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Chapter One
The first time she said her name on the phone that
January night, I couldn't place herthough there was something
vaguely familiar about the voice. It had a snooty, trust-fundy tone,
as if she were announcing, "I own a Marc Jacobs bag and you don't."
"Ashley Hanes," she said once more, this time with
exaggerated emphasis and irritation, the way American tourists sometimes
speak to foreigners who don't understand them. "We met at Peyton Cross's
wedding. I was a bridesmaid, remember?"
Oh, right. We had been introduced late last April
in Greenwich, Connecticut, during the infamous Cross-Slavin wedding
weekend. Ashley had graduated from the same exclusive private high school
as the bride and was now working, if my memory was correct, as an interior
decorator in Greenwichthough working's apparently something she chose
rather than had to do. An image of her began to loosen from my memory:
long, chestnut-colored hair, slim as a French baguette, and haughty
as hell, just like the voice. She was the kind of woman who would meet
you at a party and look right through you, as if you were a potted palm.
"Oh, right, I'm so sorry," I said. "I'm in a little
bit of a fog at the moment. How are you anyway?"
I was pretty sure what was coming next. Since I'm
a contributing writer for Gloss magazine,
I often get phone calls from people I've met asking for fashion or publishing-related
favors. But I write true-crime and human-interest stories for the magazine
and I'm not connected to the glittery, glossy stuff. Just for the record,
I am categorically unable to help someone become a Ford model, gain
admittance to a Chanel sample sale, or publish a confessional article
on how a liposuction procedure left ugly scars along her buttocks.
"I need your help," she said.
"Okay," I said. "Though if it's"
"There's a very serious situation, and I have to talk
to you about it."
Serious to someone like Ashley could mean her hairdresser
was out of town for the week, but the alarm in her voice sounded real
enough that I was concerned.
"Is it about Peyton?" I asked. Though I had spoken
to Peyton on the phone once last summer, I had not laid eyes on her
in nine monthsnot since she had dazzled a room of five hundred guests
in a satin Vera Wang wedding dress with a low-cut, crumb-catcher bodice.
From there she had headed off for a cruise of the Greek islands with
her new husband, David, who'd made a fortune in the world of financewhatever
that means.
"No. Well, indirectly,
yes. Look, it's not something I want to get into on the phone. Can you
meet me to talk about this?"
"All right. Tell me whenand where. Are you still
living up in Greenwich?"
"Yes, but I'm in New York tonight. At the Four Seasons
Hotel. Could you come by here for a drink?"
"Tonight?"
I exclaimed. It had started to snow a few hours earlier, and as I glanced
across the room toward the window of my fourteenth-story apartment,
I could see it was coming down harder nowin big, crazy swirls.
I live at the very eastern end of Greenwich Village, on the corner of
9th Street and Broadway, and it would be a bitch getting a cab up to
57th Street in this weatherand an even bigger bitch getting one
back.
"It's urgent," she said. "When you hear what I have
to say, you'll understand why I need to see you immediately."
It didn't seem like I had much choice but to acquiesce.
She sounded about as eager to hear me say no as she would to travel
by Greyhound, and besides, if the situation really did involve Peyton
Cross, even indirectly, I was curious to know what it was. I explained
to Ashley that it might take me forty-five minutes to get there. We
agreed that I would ring her on the hotel house phone when I arrived
and she'd come down to the bar in the lobby.
I'd been reading a book when she called, dressed in
bagged-out sweatpants and drinking a cup of instant hot cocoa in honor
of the snowstorm, and now I was going to have to head out into the mess.
Several months ago I'd moved into a steady relationship with a guy named
Jack Herlihy, but because he taught psychology at Georgetown University
in Washington, D.C., we only saw each other on weekends. Some nights
I'd see a movie or have dinner out with friends, but more weeknights
than not, I was holed up in my apartment, either alone or chatting with
my seventy-year-old next door neighbor, Landon. Though I looked forward
to my weekends with Jack, the rest of my nights had become about as
scintillating as C-SPAN. Landon had told me lately that he was worried
that I might start adopting stray cats.
I changed into a pair of tight dark jeans, a black
turtleneck sweater, silver hoop earrings (in an attempt to look a little
dressier), and my snow boots, which I found after foraging in my closet
for five minutes. It was actually the first time that winter that we'd
had more than flurries in Manhattan.
I was surprised when I stepped outside to see that
about two inches of snow had already stuck to the ground, and you could
tell by the swollen look of the sky that more was on the way. I opted
for the subway, the IRT at Astor Place. It would be faster than hunting
for a caband it would take me to within two blocks of the hotel.
