Ellen Crosby - The Sauvignon Secret

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When Lucie Montgomery finds the body of prominent wine merchant Paul Noble hanging from a beam in his art studio not far from her Virginia vineyard, she is unwittingly dragged into Noble’s murky past. Once a member of the secretive Mandrake Society, Noble might have aided in a cover-up of the deaths forty years ago of a disabled man and a beautiful young biochemist involved in classified government research.
A seemingly innocent favor for an old friend of her French grandfather sends Lucie to California, where she teams up with Quinn Santori, who walked out of Lucie’s life months earlier. Soon Lucie and Quinn are embroiled in a deadly cat-and-mouse game that takes them from glittering San Francisco to the legendary vineyards of Napa and Sonoma, and back home to Virginia, as they try to discover whether a killer may be seeking vengeance for the long-ago deaths. As Lucie and Quinn struggle to uncover the past, they must also decide whether they have a future together. Blending an intriguing mystery with an absorbing plot, vivid characters, and a richly evoked setting,
should be savored like a glass of fine wine.

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But Brooke had nudged open the door when she mentioned the previous owner, Teddy Fargo, and that was all I needed.

“So what did your predecessor use?” I asked. “Bt?”

“Yes,” she said over her shoulder. “He was into some other stuff, too. Not just for the grapes, but for the gardens, especially the roses.”

“Did any of it work?” Quinn asked. “Don’t tell me he was one of those New Age weirdos who put bull semen in animal horns and planted them under the vines?”

I wanted to poke him for being ornery and changing the subject, but he wasn’t sitting close enough so that I could do it unobtrusively.

“How’d you guess?” she asked. “You bury them at night during a full moon. After the ritual naked dance through the vineyard.”

“You know, I’ve been thinking about trying that,” I said.

Quinn looked incredulous. “You’re not serious?”

Brooke caught my eye and grinned.

He caught on, finally. “All right, very funny. Both of you.”

“You started it,” she said. “You’re just like Daddy. An unbeliever.”

“Bull crap. That stuff’s voodoo, say what you want. You got six acres, Brookie. How much naked dancing and planting under the full moon are you willing to do?”

She took a corner too fast—I think on purpose—and hit the brakes. Quinn and I grabbed on to our seats. “Six acres’ worth. Eventually.”

I needed to reroute the conversation back to Fargo. “I’m interested in what else the former owner used. Even if Mr. Skeptic here isn’t.”

“There used to be a greenhouse up there.” Brooke pointed to one of the hills behind the vines.

“Where?” I asked. “It looks like nothing but woods and scrub.”

“There’s a dirt road that winds around behind those madrones if you follow the contours of the hill,” she said. “It was private, out of sight. I think Ted was into crop modification, but he didn’t want to experiment near the vines. He had a separate garden away from everything else.”

“Experiment?” Quinn said. “What kind of crops?”

“I have no idea.”

“Brookie, there are rumors the guy was growing marijuana here.”

Her eyes flashed. “There’s not a single marijuana plant anywhere on this property, okay?”

“Someone told me he grew black roses,” I said. “Did he ever say anything about that?”

For a long moment she was silent. “I don’t think so,” she said finally. “I’ve seen everything that he left behind.”

“What do you mean ‘that he left behind’?” I said. Allen Cantor said Fargo destroyed anything to do with his drug business.

“What’s with you two?” Brooke stopped the ATV and turned around and glared at me. Then her gaze swung back to Quinn. “Why so many questions about Ted? What’s going on?”

“Do you know him?” I asked.

She drummed her fingers on the steering wheel. “I bought this place from him, didn’t I? What do you think?”

“Where is he now?” Quinn said.

“Is he in trouble?” She folded her arms across her chest and looked stonily at Quinn. “What is this, a drug sting? Are you guys working undercover for DEA?”

We’d pushed too hard. I tried to make a joke out of it. “If we were, we obviously aren’t very good at it, are we? Look how fast you made us.”

