8 Sweet Payback (8 page)

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Authors: Connie Shelton

BOOK: 8 Sweet Payback
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“Stay right here on our block,”
Sophie called out to him. She looked up and saw Beau.

He made eye contact and walked
over.

“Can we talk for a minute?” he asked.

“I guess.” She backed into the
apartment, standing aside so he could enter. “I don’t know what I could tell
you that’s any different from yesterday.”

Beau looked around. “I notice
Lee’s bike is gone. Did he leave?”

“I don’t know. I mean, he didn’t
bring much stuff with him. A few clothes that he carried in his saddlebags. He
loves that bike.” She moved a stack of folded towels from the armchair and
motioned for Beau to sit.

“He’s had it a long time?”

“Long time. Even back when we
first started dating. He left it with me when they sent him away. Nathan was a
baby then and Lee told me if things ever got really hard for us that I could
sell the bike. That was my first clue how much he loves Nathan. He wouldn’t
give up that bike for anything or anyone else.”

“Things must have been difficult
for you, more than once I would imagine.”

“Yeah, well. I’ve got my job at
the bank. It’s steady even if it doesn’t pay a whole lot. My folks helped me
out some too. Mom watched the baby for me until he started school, so that was really
good.”

“And now that Lee’s back?”

“I don’t know.” She’d perched on
the arm of the couch and now she ran her fingers through her hair, scraping it
back from her face. “I still have feelings for him. We might be able to make it
work. But I told him he can’t put Nathan in danger—no matter what. I don’t want
to move away from my family . . . but I don’t know if we could stay here. I
just don’t know anything right now.”

“If it’s any help, I was able to
verify Lee’s alibi for Sunday morning.”

Relief washed over her. She truly
hadn’t been sure that he had stayed on that couch all night long, Beau realized.

“Sophie, I think the way out of
this whole mess is if we can go back to the old case, when Angela was killed.
If we can find out who really did it, I’d hope that the whole town could get on
with life and put this situation behind them.”

She nodded. “Otherwise, I’m afraid
it’s going to be one payback after the other.”

Smart girl.

“So,” he said, “what do you
remember from back then? Did you know Angela Cayne?”

“Oh sure, slightly. Everybody
knows everybody in this town—I’m sure you’ve heard that before. Angie was a few
years younger, you know, so we were never in the same classes. But when I
started going out with Lee—we were seniors in high school then—I’d see Angie
around. Her folks lived right next door to Lee’s. Cute girl, pretty popular as
I remember. I recall her getting into some kind of trouble over a drunk driving
incident . . . she was probably about sixteen.”

“Her grandmother said she was in
an accident once and they thought they might lose her.”

“Oh, gosh, that’s right. That’s
what it was. Angie was driving and there was a bad wreck. Her best friend died.
I was away when that happened, taking training courses for my job. Lee went to
UNM for a year and I think he was gone then too. College didn’t work out for
him. He finally went to work for his buddy who owns that bike shop in Taos.”

“So, moving up to the time when
Angela was abducted and killed . . . what do you remember about that?”

“My world and Angie’s were pretty
different. I’d gotten pregnant with Nathan, but Lee and I were having problems.
I couldn’t decide if getting married was a good idea or not. I guess my
hormones were going all crazy, but I just didn’t want to make that commitment
until after I had the baby. Then one thing and another. I went back to work, my
mom was keeping Nathan during the day . . . you know, I rarely got over to
Lee’s parents’ house in those days so I hardly ever saw Angie. The first I knew
about the tragedy was when a customer came in the bank, all scared and shaky
and said she’d just heard that Angie Cayne was kidnapped. I mean, no one
believed it at first. The gossip went wild—she’d run off with a boyfriend,
she’d run off with an older man, she’d run off to get away from her
parents—that kind of stuff. No one truly believed that anything bad had
happened to her until her body was found a few days later. Then it was
shock—total shock.”

 
 

Chapter
8

 

Sam hit the accelerator a little
too hard as she watched Beau’s cruiser turn around. Being ordered back home didn’t
sit well with her, but a niggling feeling told her that it wasn’t Beau she was
angry with, it was the situation. And she couldn’t very well be angry at a
situation that didn’t realistically involve her. And yet, just a few minutes
ago, she had become involved.

At the bottom of it all was fear.
What if the man who’d pulled her out of her truck was the killer? And what if
he’d grabbed her with evil intent, and what if Beau hadn’t come along at that
moment?

That’s what spurred her emotions
now.

The road curved and her truck
swayed across the yellow line.
Get hold
of yourself
,
Sam
. She eased off
the gas and concentrated on the road, dashed lines on pavement, flowing past,
calming her mind.

At the ranch, Nellie and Ranger
sat up on the porch as Sam pulled up the driveway. The minute she got out of
the truck, both of them bounded toward her, tails in motion, smiles on their
faces.

