When the Cookie Crumbles (22 page)

Read When the Cookie Crumbles Online

Authors: Virginia Lowell

BOOK: When the Cookie Crumbles
13.03Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Personally, I can dream and decorate cookies simultaneously,” Maddie said as she reached for an undecorated
cookie shaped like a church. “Anyway, we’re nearly finished.”

“I count at least a dozen bare gingerbread cookies still waiting to be dressed,” Olivia said.

“Piece of gingerbread,” Maddie said. “We’ll be done in ten minutes. After that, we ought to think about how to get into the Chatterley Mansion.”

“You’re kidding, right?”

When Maddie shook her head, red curls snaked out through the edges of her bandanna. “I’ve remembered something that might really help us. When Lucas decided to take on the renovation, the first thing he did was draw a blueprint of the entire mansion, inside and out. Lucas studied architecture, you know.”

“I didn’t know, but—”

“Livie, listen to me. We can kill two birds with one…sorry, insensitive metaphor. What I mean is we can satisfy our antique cookie-cutter lust and help Rosemarie and Heather—and maybe Matthew—at the same time because Lucas’s drawing will show us where to look.”

“But we don’t have Lucas’s—”

“A minor detail,” Maddie said.

“But—”

Maddie grabbed an undecorated gingerbread cookie and stuffed it into Olivia’s mouth. “Enough with the interruptions,” she said. “Lucas made a really thorough diagram of the mansion, which he proudly showed me, and only me, before he locked it in the hardware store safe. I was a bit bored, but given my almost-fiancée status, I tried my best to pay attention. Now I’m glad I did, which should be a lesson to me, if I can remember it. I do, however, remember what was on Lucas’s diagram. The relevant parts, anyway.”

Olivia swallowed a bite of chewy, gingery cookie and felt
a familiar ping of pleasure. “So you’re saying we wouldn’t actually have to break into the hardware store and crack Lucas’s safe to steal the diagram? Why am I not reassured?”

“Don’t be silly, Livie. I have a key to the store, and I know the combination to the safe. But no, we won’t have to use them. I remember that Lucas had marked some parts of the house to be blocked off. He said he wouldn’t bother renovating those areas. He didn’t want to waste time and money, since he didn’t expect anyone to be living in the mansion. No one had been in those parts of the mansion for years, even decades, and he worried they might not be safe.”

Olivia had finished eating the unexpected cookie, but she no longer wanted to interrupt. She was hooked.

“The attic was one area. Lucas said he’d looked inside and found it empty, plus a couple of floorboards were rotting. He also found two short doorways that were sort of hidden. And here’s the really interesting part—Lucas never noticed them before. He’d been in that mansion many, many times, what with his fascination with architecture. He’d wanted to renovate the place for years.”

Olivia couldn’t help herself. “Did Lucas find anything behind those doors? I’m dying here.”

“Investigation is not his thing,” Maddie said with fondness. “One door is at the back of a storage closet under the front stairs, and the other is in the root cellar wall. No one goes down there because of the creepy crawlies, but my brave Lucas isn’t bothered by a few bugs or snakes or—”

“I get the picture,” Olivia said. “I might never get it out of my head.”

“Lucas found the door in the root cellar when he tried to move a cupboard filled with old, empty canning jars. The cupboard fell apart. I won’t describe the stuff that fell out. Lucas cleaned up the mess and saw the door in the wall. He
tried to open it, but it was stuck shut, so he gave up. He wondered if it might be some sort of tunnel for helping slaves escape or something.”

“Uh, I doubt that,” Olivia said. “The Chatterleys were known for owning slaves, not helping them escape. More likely it’s an old hiding place or storage area of some sort. Oh…are you thinking the Chatterleys might have used it as a safe for their valuables?”

“Well, it’s a thought,” Maddie said. “A root cellar seems like a logical place to hide cookie cutters. I mean, cookies are food of the first order, plus who wants to go treasure hunting in a root cellar?”

“Definitely not me,” Olivia said.

M
addie slid a lid on a cake pan filled with the last batch of decorated cookies for the fete. “It’s only twelve thirty a.m.,” she said. “Are you thinking what I’m thinking?”

“That we should finish cleaning the kitchen and get some sleep?”