“Come on, Brooke.” Quinn touched her arm. “We’re just wondering if you know where he is. He’s gone missing ever since he sold you this place.”

“Why do you care? Does he owe you money?”

Quinn cut a look in my direction. “No, he doesn’t. And it’s kind of a complicated story.”

“Go on.”

“I’m sorry,” I said. “We can’t.”

Brooke stared out at the place where Fargo’s greenhouse had been.

“He told me that if anyone came around asking about him that I’d be smart to keep my mouth shut. I thought he was kidding, but I guess I was wrong.” Her voice wavered and she looked into Quinn’s eyes. “I wasn’t expecting the person who asked to be you.”

Quinn rubbed her shoulder like he was comforting a child. “You know about the drugs, don’t you, kiddo? He was a dealer and he grew the stuff right here.”

“I don’t know. Maybe. He burned some fields and cleaned out the greenhouse and the lab before he left. Then he tore down those places, too.”

I sat up straight. This was the first I’d heard about a laboratory.

“Why did he have a lab? What did he do there?” I asked.

“It’s where he made the pesticides. What did you think? That it was a meth lab?” She sounded irritated.

“God, no.”

“The only drug I heard about was weed,” she said. “One of these days they’re going to legalize it in California. There are people who say alcohol is worse. I’m not going to judge what he did, but I’m no dealer and I don’t grow it.”

“What about the burned field? What was there?” Quinn said.

“Presumably his marijuana crop. He put barbed wire around that field; it wasn’t much land, half an acre, and nailed up KEEP OUT signs. Warned me not to go near it or let my dog or any animal near there,” she said.

“Did he say why?” Quinn asked.

“Told me he was worried about some of the stuff he’d experimented with. He wasn’t sure about the REI. Said it could be a really long time.”

That didn’t make sense.

“But why worry about that if he was using organic pesticides on the vines and gardens?” I said.

Brooke gave an impatient flick of her hand and started the ATV. “Look,” she said, “I don’t need to be cross-examined by either of you. Whatever Ted did or grew or experimented with, it’s all gone now. Legal, illegal, whatever. You can’t see where it was from here and it was on private property. So what the hell? Are we done now?”

There was no point asking her if we could see where the lab and greenhouse had been, or even the field with its barbed-wire fence and KEEP OUT signs. No one spoke as she drove us back to the Porsche.

“I’m sure Mick Dunne will be in touch with you in the next day or two about the wine,” I said.

“Fine.” She’d clammed up.

I caught Quinn’s eye. “I’ll wait in the car.”

I got into the Porsche and heard his voice, low and soothing, talking to Brooke. I didn’t catch what he said, or her murmured replies, but he seemed to be comforting her and she was still upset. Finally, he put a hand on her shoulder again and she nodded.

“Be seein’ you,” he said and kissed her forehead.

He didn’t say anything to me until we were back on the Silverado Trail.

“She’s worked up. We shouldn’t have gone at her like that.”

“I’m sorry. I know she is. But it does sound like Teddy Fargo could have been Theo Graf, don’t you think?”

He shrugged. “No black roses.”

“The guy had a lab where he made pesticides.”

“The guy was into drugs. A lab comes in useful. Saying he used it as a place to make pesticides for his garden could be just to keep people off his back.”

“Then he disappears and tells her not to talk to anyone about him?”

“I repeat. Drugs.” He gave me an ominous look. “What are you going to tell Charles? All he wanted to know was whether there were any black roses and now you know the answer is no.”

“I don’t know what I’m going to tell him,” I said. “This has gone down a whole different road from what we expected.”

“I think it’s over.” Quinn spoke with finality. “Charles was barking up the wrong tree. Let it go. If Fargo, or whoever he is, finds out Brooke talked to us about his little side business and his cash crop, and you get Charles and some of his spook friends involved—”

He left that remark hanging on purpose, but I knew what he meant. Leave it alone. Walk away.

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