Monica Ferris_Needlecraft Mysteries_01
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Bad Intentions …
“She wants to buy Crewel World,” said Betsy.
“She’ll have to find a new place for it,” warned Mickels.
“Yes, I was afraid of that,” said Shelly to Mickels, coming out of the kitchen. “Are you going to be okay, Betsy?”
“I think so, thanks.”
“But I can make the store the talk of the country,” said Irene, now arguing with all of them. “I’ve wanted to open my own store for years and years, you know that, Shelly; but Margot got hers started first, so there wasn’t anything I could do ‘til she got out of the way.”
“That’s a strange way of putting it, Irene,” said Shelly. “She didn’t exactly decide on her own to step out of anyone’s way. She was murdered …”
Irene shrugged. “Well, it’s how I think of it. She wouldn’t let me become her partner, so what could I do?”
“What do you mean?” asked Betsy sharply.
Berkley Prime Crime titles by Monica Ferris
CREWEL WORLD
FRAMED IN LACE
A STITCH IN TIME
UNRAVELED SLEEVE
A MURDEROUS YARN
HANGING BY A THREAD
CUTWORK
CREWEL YULE
EMBROIDERED TRUTHS
SINS AND NEEDLES
KNITTING BONES
THAI DIE
BLACKWORK
Anthologies
PATTERNS OF MURDER
SEW FAR, SO GOOD
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This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.
CREWEL WORLD
A Berkley Prime Crime Book / published by arrangement with the author
PRINTING HISTORY
Berkley Prime Crime mass-market edition / March 1999
Copyright © 1999 by Mary Monica Pulver Kuhfeld.
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eISBN : 978-1-101-49575-9
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I thought I knew enough about needlework to write this novel. I didn’t. Fortunately, people can be generous with their time and talents. Foremost are the owner, staff, and customers of Needle Nest of Minnetonka—particularly Pat Ingle, Sandy Mattson and the Wednesday Bunch. Denise Williams designed the T‘ang horse pattern and told me about painting needlepoint canvases. Elizabeth Proudfit encouraged and advised me, and lent generously from her own library of needlework books. And the people of rec.crafts.textile.needlework (an Internet newsgroup) have cheered me on, answered my questions, and continue to be an excellent resource.
To all of you, humble and heartfelt thanks.
1
Nowadays, when she stopped for lunch, Margot sat with her back to her shop’s big front window. That gray monstrosity they’d built across the street had taken away her view of the lake. She ate the last Frito and wadded the empty bag into the plastic wrap that had held her sandwich and dropped both into the little wastebasket under the table. She drank the last of the green tea in her pretty porcelain cup—brewed from a bag, but good nevertheless—and took the cup to the back room for a quick rinse.
There were no customers waiting to buy needlework patterns or embroidery floss or knitting yarn when she got back, so she made a quick tour of her shop, rearranging the heap of knitting yarns in a corner, adjusting a display of the new autumn colors of embroidery floss in a basket on a table, and moving a folding knitting stand an inch closer to the traffic lane. Her shop appeared aimlessly cluttered, but every display was calculated to draw customers ever deeper into the room, with items virtually leaping into their hands.
Satisfied, she sat down again and got out her own knitting. She was working on a bolero jacket she intended to wear to a meeting on Saturday. It was a simple pattern, just knit and purl, but she was doing it in quarter-inch ribbon instead of yarn, so the jacket had an interesting depth and texture. It helped that the ribbon blended every few inches from palest pink to soft mauve to gray lavender.
Margot started knitting, her hands moving with swift economy. The jacket was nearly finished—if it wasn’t finished already. She was slender enough to look good in a bolero jacket, but short enough that she had to try on everything in clothing stores, even things labeled petite, and nearly always had to adjust knitting patterns. After all these years she should be accustomed to it, but every so often she’d miscalculate or just get carried away with the pleasure of the work, and end up with the voluminous kind of garment teenagers wore. Of all the silliness of the current age, the silliest was a young thug who had to hold up his pants with one hand while he held up a shopkeeper with the other.
Margot Berglund was fifty-three, blond, with kind blue eyes and a bustling but comfortable manner. She had always been happiest with something to keep her busy, and so, when simply doing needlework and teaching her friends to do needlework and organizing expeditions to needlework stores and gatherings wasn’t enough, she had opened Crewel World. That was back wh
en crewelwork was the rage; just because it was needlepoint nowadays, she saw no need to change an established name.