As the train hurled through the tunnel, its floor
sopping wet with melted snow, I had time to consider what trouble might
be brewing for the captivating Peyton Cross. From all reports, her life
couldn't have been going better. In her early thirties like me, she'd
been dubbed the next Martha Stewartor "Martha Stewart wannabe" in the
eyes of the people who envied her so much they couldn't stand it. She
ran a combination cooking school, catering business, and gourmet kitchen
and food shop out of an old farmhouse and barn on the outskirts of Greenwich.
Her first cookbook was due out sometime this year, and she was a frequent
guest on the Food Network. A television show of her own was probably
already in the offing.
As they say, I knew her whenshe was my roommate
freshman year at Brown. She was extremely vivacious, pretty in that
kind of scrubbed face, not-overly-sophisticated preppy way, and from
what I could tell, afraid of absolutely nothing. Though some guys were
totally intimidated by her, the majority was mesmerized, and she always
had a pack of them mooning over her. Life as her roommate was entertaining
but also exasperating. That's because she could be selfish and rude.
She'd ask me to meet her at dinner and then make me wait for an hour
in the cafeteria, or she'd borrow my best shirt and then leave it balled
up with the dust bunnies under her bed. Over time I figured out how
to avoid situations with her that could end in me cursing under my breath.
The trick for surviving, I learned, was to keep my expectations low
and enjoy the show.
We both got singles sophomore year, and though we
were friendly and occasionally grabbed a beer together, we didn't see
a huge amount of each other. I bonded with several women who, unlike
Peyton, seemed to carry the good-girlfriend gene. After college Peyton
and I stayed in touch by e-mail, though infrequently. When I left my
gig as a reporter at the Albany Times Union
and headed for Manhattan, hoping to break into magazines, I called her
for some insight. At the time she was working for Food
& Wine, developing recipes. She promised to introduce me to a
few people in the business, and to my surprise she actually came through.
She also invited me to Greenwich several times for parties she was throwing
as part of her burgeoning catering and event-planning business. That
was the thing about Peytonjust when you were ready to strangle
her, she could charm the pants off you.
Her wedding had been one of the more lavish I'd ever
attended but also breathtakingly original. It was held in a historic
house on the outskirts of Greenwich, and Peyton arranged for her own
company to do the catering. That was partly because she didn't trust
anyone else to do the job with her degree of genius, but also for the
PR value for her business. Friends of mine had sworn I'd bag some rich
guest that day, but David Slavin was almost twenty years older than
Peyton and his business associates and friends were paunchy and pathetically
boorish. I'd spent a good chunk of the day flirting with one of the
bartenders.
The snow was coming down even harder when I emerged
from the underground at 59th and Lexing-ton. I felt relieved when I
finally stomped into the marble, two-story-high lobby of the Four Seasons.
I rang Ashley's room to tell her I'd arrived and then headed over to
the lobby bar, requesting the most private table they could manage.
Like the lobby, the entire areathe marble walls, the Roman shades,
and the furniturewas done in shimmering beige. A little too mausoleum-like
for my taste.
Though I hadn't recalled Ashley's name when she'd
first said it on the phone, I had no trouble recognizing her as soon
as she strode purposefully in my direction. She had a rich girl's air
of self-importance and entitlement, the kind that many A-list actresses
try for years to acquire but never do.
As she got closer I realized that the dark green thing
she was wearing was actually a fur coat. Either she was planning on
going out afterward or she'd been reluctant to leave it in the room.
It was, I suspected, sheared beaver or mink, lush and plush and worth
at least twenty thousand dollars. I wondered if her car sported a bumper
sticker that read, "I don't brake
for small animals."
She slid into the chair to my left without bothering
with a perfunctory air kiss or even a hello. I guess she figured we'd
gotten our pleasantries out of the way on the house phone. She wore
her chestnut hair pinned back tonight, accentuating the slenderness
of her tanned face. Her cheekbones were so high and sharp, you'd risk
a paper cut if you got too close to them.
"Did you order yet?" she asked briskly, shaking off
her coat to reveal a sleeveless orange dress and thin buff arms. She
glanced at my turtleneck and jeans with a soupon of disapproval, as
if I were wearing one of those plastic lobster bibs that says, "I'm
a piggy."
"No, I was waiting for you," I told her.
She jerked her head around toward the center of the
room and signaled for the waitress. She appeared on edge, and I assumed
it had to do with the news she was about to divulge. There didn't seem
to be any reason to spend five minutes on small talk, so as soon as
she had ordered a dirty martini and I'd ask for a glass of cabernet,
I jumped in.
"So tell me, what's going on?" I asked. "When was
the last time you spoke to Peyton?"
"It's been a while. Last summer, I guess."
