known most of these women for her entire adult life. A few were natives of Tinkerâs Cove, but most were transplants or âwash ashoresâ like herself and Bill, idealistic young college graduates who had avoided the rat race and looked for an alternative life-style âback on the land.â With their Mother Earth News to guide them, theyâd chopped wood, planted gardens, and recycled everything.
Through the years sheâd attended Lamaze and La Leche League classes with these women. In those days they wore hand-wrought silver earrings in their pierced ears, and they drove ancient pickup trucks or huge Chevy Impalas filled with apple-cheeked and overalled children. Conversations had centered around how to get a baby to sleep through the night or how to keep the cabbage moths away from the kohlrabi.
Now they drove Jeep Cherokees or Dodge Caravans, and the dangling earrings had been replaced with discreet gold buttons or cultured pearls. Their faces were still scrubbed clean morning and night, but Oil of Olay was carefully smoothed under the eyes and just a hint of makeup applied. The long, flowing hair of the seventies had been cut, tinted, and permed. Now they didnât look very different from their mothers.
Their lives, however, were different from their mothersâ. They all had jobs, some full-time, but most part-time like Lucy. They helped in their husbandsâ businesses or answered the phone at Country Cousins, and some werenât above waiting on tables during the summer. âHow else can you make a hundred dollars in a few hours?â theyâd ask each other as they sunned themselves on the beach. They were the mainstay of the Scouts and the PTA; they were the class mothers. The cookie exchange was an established part of their Christmas season.
Sue Finch had been the hostess for five or six years. It gave her an opportunity to show off her decorations, and it gave her friends a chance to socialize during the busy holiday season. Sue held the number of participants to an even dozen, and each woman brought six dozen of her best Christmas cookies. All the cookies were arranged on a long pine trestle table, and the high point of the evening was a leisurely procession around the table, each woman taking six of each cookie. All went home with the same number of cookies they had brought, but each had a dozen different varieties.
And what varieties! It was a point of honor to bring cookies rich in butter, chocolate, and nuts, cookies that required a bit of fussing. Of course, the cookies were to be taken home and saved for Christmas, so Sue always provided a dessert, too. This year it was an elaborate buche de Noel, a sponge cake filled with chocolate-flavored whipped cream and decorated with meringue mushrooms and drizzles of chocolate and caramelized sugar.
âI just donât know how you do it, Sue,â commented Lucy. âEverything is so lovely.â
âOh, well, Iâm not working like you are.â Sue shrugged. âLucy, you look exhausted. Are you doing too much?â
âI donât think so. But I havenât been getting much sleep. The police kept us so late the night Sam Miller died.â
âThatâs right,â said Pam Stillings, whose husband, Ted, was editor of the Pennysaver . âYou actually found Sam, didnât you, Lucy?â
âI did and I wish I hadnât. I may have discovered the body, but I didnât even see him. Everyone asks me about it, but I really donât know anything.â
âWere you scared?â asked Pam.
âNo, not really. Just kind of sick and let down the way you feel when the adrenaline stops flowing. Of course, I thought it was suicide. I didnât realize heâd been murdered.â
âWhy would anyone think a man like Sam Miller would kill himself?â demanded Rachel Goodman. âHe had everything, including Marcia.â
âIf you ask me,â Franny Small