The front door went bing and a handsome woman whose dark hair was pulled into a fat bun hustled in.
“Sorry I’m late,” she said breathlessly. “It’s so beautiful out, I found myself walking slowly to enjoy it.”
“I don’t blame you, Shelly.”
Shelly went to hide her purse in the checkout desk’s bottom drawer, looked around with a settling-in sigh, and asked, “What’s first?”
“The window, I’m afraid,” said Margot. The shop was deep but narrow; its front was mostly window, currently ornamented with canvases and patterns featuring brightly colored leaves and one-room schoolhouses.
“What, already? School hasn’t even started yet.”
Margot smiled. “Our customers are always working in advance of a holiday. Half of them are already making Christmas ornaments. So don’t get too elaborate with the window; soon we’ll have to advertise Christmas projects for the procrastinators.”
Shelly picked up the stack of display items Margot had chosen and went to the front window.
“Ooooh, I think I’d like this one for myself,” she said a minute later. Margot looked up to see her holding a counted cross-stitch pattern featuring an enormous pale moon with a silhouetted witch riding her broom across it. In the foreground was a heap of pumpkins out of which rose a windblown scarecrow.
“You’ll have to do it on black,” warned Margot.
“Yeah, well, I’ve been thinking of buying one of those Dazor lamps anyway,” said Shelly. She traced the tatters of the scarecrow with a finger. “Isn’t this just beautiful?”
“Shall I deduct it from your pay?”
“Let me think about it. Maybe I won’t have time.”
Margot laughed; Shelly sounded almost hopeful.
Shelly Donohue was a schoolteacher who’d taken this part-time job to earn a little spending money over the summer; she’d spent most of it on floss and counted cross-stitch patterns. “How many did you order?” she asked.
“Only three; not many people like working on black.”
“Ask me again when there’s only one left.” Shelly turned to find a place in the window to hang the pattern.
The shop fell silent except for classical music coming from a radio tucked under a table near the back. Mozart’s flute concerto, played on a flute for a change.
After a while Margot put down her needles to spread the jacket on the worktable. Was it done? She reached into a basket on the table and among the scissors, marking pencils, knitting needles, and all, found a fabric measuring tape.
“I thought I’d find your sister here when I came in,” Shelly said.
“Yes, I’ve been thinking she might be here today.” Margot stretched the tape down the back of the jacket.
“When did you last hear from her?”
“Day before yesterday. She was in Las Vegas.” She adjusted the jacket to measure the front.
“Did she win?”
Perhaps just one more row, then she would bind off. “Hmm? Oh, I don’t know; she didn’t say anything about gambling.”
“Is she the sort to gamble?”
“A year ago I would have said yes, definitely. But I’m not so sure now.” Margot tucked the tape measure back into the basket and sat down to resume knitting.
Shelly made a concerned face and said, “Oh, Margot; is she coming because she’s broke?” Shelly had a cousin who mooched.
Margot considered that. “No, I think she’s at loose ends right now, and just doesn’t know what she wants to do next.”
Betsy was Margot’s only sibling, her elder by two years. They had been close as children, despite having very different personalities. Margot had been the placid and obedient one; Betsy had been impulsive and adventurous. At eighteen, Betsy had run away to join the navy. A year later she married a sailor in one of those hasty justice-of-the-peace ceremonies, phoning home with the news only afterward. This completed the breach between Betsy and her parents, which was some years healing.
Margot had lived at home until she finished college, then married the boy she’d dated since junior high. The sisters had stayed in touch over the years, but had not seen much of one another. Betsy’s first marriage hadn’t lasted long. She had moved around a lot, and then wrote of belated plans to get a degree. The Christmas after that she announced her marriage to a college professor. Letters were fewer after that, and less exciting. Margot had thought Betsy settled at last.
Then, just a few weeks ago, Betsy had written a long letter. Her college-professor husband had fallen in love with one of his students and was divorcing Betsy. Apparently there had been a pattern of affairs with students, so Betsy was letting him go. The tone of this letter was very unlike Betsy’s normal cheery exuberance. She sounded sad and tired. Margot, worried, wrote back at once and, after an exchange of letters, invited her sister to come for an extended visit. Betsy’s reply: Keep a light on for me, I’ll be there in a week or ten days. That had been just over a week earlier.