“Antique cookie cutters? Chatterley Mansion? Come on, Livie, we’ll never get another opportunity like this. I mean, I’m truly sorry that Hermione is in the hospital with a heart attack, and I hope she comes through okay.”

“But the sooner she recovers,” Olivia said, “the sooner she’s back in the mansion, and our opportunity will be gone, right?”

“Well, at least until she sells the house, and then who knows?”

Olivia wedged a mixing bowl into the dishwasher, added soap, and pressed the on button. “I forgot to mention, Constance called earlier and left a message on my
cell. She said Hermione told her to forget about putting the mansion on the market. She didn’t say why she’d changed her mind. Constance was curious, and so am I.”

“There you are, then,” Maddie said. “Once Hermione comes home from the hospital, our chances go bye-bye. I had a good look around when we were visiting her, and I think she’s been tearing the house apart looking for the Chatterley cookie cutters. Paine probably told her about the collection and how valuable it might be. Maybe she decided to do away with him so she wouldn’t have to share the profits.”

“But, Maddie, how could Hermione manage the search on her own? If Matthew frightened her into a heart attack, all that heavy lifting would probably have killed her.” Olivia lifted her pooped pup from his blanket under the kitchen desk. She’d allowed him to sleep in the kitchen due to his recent fireworks-induced trauma. “Time for bed, little guy.” Spunky whimpered without opening his eyes.

“Livie, what if heavy lifting is what caused Hermione’s heart attack? Did anyone actually see Matthew threaten her?”

“Not that I know of.” With Spunky draped over her shoulder Olivia gathered the small bottles of gel food coloring scattered around the worktable and tightened all the tops. She felt torn between her rational, grown-up self and the cookie-cutter hunter bubbling to the surface. Finding even a tiny fraction of the Chatterley cutter collection would be a thrill she’d never forget. However, conducting a secret search of Chatterley Mansion while its mistress was hospitalized with a heart attack struck Olivia as callous…and so tempting.

Olivia’s temptation went beyond the Chatterley cutter collection. Ever since Paine and Hermione’s arrival in town, Olivia had felt she was missing something. Paine had
behaved like two different people, which was odd enough, but it was really Hermione she’d puzzled over. Olivia very much wanted to know about Hermione’s connection with Chatterley Heights’s mayor, Karen Evanson. She didn’t believe she’d heard the truth yet from either woman. A search of Hermione’s belongings might yield a clue or two.

“If we are caught,” Olivia said, “Del will be furious.”

“We won’t be,” Maddie said. “We’re only going to pick up some of Hermione’s clothes to bring to the hospital. It’s a small-town gesture.”

“Oh yeah, that’ll work,” Olivia said. “Del might want me to do that at some point, but not in the middle of the night and without permission.”

“There’s that,” Maddie admitted. “It’s a chance I’m willing to take. Livie, it’s okay if you don’t want to go. I can handle it on my own. There’s probably nothing to find anyway, but at least I’ll know.”

“I can’t let you go alone.” Snuggling her drowsy pup against her chest, Olivia held open the kitchen door and doused the light. “Let’s grab a couple hours of sleep first. By three a.m., the streets will be as deserted as they’ll ever be. You can crash in my guest room.”

“I’ll hang out on the sofa,” Maddie said. “I won’t be able to sleep, so there’s no point in messing up your guest bed. I’ll have double-strength coffee perked by two forty-five. If you’re not up by three, I’ll leave without you.”

Chapter Fifteen

Olivia’s alarm awakened her from a disturbing dream in which she was being pursued by a crazed gingerbread man wielding a licorice hatchet. She was trying to run up a staircase made of pearlized sugar sprinkles, which rolled away as she stepped on them. Since Olivia was not prone to nightmares, she figured this one was guilt induced. However, she had no intention of backing out of the plan to search Chatterley Mansion. If she did, Maddie would just go by herself anyway.

The aroma of fresh coffee helped her roll out of bed, fully dressed. Spunky opened his eyes without lifting his head. He saw nothing to convince him it was time to get up. Olivia left quietly, as if she were making a bathroom run.

“Good,” Maddie said as Olivia entered the kitchen. “I wasn’t looking forward to dragging you out of bed. Spunky might get all protective.”

