Scandinavians are.”

      “Like our daughter-in-law,” Joe acknowledged,

      opening the evening paper, which Judith had retrieved

      earlier from the front porch.

      “Yes,” Judith said in a contemplative voice. Kristin

      was not only big and beautiful, but so infuriatingly

      competent that her mother-in-law was occasionally intimidated. “Yes,” she repeated. “Formidable, too. What

      is she not?”

      The front doorbell rang, making Judith jump. “The

      guests! They’re part of a tour, here for two nights. I

      didn’t think they’d arrive until five-thirty.” She dashed

      out through the swinging doors between the kitchen

      and the dining room to greet the newcomers.

      The tour group, consisting of a dozen retirees from

      eastern Canada, were on the last leg of a trip that had

      started in Toronto. Some of them looked as if they

      were on their last legs, too. Judith escorted them to

      their rooms, made sure everything was in order, and informed them that the social hour began at six. To a

      man—and woman—they begged off, insisting that

      they simply wanted to rest before going out to dinner.

      The bus trip from Portland had taken six hours, a result

      of summer highway construction. They were exhausted. They didn’t need to socialize, having been

      cheek by jowl with each other for the past three weeks.

      Indeed, judging from some of the glares that were ex- SILVER SCREAM

      9

      changed, they were sick of each other. Could they

      please be allowed to nap?

      Judith assured them they could. Cancellation of the

      social hour meant that she, too, could take it easy. Following hip replacement surgery in January, Judith still

      tired easily. But before taking a respite, she had to call

      the Kidds and the Izards to inform them that their

      reservations were being changed because of unforeseen circumstances.

      Joe had just opened his second Harp when Judith returned to the kitchen. She observed the top of his head

      behind the sports section and smiled to herself. There

      was more gray in his red hair, and in truth, there was

      less of either color. But to Judith, Joe Flynn was still

      the most attractive man on earth. She had waited a

      quarter of a century to become his wife, but the years

      in between seemed to have faded into an Irish mist. On

      the way to the computer, she paused to kiss the top of

      his head.

      “What’s this rash outbreak of affection?” Joe asked

      without glancing up.

      “Just remembering that I love you,” Judith said lightly.

      “Do you need reminding?”

      “No.”

      She noted the Kidds’ number in Appleton, Wisconsin, and dialed. They were repeat customers, having

      come to Hillside Manor six years earlier. Judith hated

      to cancel them.

      Alice Kidd answered the phone on the second ring.

      Judith relayed the doleful news and apologized most

      humbly. “You’ll be put up at a lovely B&B which will

      be convenient to everything. Ms. Heffelman will contact you in a day or two with the specifics.”

      10

      Mary Daheim

      “Well, darn it all anyway,” Mrs. Kidd said with a

      Midwestern twang. “We so enjoyed your place. How is

      your mother? Edgar and I thought she was a real doll.”

      A voodoo doll perhaps, Judith thought. “Mother’s

      fine,” she said aloud. “Of course her memory is sometimes iffy.”

      “Yes,” Mrs. Kidd said in a quiet voice. “Edgar’s

      mother is like that, too. So sad. My own dear mother

      passed away last winter.”

      “I’m sorry to hear that,” Judith said.

      Alice Kidd acknowledged the expression of sympathy, then paused. “You’re certain we’ll be staying in as

      nice a B&B as yours?”

      “Definitely,” Judith declared. Ingrid wouldn’t let her

      down. She’d better not. An inferior establishment

      wouldn’t be a credit to Judith or to the association Ingrid guarded like a military sentry. “Maybe even

      nicer.”

      “I doubt that,” Mrs. Kidd said as if she meant it.

      “You’re very kind,” Judith responded. “We’ll be in

      touch.”

      Next she dialed the number of Walt and Meg Izard

      in Riceville, Iowa. A frazzled-sounding woman answered the phone.

      “Mrs. Izard?” Judith inquired.

      “Yeah, right. Who is this? We’re watching TV.”

      “I’m sorry,” Judith said, then identified herself as

      the owner of Hillside Manor.

      “What’s that?” Mrs. Izard snapped. “A rest home?

      Forget it.”

      “Wait!” Judith cried, certain that Meg Izard was

      about to slam down the receiver. “I own the bed-andbreakfast you’re staying at in October. The nights of

      SILVER SCREAM

      11

      the twenty-ninth, thirtieth, and thirty-first. I’m afraid

      there’s been a change.”

      “A change?” Meg Izard sounded perplexed. “In

      what? The dates? We can’t change. We’re celebrating

      our twenty-fifth anniversary.”

      “The change affects your lodgings,” Judith explained. “I’m afraid I won’t be able to accommodate

      you that weekend.”

      “Why not?” Meg’s voice had again turned harsh.

      “You got the Queen of England staying there?”

      “Not exactly,” Judith replied. “I’ve had to rearrange

      my schedule. Unfortunately, there’s a movie crew

      coming for a big premiere.”

      “Movies!” Meg exclaimed. “Who’d pay five dollars

      to see a movie when they can watch it on TV a year

      later? Who cares? We like our sitcoms better anyway.

