Cream. I like the sign out at the junction with that huge chocolate ice cream cone painted on it. You can see it a mile away, and by the time you get to it, your mouth is watering. You painted the sign, didnât you, Amabel?â
âI sure did. And youâre right. People tell us they see that sign and by the time they get to the junction their car turns itself toward The Cove. Itâs Helen Keatonâs recipe, handed down from her granny. The ice cream shop used to be the chapel in the front of Ralph Keatonâs mortuary. We all decided that since we have Reverend Vorheesâs church, we didnât need Ralphâs little chapel too.â She paused, looking into a memory, and smiled. âIn the beginning we stored the ice cream in caskets packed full of ice. It took every freezer in every refrigerator in this town to make that much ice.â
âI canât wait to try it. Goodness, I remember when the town wasnât much of anythingâback when I came here that one time. Do you remember? I was just a little kid.â
âI remember. You were adorable.â
Sally smiled, a very small smile, but it was a beginning. She shook her head, saying, âI remember this place used to be so ramshackle and down at the heelsâno paint on any of the houses, boards hanging off some of the buildings. And there were potholes in the street as deep as I was tall. But now the town looks wonderful, so charming and clean and pristine.â
âWell, youâre right. Weâve had lots of good changes. We all put our heads together, and thatâs when Helen Keaton spoke up about her grannyâs ice cream recipe. That Fourth of Julyâgoodness, it will be four years this Julyâwas when we opened the Worldâs Greatest Ice Cream Shop. Iâll never forget how the men all pooh-poohed the idea, said it wouldnât amount to anything. Well, we sure showed them.â
âIâd say so. If the Worldâs Greatest Ice Cream Shop is the reason the townâs so beautiful now, maybe Helen Keaton should run for president.â
âMaybe so. Would you like a ham sandwich, baby?â
A ham sandwich, Sally thought. âWith mayonnaise? Real mayonnaise, not the fat-free stuff?â
âReal mayonnaise.â
âWhite bread and not fourteen-vitamin seven-grain whole wheat?â
âCheap white bread.â
âThat sounds wonderful, Amabel. Youâre sure no one will recognize me?â
âNot a soul.â
They watched a small, very grainy black-and-white TV while Sally ate her sandwich. Within five minutes, the story was on the national news broadcast.
âFormer Naval Commander Amory Davidson St. John was buried today at Arlington National Cemetery. His widow, Noelle St. John, was accompanied by her son-in-law, Scott Brainerd, a lawyer who had worked closely with Amory St. John, the senior legal counsel for TransCon International. Her daughter, Susan St. John Brainerd, was not present.
âWe go now to Police Commissioner Howard Duzman, who is working closely with the FBI on this high-profile investigation.â
Amabel didnât know much of anything about Scott Brainerd. She had never met him, had never spoken to him until she had called Noelle and he answered the phone, identified himself, and asked who she was. And sheâd told him. Why not? Sheâd asked him to have Noelle call her back. But Noelle hadnât called herânot that Amabel had expected her to. If Noelleâs life depended on it, well, that would be different. She would be on the phone like a shot. But she hadnât called her this time. Amabel wondered if Noelle would realize that Sally could be here. Would that make her call? She didnât know. Actually, now it didnât matter.
She reached out her hand and covered her nieceâs thin fingers with hers. She saw where there had once been a ring, but it was gone now, leaving just a pale white mark in
Christine Zolendz, Frankie Sutton, Okaycreations