“… funny that,” Shelly was saying.
“Funny what?”
Shelly’s voice thinned as she strained to put a clear suction cup with a hook on it way up near the top of the window. “It’s usually the oldest child who’s conservative, more grown-up, the one who helps parent the younger ones.”
“You think so? But there was just the two of us, and I’m only twenty-seven months younger. …” Her needles slowed as she thought that over. Betsy had been the voice of enthusiasm, the “what if” and “wouldn’t it be fun to” child; Margot had been the cautionary, worried “we could get hurt” or “Mama will be mad” child. Each had brought some balance to the tendencies of the other; perhaps that’s why they had been so happy together growing up. Perhaps they could recapture some of that balance.
Her musings were interrupted again by the electric bing of the door opening. An older woman, tall and very slim, came in. She was wearing a beautiful linen suit in a warm gray a shade darker than her hair.
“Good afternoon, Mrs. Lundgren,” said Margot, putting down her knitting.
Mrs. Lundgren loved needlework, but was too busy to do her own. She frequented craft fairs and often came to Margot for bonnets and booties for her granddaughters and needlepoint pictures and pillows for her several homes. Margot rose and went behind the big desk that served as a checkout counter.
“Margot, I’ve been thinking some more about that T‘ang horse,” said Mrs. Lundgren.
“It’s not for sale, Mrs. Lundgren,” said Margot, politely but firmly.
“So you keep telling me.” Mrs. Lundgren got just the right light and rueful tone in her voice; Margot relaxed into a smile. “But as I said, I’ve been thinking. Would it be all right to ask you to make a copy of it for me? It won’t be displayed here, but in our winter home.”
Margot turned and looked at the wall behind her, where a framed needlepoint picture of a midnight-blue horse hung. The animal had his short tail closely braided, his feet well under him and his neck in a high arch, the head somewhat offset, as if he were looking backward, around his shoulder. He had a white saddle, white stockings, and a golden mane combed flat against his neck. The original was a pottery T‘ang Dynasty horse in the Minneapolis art museum.
“Do you know, I should have thought of that,” Margot said, surprised at herself. She frowned. “But I threw my old sketches away, so I’d have to start over, take a piece of graph paper, go to the museum and plot the horse on it, and then needlepoint over that.”
“I understand. And then could the background be a different color?”
“Of course. Do you know what color?”
Mrs. Lundgren reached into her purse and produced a fabric swatch. “Can you match this?” The color was a faded, dusty red. A trip to the silks rack produced a sample nearly the same color.
“But not quite,” said Margot with regret.
“Yes, and not quite won’
t do. How about this pale olive?” Mrs. Lundgren lifted a skein off its hook.
“Are you sure? I mean, it will look very good as a background color, but you don’t want to offend your decor.”
“There is a dark olive in the drapes,” said Mrs. Lundgren.
“Very well.” Margot took the silk from Mrs. Lundgren and the two walked back to her desk.
“How much for the entire project?” asked Mrs. Lundgren.
Margot went to the big desk that was her checkout counter and got out her calculator. “Do you want yours the same size?”
“What is that, fourteen by fourteen?”
“Yes, plus the mat and frame, of course.”
“That’s what I want, even the same narrow wood frame, please.”
Margot began to punch numbers. “I’ll have to charge you one hundred and fifty dollars to paint it,” she began. That was a very fair price; painting a needlepoint canvas was harder than it looked; not only did the picture have to be artistically done, the curves and lines and color changes had to be worked in a pattern of tiny squares. “Then two dollars a square inch for the stitching, that comes to four hundred dollars; and another hundred and fifty for stretching and framing.” Margot punched the total button. “That would be seven hundred dollars.”
“How long will it take?”
“I could have it for you by Christmas.”
“I’m sure that’s a reasonable time allowance, but could it just possibly be sooner than that? We’re spending Thanksgiving at our winter home in Honolulu, and I’d like to take it with me.”
Margot closed her eyes and thought. As the Christmas season began to loom, her finishers wanted more and more lead time. On the other hand, the bolero jacket was all but done and she had nothing else urgent on her own horizon. If she started right away …