“Hey you guys,” she said, bending
to give them some attention. “You know how to brighten a mood, don’t you?”

They circled, slowing her progress
to the front door. She let them come inside and she dropped her pack on the
couch. Frustration welled up again. No lunch, little progress on the job at the
big white house, and now Beau was put out with her for being in Sembramos at
all.

She stood in front of the open
refrigerator door, contemplating the contents—didn’t she used to get after
Kelly for doing the same thing?

Make up your mind, Sam, and just get on with the day!

She picked up a plastic container
of leftover potato salad, not exactly the lunch she’d anticipated. Wandering
through the house with fork in hand, she polished off the contents as she
debated what to do next. Despite the best of intentions, she wasn’t in the mood
for spring cleaning. She took the empty Tupperware to the kitchen and put it in
the dishwasher, looked around, felt her impatience rise again.

A slip of paper on the counter caught
her attention.

It was the name Rupert had given
her, the reference librarian. Well, doing a little research sounded like way
more fun than cleaning. She picked up the phone, dialed the number at the
Harwood Library and was put in touch with Cora Abernathy.

“Oh, yes, Rupert Penrick,” the
woman with the elderly-sounding voice said. “He comes around now and then. I
have to say, he does have some of the strangest requests for information.”

Sam could see this line of
conversation going a thousand directions—interesting ones, yes, but since she
already knew the plots of most of Rupert’s books, she figured she better lead
Cora toward her own needs.

“Well, my request might turn out
to be an odd one, too,” she said with a chuckle. “I met a woman here in
Taos—Bertha Martinez. She died almost two years ago and I understand that she
was possibly involved in the occult. People said she was reputed to be a
bruja
.”

“Hmm . . . I’ve never heard of
her. I suppose I could check the New Mexico history texts, see if her name
comes up.”

“I don’t know that it would,” Sam
said. How to approach this without actually telling Cora about the wooden box? “I
doubt Bertha was anyone very important, although I could be wrong. What I’m
mainly interested in knowing is how I might find other people who knew her.
There’s not some kind of local witches club around here or anything, is there?”

“That would be called a coven. I’m
not aware of any. Still, you never know.” Cora sounded slightly distracted.
“I’m making some notes. Let me do some checking and I’ll get back to you.”

The librarian took Sam’s phone
number and promised to call back, whether she found out anything or not. At
least it was a start, Sam figured, as she hung up.

The idea of there being a local
coven really hadn’t occurred to Sam before now, so on a whim she set her laptop
computer on the dining table and decided to give that a try. A search for
“witch covens Taos” led to two websites, one of which seemed to be wiccans who
seriously studied the practice of modern day witchcraft; the other looked like
a bunch of schoolgirls who fancied themselves to be Harry Potter’s girlfriends.
Neither seemed a likely match for a woman in her nineties who had probably
practiced the oldest of the old New Mexico traditions. To have been a
contemporary of Bertha Martinez, Sam guessed she would be talking to someone
over seventy.

She closed her browser, unsure
whether she was on the right track at all. A rumor about Bertha being a
bruja
was a far cry from knowing it for
a fact, and an even farther leap to the notion that the wooden box had anything
at all to do with such practices. Sam decided to put the whole thing out of her
mind unless she heard back from Cora Abernathy and got any truly useful leads.
There were more important things requiring her attention—her business, for one.

Aside from the two weeks she was
away on her honeymoon, this was the first time she’d gone a full day without
being at the bakery. She dialed Sweet’s Sweets. Jen didn’t answer until the
fourth ring and Sam could hear a clamor of voices in the background.

“Things are busy, I gather?” She
could picture the sales room full of people and Jen dashing around to fill
orders. It was, after all, mid-afternoon and there was often a rush of
coffee-and-dessert folks about now. “Just call me back when it settles a
little.”

“No, Sam, wait!” Her voice went
lower. “We have a little situation. Can you talk to Becky a minute?”

Situation? Uh-oh.

Becky came on the line, sounding
frazzled. “Oh, Sam, I’m afraid I lost an order. There’s a lady here who’s
giving Jen what-for out front.”

“Take a deep breath and tell me
what happened.”

“This woman comes in—this was
about fifteen minutes ago. She’s got, like, five or six friends with her. She
says she’s here to pick up her divorce-party cake. Jen comes back with a blank
look on her face. I don’t remember the order either . . . And now this woman is
throwing a fit and all of her friends are making comments like ‘why did you
order from
this
place?’ and stuff
like that. I’m afraid they’ll all leave here and tell people that Sweet’s
Sweets is a terrible bakery. She keeps saying that the party is tonight and if
there’s no cake she’s going to—I don’t know what, but she’s pretty angry.”

Sam’s mind whirled. She didn’t
remember any divorce-party order either, but with the Easter rush and everything
else that had happened in the past week, she just couldn’t be sure.

