Dire Threads - Dire Threads Part 29
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Dire Threads Part 29

Haylee, her mother, and her mother's lifelong friends ran into the store. All four of them bit their lips, probably imitating my thin-as-thread smile.

I hated to hurt Haylee. With a deep breath, I raised my chin and announced loudly, "This morning at Smythe's farm, I discovered that Smythe had a padlock matching the ones on my gates."

Naomi and Opal steadied each other. Edna's mouth pruned up like she'd expected an orange and gotten a lemon. She thumbed through the notebook where she'd written clues about our suspects.

Haylee crossed her arms.

I waved Uncle Allen and Smythe closer but made them stay outside the pen, on the other side of the railing. Uncle Allen's lower lip jutted out with belligerence. Smythe was casual and relaxed, his hands in his pockets.

The store had quieted. This time, I didn't have to raise my voice. "Several hours after Mike died, I drove out into the countryside to take pictures." I jiggled my mouse until the picture became clear. "This photo shows a man cutting across Dawn Langford's fields into the woods on a route that would take him directly to Smythe's farm. I believe it's Smythe."

Uncle Allen put a hand up like he was stopping traffic in an intersection. "That's Mike. Everyone says so." Everyone? Aunt Betty and Rhonda and their friends.

Smythe scratched the back of his neck. "It's not me."

"It's Mike," Rhonda snarled. Where had she come from?

Aunt Betty, too. "He's tall, like Mike," she commented. "But like Smythe, too."

I nearly fainted. I didn't expect any sort of help from her. I enlarged the photo to show the man's right hand. "Look closely and you'll see a tiny bit of yellow and black glove."

Opal gasped. "Smythe bought his yellow and black hat, socks, and gloves at my store."

Uncle Allen hitched at his belt. "Doesn't prove a thing. The person in the picture could be anyone. Every hunter in the state owns a coat and cap like that."

I squared my shoulders. "This morning in Smythe's shed, I saw his yellow and black striped gloves with a camouflage coat and a neon orange cap. A bunch of grapes and the words Krawbach Vineyard were embroidered on the cap." My turn to dish out a gotcha look.

It didn't bother Uncle Allen. "Mike gave those hats to everyone. Besides, Smythe said he never saw that padlock you claim was his."

From the back of the crowd, Sam the ironmonger piped up, "Mike may have stolen a padlock from me. He could have given it to . . . someone else."

Beside him, Pete DeGlazier nodded three times. "Mike and Smythe were thick as thieves."

Mona shook her head.

Irv edged around Jacoba and Luther. My store was becoming quite crowded. "More like thick as arsonists."

Smythe rubbed at his chin, then thrust both hands into the pockets of his jeans again. "Mike was the arsonist, but he always had a way of proving that Herb or I did it."

"That's right," Herb shouted. "We were always Mike's fall guys."

I tried to put sympathy and understanding into my voice. "The night Mike died, someone emptied a gas can around my cottage, the one Mike wanted to bulldoze. Maybe Mike brought someone he could blame another arson on. Maybe that person was angry at Mike for the theft of timber, including a very old and valuable black walnut tree."

Irv jeered, "You loved the tree house we built in that old tree, didn't you, Smythe? Did you still go up there to daydream, right until the time Mike had it cut down? Did Mike steal trees from you?"

I asked Smythe, "Why didn't you report Mike for stealing your timber? It had to be worth a lot." Mentally subtracting the amount of Mike's first large unexplained bank deposit from the amount of second, I came up with a ballpark figure. "Like maybe over a hundred thousand dollars."

Smythe tore off his stocking cap. "Yes, I did suspect that Mike had some of my trees cut down and sold the timber, but I didn't need the money, and he did. He had a hard time making a go of everything, especially after my aunt and uncle died. Our farms were originally one, owned by our great grandparents. I didn't want to confront him about it until, well, maybe until he brought it up and, I don't know"-Smythe shrugged-"confessed and paid me back on his own." He shoved the cap into a pocket of his yellow parka and folded his arms. "But none of this matters. I was in Erie the night Mike died. I didn't know anything about it until Friday night when Aunt Betty and Rhonda told me." A muscle twitched in his jaw.

I turned to Uncle Allen. "Subpoena the hotel's surveillance tapes. You may see Smythe's truck arriving early Wednesday morning."

34.

IT WAS A SHOT IN THE DARK, BUT IT found its mark.

Smythe lowered his head, backed away, and bumped into my cutting table. "You don't have to subpoena the hotel's surveillance tapes, Uncle Allen. I did leave the hotel Tuesday night and return early Wednesday morning. And I did come to Willow's place with Mike on Tuesday night." If Smythe hadn't clutched the table with one white-knuckled hand, he might have crumpled to the floor.

Keeping my eyes on him, I backed to the phone, called the state police, and asked them to send reinforcements. To my amazement, Uncle Allen didn't stop me, and after I hung up, he reminded me, "It could take a half hour for them to get here."

Naomi stepped forward, her narrow shoulders fragile, her head up. "What happened, Smythe?" she asked in her usual sweet and gentle tones.