“I should hope so.” Olivia drained her coffee. “Let’s get going before Spunky catches on. I just need to collect a couple things on the way out.” She sorted through a kitchen drawer and found a sturdy screwdriver, which she slipped into her jacket pocket. She also grabbed two flashlights, one of which she handed to Maddie. Her cell phone lay on the small table by the front door of her apartment. She left it turned off and dropped it into another pocket.

Within minutes, they were on the front porch of The Gingerbread House. Olivia scanned the town square for movement and saw none. It had been a full day for the citizens of Chatterley Heights, and she hoped they were all sound asleep. Matthew Fabrizio, incarcerated or not, was probably deep in alcohol-induced slumber. Olivia felt a pinch of sympathy for Heather.

With Maddie in the lead, they followed a circuitous route to Chatterley Mansion and slipped down the alley to the back door. Olivia was pleased to notice that several lights had been left on, perhaps to make the house look occupied while so many strangers were in town. No lights shone in the kitchen or over the alley door, for which Olivia was grateful. She felt confident they had entered unseen.

Maddie aimed her flashlight at the kitchen floor. “Remember there’s stuff all over the place,” she whispered. “It’s easy to trip, even with a light on.” They picked their way through the dining room and down the hallway to the front of the staircase, where a door led to a closet under the stairs. “Lucas is so thorough,” Maddie said as the closet door opened smoothly. “He actually oiled all the hinges in the house. I could have killed Paine myself when he complained about the mansion being in bad shape.”

“I wouldn’t repeat that if I were you.”

“I’m just saying.” Maddie poked her head inside the
closet and pulled out a tasseled lamp shade with a rip in the fabric. “We’ll have to excavate our way in. At the back, Lucas found a door that went up about to his waist. Luckily, it’ll be higher for us.” She handed Olivia several more broken pieces of what were once lovely examples of nineteenth-century furnishing. “That should do it.” Maddie shone her flashlight on a small door painted the same light yellow as the closet walls. The door stuck when she pulled the wooden knob, but it yielded on the next try. Maddie bent through the open doorway and disappeared into darkness.

“Come on in,” said Maddie’s disembodied voice. “I feel so Nancy Drew-ish. I haven’t had this much fun since you and I were twelve, and we sneaked into that creepy old farmhouse on the edge of town. Remember that? We thought it was haunted.” Maddie aimed her flashlight near the opening so Olivia could see her way.

“That place really was haunted,” Olivia said as she scooted through the short doorway. “By a flock of pigeons. I also remember I nearly fell through a rotted floorboard.”

“Yeah, good times.” Maddie moved her light along the inner walls of the small hidden closet-within-a-closet. “Looks like old papers and books. Probably nothing useful, but it’s worth a few minutes.” She sat cross-legged on the floor, stirring up decades of dust.

Olivia sneezed twice and decided against sitting. “I hope there aren’t any mice in here,” she said, kneeling to pick up a small book with a blank, stained cloth cover. Opening to a random page, Olivia saw faded, cramped handwriting. “I wonder if this is a journal of some sort,” she said.

“Cool! Read some to me. I’ve found nothing but boring old receipts and household budget figures. Although I
suppose historians might drool over this stuff.” Maddie abandoned the papers and began looking for a more promising stack.

Olivia held her flashlight on a page in the little book. “I think the handwriting style is really old. I can’t make sense of it.”

“Hand it over. Aunt Sadie told me about old cursive writing when we saw the Declaration of Independence at the National Archives Building in DC.” Maddie’s flashlight cast shadows on her face as she frowned in concentration. After examining several pages, she looked up and grinned. “I think I know what this might be. See that mark that looks like a big ‘2’? That’s a capital Q in old cursive. So ‘2uarts’ is really ‘Quarts.’ Hey, this is a recipe book! It’s written in a run-on style, like paragraphs of description. Not the way we write recipes today.” Maddie turned several more pages. “Ooh, and this recipe,” she said, tapping the page, “has got to be for some type of gingerbread cookie.” She handed the book to Olivia.

Other books

Nice Girl and 5 Husbands by Fritz Leiber
The Furies by John Jakes
Amply Rewarded by Destiny Moon
Commanding Her Trust by Lili Valente
Dastardly Deeds by Evans, Ilsa
The Cannibal Queen by Stephen Coonts