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Kari Jacobs Box Set

Page 7

by Harper Harris


  The little guy looked up at me with loving, sleepy eyes and then let out a tiny yawn. He was achingly adorable. I took him out of his box and hugged him to my face. So, this is what they meant by love at first sight!

  Still, I was in literal shock at the fact that Miss Sylvia had just sent me a dog in the mail. I knew the Winters had talked about getting money from the sale of the puppies to further save the plantation.

  I looked around the box a little more and saw a card taped to the side. I carefully took it out and opened it up to read.

  Dear Kari,

  Inside you’ll find one of the puppies from the prize-winning litter of my two Great Danes, Snickerdoodle and Macaroon. I’m sure you remember them. I had Henry ask you to take them for a walk so you could get used to them— and when you returned, I could tell you liked them by the way you looked at them and pet them to easy your anxiety during our talk. The little one I have sent you is a true show dog and definitely worth more than the five thousand dollars I promised for your services. However, it is my hope that you keep him and love him as I much as I do because he will bring great joy into your life. Enjoy him and your life, dear Kari, to the fullest! I do hope to see you— and the little pup— again soon. We will officially invite you to come back for our annual pie baking competition that we hold here at Red Rivers Plantation.

  With regards,

  Your friend, Sylvia Winters

  I put the card down for a second and stared at my new little charge. I really shouldn’t be surprised that Sylvia sent me a puppy as payment. It was so her.

  Even though I had had no intention of getting a dog, my heart couldn’t help but warm at the sight of the little guy. He snuggled himself into my lap, curling up and resting.

  I stroked his soft fur and sighed. I could use the company. Maybe he would make a good companion. Sylvia took the time to get him delivered to me, so I might as well enjoy my new pet. And he seemed pretty docile, especially for just being shipped.

  I looked at the card one last time to see if she had written anything else. The second time around I noticed a P.S. scrawled at the bottom. It gave the puppy’s name, but it was much too long–– more suitable for if he were going to be presented in show.

  I couldn’t be yelling that out every time the two of us were playing. Once I got to the end, there were parentheses surrounding a nickname: Shortbread. Much more manageable.

  “Is your name Shortbread?”

  He had been snuggled with his head down in my lap but when I asked him this, he sat up and licked my face. He obviously liked the name— and me.

  Yeah, I could do this. Take care of a dog and everything.

  I moved him off my lap, so I could stand and hold him to my face. Then we looked at one another for a few seconds.

  “Do you want to come live with me?”

  He just wagged his tail and I took it as a yes.

  In the end it would turn out neither Shortbread, nor I, had any idea what we had signed up for. But then life would be pretty damn boring if you already knew what was going happen.

  THE END

  Succulent Southern Recipe

  Miss Delilah’s Fresh Peach Pie

  Ingredients:

  2c sliced fresh peaches

  1T lemon juice

  1/4c sugar

  3T cornstarch

  2 tsp butter

  ¼ tsp almond extract

  Dash of salt

  1 baked 9-inch pastry shell

  Sprinkle peaches with lemon juice & sugar. Let stand 1 hour. Drain and measure out 1 cup syrup, add cornstarch and blend. Stir over low heat until thick. Remove from heat. Add butter, salt and almond extract.

  Cool on a window sill on a lovely spring day.

  Place peaches in baked shell and pour the cooled mixture over the peach slices. Chill. Pipe with whipped cream; garnish with maraschino cherries.

  Note: If syrup from peaches does not equal 1 cup, add water to make it equal to 1 cup.

  Miss June’s Judgement

  Kari Jacobs, The Lawyer Sleuth Cozy Mystery Series

  Book 2

  Copyright © 2018 Harper Harris.

  All Rights Reserved.

  This book is a work of fiction and any portrayal of any person living or dead is completely coincidental and not intentional. No part of this book may be reproduced without written permission from the author, other than brief excerpts for the purpose of reviews or promotion.

  Prologue

  It had to be that file I peeked at.

  Cassandra.

  I mean, who wouldn’t be curious about a file with a name like that? Okay, no excuses for my behavior there. That file was still on my boss’s computer, which I had no business looking at, let alone prying into. Even if he did seem like a very shady guy who wouldn’t mind throwing me under the bus to save his own skin if he needed to.

  When you look at that way, I did it out of self-defense.

  I wonder what Judge Jacobs, my moderately famous aunt, Octavia Jacobs, would make of that argument. I’ll bet she’d fine me for wasting her time and throw me out of her courtroom with a few choice words.

  I sure do miss her no-nonsense advice. She doesn’t always put it in the nicest way but she’s usually right.

  Why she ducked out of the public eye two years ago, no one knows, but she left behind a legion of fans of her syndicated TV show, still in reruns, not to mention some confused and, frankly, hurt family members. My dad and I tried to get in touch with her for months, but she wouldn’t see us or take our calls. Eventually, we gave up.

  I just know she had something to do with the job I was offered here in Appleton at Winston, Yancey & Philpot, but I haven’t pieced together how or what.