Smythe rubbed his forehead, then pinched the top of his nose between thumb and finger. "Last Tuesday evening, after I talked to you ladies, I started toward Erie. Mike passed me in his pickup and waved at me to pull off." Smythe caught his breath with a gulp. "He said we were going to torch Willow's cottage-"

I interrupted him. "Who's *we'?"

Smythe looked surprised I would ask that. "Mike and I. He told me to check into my hotel in Erie, then come back to, as he called it, get in on the fun, because the conference would give me a perfect alibi." Drooping against my table, Smythe studied the backs of his hands. "I knew Mike. He would find a way to blame me, but I agreed to go with him." As if afraid to let me see the entreaty on his face, he looked past me toward my back window. "I had a good reason. I was going to stop him from burning Willow's cottage down."

I closed my eyes, swayed involuntarily, and opened them again. If Smythe was to be believed, I owed him for saving Blueberry Cottage.

I said quietly, "So you were the one who broke into my store, stole my camera, and erased photographs from my computer."

He started to shake his head, then gave me a rueful smile. "I'm sorry, Willow. I heard about the photos you had on your computer, and I figured out that the one they were talking about, supposedly of Mike, was of me. Sooner or later, someone would recognize me, even though I wasn't wearing my usual hat and coat, and they'd jump to the wrong conclusion about where I was when Mike was attacked. But I didn't kill him, didn't touch him, and didn't want any evidence around that might make it look like I did. I was going to return your camera to you."

"With the pictures erased?" I asked.

He gave a dejected little nod.

If Smythe had worn his usual cap, I'd have known right away who he was. If he hadn't been wearing a bright orange cap, though, I might not have stopped to take pictures. I asked him, "Why did you wear a cap from Mike's vineyard on your long walk home?"

"I forgot and left my hat in my hotel room that night. Mike gave me his."

"And he wore . . . ?" I asked.

"He didn't wear one. He was being macho."

That was easy enough to believe. He hadn't worn one earlier that day, either. "How did you end up with a padlock matching mine?"

Smythe toed at the grain of my walnut floor. "Mike brought it in a package with a key that would open your gates. After he unlocked your gate, he told me to hang on to his lock and keys for him. He gave me the packaging, too. I was going to give it all back, but I . . . kind of left your place in a hurry that night, Willow. After I heard he died, I didn't see the point in returning them."

"And the lock turned out to be very handy when you got home, didn't it," I challenged. "You could lock your hat, coat, and gloves in your shed. Maybe you were afraid they had blood on them."

He gaped at me. "They reeked of gasoline. I didn't want them stinking up my house. I hung them in the shed to air out."

"And you locked the shed," I repeated.

He pulled his stocking cap out of his pocket and shoved it onto his curls, covering his eyes for a second before rolling up the bottom edge. "That was later. I'd seen some kids hanging around." His gaze didn't meet mine.

More likely, he locked the clothing in the shed after he heard about the photo the local sleuths had seen on my computer.

Edna flipped a page in her notebook. "You drove to Erie that night, checked in at the hotel, then drove back. Where did you park your truck, and how did you get to Willow's?"

Smythe steadied himself against the table. "I left my truck at Mike's. I rode behind him on his ATV."

I burst out, "Why did he drive that? It made a racket and woke me up."

Herb answered for Smythe. "Mike liked being noticed, and he probably wanted to prove you couldn't keep ATVs off the trail."

"Mike was a daredevil," Irv said. "He wouldn't have minded if you caught him. He'd have charmed you into helping him burn down your own shed."

"Cottage," I corrected automatically. "And nothing would have made me destroy it."

Smythe looked more hangdog than my enthusiastic dogs ever could. "Mike brought his ATV so we could avoid roads when we made our getaway. He said we would never get caught."

Threadville tourists gasped. My sisters-in-thread.

Naomi extended both hands, palms up, toward Smythe. "How did you stop Mike from torching Willow's cottage, Smythe?"

Smythe rubbed the back of his hand across his eyes. "Mike had brought along a can of gasoline. He told me to douse Willow's cottage while he broke into her lean-to. I dumped the gas out of the can, safely far from Willow's cottage." Smyth's yellow parka seemed to deflate. "Mike came out of Willow's lean-to. He was carrying her paddle like a weapon. He charged me and swung it, like my head was a baseball and the paddle was a bat."

Naomi's hands flew to her cheeks. "Smythe, how perfectly terrible! What did you do?" Although she resembled a kindly aunt, she was as good as any policeman about questioning her suspect.

"The only thing possible. I ducked, ran out the gate we'd left open, and escaped. I didn't understand what it had all been about at first, but I've thought about it ever since. Mike had known Willow's canoe paddle was in her lean-to and broke in specifically to get it. He had planned all along to knock me out, set fire to the cottage, and leave me for Willow to find."

The shop was silent except for several audible intakes of breath.

"My so-called perfect alibi wouldn't matter," Smythe went on. "Everyone would believe that I had burned down Willow's cottage, and that she'd attacked me because of it. The key that opened her gate would have been in my pocket."

