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Died in the Wool
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Contents
Title Page
Copyright Notice
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-one
Chapter Twenty-two
Also by Rett MacPherson
Copyright
THIS BOOK IS FOR MY HUSBAND
who lives with my little quirks—like never having enough roses, or enough quilts, or enough fabric, or enough books—and manages not to complain, too much. And who at the end of the day still considers me “his woman.”
AND FOR THE AMAZING WOMEN ON MY FAMILY TREE
who passed the love of quilts and quilting down to me either through their written record or through the record of their craft.
Acknowledgments
The author wishes to thank some people, as usual.
My writer’s group: Tom Drennan, Laurell K. Hamilton, Martha Kneib, Debbie Millitello, Sharon Shinn, and Mark Sumner. You guys have been such great cheerleaders for Torie and her gang.
My editor, Kelley Ragland, and everybody at St. Martin’s Press. My agent, Merrilee Heiftez, at Writers House.
Darla Cook for doing a lot of hand holding.
For the ladies at the Quilted Fox and Quilters Cottage. I feel inspired just being around them; their amazing quilts and the fantastic fabrics.
My kids, for keeping me sane, but not too sane. That would ruin all the fun.
One
It was springtime in New Kassel. As much as I love winter and snow, I always love to see spring come, bringing baby rabbits, lilacs, and birds busy at the feeders. It was the month of May, and our first annual New Kassel Garden Club rose show was about to kick off, and I was overseeing all of the festivities. Which would be interesting since the only thing I can really tell you about roses is that you stick them in the ground and they come up in pink, red, yellow, and white. I didn’t really need to know a lot about roses, though. I just needed to know about making the tourists happy. The garden club would worry about the roses.
I, Torie O’Shea, wear several hats in this town. I used to work as a tour guide for Sylvia and Wilma Pershing, who had owned the Gaheimer House. Now I own the Gaheimer House. Sylvia left it to me when she passed away last year. I’m also a genealogist and serve on the Events Committee and am the president of the historical society. I have transcribed more Granite County records than I care to think about. The level of activity comes and goes. For several weeks I’ll be in a frenzy trying to get everything prepared for a particular event, and then I’ll have weeks and weeks of nothing much to do except to give tours of the Gaheimer House.
As much as I love the Gaheimer House and know every nook and cranny, I was beginning to feel the faintest flutter of boredom. I know, I know, it’s something I never thought would happen to me—and can I just say that I think it’s uniquely American that I could be both overwhelmed and bored all in the same month. I live and breathe this town and everything in it, but there was a part of me that longed to learn everything I could about a new place.
That’s why when Helen Wickland entered my office at the Gaheimer House with the news that the old Kendall house was now on the market, I almost swallowed the cap on my pen.
“I swear,” Helen said, crossing her heart. Helen is a dear friend of mine, a decade older than I am with more salt than pepper in her hair. She’s lived in this town longer than I have. She’s also the resident chocolatier. Oh yes, everyone should be best friends with the local chocolatier. It definitely has its perks. “I just heard it from Elmer.”
Elmer Kolbe is the honorary fire chief. He got too old to work, so we made him retire, but he shows up to work every day anyway. “Really?” I asked.
“Just the other day you said that you wished Evan Merchant would finally put the Kendall house up for sale,” she said. “Remember? You said it was an eyesore and that you wanted to buy it?”
“Well, it is,” I said. “Sort of. Merchant doesn’t keep up with the repairs and the painting, and sometimes he doesn’t even mow the grass for, like, a month.”
“Well, he’s put it up for sale, and get this—he’s selling off the contents, too,” she said, beaming. “So if there are a few things inside that you’d like to buy for the Gaheimer House, you’re about to get your wish.”
“Incredible,” I said. “How much are they asking for it?”
“I don’t know,” she said. “Are you seriously thinking about buying it? I mean, it’s one thing to say you’d like to buy it, but it’s another to actually buy it.”
“If they’re not asking an arm and a leg for it, I’m game.”
Her eyes twinkled with anticipation, because she knew exactly what I’d do with the old Kendall house. Legend has it that a banker from up north by the name of Byron Kendall fell in love with the Mississippi river valley when he came through on his way to Kentucky during the Civil War. Supposedly, he’d vowed that if he made it through the war alive and the country was still intact, he was going to return and settle here. He did just that.
When he died in 1902, he left the house to his oldest son, Sanders. Sanders “Sandy” Kendall then raised his family of three in it. Everybody around here knows the name of Sandy Kendall because of the tragedy that befell him and his family. His wife died shortly before World War I. Then his oldest son fought in the trenches in Europe. A few years after that son came home from the Great War, all three Kendall children committed suicide in the house. It was a legend known throughout the Mississippi valley, and it would make one hell of a tourist trap.
“It would be New Kassel’s newest attraction,” I said. Helen smiled. “Not just for the revenue it would bring the town, but because I’ve wanted to tell the story of the Kendall children for a long time.”
