“No money involved,” I said. “Just the thrill of winning.”
“Big thrill,” Rob said, through a mouthful of scrambled eggs.
“And a trophy,” Mother added. “Quite possibly a lovely engraved Waterford bowl. That’s what I suggested.” Yes, that sounded like Mother’s kind of suggestion. She was a confirmed human magpie, easily seduced by anything that glittered, and a sucker for anything that had ever come out of the Waterford factory.
“Well, if the winning rose is bred by the exhibitor, there’s always a remote possibility that a commercial rose company might want to buy it,” Dad said. “Of course, that would only happen if it were a significant advance toward the creation of a truly black rose. All the big commercial breeders have their own black rose breeding programs.”
“And ridiculous programs to begin with,” put in my grandfather. “A genuinely black rose is a scientific impossibility.”
“Oh, I hope not,” put in my cousin Rose Noire, née Rosemary Keenan, to those who had known her before she’d become a purveyor of all-natural cosmetics and perfumes and adopted a name to match. “I do hope one day to greet one of my namesakes!”
She probably would. Talking to plants wasn’t even unusual in my family. Although Rose Noire was one of the few who expected the plants to answer.
“Useless things, roses,” my grandfather said. “Had all the vitality bred out of them, so the poor things can barely survive without massive applications of chemicals all the time. Environmentally unsound.” A typical reaction from my grandfather, Dr. Montgomery Blake, the world famous zoologist and environmental activist. Of course, he could merely be vexed that Dad’s rose growing was preventing him from working full-time on the Blake Foundation’s latest animal welfare campaigns, whatever they were.
“Getting back to Matilda and Deirdre—” I said.
“Adelaide,” Dad corrected.
“Sorry,” I said. “It’s no wonder I didn’t recognize the names— last time I got an update on your rose-breeding program, you were just referring to them by numbers.”
“But that’s so dehumanizing!” Rose Noire exclaimed.
“Don’t you mean deflowering?” Rob asked, with a snigger.
“How can you expect a living creature to thrive when all it has is a number, not a name?” Rose Noire went on.
“That’s why we decided to name them,” Mother said.
“Unofficially, of course,” Dad added. “I haven’t yet registered them with the ARS. Officially, Matilda is L2005-0013.”
“But we’re going to name them all after family members,” Mother said.
“No shortage of names there,” Dr. Blake muttered. He was still getting used to the fact that when he claimed Dad as his long-lost son, he’d found himself allied by marriage with Mother’s family, the Hollingsworths, whose numbers exceeded the population of some small countries.
“I hope you stick to dead relatives,” Michael said, as he emerged from the kitchen with a pot of coffee. “Otherwise we’ll have no end of confusion. And imagine if it got around the county that Rose Noire was suffering from black spot disease, or that Rob had thrips.”
“What are thrips?” Rob asked, looking alarmed.
“Getting back to Matilda and Adelaide,” I repeated, “what happened to them, and what makes you think it was foul play?”
“They were eaten,” Dad said. “Undoubtedly by marauding deer. And I found this in some bushes nearby.”
He held up a small brown glass bottle with a neatly printed label proclaiming that it contained “100 percent Doe Urine.”
“James!” Mother said. “At the breakfast table?”
“Someone obviously sprinkled this near Matilda,” Dad said. He tried to pocket the bottle discreetly, out of deference to Mother’s sensibilities, but Dr. Blake held out his hand for it. “In fact, they probably sprinkled the stuff in a path leading from the woods straight to Matilda.”
“Yuck,” Rob said, making a face. “If I were a deer, I’d steer clear of roses some other deer had already peed on.”
“But you’re not a deer,” my grandfather said. “To a deer, especially a male, doe urine would be an irresistible lure. Hunters have used deer urine for centuries to cover up their human scent and attract deer to their hunting areas. It’s particularly effective if the urine is—”
“Dr. Blake!” Mother exclaimed. I wasn’t sure whether she was objecting to his words or to the fact that he had opened the bottle and was sniffing it curiously.