contained a roaring fire. There was plenty of seating, so everyone found a spot and rooted in their knitting bags, while I sat outside the circle and focused on my salad. Kendra took a seat in a comfy-looking chair by the fireplace and removed a portion of a delicate, white shawl from her canvas bag. She had curly brown hair she wore pulled back in a low ponytail and had a magnificent smile that crinkled upward to her rosy cheeks and chocolate brown eyes. She and Livvie had been close friends at Busmanâs Harbor High School, but each had gone her own wayâLivvie to marriage and pregnancy, though not, as she would cheerfully tell you, in that order; Kendra to university and then a PhD in marine biology. Along the way, sheâd acquired a husband and two kids, and now sheâd returned to work at the oceanography lab on Westclaw Point, site of some of the best jobs in town. She crossed one long, lean leg over another and began to knit. Sheâd been back in town only for a year, yet she appeared perfectly at ease in her surroundings and with these women. I envied her easy integration into Busmanâs Harbor, which seemed in particular contrast to my own.
I finished my salad, took the bowl to the kitchen, rinsed it, and put it in the dishwasher. In the beautiful room, I looked at the childish drawings on the bulletin board and marveled that friendly, calm Kendra seemed to have it allâjob, family, happy home.
When I got back to the great room, all eyes were on me.
âSpill,â Livvie commanded. âWhat happened at Gusâs this morning?â
Traitor. What happened to âItâs not always about you, Juliaâ?
I gave them the shorthand version, the one that had to be all over town already. A strangerâno, I didnât recognize him or know his nameâhad died in Gusâs walk-in. The ME had questions about the death, so the state police were in town investigating.
âYou mean he was murdered,â someone clarified.
âMaybe. Probably. The police are waiting for lab tests.â
âSo this murderer was in the restaurant last night, after everyone left?â Kendra asked, her pretty brow wrinkled.
I didnât answer. I truly didnât know, but I was sure everyone took my silence as a yes. I decided to turn the tables and start asking questions of my own before the evening turned into an interrogation.
âDo any of you know the Bennetts, Phil and Deborah? They live on Eastclaw Point,â I asked.
âSure,â Kendra answered. âWere they in the restaurant last night?â
âYes.â I didnât see any harm in answering.
A few people nodded. Marley Bletcher, former middle-school class clown and one of the few other singles in the group, pulled back the skin on her face that same way Iâd done when talking to Chris, imitating Deborahâs plastic surgery. âShe comes into Hannafordâs all the time.â Marley was a checkout clerk at our local chain supermarket.
âTheir home was on the Garden Clubâs house tour last summer,â someone added. âItâs amazing. Gorgeous. Huge. Sheâs a decorator.â
âAnd what about him?â I asked.
âRetired,â Kendra answered. âI think he was something in Big Pharma.â
âHeâs a big farmah?â Marley asked. âBecause he doesnât seem like a farmah to me.â
âHe was an executive with a large pharmaceutical company,â Kendra corrected gently.
âWhen did they start staying in town year-round?â I asked.
âThis is their first winter,â Kendra answered. âThey have two boys, mid-thirties, a little older than us.â She looked at me. âTheyâre close to Chrisâs age. Maybe he knows them?â
Summer kids? I doubted it. I shook my head.
âAnyway,â Kendra continued, âheâs retired and theyâre here full-time. They completely did over that house.