And Then You Dye

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Authors: Monica Ferris

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Berkley Prime Crime titles by Monica Ferris

CREWEL WORLD

FRAMED IN LACE

A STITCH IN TIME

UNRAVELED SLEEVE

A MURDEROUS YARN

HANGING BY A THREAD

CUTWORK

CREWEL YULE

EMBROIDERED TRUTHS

SINS AND NEEDLES

KNITTING BONES

THAI DIE

BLACKWORK

BUTTONS AND BONES

THREADBARE

AND THEN YOU DYE

Anthologies

PATTERNS OF MURDER

SEW FAR, SO GOOD

And Then You Dye

Monica Ferris

THE BERKLEY PUBLISHING GROUP

Published by the Penguin Group

Penguin Group (USA) Inc.

375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, USA

Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto, Ontario M4P 2Y3, Canada (a division of Pearson Penguin Canada Inc.) • Penguin Books Ltd., 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England • Penguin Group Ireland, 25 St. Stephen’s Green, Dublin 2, Ireland (a division of Penguin Books Ltd.) • Penguin Group (Australia), 250 Camberwell Road, Camberwell, Victoria 3124, Australia (a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty. Ltd.) • Penguin Books India Pvt. Ltd., 11 Community Centre, Panchsheel Park, New Delhi—110 017, India • Penguin Group (NZ), 67 Apollo Drive, Rosedale, Auckland 0632, New Zealand (a division of Pearson New Zealand Ltd.) • Penguin Books (South Africa) (Pty.) Ltd., 24 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank, Johannesburg 2196, South Africa

Penguin Books Ltd., Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England

This book is an original publication of The Berkley Publishing Group.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.

Copyright © 2012 by Mary Monica Pulver Kuhfeld.

“Mary Monica’s Argyle Clock Towers” pattern copyright © 2011 by Alixandra Jordan.

Cover art by Mary Ann Lasher. Cover design by George Long.

All rights reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights. Purchase only authorized editions.

BERKLEY
®
PRIME CRIME and the BERKLEY
®
PRIME CRIME logo are registered trademarks of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.

FIRST EDITION:
December 2012

Berkley Prime Crime hardcover edition ISBN: 978-0-425-25281-9

An application to register this book for cataloging has been submitted to the Library of Congress.

One

I
T
was a Wednesday evening in early May, close to seven thirty. The surface of the library table in the Crewel World needlework shop was thickly layered with newspaper over a sturdy plastic sheet. A big kettle and a large, long-handled stainless steel pot were simmering on a hot plate in the middle of the table, and there was a smell in the moist air as of some unpopular green vegetable cooking.

All eight seats at the table were taken, and two women were standing, all attentive to a handsome dark-haired woman in her middle fifties. She was enveloped in a white smock generously spattered with soft colors, some faded almost to invisibility.

“In dyeing there are two kinds of fibers,” she was saying, waving an arm over the pot, “protein fibers and plant fibers. Protein fibers come from animals: wool, silk, alpaca, dog and cat, yak, et cetera.”

A standing woman’s hand went up. “I beg your pardon,” she said. “Silk is animal protein?”

“Certainly. It comes from the silkworm. And worms—they’re moth larvae, actually—are animals.”

“Oh, the silkworm. Well, yes, I guess they are.” But her nose was wrinkled in distaste.

“Cotton, linen, soy, bamboo, and corn are some of the plant fibers.” She paused, waiting for someone to question that, but no one did.

Betsy Devonshire, the other standee and owner of Crewel World, thought that might be because the speaker was Hailey Brent, whose hand-spun and hand-dyed yarns, made of all the aforementioned fibers and more, were familiar to these people, who were customers of Betsy’s shop.

Hailey looked at the smaller pot on the hot plate. The liquid in it was thick with wilted pinkish lavender flower heads. She picked up a foot-long wooden dowel to stir the mixture. “Just a little longer,” she said.

Four small glass bottles stood in an irregular cluster on the table, each containing a powder: one white, one gray-green, and two gray. Each carried a white stick-on label with uncial lettering:
TIN, COPPER, IRON, ALUM
.

“Now, mordants.” Hailey gestured at the bottles. “Mordants are chemical or metal salts such as these, dissolved in water. The word comes from the Latin for
bite
, because they cause the dye to penetrate the fiber. Any fibers you are going to dye should first be soaked in one of these mordants. They change the way color from the dye bath affects the fibers. They may also brighten, dull, or strengthen a color, and they all serve to make the dye more colorfast. All the metallic ones are poisonous, which is the main reason why, if you decide to try dyeing, you should
absolutely never
use a pot or pan or bowl that you use in ordinary cooking. Not even careful washing is guaranteed to restore it to a condition safe for food use. I hope that is clear?” Hailey’s genial tone had turned serious, and everyone solemnly nodded back at her. Those who had been taking notes were seen writing this down.