  No one around the office even remembers her. I mean, they remember her from TV, but no one knew she had some connection with the small-town North Carolina firm as far back as the 1980s. I guess she’s out there, looking after me still, but I just wish we could connect again. I always thought we were very close.

  That’s one unresolved issue from my old life and it bothers me like an itch in my britches, as they say down here.

  The other is Cassandra.

  Maybe Aunt Tavey wouldn’t agree but I’m starting to like the self-defense plea.

  Ned Rothko was a weird guy to work for. I don’t think he ever trusted me and I can assure you that went both ways. He never said or did anything around me that might be incriminating or unethical; he just set off my alarm bells.

  And I listen to my alarm bells.

  One night he had left me in his office to finish up some briefs. He left his laptop open on the desk. Now that’s the first out of place item. Mr. Rothko’s a guy who wouldn’t even use the restroom without an itinerary and schedule, but he leaves his laptop, not just in the office, but open.

  It’s almost like he laid a trap for me. But why?

  I’m nosy, I’ll admit that. But if Rothko had seemed on the up and up, I never would’ve peeked. I would’ve closed the screen and walked away. But what if he was into some dirty business that could sweep me up with it?

  Anyway, I peeked. And there it was, glowing with a red ‘hot’ file flag and an intriguing mythical name: Cassandra. I clicked on it.

  And what I saw was…encrypted gibberish spilling across the screen. In other words, nothing. But the very next day my professional life started tanking.

  Rothko and some other partners started piling menial tasks on me, stuff well below my paygrade. My protests were ignored; I fell behind in my work. A couple of weeks later I’m standing before the senior partner, trying not to cry, while she tells me how disappointed she is and hands me a box to clean out my office with.

  Maybe they just didn’t like me–– it’s happened. But another weird thing was after that I couldn’t get a job anywhere in the Bay Area. I was blacklisted, yet no one would tell me why.

  If this job in Appleton hadn’t come through when it did, it would’ve been move-back-in-with-mom-and-dad time.

 
The offer letter named-dropped my aunt, which is why I figured she had something to do with me getting the job. It referred, vaguely, to some ‘association’ the firm had with her in the past. Could be a hoax for all I knew, but the money they paid me to move was real and no one else was doing that.

  Even though I detest loose ends, I tried very hard to leave the past in the past and focus on my immediate future at my new firm in my new town. Appleton was a very pleasant place to be, if a tad hot for this NorCal girl. I had no experience with small towns or the South and every day I discovered some new phrase or custom or learned a fascinating tidbit of local history.

  I was really starting to like it here and I loved my job. Everyone was super nice, and the pace of work was brisk, but a laid-back Southern type of brisk that left time for a life. I was still working on that part, though.

  I had one friend in town, my puppy, Shortbread, who arrived by mail only a few days prior from Miss Sylvia at Red Rivers. Payment for services rendered, I suppose you could say, but that does not encompass the love and utter co-dependence we immediately had with each other. He’s honestly one the most thoughtful gifts I’ve ever received.

  Shortbread to me really symbolized a break from my old life. Everything was new to him and everything new excited him. So, he was always excited. That’s how I wanted to be.

  I’d never forget my aunt, of course, always wondering why she cut herself off, when she seemed to take a special interest in me as a kid and guided me to get into the practice of law. And I’d always want to know who conspired to drive me out of San Francisco and why, or if I just overthink things to the point of paranoia.

  Above all, I just wanted to enjoy life again, fill the free time I would have with new friends and new experiences. It appeared I’d shown up in exactly the right place.

  Chapter One

  July 9th (one week after moving to Appleton, NC)

  I was looking for a spot to display the first edition Black’s Law Dictionary my Aunt Tavey had given me when I graduated from law school. I’d never actually used the book, nor would I ever I. In fact, I was afraid it would turn to dust every time I touched it and since it was last current in 1891, it was unlikely to help me professionally.

  But as a motivating symbol, as intended by my aunt, it meant everything to me. She told me that, though the book itself may be obsolete, the law it contained was a living thing that had evolved in the intervening century. My career as a lawyer would further that evolution in some great or small way. I had always gone for great.

  Now, I habitually displayed the first edition in a prominent place in my work area. I’d glance at it whenever I needed a shot of optimism, imagining my contribution to this strange beast, The Law, that had threaded its way through all of recorded human history.

  I’d been lost in such thoughts, when I heard a nearly silent knock and the not yet familiar creak of my office door opening. I turned around to see Tammy, the associate attorneys’ secretary, walking in with a promising looking folder. It had that manila-sheen that I’d been waiting to see. I’d been in Appleton for a week, prepping myself for this very moment.

  “Kari! I have something extra excitin’ for you. That is, if you’re ready for your first case?” Tammy drawled and wiggled her shoulders, turning the moment sillier than I’d have hoped. The two of us hadn’t had much time to talk, but her shiny personality was hard to miss.

  I carefully placed Black’s Law on one of the few empty shelves left and accepted the assignment Tammy had brought me.

  “I am so ready, Tammy, thank you.” I took the folder with a smile.

  There was nothing in it because it was meant to be filled with notes and documents on the client who was about to be assigned to me. My first week here, I watched a lot of the goings-on in the office. We were a small law firm, so cases weren’t exactly piling up. But nevertheless, I had made sure to observe as much as possible.

