Better Than Gold. Mary Brady
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“What, Chief Montcalm?” Murder? Mayhem? Plague? She stopped her mind from rushing to the wild places.
“I know you’re in a hurry to get this project completed, Ms. Parker, but I’m going to have to delay things until we have all we need from here.”
“I—um. I understand.” What could she say? This was a person in her wall. But how long would the delay be? A couple of hours? All day? She almost shuddered to think of what more work stoppage would do to the opening date. If she missed the first migration of tourists, she might never be able to keep the Roost open. If the Pirate’s Roost didn’t stay open, what would that say about Bailey’s Cove as a place to visit. If the tourists didn’t come, the town would continue to shrink and fade.
The chief stepped over to where she waited. “We can start processing the scene, but I want everybody out of the building while we get to work. We’ll get you and your people back in here as soon as we can.”
“Has the body been here a long time do you think?” Mia asked, almost afraid to hear the answer.
“Most likely a long time because whoever did this used granite and not brick. Brick if it were easily available would have been a lot less work. You probably know this building’s history better than I do.”
She doubted that, but she knew he wanted her take. “The building was first built as a hotel and restaurant in around 1818 by the town’s founder. It has been many things including abandoned for about two decades from the mid 1970s until ’95 then it was a political headquarters. Recently, it was, of course, the yarn and crafts store. I don’t know how long this wall’s been here.”
The chief scribbled as she spoke, and then he looked up and gave her an even gaze. “I suppose we ought to let your crew go soon.”
“Charlie at least. Before he bolts anyway. He found an occupied rat’s nest last week. Took off across Church Street to Braven’s for a beer in the middle of the afternoon and didn’t come back. I had to coax him to work the next day with Pardee Jordan’s donuts. Juvenile, ah-yuh, but that’s Charlie.”
Chief Montcalm lowered his eyebrows. She suspected he already knew everything she was babbling at him about, but he listened anyway. That’s part of what made him a good police chief.
“My people will get statements from all of you,” he said when she shut up. “We’ll check and see if there’s any identification on the body.”
“Do you think there might be? Even if it’s really old?”
“I could see what is probably clothing remnants. Something to identify the remains could be in there. What’s left of the clothing will at least give us a more accurate time frame.”
A man in paper coveralls entered burdened with equipment, presumably to record the scene and gather clues. Chief Montcalm turned to face Mia. “I’m gonna have you wait out on the porch with the others.”
“But I thought I’d stay and...”
Another of his crisp gestures and she turned to join the others on the porch.
* * *
IN A DIMLY lit room in St. Elizabeth’s Manor nursing home in Portland, Maine, Daniel MacCarey pulled the chair up to the bedside of his elderly aunt. “I’m here, Aunt Margaret.”
He took her delicate hand in his and pressed softly.
The quiet sounds of evening at the nursing home clanked and moaned as his great-aunt Margaret breathed softly. Her eyes fluttered open and then closed.
The flowers he had brought to brighten her room three days ago were beginning to fade. The faint smell from the lilies lingered in the air the way her Chantilly perfume had in her stately old home long after he had moved her to St. Elizabeth’s. He had wanted someone to be with her all day and not just on Sunday afternoons, holidays and the rare evenings when he could get there to visit her before she fell asleep.
The nurse had called him an hour ago to come. “She says it’s time.”
The call hadn’t been a surprise. Margaret Irene MacCarey was ninety-two. Three weeks ago she started looking tired, stopped attending activities with the other residents, eventually stopped leaving her room. A few days ago, they wanted to move her to the acute-care facility, but she had insisted they call for the hospice service to take over her care.
No one had argued.
“I’m sorry, I have to go, Daniel.”
Margaret’s feathery words came so softly he thought at first he had imagined them, until he saw her eyes open, a faint smile settled on her delicate features.
He brushed his fingertips across the back of her hand. “Is there anything I can do for you?”
She closed her eyes and when she didn’t open them, Daniel found himself hoping for more time with her. He patted her hand.
She turned her hand over to squeeze his. “Scare you, did I?”
“You’ve been scaring me since I was a boy. Why should today be any different?”
Slowly, her eyelids lifted again. “You’ll be fine, Daniel.”
“Of course I will.” His only living blood relative was about to let go of his hand for the last time. He leaned forward in his chair and repeated for both their sakes, “Of course I will.”
“Funny. It never occurred to me until it was way too late—” she paused and took a breath “—that when I left, you might end up the last of us. Alone.”
She breathed quietly for a minute and then continued. “I’m sorry. I always had your dad and then I had you. Couldn’t you just find a woman who doesn’t want children? Or even a man, for goodness sake.”
“You’re so progressive for such an old lady, Aunt Margaret.”
“I’m serious about you finding somebody.” She squeezed his hand again. “And I have to try one more time. Just because you won’t be having any more children doesn’t mean there isn’t somebody out there who doesn’t want to spend the rest of her life with you.”
“I’ve got my work.”
“You’ve got classrooms full of those transient college students.” Her voice was weakening, becoming more breathy.
“I’ve got many things in the works,” he said.
“You are so nice to try to let me leave in comfort.”
“Don’t worry about me.”
“You’re all I’ve got left to do. I’ve finished everything else.” Her voice came out raspy and halting.
“Don’t worry about me,” he repeated.
“I’ve no worry left in me. I just see things more clearly these days.”