Betsy, who had been thinking that dyeing might be an interesting way to spend an afternoon, changed her mind.

“Good. Now, let’s strain out the vegetable matter from our dye bath.”

Hailey reached under the table for yet another stainless steel pot, this one large with two pouring spouts. Atop it was a big, deep strainer. She slowly poured the flower heads and the liquid, the color of thin tea, into the strainer, using the dowel to poke the last of the flowers out.

“Ms. Brent,” asked one of the observers seated at the table, “is that brown the color we’re going to get on the wool?”

“Possibly. I’m not sure,” Hailey replied. “One of the more interesting things about vegetable dyeing is that when you try a new variety, you’re never quite sure what color you’re going to get. But I don’t think we’re going to get pink or lavender.”

“Oh,” said someone else in a disappointed voice, “I was hoping for a nice, bright pink.”

“For a nice, bright pink, I’m afraid you need to go to the aniline dyes—chemical dyes. Natural dyes tend to be softer in color.”

“But wasn’t there a red dye back in the eighteenth century?” asked another woman. “The British used it on their soldiers’ uniforms. That’s why they were called redcoats, right? And that was before aniline dyes.”

“There is a natural dye that gives a true red, but it comes from an insect found on Mexican cactus plants: cochineal. It was a very expensive dye—still is, in fact. The British were showing off, using it for ordinary soldiers’ uniforms. The closest red you’ll get from a vegetable dye is orange. There is actually a local flower that will give you a nice, rich orange when mordanted in tin, but it isn’t fast—it fades in sunlight and after a couple of washings.”

“What flower is that?” asked the woman.

“A new variety of marigold. You’ll probably notice, when we dye our samples, that the wool mordanted in tin gives us the brightest color.”

Also on the table was a low stack of fabric cut into four-inch squares, each with five short lengths of white yarn slipknotted through slits cut down one side. Beside each slip of yarn was printed on the fabric with permanent marker
ALUM
,
COPPER
,
IRON
,
TIN
and
NONE
.

Hailey picked up the squares, counted the number of people present (including herself), and pulled a dozen squares off the stack. Setting them aside, she lifted the strainer off the big pot and dumped the flowers into a wastebasket lined with a plastic bag, then poured the liquid back into the pot and returned it to the burner.

“Now let’s try dyeing some of our wool.” She took the dozen squares and dropped them into the pot, poking at them with the dowel. She checked her watch, and half the members of her audience checked theirs, too. “We’ll give it five minutes,” she said.

Meanwhile, she lifted the kettle off the hot plate and poured its steaming contents into a stainless steel dishpan. “Rinse water,” she explained.

She reached under the table and came up with a twin to the pot currently holding the squares. “Betsy, could you fill this about halfway with hot water?”

“Certainly,” said Betsy, taking the pot with her into the back room, where—having been forewarned—she had earlier filled the electric teakettle and plugged it in.

Hailey Brent had come into Crewel World several months ago to see if Betsy would be interested in carrying her hand-dyed and hand-spun knitting yarns. Betsy was pleased to add them to her stock, and some of her customers were willing to pay the higher prices for the yarns. It was a natural progression for Betsy to invite Hailey to spend an evening in the shop giving a demonstration on dyeing.

So here they were on a Thursday evening in early May, learning some of the basics.

Betsy poured hot water into the pot and brought it back to the table.

Hailey was lifting one of the squares out with her dowel, checking its progress. Already one of the slips of yarn was a dark brown color, one was a bright yellow, one was palest cream, and one was olive green. The last one, marked
NONE
, was not visibly affected. It was an interesting, seemingly magical effect to see fibers coming out different colors from the same dye pot. The square itself had turned a pale olive.

“None of them is tea colored,” said one of the seated women, surprised.

“This is what I told you, you never know when you try some new vegetable dye what color you’re going to get,” said Hailey cheerfully.

“I was really hoping for something lavender,” remarked another of the sitting women. “I don’t see why lavender flowers don’t produce a lavender dye.”

“You know something?” said Hailey with a chuckle. “Neither do I.”

“Maybe if we used the roots,” persisted the woman. “You said earlier that roots can be a source of dye and that you don’t always get the color of the roots when you use them as dye.”

“But we don’t have the roots,” said Hailey. She added slyly, “Marge evidently didn’t dig these up out of someone’s garden—did you, Marge?”