  We mainly dealt with legal issues for the city but I wasn’t a part of that side of the firm. During my interview, it was made clear that I would primarily be dealing with the locals and their everyday legal issues.

  That was fine by me, since I had to start somewhere. I’d make my way as I always did with perseverance and hard work. Whoever this client was, I would give them my all.

  A quick glace around my office, revealed the clutter I had let pile up over the week. I had been introduced to the town’s lazy pace and adopted it perhaps too earnestly. Culturally speaking, Appleton is about as far from the Bay Area as you can get and still be in America. And so far, I was loving it way more than I’d anticipated.

  Accordingly, I’d been taking my time moving in. The office was bigger than what most associates at my level would get––one of the perks of small-town employment––but that also meant more space to fill. I was close to being finished with unpacking.

  It wasn’t a complete mess: a box of books remained, and piles of files hid about half of the deep brown oak of my desktop. I’d gotten everything off the floor but it wasn’t yet the impeccably appointed office of a professional and stately lawyer.

  I asked Tammy, “Could you give me five minutes before sending the client in? I just want to…”

  Instead of finishing the sentence, I just made an overarching gesture that encompassed the untidiness.

  Tammy giggled and gave me an enthusiastic, “Sure thing, Kari! Five minutes!” before going back out to the waiting room.

  A week had allowed me to get somewhat used to Tammy’s unhurried Carolina inflection contrasted with her out of control perkiness. Problem was, I couldn’t read what Tammy really felt. Her demeanor was always the same–– bright and chummy–– but always the same. I noticed this a lot in people since moving to the South.

  So, my first case at my new law firm. It was, in fact, my first case as the lead lawyer, ever. I’d had the opportunity to sit in on some big cases but getting to be on point was something new. I was eager to jump right on it, but even more so to get it right. There was a lot riding on this and I was determined to do better than my best.

  Five minutes later, like five minutes exactly, Tammy returned, but this time she had a pleasant-looking lady following her.

  Luckily, I had estimated the time I needed and arranged the office clutter into the façade of a busy professional rather than the disorganized one who actually worked here. Tammy must’ve timed her return to the second. So, she takes things quite literally, I thought. Noted.

  I turned my attention to my new client. Some of her pleasantness emanated from the bright white summer dress she had on. White has a way of making people seem approachable, the way the light bounces off it, but she had a glowing smile as well. A big ol’ smile on a petite Southern woman.

  She put me at ease almost immediately. I wasn’t used to feeling so comfortable with someone so quickly. I could be a bit self-protective, perhaps overly so. Years living among Bay Area lawyers had taught me that.

  I offered my hand. “Hi, I’m Kari Jacobs. It’s nice to meet you.”

  Tammy excused herself and I thanked her before turning back to my client. The woman shook my hand.

  “I’m Ashley Butler,” she said in a thick drawl that put Tammy’s to shame. “I heard we had a new advocate in town and I couldn’t wait to get myself over here to say hi. It’s so nice to finally meet you even if it’s under less than desirable circumstances.”

  These less than desirable circumstances, presumably, were why she was in my office. People didn’t just cut to the chase down here. It took a little getting used to for a city-girl like me, but I found these little customs both fascinating and attractive.

  We both took a seat and I smiled, wanting to maintain a warm atmosphere. I put the hair that escaped from my bun behind my ear. I wasn’t quite used to the smallness of Appleton and the idea that my arrival was news around town had me feeling suddenly bashful. But, composure maintained, I began the initial interview.

  “So, Ms. Butler, what can I––”

 
“Please, call me Ashley. We must be about the same age and I feel like it would be kind of weird to be so, you know, formal. Likewise, I’ll call you by your Christian name, if that’s okay with you, Kari.”

  Nice. This case and this client were already proving to be a good beginning.

  Back home in San Francisco, I interned at a big, prestigious law firm and there was a characteristic brusqueness that accompanied many interactions, be it with a client or a partner. Maybe it was because they all had big money, or just the go-go-go urban environment. On the whole, the sunnier disposition of the people down South had been refreshing.

  “Certainly, Ashley, I don’t mind dropping the formalities. So, what brings you in today?”

  She settled in her seat and began, “Well, I want to file a claim or lawsuit or something against my neighbor, Miss June Carter Clawson.” She extra-emphasized the name, her irritation poking through.

  “Okay, what sort of trouble is this woman giving you?”

  “Miss June has been disputing the property line ever since I moved in, which was over two years ago. She’s in her seventies and you’d think she’d be spending her golden years trying to have some fun. But no. Miss June is hell bent on taking over almost half of my lawn! Just annexing it as part of her land.”

  I could see Ashley getting more and more worked up, so I offered her some water. Disputes between neighbors could get ugly, sometimes really ugly, and this one seemed no different.

  While I poured, she took out some papers from her tote, placing them on the table. Her hands moved over them as if trying to organize, but it was only a few sheets, so it seemed to be more of a way to occupy time. Giving her the glass, I turned my head to see what she had laid before me.

 

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