      They make Walt laugh, which isn’t easy to do these

      days.”

      Riceville, Iowa, must indeed be rural if they only

      charged five bucks for a first-run film, Judith thought.

      “It’s a big event,” she said, with a need to defend herself. “Bruno Zepf is opening his new epic, The Gas-

      man, here in town.”

      There was a long pause at the other end. Finally,

      Mrs. Izard spoke again: “Never heard of him.”

      “I don’t know much about Mr. Zepf, either,” Judith

      admitted in an effort to appease the disgruntled Mrs.

      Izard. “You’ll be hearing from Ingrid Heffelman soon

      to make sure you’re put up in a very nice inn.”

      “Hunh.” Meg paused. “Okay, we’ll stay tuned. But

      this Heffelbump woman better call soon. October’s not

      that far away.”

      It was two months away, Judith thought, but didn’t

      12

      Mary Daheim

      argue. She was beginning to feel grateful that the Izards

      wouldn’t be staying at Hillside Manor. Trying to remain

      gracious, she rang off. The Kidds and the Izards had

      been disposed of; she needn’t worry about Bruno Zepf

      and his movie people for two months. The waning summer and the early fall should be relatively uneventful.

      It was typical of Judith that, as Cousin Renie would

      say, she would bury her head in the sand. On that warm

      August evening, she dug deep and tried to blot out

      some of life’s less pleasant incidents.

     
    One of them was Skjoval Tolvang. The tall, sinewy

      old handyman with his stubborn nature and unshakable

      convictions had already made some improvements to

      Hillside Manor. He had repaired the sagging front

      steps, replaced the ones in back, rebuilt both chimneys,

      which had been damaged in an earthquake, inspected

      the electrical wiring, and put in what he called a

      “super-duper door spring” to keep the kitchen cupboard from swinging open by itself. What was left involved rehanging the door to the first-floor powder

      room and checking the toolshed’s plumbing.

      Judith came a cropper with the bathroom repair. On

      the first day of September, Mr. Tolvang showed up

      very early. It was not yet six o’clock when he banged

      on the back door. Joe was in the shower and Judith had

      just finished getting dressed. The noise was loud

      enough to be heard in the third-floor family quarters,

      and thus even louder for the sleeping guests on the second floor.

      “Damn!” Judith breathed, hurrying down the first

      flight of stairs. “Double damn!” she breathed, taking

      the back stairs to the main floor as fast as she could

      without risking a fall.

      SILVER SCREAM

      13

      “By early,” she said, yanking open the back door, “I

      thought you meant seven or eight.”

      “Early is early,” the handyman replied. “Isn’t this

      early, pygolly?”

      “It’s too early for me to have made coffee,” Judith

      asserted. “You’ll have to wait a few minutes.”

      But Skjoval Tolvang reached into his big toolbox

      and removed a tall blue thermos. “I got my medicine to

      get me going. I vas up at four.”

      Coffee fueled the handyman the way gasoline propels cars. He never ate on the job, putting in long, arduous days with only his seemingly bottomless

      thermos to keep him going.

      “I’m a little worried,” Judith said, pouring coffee

      into both the big urn she used for guests and the family coffeemaker. “Having a bathroom just off the entry

      hall may no longer be up to city code.”

      “Code!” Skjoval coughed up the word as if he’d

      swallowed a bug. “To hell vith the city! Vat do they

      know, that bunch of crackpot desk yockeys? They be

      lucky to find the bathroom, let alone know vhere to put

      it!”

      “It was only a thought,” Judith said meekly.

      “You vorry too much,” Skjoval declared, putting the

      thermos back into his toolbox. “I don’t need no hassles. I quit.”

      It wasn’t the first time, nor would it be the last, that

      the handyman had quit over some quibble. Skjoval

      never lacked for work. He was good and he was cheap.

      But he was also temperamental.

      Judith knew the drill, though it wasn’t easy to repeat

      at six-ten in the morning. She pleaded, groveled, cajoled, and used all of her considerable charm to get

      14

      Mary Daheim

      Skjoval to change his mind. Ultimately, he did, but it

      took another ten minutes.

      Luckily, the rest of the week and the Labor Day

      weekend went smoothly. It was only the following Friday, when Skjoval was finishing in the toolshed, that

      another fracas took place.

      “That mother of yours,” Skjoval complained, wiping sweat from his brow as he stood on the back porch.

      “She is Lucifer’s daughter. I hang the bathroom door

      yust fine, but vhy vill she not let me fix the toilet?”

      “I don’t know,” Judith replied. Indeed, she had been

      afraid that Gertrude and Mr. Tolvang would get into it

      before the job was done. Given their natures, it seemed

      inevitable. “Did she give you a reason?”

      “Hell, no,” the handyman shot back, “except that

      she be sitting on the damned thing.”

      “Oh.” Judith frowned in the direction of the toolshed. “I’ll talk to her.”

      “Don’t bother,” Skjoval snapped. “I quit.”

      “Please, Mr. Tolvang,” Judith begged, “let me

      ask—”

      But the handyman made a sharp dismissive gesture.