“Becky, calm down. Has the woman
described what she ordered? Can we pull something together quickly?”

“She says it was like a wedding
cake, three tiers. Only the bride and groom aren’t standing together on the
top, she’s pushing him off, like he’s falling down the stairs and breaking his
neck.”

This customer sounded like a
lovely woman to be married to. The guy was probably thrilled to be taking the
stairs out of there.

“Okay, Becky, walk over to the
fridge and tell me what we have on hand.”

“Two dozen vanilla cupcakes iced
in chocolate, a red velvet half-sheet that isn’t decorated yet, four eight-inch
layers . . . those aren’t decorated yet either. Oh, and two fruit tarts. All of
that was going to be part of our stock for tomorrow.”

It was an adequate amount for the
usual walk-ins who wanted birthday cakes and family desserts. Sam’s mind tried
to put it all together into something coherent.

“Good. Now we’re going to fudge a
little with the customer.” An out-and-out lie, really, but you had to do that
sometimes to save the day. “Go in there and tell the woman that you hadn’t
realized the owner had taken her order home to personally finish it. Tell her
to come back at five and it will be ready.”

Becky let out a whimper.

“I’m on my way. I’ll be there in
fifteen minutes. Meanwhile, pull out all the cake toppers we have and see if
anything can be adapted to the bride-and-groom scenario she wants. If not, get
out the modeling chocolate and you and Julio do your best to sculpt figurines.
I’ll handle the cakes, if you can do the other. And Becky? Don’t panic. We can
do this.”

Sam glanced at the clock as she
hung up. Three o’clock already. But at least she finally felt like the afternoon
had purpose. She wondered how soon Beau would be home. He’d ordered her to stay
at the ranch so there wouldn’t be trouble with the Sembramos crowd, but surely
this didn’t count. She picked up her pack and the keys to her bakery van.
See? I won’t even be driving the same
vehicle—no one will know me. Yeah, how far is that argument going to go?

She walked through the back door
at the bakery to find Becky and Julio bent over the work table shaping bits of
colored claylike material.

“I take it the customer accepted
the plan?”

“Barely. I think she still gave
Jen an earful.”

Sam peered through the curtain,
where Jen was furiously polishing away at the bistro tables.

“You okay?”

Jen looked up and nodded. “Thank
goodness you came up with this idea. The woman actually seemed a little bit
pleased that her order was being personally handled by you.”

“Thanks, Jen. I’m sure you handled
it as well as anyone on earth could have.”

“We never did find an order form
for this, and I swear I never saw this person in the shop before.”

Whether the lady was mistaken
about which bakery she’d visited, or whether she was the type who operated by
throwing tantrums all around town to get what she wanted, Sam would probably
never know. For now, she would have to come up with something to save her
reputation from being trashed.

She’d been forming an idea as she
raced out of the house and drove to the shop. Now it was time to implement it.

“Julio, do we have plenty of white
buttercream?” she asked.

He pointed to a tub that Becky had
wisely taken from the fridge. Sam pulled out the sheet cake and the four
layers. Smoothing buttercream on the sheet first, she then stacked three of the
layers on top of it, butting their edges together into a cloverleaf formation.
They all received a buttercream coating, then the final eight-inch layer went
on top. Sam filled her biggest piping bag and went to work with flowers and
large, full-blown roses. The design began to take shape nicely, and it really
did scream ‘wedding.’

Julio, meanwhile, had created a
groom in tuxedo. The little man-figure’s legs were splayed and his arms seemed
to be grabbing air. Julio held him beside the cake and, for all the world, he
looked as if he’d just been knocked down a flight of steps. Becky’s
bride-figure had her hands on the hips of her white gown and a furious
expression on her face.

“I got her hair color and features
from the real one,” Becky said with a satisfied little grin.

Sam set the figurines in place,
piped on a couple more little details, and stood back to evaluate. “It seems
pretty vindictive to me.”

“So did this customer. Maybe we
should add some blood,” Becky said.

Julio eyed the cake. “I think the
guy’s lucky. The real one, I mean.”

The bells at the front door
tinkled and female voices filled the shop. The clock said five.

“Shh,” Sam warned. “I’ll take it
out there. Either she’ll love it or I’ll be back in a minute with half my ass
missing.”

That drew a chuckle and the others
turned to clean up the mess the flurry had created on the worktable.

The customer seemed in an entirely
different frame of mind this time. She greeted Jen as if her parting words had
not been rude and threatening, and she gushed over Sam’s cake design to the
point that Sam decided the group must have started the party a little early at
a bar somewhere. At any rate, the lady paid for the cake and left and Sam’s
entire staff had survived. Smiles and relief showed unanimously. Sam was in the
middle of handing out congratulations all around when her cell phone rang.
Beau.

Oh boy. Was this going to be their
first real clash of wills?

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