Marge Schultz, who was standing beside Betsy, turned pink. But she said, calmly enough, “I bought these flowers at the florist shop on Water Street.”

“You didn’t take them from your own gardens?” asked another woman.

“No, of course not. These are summer flowers; it’s only May, too early in the year for them to bloom in my garden.”

Marge owned a nursery called Green Gaia Gardens, which Hailey must have known about, since she called her so casually by name. Betsy also knew Hailey was herself a gardener, so she must be aware that lavender daisies wouldn’t be blooming in the spring.

So why the crack about digging them out of someone’s garden?

“Thanks,” Hailey said as Betsy set the pot down. “This will do for a second rinse. You want to rinse and rinse again and again until the water runs clear.” She lifted a square out of the dye, held it over the pot for a little while to let it drip and cool, then very gently squeezed it before putting it in the dishpan. “You want the rinse water to be the same temperature as the dye,” she said. “And you don’t want to agitate your fibers. Otherwise they may felt.” Meaning turn into a solid mat.

She continued the process, lifting the other squares one at a time and squeezing them. “There’s one mordant I haven’t mentioned yet: sugar. Sugar makes a great fixative—that’s why if you spill a dollop of jam onto your white trousers, the stain is permanent.” She looked up briefly. “Right, Marge? The stain is permanent.” The sly tone was even more evident this time.

Though her face was still pink, Marge said in a tone bordering on indifference, “How would I know?”

One of the seated women offered, “I ruined a favorite blouse last year by spilling blueberry preserves down the front of it.”

“Why is she picking on you?” murmured Betsy to Marge.

“I don’t know,” Marge said wearily.

Betsy asked Marge to stay after the demo was finished. “I lost some of my bleeding hearts over this winter,” Betsy told her friend. “We used too much salt in the parking lot, I guess. I want to replace them—or maybe get something else that likes shade instead.”

Betsy owned the old brick building in which her shop was located. It was two stories high, and consisted of three shops on the ground floor and three apartments on the second. Betsy lived in one of the apartments herself.

At the back of the building there was a small parking lot just big enough for four cars plus a Dumpster. The parking lot backed onto a steep, tree-filled rise; Betsy owned about two-thirds of it. The trees kept the ground in deep shade, and Betsy had thought of having some of them cut down so she could plant some sun-loving perennials back there. She especially envied Marge’s collection of hydrangea shrubs. New to central Minnesota, and hardy, hers offered large round clusters of rich pink blooms from June to frost. But they needed lots of sunlight.

“I’m wondering what you’d suggest for the hill behind my parking lot,” said Betsy. “Did you get a chance to look at it before the dyeing demo?”

“Yes, I did. Hostas would look nice, and they spread, so you could buy only a few to start with and then be patient.”

“Yes, but everyone has hostas. What else is there?”

“Well, if you want something large and showy, you should just buy more bleeding hearts. But plant them on the margin of your wooded lot, they do need some sun. For deeper in, and if you want something hard to kill, lily of the valley is a good choice. They spread fast and are very aggressive at driving out other plants, which can be good or bad, depending.”

They talked about how many plants Betsy should buy, and Betsy promised to visit Green Gaia sometime during the next several days.

Then Betsy asked, “Marge, what’s the problem between you and Hailey Brent?”

“Oh, no problem. We just don’t get along.”

“You’re neighbors, aren’t you?”

“Yes. Maybe that’s the problem. She has a very artistic temperament, you know.”

“So?”

Marge shrugged uncomfortably. “Well, she has this attitude that anything that drives her artistic sensibilities is permitted. For example, she has come onto my property and stolen blooms. Not a lot, and not often, but when I get something she thinks would make a good dye, she’ll just take it without asking. She knows it’s wrong, because she sneaks. I mean, if she really thought it was all right, she’d just take them openly. I asked her one time what she would think if I came into her garden and took a plant I liked. And she said, ‘If you needed it badly, I wouldn’t say a word.’” Marge sighed. “One of these days maybe I will call the police on her.”

“It’s gotten that bad?”

Marge sighed again. “No, not really. But she’s a terrible nuisance. And now she’s got it into her head that I’m just looking for a chance to steal something from her garden—that’s what the fuss was this evening. I’m sorry it happened. It must’ve been at least as aggravating to you as it was embarrassing to me. I only came because I’ve been thinking of setting up a little garden of plants useful to dyers and wanted a look at the skill set. And then she behaves like that! Honestly, sometimes I could just brain her!”

Marge laughed wryly, but Betsy was to remember this conversation in the weeks to come.

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