      “Never you mind. I don’t vant to see that old bat no

      more. She give me a bad time all veek. Let her sit on

      the damned toilet until her backside falls off.” Skjoval

      yanked the painter’s cap from his head and waved it in

      a threatening manner. “I go now, you call me if she

      ever acts like a human being and not a vitch.” He

      stomped off down the drive to his pickup truck, which

      was piled with ladders, scaffolding, and all manner of

      tools.

      Judith gritted her teeth and headed out under the

      golden September sun. Surely her mother would coop- SILVER SCREAM

      15

      erate. The toilet needed plunging; Gertrude threw all

      sorts of things into it, including Sweetums. It was either Skjoval Tolvang for the job or a hundred bucks to

      Roto-Rooter.

      Gertrude wasn’t on the toilet when Judith reached

      the toolshed. Instead, she was sitting in her old mohair

      armchair, playing solitaire on the cluttered card table.

      “Hi, Toots,” Gertrude said in a cheerful voice.

      “What’s up, besides that old fart’s dander?”

      “Why wouldn’t you let Mr. Tolvang plunge the toilet?” Judith demanded.

      “Because I was using it, that’s why.” Gertrude

      scooped up the cards and put them in her automatic

      shuffler. “When’s lunch?”

      “You ate lunch two hours ago,” Judith responded,

      then had an inspiration. “Why don’t you come inside

      with me? I’m going to make chocolate-chip cookies.”

      Gertrude brightened. “You are?”

      “Yes. Let me give you a hand.”

      Judith was helping her mother to the door when

      Skjoval Tolvang burst into the toolshed.

      “You got spies,” he declared, banging the door behind him. “Building inspectors, ya sure, you betcha.”

      Judith’s dark eyes widened. “Really? Where?”

      “In the bushes,” Skjoval replied. “Spying.”

      “Here,” Judith said, gesturing at Gertrude, “help my

      mother into the house. I’ll go check on whoever’s out

      there.”

      But Gertrude balked. “I’m not letting this crazy old

      coot touch me! He’ll shove me facedown into the barbecue and light it off.”

      “Then stay here,” Judith said crossly, and guided her

      mother back to the armchair.

      16

      Mary Daheim

      “Hey!” Gertrude shouted. “What about those

      cookies?”

      But Judith was already out the door. “Where is this

      inspector or whoever?” she asked of Mr. Tolvang.

      “By them bushes,” the handyman answered, nodding at the azaleas, rhododendrons, and roses that

      flanked the west side of the house. “Making trouble,

      mark my vords.”

      “I wonder,” Judith murmured, heading down the

      driveway.

      There was, however, no one in sight. She moved on

      to the front of the house. An unfamiliar white car was

      parked in the cul-de-sac. There were no markings on it.

      Judith moved on to the other side of the house.

      A tall man in a dark suit and hat stood between the

      h
    ouse and the hedge that divided Judith and Joe

      Flynn’s property from their neighbors, Carl and Arlene

      Rankers. The man had his back to Judith and appeared

      to be looking up under the eaves.

      “Sir!” Judith spoke sharply. “May I help you?”

      The man whirled around. “What?” He had a beard

      and wore rimless spectacles. There was such an oldfashioned air about him that Judith was reminded of a

      character out of a late-nineteenth-century novel.

      “Are you looking for someone?” Judith inquired,

      moving closer to the man.

      He hesitated, one hand brushing nervously against

      his trouser leg. “Well, yes,” he finally replied. “I am. A

      Mr. Terwilliger. I was told he lived in this cul-de-sac.”

      Judith shook her head. “There’s no one by that name

      around here. Unless,” she added, “he intends to stay at

      my B&B.” She made an expansive gesture toward the

      SILVER SCREAM

      17

      old three-story Edwardian house. “I run this place. It’s

      called Hillside Manor. There’s a sign out front.”

      The man, who had been slowly but deliberately

      backpedaling from Judith, ducked his head. “I must

      have missed it. Sorry.” He turned and all but ran around

      the rear of the house.

      Judith’s hip replacement didn’t permit her to move

      much faster than a brisk walk. Puzzled, she watched

      the man disappear, then returned to the front yard. He

      was coming down the driveway on the other side of the

      house, still at a gallop. A moment later he got into the

      car parked at the curb and pulled away with a burst of

      the engine.

      “Local plates,” she murmured. But from where Judith stood some ten yards away, she hadn’t been able

      to read the license numbers. With a shrug, she headed

      back to the toolshed. She’d mention the stranger’s appearance to Joe when he got home. If she remembered.

      Five hours later, when Joe arrived cursing the dead

      end he’d come up against in a missing antique clock

      case, Judith had forgotten all about the man who’d

      shown up at Hillside Manor.

      It would be two months before she’d remember, and

      by that time it was almost too late.

      TWO

      JUDITH RECOILED FROM the obscenity screamed into

      her ear by Cousin Renie. The four-letter word was

      rapidly repeated before Renie cried, “You’re not

      911!” and hung up.

      Shaken, Judith stared at her cleaning woman,

      Phyliss Rackley. “Oh, dear. What now?” she

     


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