“So you’d set up tours?”
“You bet,” I said. “You know, they say that the inside of the house is pretty much as it was when Sandy Kendall died.”
“I know. I remember as a kid peeking through the slats on the windows,” she said. “Did Evan ever live in the main house?”
“I’m not sure,” I said. “I’ll have to ask him when I see him, but I’m fairly certain he’s always lived in the guesthouse.”
“Hmph,” she said, working her lower lip with her fingers. “Seems odd.”
“Nothing about that house or that family is normal,” I said. “Do you know what’s in that house?”
She shook her head.
“Supposedly all of Lieutenant Kendall’s Civil War papers and uniforms, and his granddaughter’s quilts. I can’t remember her name, but she was a world-renowned quilter. I think I remember Sylvia saying that the girl’s quilts had been shown at one of the World’s Fairs and one was even in the Smithsonian.”
“Wow,” Helen said.
“It would make an excellent exhibition,” I said.
“They’re p
robably asking a bundle for it,” she said.
“You’re probably right,” I said, “but it won’t hurt to find out.”
The back door to the Gaheimer House burst open just then and a loud, shrill voice yelled out, “Torie! You have got to do something about that woman!” My ears told me the visitor was Eleanore Murdoch long before she actually entered my office. Helen sat down in the chair across from my desk and rolled her eyes. Eleanore appeared in my doorway, huffing and puffing and clearly upset. Her ears were blood red, and Eleanore’s ears only turn blood red when she is extremely peeved.
Eleanore owns the Murdoch Inn with her husband, Oscar, and has a little gossip column in the local newspaper. She’s top-heavy and wears the most outrageous combinations of clothes, loud jewelry, and bright colors I’ve ever seen on a mammal. Today, I’m assuming in honor of spring, she wore a grass-green shirt with giant pink tulips appliquéd across the bottom of it. Her pants were bright gold tucked into green socks. Her purple and pink tennis shoes looked a bit out of place, but my guess was that she didn’t have any yellow or green shoes. On her ears, she sported hummingbird earrings that looked as though the birds were about ready to take a drink from her neck. She didn’t wear a hat with this ensemble, so I was a bit disappointed. “What can I do for you, Eleanore?”
“Maddie Fulton has got to be put in her place,” she said. “First of all, the rose is not a superior flower to the clematis, but I let her have her way. Are we having a first-ever annual clematis show? No, siree. We’re having a stupid rose show. Now she won’t even listen to my gentle suggestions as to which roses should be in the show!”
Helen smiled and smothered a laugh. I wasn’t laughing, though, because I knew that once Eleanore got on to something … Well, let’s just say Eleanore is not unlike me in that she is a bit tenacious when it comes to something she believes in. Also, although the things I find important are quite often worlds apart from what Eleanore finds important, we both react sort of the same way about things, and that could spell trouble for everybody involved. She’s much more obnoxious about it than I am, though. At least I hope so.
“Hybrid teas, Torie. That’s what she should be focusing on. But no, she has no less than twelve floribundas, for heaven’s sake. And don’t even get me started on the Noisettes. And the few hybrid teas that she’s picked, well, they’re just not worthy,” she said. “And she thinks David Austin is the Rose God or something.”
Eleanore might as well have been the teacher in a Charlie Brown cartoon, because all I heard was blah blah rose blah blah blah. I had no clue what she was talking about, so I honestly didn’t know if there had been a horticultural travesty committed or not. A rose is a rose is a rose, right? “Eleanore,” I said.
“Who is the president of the New Kassel Garden Club, anyway?” she asked.
I started to answer but didn’t get the chance.
“I’ll tell you who,” she said. “Dudley Froelich, that’s who. And who is the vice president of the garden club?”
Tobias Thorley, but I didn’t get to say so.
“Tobias Thorley,” she said. “Not Maddie Fulton! Maddie Fulton does not hold an office in the garden club!”
“But,” Helen spoke up, “Maddie is the resident rosarian, is she not?”
What the hell was a rosarian?
Eleanore got quiet a moment. “There are three other rosarians in town.”
“Yes, but everybody knows Maddie is the woman you go to when you have problems with roses,” Helen said. “Have you seen her garden? It’s absolutely amazing.”
Eleanore lifted her chin a notch. “I don’t recall that I was addressing you, Helen,” she said. “Torie, you must do something.”
Helen made a face at Eleanore behind her back and acted like she was about ready to kick her in the pants. This made me laugh, which completely incensed Eleanore. “Sylvia would have done something!”
“Well, Eleanore,” I said, “this has been discussed many times in the past. I am not Sylvia. What exactly is it you want me to do?”
“Tell her that … as Events Committee chairperson, you feel that her selection of roses is out of the question,” she said. Her ears were getting redder, if that was possible, and her hummingbird earrings clanked around so much that I just knew the sides of her neck were going to be bruised.
“But that would be a lie,” I said.
“Oh, like you’ve never lied before,” she said, and crossed her arms.
