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“She’s extended her generosity to woodchucks, raccoons, and opossum, too.”

Cletus Aubrey chuckled again. “The good things in life never change. Theo, Miss Browning, to what do I owe this blast from the past, this walk down memory lane?”

“Cletus, I have a favor to ask.”

“Ask away.”

“You used to work in the property room, am I correct?”

“For three years. Before I went to night school and turned into a computer nut.”

“How big a deal would it be to snoop around in there?”

“No big deal at all if I had a general idea what I was on the lookout for.”

“Let’s just call it a mysterious object found in the home of a Mr. Hughes Barron.”

“Uh-oh, the old mysterious object search. Yeah, I can probably pull that off. What was the name again? Barron?”

“Yes. B-A-R-R-O-N.”

“The first name is Hughes?”

“That’s it,” said Theodosia

“One of the guys who works in property owes me twenty bucks from a bet he lost on last week’s Citadel game. I’ll harass him and have a look around. Kill two birds with one stone.”

“Cletus, you’re a gem.” “That’s what I keep telling my wife, only she’s not buyin’ it.”

Theodosia was deep in conversation with one of the sales reps at Frank & Fuller, a tea wholesaler in Montclair, New Jersey, when the other phone line lit up. It was Cletus calling back.

“You ain’t gonna like this, Miss Browning,” he began.

“What was it, Cletus?”

“Some tea thingamajig.”

“Describe it to me,” said Theodosia.

“Silver, lots of little holes.”

“A tea infuser.”

“You sell those?” asked Cletus.

“By the bushel,” Theodosia said with a sigh.

Chapter 47

The last six months of sales receipts were laid out on Theodosia’s desk. Haley had tried to stack them, month by month, in some semblance of order, but there were so many of the flimsy paper receipts they kept sliding around and sorting into their own piles.

“This is everything?” asked Theodosia. In an effort to gain some control and a slight appearance of tidiness, she had pinned her hair up in a bun, much to Haley’s delight.

“You look like a character out of a William Faulkner novel,” Haley quipped. “All you need are Drayton’s reading glasses perched on the end of your nose.”

Theodosia ignored her. “These are all the sales receipts, correct?”

“Should be, unless you want me to pull computer records, too.” Haley sobered up. “We don’t need to do that, do we? I think it would just duplicate efforts.”

“If the two of us go through these, we should be able to sort out sales receipts on everyone who purchased a tea infuser.”

Because the Indigo Tea Shop maintained a customer database for the purpose of sending out newsletters and direct mail, customer names and addresses were almost always entered on sales receipts.

Haley looked skeptical. “Which kind? Spoon infusers, mesh ones with handles, tea ball infusers?”

“All of them,” declared Theodosia. “You take these three stacks, I’ll take the others.”

“What about infuser socks?” asked Haley.

“Anything having to do with tea infusers means infuser socks, too.”

“Okay, okay. I’m just double-checking. I’m worried about Bethany, too.” Haley bent diligently over her stacks of papers.

“You’re sure Bethany didn’t fill in here before six months ago?” asked Theodosia. She was concerned about the window of time they were checking.

Haley squinted thoughtfully. “Before last May? No, I don’t think so.”

Two hours later, they had sifted through all the receipts and found, amazingly, that the Indigo Tea Shop had sold almost fifty tea infusers in the last six months.

“Now we’ve got to try to rule some people out,” said Theodosia, overwhelmed at the sheer number of receipts just for tea infusers.

“Such as?” said Haley.

“Tourists, for one thing. People who stopped by for a cup of tea and made a few extra purchases.”

“Okay, I get it,” said Haley. “Let me go through these fifty then. See what I can do.”

Fifteen minutes of work produced a modicum of progress.

“I think we can safely rule out about thirty of these,” reasoned Haley. She indicated a stack of receipts. “These customers are all from out of state and fairly far-flung. California, Texas, Nevada, New York...”

“Agreed,” said Theodosia. “So now we’re down to local purchases. Who have we got?”

Haley passed the remaining handful of receipts to Theodosia. “Those two sisters, Elmira and Elise, who live over the Cabbage Patch Needlepoint Shop. Reverend Jonathan at Saint Philip’s. A couple of the B and Bs.” Theodosia studied the culled receipts. “Mostly friends and neighbors,” she said. “Not exactly hardcore suspects.”

“Lydia at the Chowder Hound Restaurant down the street bought three of them,” said Haley. “Do you think she had it in for Hughes Barron?”

“I doubt she even knew him,” murmured Theodosia. “Okay, Haley, thanks. Good job.”

“Sorry we couldn’t come up with something more definitive.” Haley hesitated in the doorway, feeling somehow that she’d let Theodosia down.

“That’s all right,” said Theodosia. “Thanks again.”

Theodosia reached for the clip that contained her thick hair and yanked it out. As her hair tumbled about her shoulders, she thought of all the things she had left undone at the shop, how she’d even missed this week’s therapy dog session with Earl Grey.

Her heart caught in her chest. Earl Grey. The dog she’d found cowering in the alley out back, the dog that was her dear companion. Someone, quite possibly the person who had murdered Hughes Barron, had threatened to poison Earl Grey if she didn’t back off.

Okay, Theodosia thought to herself. Following up on these sales receipts was going to be her last effort. And if it didn’t pan out, she would back off.

Sitting in her chair, trying to focus, Theodosia leafed through the stack of twenty or so receipts Haley had culled out.

Lydia at the Chowder Hound. Could she have had any sort of connection to Hughes Barron? Or, for that matter, any of the possible suspects? Her gut feeling told her probably not.

And Samantha Rabathan had bought a tea infuser a few months ago. Theodosia pondered this, thought about probable connections. What if, just what if Samantha purchased the tea infuser for the Heritage Society?

Samantha was kind of a goody-goody that way. When she wasn’t out winning a blue ribbon for her spectacular La Reine Victoria roses or flitting about being a social butterfly, she spent a good portion of her time as a volunteer with the Heritage Society. She worked in the small library and helped the development director entice new donors.

So it was possible that Timothy Neville might be behind this after all.

Timothy Neville could have done away with Hughes Barron and somehow planted the tea infuser with Bethany’s fingerprints as false evidence. He knew her prints would have thrown the police off the track. That is, if the police ever got onto that track in the first place.

Well, there was only one way to find out. She would go and ask Samantha if she’d bought a tea infuser for the Heritage Society. Samantha might think it a strange question, but she’d probably be too polite to say so.

Chapter 48

Paved in antique brick and bluestone, accented by a vine-covered arbor, Samantha Rabathan’s garden was a peaceful, perfect sanctuary. Flower beds arranged in concentric circles around a small pool had lost much of their bloom for the season but, because of the great variety of carefully selected greenery, still conveyed a verdant, pleasing palette.