"Do you remember the bridesmaid with the short
black hair? Jamie Howe?" Jamie. She was the bridesmaid I'd spent
the most time talking to, mainly because she was also in the magazine
business. She'd met Peyton during her tenure at Food
& Wine and had since become an editor at another food magazine.
I hadn't particularly liked her. She was sullen and, I suspected, jealous
of Peyton's success. She kept talking about how lucky Peyton was to
have David to foot the bill for all of her ventures.
"Sure. She lives here in New York, right?"
"Lived," she said, almost defiantly.
"She's dead now."
"You're kidding," I exclaimed. The news
took me totally by surprise. "How?"
"She was electrocuted in her apartmentdown on the
Lower East Side. It happened in September." I sat there momentarily
speechless while Ashley took a fortifying sip of her martini. As she
swallowed, she laid her French-manicured hand flat against the front
of her dress, as if it helped the vodka go down more easily. When she
set the glass on the table again, I caught the cloying scent of olives.
"Gosh, I vaguely remember hearing that someone in
the business died like that," I said finally. "But I had no idea it
was her. What happened exactly?"
"She was taking a bath and a CD player slipped into
the tub," Ashley said.
"That's horrible."
"I know. And hard to believe someone wouldn't know
better than to set it so close to the tub."
"What do you mean?" I asked. "Are you thinking"
"Until last week I didn't think much about it at all,"
she said, suddenly sounding frantic. "I'd never even met Jamie before
the wedding. Butwait till you hear this. Two weeks ago another of the
bridesmaids died. My roommate, Robin Lolly."
I let out a gasp so loud that a media mogul type at
the next table turned his head in our direction. She was right. I could
barely believe what I was hearing.
"How?"
I asked.
"She was taking antidepressants, and she had some
kind of fatal reaction. It was from mixing them with the wrong kind
of food." Her eyes filled with tears as she spoke, but they seemed to
come as much from nervous tension as from sadness.
"Robin?" I said. "Is she the one who worked at the
farm with Peyton?"
"Yes, yes," Ashley said impatiently. "She was the
very pretty onewith the long blond hair. She managed the shop at the
farm."
"That's terrible," I said. "Were you two very close?"
"We weren't what you'd call best friends," she said,
shaking her head quickly, "but we'd known each other since high school.
Robin, Peyton, Prudence she was the maid of honor, remember?and I
all went to Greenwich Academy together. Robin and I started sharing
a town house last March. My roommate had moved out and Robin had just
gotten divorced. She needed someplace to live."
"Was she at home when she died?"
"No, she was up in Vermontall aloneat a ski house
her parents left her. She'd driven up on Friday and the coroner said
she must have died shortly after she arrived, though her body wasn't
discovered until a cleaning person came in Monday morning." Her voice
choked as she spoke the last sentence.
"I'm so sorry," I said. "This must be awful for youand
for Peyton, too."
"Look," she said, suddenly grasping my arm so hard
it would have taken the Jaws of Life to remove it. "Don't you find it
odd that two perfectly healthy young women who were in a wedding together
would die within a few months of each other in such bizarre circumstances?"
"Are you saying you think someone killed
the two of them?" I asked. "Because they were bridesmaids?"
"All I know is that something's not right about
it, and I'm going out of my mind. Robin and Jamie hadn't even met until
the wedding. But they became friends after that. And now suddenly they're
both dead as a result of these strange accidents. I'm terrified something
could happen to me."
"I know how upsetting this must be, but it really
sounds like nothing more than an awful coincidence."
She shook her head agitatedly.
"That's what everyone
saysPeyton and everyone else."
"Well, do you have anything else to go on?" I asked.
"To begin with, I find this whole food and drug mixing thing preposterous.
Robin was very clear about the foods she wasn't supposed to eat. She
told me what they were so that if I ever cooked for us, I wouldn't include
any of them."
It was hard to imagine Ashley doing anything with
food other than calling the Zone hotline.
"But sometimes people cheat with food, no matter
how religious they say they're going to be about their diets," I told
her.
She glanced nervously around the room, as if she was
afraid of eavesdroppers, then leaned closer to me.
"That's not all. After Jamie's death, Robin got really
weird. She seemed nervous and tense."
"But that was probably just normal grieving," I suggested.
She let out a ragged sigh.
"I can't believe this," she said. "I thought you of
all people would take it more seriously. I guess if my life is in danger,
I'm going to have to take care of myself."
There was a manic edge to her voice, and the media
mogul glanced over again. It probably appeared as if I was trying to
talk her down from a coke high.
"Ashley, look, you need to chill on this. Even
if the worst happened and someone killed both of them, it may have to
do with their being friends, not being
in the wedding together."