All very plausible, except for one detail. I asked, "When you escaped, why didn't Mike follow you on his ATV? That doesn't sound like him."

Smythe admitted, "I expected him to. I cut through backyards, first the General Store's, then around behind others until I was out of town. I didn't hear the ATV, or anything besides my own boots hitting the ground and my breathing."

With Clay at my back like a coiled spring, I bravely left the dog pen and stood up to Smythe. "Why would Mike go to so much trouble to burn down my cottage and hurt you in the process?"

Smythe hauled in one harsh breath, then another. "You stood up to him in public. He always bragged that he didn't get mad, he got even. And that's how he lived his life. I was the most available scapegoat. He thought he could tempt me with my *perfect' alibi."

Sally and Tally whined. Clay pulled them closer.

Haylee's face could have been carved from wood. "Mike hated you, Smythe. He set you up."

Irv growled, "Mike wasn't that smart. Smythe's making it up to save his skin."

Smythe flushed but didn't take his eyes off Haylee. "Mike certainly didn't set me up to murder him. I don't know who attacked him after I left. All I know is Mike liked to watch buildings burn but didn't want to be blamed."

Haylee interrupted him, speaking more harshly than ever. "He could only blame you if you didn't stand up for yourself."

Smythe bowed his head. "True, but-" He didn't have to say the rest. Mike had probably cowed him all his life.

Edna had a different interpretation. "He could have blamed you if he hurt you so badly you couldn't stand up for yourself."

Naomi asked gently, "Did you have to defend yourself from him, Smythe?"

"No!" I'd never seen Smythe this assertive before. "I told you. I left."

Edna turned pages in her notebook. She cast a condemning glower toward Herb. "Okay, Smythe, if you didn't hit Mike with that canoe paddle, who did?"

"I don't know."

The trouble was, I believed him, and I'd learned to read Haylee and The Three Weird Mothers. They believed him, too.

I'd built up a case against a person who might prove to be innocent. I was worse than Uncle Allen and the state troopers, who had not yet accused anyone, including me, of murdering Mike. I felt sick.

Edna asked, "Smythe, did you see or hear anyone else in Willow's yard or cottage that night?"

"No," he answered. "I was too busy running away."

Irv let out a scornful laugh. "Smythe was always good at running away."

"What about vehicles?" I asked, remembering the dark pickup truck that Uncle Allen and I had seen.

Smythe closed his eyes as if trying to bring back that night. "I heard something with noisy snow tires roaring down Lake Street shortly after Mike shut off his ATV."

Uncle Allen and I looked at each other. When I'd tried to describe the truck to Trooper Gartener, I'd forgotten that the sound of the truck's tires on pavement had seemed loud considering that the truck had only been creeping along.

From Uncle Allen's expression, he was remembering the same thing. "Could you tell which direction it was going?"

Smythe studied his fists. "So many things happened at once. It sounded like it was heading toward the beach. But I think it stopped before it got there."

Uncle Allen and I gave each other a slow, measuring assessment. Were we drawing the same conclusions? The truck could have parked at the end of the trail, and Mike's murderer could have approached on foot.

But how would the killer have known what was going on? Had Mike arranged for someone besides Smythe to help burn down my cottage? Someone who may have been the actual killer?

I went through the exact order of what I remembered from that night. The ATV had awakened me. The dogs had barked. I'd still been trying to wake up enough to sort it all out when the ATV's engine shut off. I'd hidden my head, first under my duvet and then under my pillow, trying to go back to sleep, but the dogs had continued their fussing and barking. I'd given up sleeping after what seemed like ten minutes but may have been as little as five, then had taken another few minutes to dress before I let the dogs out.

Everything that Smythe had described could have happened during the ten or so minutes from when Mike shut off his ATV to when the dogs and I made it outside. Mike could have unlocked the gate and brought the gas can into my yard. Smythe could have dumped out the gas while Mike broke into my lean-to and got my canoe paddle. If they'd raised their voices when Mike swung the paddle at Smythe, I hadn't heard them over the dogs' racket.

The timing worked. Smythe could have been telling the truth. The killer could have parked the truck with the noisy snow tires on Lake Street and come along the trail on foot. He could have spied on Mike and Smythe, could have seen Smythe run away, and could have been certain that Smythe didn't know he was there. This third person could have attacked Mike, only to be interrupted by my dogs racing down the hill and barking.

Desperate for a place to hide, the attacker must have broken into Blueberry Cottage and watched to see what we did. The moment we ran back up the hill, he'd have had at least five more minutes while I phoned for help and let Dr. Wrinklesides into the yard. He could have rushed out of Blueberry Cottage and finished his attack. That explained why my canoe paddle had suddenly appeared next to Mike. Then the attacker would have had time to run to his truck, hop in, and be at the intersection of Lake and Cayuga at about the moment that Uncle Allen arrived in my front yard.

What were the odds that the truck Uncle Allen and I saw had nothing to do with the case?