Paper-Thin Alibi

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Paper-Thin Alibi Page 24

by Hughes, Mary Ellen


  Russ nodded, grinning.

  “So,” she said to her hovering craft shop friends, “there was a major team effort going on here, huh?”

  “The lieutenant got us here lickety-split,” Loralee said. “As soon as Charlie contacted the police.”

  “Charlie!” Jo cried. “Where’s Charlie?”

  “Over here, Aunt Jo.” Charlie’s voice came from near the window, and Jo looked to see a hand waving behind a couple of tall patrolmen. They parted to let Charlie through, and Jo hurried over to give him a big hug.

  “You’re my hero, Charlie!” she said. “If it weren’t for you who knows what might have happened.”

  Charlie shrugged and grinned modestly. “It was just lucky Mrs. Chatsky wanted another vase, so that I had to call you.”

  “But you understood what I was trying to tell you, Charlie. I was afraid you might think I had lost my mind.”

  “You did throw me for a bit, but I could tell from your voice that you were really serious. I mean,” he said, grinning, “I know you don’t drink much, Aunt Jo. I also knew from the background noise that you were on the road. Mentioning that photo of the tobacco barn was all I needed to figure out where you were headed.”

  “Many people would have needed a lot more,” Ina Mae said, patting Charlie on the shoulder.

  “We’ll have to sign this boy up for the department,” an officer Jo didn’t recognize said, slapping Charlie on the back.

  “Let’s let him get his driver’s license first,” Dan quipped from nearby, bringing general laughter.

  Jo hated to spoil the mood, but there was an important thing she needed to know. “How is Kevin Boyer? Russ, you told Meg he was doing worse.”

  “That was just part of the pressure I tried to put on her. Actually, he’s coming around, last I heard.”

  “They discovered what she had given him?”

  “As soon as we knew it was Meg you were with—a couple of on-the-ball nurses gave us that information—we sent a search team to her house. They found quite a cocktail of ground-up prescription drugs and who knows what else that she’d mixed together, and rushed it to the lab for analysis. Kevin’s been getting the treatment he needs ever since.”

  “Thank God.”

  “They also found some other interesting items,” Carrie said, her eyebrows raised.

  “What do you mean?”

  “Copies of letters she’d printed out and was apparently sending all over town.”

  “Letters?”

  “Anonymous letters that said much more than the one she sent you. They accused you of poisoning Linda Weeks and getting away with it, and asked if anyone wanted a murderer living in their town.”

  “So of course people were looking at me as though I had two heads.”

  “We never got one of those,” Javonne said. “She must have known better than to send them to the people who really know you.”

  “Carrie, you said the letters were one of the things that they found at Meg’s house. What else was there?”

  Russ answered. “Photos of Patrick Weeks, lots of them, taken recently and when he obviously wasn’t aware of it.”

  Jo nodded, not too surprised. “Meg told me she had gone to his shop. She didn’t mention having taken her camera. Pat didn’t recognize her, I know, and thought I had sent her to spy on him.”

  “The photos clued us in on his connection to her. That and a scrapbook full of thoughts she had written down about what their life together was going to be like. Weeks was floored to hear about it. I doubt he’d even thought about her for years. Once it sunk in what she’d done and what was happening at the barn, he was more than willing to help us.”

  “She must have been one sick person to do everything she did,” Dulcie said.

  “I can confirm that,” Jo said. “She had reason to be angry with Linda, certainly, but a healthy person would have been able to deal with it long ago and move on. She nursed her grudge against Linda for years and convinced herself that her one chance at happiness lay with the man Linda had stolen from her. She really had stepped a long way from reality.”

  “How sad that she never got any kind of help,” Loralee said. “So much misery, including her own, might have been avoided.”

  “People with problems of that sort,” a nearby nurse said, “don’t always realize they need help. They can twist things around so gradually that what starts as a defensive alibi becomes rationalization, then finally—to them—the absolute truth. And they often manage to put up a good front of normalcy so that others don’t see what’s churning inside them. Until, that is, something happens to break through that thin covering.”

  “Running into Linda started the break for Meg,” Dulcie said.

  “What will happen to her now?” Loralee asked.

  Everyone turned to Russ, who said, “She’ll be charged, of course, and have to face those charges. It’ll be up to the courts to decide what her state of mind was at the time of her crimes. The best scenario—for her—would be commitment to a mental hospital. This is still incarceration, but she would receive psychiatric treatment.”

  “As long as she’s unable to hurt anyone else,” Ina Mae said.

  “Amen,” several others in the crowd agreed.

  The commanding voice of a nurse suddenly rose above the others. “Everyone,” she said, “I’m going to have to ask you all to leave, now. Lieutenant Morgan is still recovering from surgery, remember, and needs to get some rest.”

  General murmurs of acknowledgment sounded, and final congratulations and good-nights were called out as people began to shuffle out.

  “Harry will be pleased as punch,” Javonne said to Jo on her way out, “to know that photo of his made such a difference. Someone had to stay with the boys, or he’d be here too.”

  “Tell Harry,” Jo said, “that I owe him a terrific dinner out. Maybe at his cousin Delroy’s restaurant.”

  “Oh,” Javonne said, “and remember Harry’s Uncle Ralph who lives not too far from that barn? Harry called him once he got the word about what was going on, and Uncle Ralph went out to the road to meet the police and make sure they found the way to it.”