"No, no," she said, shaking her head. "I thought
that too for about forty seconds, but then I remembered something. Right
after Jamie died, Robin started asking me about the wedding. She wanted
to know if anything had seemed strange to me that day."
I felt the hairs on the back of my neck shoot up,
as if they'd been lollygaging around, half-listening, and now something
had finally caught their attention.
"What do you mean strange?"
I asked.
"I don't know. Nothing occurred to me when she asked
other than the fact that the damn bridesmaid dresses made us look like
giant balls of butterand when I asked her to be more specific, she
told me to never mind. At the time I didn't associate her question with
Jamie's death, but now I see it has to be connected."
I asked if she'd pointed any of this out to the police
and she said she'd told the officer in charge of the investigation of
Robin's death about Jamie but he had dismissed it. The out-of-state
factor had clearly deterred the police from seeing any kind of connection.
"So what exactly is it that you want from me?" I
asked finally.
"Come to Greenwich. Just look into this. Isn't
that what you do?"
A woman like Ashley wouldn't care that it wasn't really
what I did. Yes, I'd gotten involved in a couple of murder cases, and
yet basically I'm just a reporter. But trust-fund chicks like her were
only interested in locating the spot where their needs intersected with
what you had to give.
I thought for a moment, sipping my wine. It sounded
on the surface as if the situation really was
nothing more than a dreadful coincidence. But the question Robin had
asked about the wedding disturbed me. At the very least I wanted to
talk to Peyton She must be reeling from it all.
I told Ashley okay, that I would visit Greenwich to
talk to Peyton and possibly make some other inquiries. The next day,
Wednesday, would actually be the best day for me to make the one-hour
drive because I needed to be at Gloss
on Thursday for a meeting with the deputy editor. Ashley seemed instantly
relieved. I took down her number and told her that I would be in contact
with her tomorrow, after I figured out what time I'd be leaving.
We asked for the check and she paid it, though there
was a moment when I thought she was going to ask me to split it. Typical.
After walking her to the elevator, I slipped out of the rear entrance
of the hotel on 58th Street. The snow was still coming down hard and
cars crawled along the street, their wheels sometimes spinning and whining.
Miraculously a yellow taxi appeared and no one tried to bulldoze me
for it. As I nestled into the warmth of the cab, I realized that a knot
had formed in my stomach. The conversation with Ashley had rattled me.
Back in my apartment I pulled off my coat and boots
and, without turning the lights on, flopped down on the couch. Lit by
a blanket of snow on the terrace, my living room was practically aglow.
I sank back into the cushions and tried to conjure up Peyton's wedding
day. Much of it was a blur by now, thought I could recall the big details.
The ceremony, in a Protestant church in Greenwich, had taken all of
fifteen minutes. The reception, on the other hand, had gone on for hours,
starting with a cocktail hour that had featured a vodka and caviar station
among other extravagances. Dinner was five courses long, including a
cheese course before dessert.
The phone rang suddenly, startling me. I picked it
up from the side table next to the couch. It was Jack, just calling
to say good night.
"I tried earlier," he said. "I didn't think you were
going out tonight." Not accusatory, just curious. I blurted out the
whole story.
"That's definitely weird," he said. "But I wouldn't
let it alarm you. In all likelihood, it's just a coincidence."
"Doesn't it defy some natural law of probability?"
I asked, knowing that because of his training as a shrink, he might
be up on such things. "Not really. It's known as a cluster. It's a set
of random events that seem significant because there is more than an
average amount of them. But they're just thatrandom. They really don't
mean anything."
He told me again not to be alarmed, and then we moved
on to a discussion about the upcoming weekend. It was momentarily distracting,
but no sooner was I off the phone than I felt a new wave of disquietude.
The two deaths could be random, sure, but then there was that odd question
Robin had asked of Ashley: Did anything about
the wedding seem strange? I couldn't imagine, though, what occurrence
that April day could possibly have led someone to murder two women who
had just met.
I turned the lights on finally, and after traipsing
down the hall to my tiny officewhich had once been a walk-in closetI
rummaged through my desk drawer until I found a photo of the wedding
party that Peyton had sent me last summer as a souvenir. There was Peyton
and David in the center and off to David's left, the best man, Trip,
one of his business associates, and several older groomsmen I'd barely
spoken to that weekend. Off to Peyton's right were the maid of honor
and the five bridesmaids. And there I was among them, my short blondish
brown hair shellacked into a Doris Day style and all five feet six inches
of me entombed in yards and yards of yellow taffeta.
You see, that's why Ashley's story troubled me so
much. I'd been a bridesmaid in Peyton Cross's wedding, too.
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