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Caught Redhanded
“Huh.” Obviously disappointed, she pulled out her tablet. “What can I get you?”
We both asked for spaghetti with meatballs and parmesan peppercorn dressing on our salads, another sign of our similar outlooks on life. I gave Curt’s hand a little squeeze.
“So how come you’re serving?” Curt asked the brassy blonde who usually worked as hostess.
Astrid’s smile was sour, as far from her usual sunny expression as could be. “Since Annie quit. She’s leaving town to go to college and needs extra time to get ready, whatever that means. She gave us two days’ notice—two days! What is it with people today?—and we haven’t found a new server yet.”
I smiled at her. “Well, think of the tips you’ll be getting.”
“Oh, yeah,” she said. “Ferretti’s is a hotbed of high rollers.” She turned to leave, then stopped in her tracks, staring at a thin woman with dark hair too long for her age and dark circles under her eyes. The woman was sliding into a booth, newspaper in hand. “Well, well, so it’s true. She’s back in town.”
The woman looked up, saw Astrid staring at her and gave a tight smile.
“What’s she doing here tonight?” Astrid frowned. “You’d think she’d be too cut up to go anywhere.”
I looked at the woman as she laid the menu aside, began to unfold her paper, a copy of today’s The News, then paused to pull a pair of glasses from her purse. “Who is she?”
Astrid leaned on our table with both hands and dished. “Esther Colby. Or used to be Colby. I don’t know what her name is now. She disappeared a long time ago, thirty years or something like that. Quite a scandal when she walked out on her family.”
Astrid shook her head as if she didn’t understand such behavior. “I always felt sorry for Steve Colby, who’s a nice guy, if you ask me. Left him with their little girl. Of course, he eventually married Nanette, and they have kids, too. But I don’t think he ever heard from Esther after she took off.” Astrid glanced surreptitiously at Esther. “And now that little girl is dead. Esther should just leave again and let Steve and Nanette grieve in peace.”
“Esther Colby?” I watched in fascinated horror as the woman began reading the paper. “As in Martha’s mother?”
“Yeah. Quite a homecoming present, huh?”
The dark-haired woman gave a sudden cry. She was staring at the front page of the paper and I knew exactly what she was reading because I had written it.
Her hand went to her mouth as her face became a mask of horrified disbelief. “Oh, no!”
Astrid paled. So, I’m sure, did I.
“She didn’t know,” Astrid said. “Now I feel terrible dissing her like that.”
I nodded as I watched Esther Colby grab her purse and bolt for the door, the paper fluttering to the floor forgotten. Of course the police hadn’t notified her. They probably didn’t even know she was in Amhearst. Maybe Steve Colby didn’t, either, or, if he did, didn’t know where to reach her.
Astrid shook her head. “I guess your daughter is still your daughter, even if you did abandon her.” Looking thoughtful, she wandered off toward the kitchen.
I stared at Curt, trying to imagine what it was like to find out your daughter had been murdered by reading about it in the paper.
Curt was watching me, concern evident in his eyes. “Are you okay?”
I nodded. “I just feel bad for her.”
He shrugged. “I feel worse for Steve Colby though. And Nanette. Astrid’s right. They are nice people.”
“How do you know them?”
“Steve was my high school math teacher, believe it or not. Then when I taught, he became a professional friend. Since I stopped teaching, we haven’t seen much of each other, but I’ve been thinking of him all day.”
“Did you know Martha?” He hadn’t mentioned knowing her earlier today when he stopped at work.
He nodded. “Not well, though. She ran with a different crowd than I did.”
“With Mac and his friends.”
He nodded. “All of them nice enough in their own way, but too wild for me, especially back then.” He grinned. “I was a good kid.”
I had to laugh. “I bet.”
Astrid showed with our iced teas, salads and crusty Italian bread. When she left, Curt asked, “Is there anything new on the murder?”
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