  Jo grinned. “Bring Uncle Ralph to the dinner too! And Aunt Eulie. Heck, bring the whole darn family.”

  “Good night, Jo,” Loralee said, waving as she and Dulcie were carried along by the crowd toward the door. “Get a good rest yourself, now.”

  “She’ll need it,” Ina Mae said, “to handle all the customers that will be flowing back to the store, full of apologies, once word of all this gets out.”

  “Knowing the Abbotsville grapevine,” Jo said, grinning, “it’s already out and gone around twice.”

  “Jo, can we drive you home?” Carrie asked as she and Dan waited for the bottleneck at the doorway to thin.

  “I’ll see she has an escort home,” Russ said, gripping the hand Jo had slipped into his more firmly.

  “We can drop you off, no trouble, Aunt Jo,” Charlie piped up. “Dad, you have to swing over that way anyway to get Amanda, and—” Charlie broke off as Dan clapped him on the back and pushed him soundly toward the door.

  “ ’Night, you two,” Dan said.

  “Good night,” Russ said, grinning.

  The nurse who had started the whole exodus saw the last of the crowd out, then pulled the door behind herself, saying to Jo and Russ, “I’ll be back with your medication, Lieutenant, but it may be a while. Things are pretty busy on the floor tonight, so I could be a very long time.”

  She pulled the door shut with a smile, and Jo felt Russ squeeze her hand. She turned and saw him gazing at her warmly. She smiled, swallowing the lump that had formed in her throat, aware they had both been equally relieved to find each other unharmed.

  Suddenly all the worries Jo had struggled with in the past seemed miniscule. What mattered most was how much she and Russ cared for each other, feelings that had only deepened as old baggage and secrets were swept away and false barriers broken down.


  Jo listened as the voices of the last of the banished visitors faded away into elevators and stairwells, then leaned toward this man who was so wonderful, so intelligent and understanding.

  “Now,” she asked softly, thinking of that earlier embrace that had been cut much too short, “where were we?”

  Decorated Gift Box

  See decorated box samples on the author’s website

  www.maryellenhughes.com.

  MATERIALS

  Any size paper board gift box, round, square, or oblong

  Scrapbooking paper in two coordinating colors

  Scrapbooking stickers

  Decoupage glue

  Sponge brush

  Craft knife or scissors

  Place upper lid section of box on scrapbooking paper and measure a single piece of paper to cover top, outer sides, and inner sides, extending about half an inch on inside flat portion of lid. Mark with a pencil and cut.

  Spread decoupage glue with a sponge brush over those surfaces. Carefully fit the cut paper over lid, pressing and smoothing into place, overlapping the edge and a small amount of the flat, inner lid. Let dry.

  Cut contrasting paper for flat, inside section of lid. Brush decoupage glue on that area and press paper in place, covering the edges of the first paper. Let dry.

  Measure and cut one piece of paper to cover outer sides of the lower half of your box, the inner sides, and a half inch of the flat, inner bottom. Brush those sections of the box with decoupage glue and press paper into place. Let dry.

  Cut contrasting paper for the inside bottom of the box and glue into place, overlapping the edge of the paper already glued in place.

  Choose a scrapbooking sticker to glue onto the inside of your gift box lid. (Some come with tiny batteries to light up!) Whoever opens your beautiful box will get a nice surprise!

  Designed by Karlene Hicks, Annapolis, Maryland

  Paper-Craft Tips

  To add a spectacular effect to your tissue paper flowers, dip the petal edges in white glue, then in glitter.

  Add texture and interest to your picture collage with objects such as beads, plant materials, or whatever strikes your fancy.

  If your collage arrangement is elaborate, lay it out before gluing until you’re satisfied, then snap a picture before disassembling.

  Jo started off her group with simple origami, using regular origami paper. Heavier weight papers can be used for wet folding, and foil-backed paper is recommended for more complex projects. You might also want to try “moneygami,” origami using paper money!

  Loralee’s Pasta Salad with Shrimp and Snow Peas

  1½ pounds unpeeled, medium-size fresh shrimp

  16-ounce package linguine

  6-ounce package frozen snow peas, thawed and drained

  6 green onions, chopped

  4 medium tomatoes, peeled, chopped, and drained

  DRESSING

  ¾ cup olive oil

  ¼ cup chopped fresh parsley

  ⅓ cup red wine vinegar

  1 teaspoon dried whole oregano

  1½ teaspoons dried whole basil

  ½ teaspoon garlic salt

  ½ teaspoon coarsely ground black pepper

  Cook shrimp in boiling water for 3 to 5 minutes. Drain well and rinse with cold water. Chill. Peel and devein.

  Cook linguine according to package directions and drain. Rinse with cold water.

  Combine shrimp, linguine, and vegetables.

  Mix dressing ingredients together in a small jar, cover, and shake well, then pour over shrimp mixture, tossing gently.

  Cover and chill at least 2 hours.

  Serves 10.

  About the Author

  Mary Ellen Hughes is the author of Wreath of Deception and String of Lies, the first two Craft Corner Mysteries, as well as two other mystery novels and several short stories. A member of Mystery Writers of America and the Chesapeake Chapter of Sisters in Crime, she has long been fascinated with both mysteries and crafts and enjoys being able to combine them. A native Milwaukeean, she presently lives in Maryland with her husband, Terry. You can visit her website at www.maryellenhughes.com.

 

 

 


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