“But I don’t know the first thing about roses.”
“When has your lack of knowledge ever stopped you from sticking your nose in?” she asked.
Okay, take a deep breath. I really had no reason to get upset, since Eleanore was speaking the truth. I have lied to get information before. On more occasions than I care to confess. Usually there was somebody’s life hanging in the balance—and the fact that I can actually say that I’ve had to lie to save somebody’s life really says a lot about the sad state of my own life. I’ve butted my nose into things without knowing all the facts, too. But damn, she didn’t have to just blurt it out like that. Somebody might be listening. “I wouldn’t know if she picked bad roses or not, Eleanore.”
“I am telling you that she has. What, my word means nothing?”
Well, actually, no, but I wasn’t going to say that.
She took a deep breath, and I held my hands up in desperation. “Eleanore, please. I’ll talk to Maddie,” I said, “but I don’t know what good it’s going to do.”
“You just tell her that she’s picked inappropriate and ugly roses.”
“No rose is ugly,” Helen said.
“Well, of course not,” Eleanore said. “I’m exaggerating to get my point across.”
“I’ll talk to her,” I said. “I’m just not making any promises. Because I can’t.”
“Fine,” Eleanore said. “I also wanted to let you know that I am going to buy the Kendall house. They’ve just put it on the market.”
I glanced at Helen. Panic had seized my friend. She began mouthing “no way” to me and shaking her head. “W-what are you going to do with it?” I asked.
“I’m going to turn it into one of those murder-mystery dinner theaters,” she said. “It’s not every day you get to have dinner in the house where three people killed themselves.”
“Right,” I said. “I guess that’s an incentive to eat food.”
“I’m off,” Eleanore said, and whirled around on her heel and exited through the back door.
Helen and I stared at each other. Finally, Helen swallowed and spoke. “You cannot let that woman buy the Kendall house,” she said.
“Why not? Helen, if she puts in a better bid than Rudy and I, she gets it,” I said.
“It’ll be cheesy,” she said.
“No, murder-mystery dinners are fun,” I said.
“Yes, but Eleanore will make it cheesy,” she said.
“Now, she has pretty good taste when it comes to decorating the Murdoch Inn. Midwest Living did a small article on her bed-and-breakfast last fall when they covered the most quaint places to stay in seven states. Remember that?”
Helen stood then. “Whatever, Torie. But if Eleanore gets the Kendall house, I’m moving.”
I knew Helen was exaggerating, but only just. “I don’t know, Helen. Maybe what this town needs is something goofy and fun like a murder-mystery theater. Maybe me turning the Kendall house into a shrine for the dead is the wrong thing.”
“The wrong thing? Torie, are you feeling all right? You are all about shrines for the dead.”
“Gee, Helen,” I said. “That makes me sound like I belong in the Norman Bates family or something.”
“Think about it,” she said. “You don’t want Eleanore in charge of something like a mystery theater with nobody to curb her … enthusiasms.”
I only smiled.
“Remember the time she decided to host a bird-watching expedition? She showed up looking like a giant version of Heidi. She got bit by a snake—and l
ived.”
“But the snake died,” I said laughing.
“I know! Then one of the birders got attacked by a flock of starlings and tried to sue the mayor for allowing the bird expedition in the first place,” she said. I was laughing so hard my eyes were watering. “What about the time she had the pancake bake-off and blew up the ovens at the Knights of Columbus hall?”
“God, Elmer wouldn’t speak to her for, like, six months,” I said.
“Then there was the summer that she decided to learn how to skateboard, and then thought that the whole town should have a weekly skateboard-to-work day. Tobias broke a hip, and Colin had to write all those tickets for endangering the tourists!”
I was laughing so hard I could barely breathe.
“If she is in charge of a mystery theater, somebody will get killed. Simple as that.”
“You’re right, of course,” I said, “but it’s not against the law to open a business in this town, unless it’s a house of ill-repute.”
“Just promise me you will bid higher than she does.”
“We’ll see. It may be out of my financial ball park,” I said, “but I will do all in my power to purchase the Kendall house.”
“Thank you, God,” she said, looking toward the ceiling. “See you later.”
“Right,” I said. “I’m off to see Maddie Fulton.”
Two
Maddie Fulton lives just on the outskirts of town. I had every intention of going straight to her place, but decided to make a detour to the Kendall house. I couldn’t help myself. Not only am I nosy by nature, but I’m also impatient as heck. For the record, New Kassel is a fairly small town; the population is under a thousand. It’s nestled on a slight cliff overlooking the Mississippi River, about forty minutes to an hour south of St. Louis, depending on whether your destination is St. Louis city or St. Louis County. Granite County is mostly rural and used to be full of small family farms. Those are slowly but surely disappearing and giving way to the newest and brightest subdivisions, with homes on lots barely bigger than the foundations of the houses themselves. Not only does it break my heart to see the loss of the family farms, but the destruction of our wildlife habitat is catastrophic.