She unlocked the front door, then relocked it behind her, switching on one low light that allowed her to see most of the store, although dimly. She then strolled the aisles, thinking over the highs and lows of the day, but mostly the highs: the woman who claimed she belonged to a knitting club and would bring her entire group to see Jo’s beautiful yarns. Jo credited Carrie with doing a wonderful job overseeing that department.
Then there was the man who asked Jo to come see him about setting up a craft show at the country club in October. Its purpose would be to draw new members to the club, but it would be great exposure for Jo’s Craft Corner as well.
When she came to the needlework kits, Jo checked on her cash bag. She wondered if she should take it home with her, but then noticed that supplies had thinned in the nearby stamping section, many of the papers apparently having sold well. She might as well double-check that they had plenty in stock, she decided, and she continued on to the back room, bending down on the way to pick up and replace a fallen wreath form. She flicked on the storeroom light and paused, considering where the stamping papers would be. Her gaze wandered the shelves until something caught her eye near the end of one of the rows, something colorful on the floor. Gradually, it registered that what was on the floor was not store stock, and she focused more carefully. It was something, no, it was two somethings. Eighteen inches high, fuzzy, and with swirling reds, golds, and greens. Cuddles’s big floppy shoes? Had he left his costume behind?
Jo had no memory of Cuddles/Kyle actually leaving the store once he had been paid. She did remember his request to change here in the back. An ominous feeling took root in the pit of her stomach, and Jo moved closer to the odd shoes apparently standing there on their own. Why would he just drop his costume and leave it? Would he be that careless of something that could be quite costly to replace? Jo came to the end of the shelf and the answer to all her questions. Her hands flew up to her mouth, stifling a cry.
Cuddles had not left his costume on the floor. In fact, Cuddles had not left his costume at all, but still wore it as he lay there, huge shoes pointing to the ceiling, baggy pants spread wide on the floor, and a new, dark red stain added to the colors in his shirt.
Cuddles, despite the wide grin still painted on his face, would smile no more. Cuddles was dead.
Chapter 3
Red lights flashed and radios crackled as strangers trampled in and out of her store, most brushing past Jo as if she were invisible. Hovering just outside the front door, Jo clutched her arms tightly to keep from shivering, the cool night air not as much a factor as the shock over what she had recently discovered.
Cuddles the clown really was dead. Denial had leapt up protectively at first, trying to convince Jo that the clown was simply sleeping, passed out, or, least likely, joking. But the relentless sight of the blood on his chest, plus one awful touch of Cuddles’s lifeless, cold hand convinced her otherwise. Jo had stumbled backward and staggered to the front of the store where she’d left her pocketbook, fumbled for her cell phone, and called 9-1-1. Afterward she had waited there, numbly, until finally hearing sirens. Then mass confusion had taken over. Now she watched helplessly through the window, while others took command of her store.
As a parade of people tramped in and out of the back room, doing God knows what to the poor dead clown back there, a tall man of about forty arrived whom she overheard identified as Lieutenant Morgan. He quickly disappeared into that room himself.
Someone put a paper cup of coffee in her hand and she thanked him, holding the cup but ignoring its contents. More coming and going, and Jo’s coffee cooled. Finally, she set the cup down on the sidewalk and grasped her arms tightly once more.
“Jo! Jo, are you all right?”
Jo turned to see Carrie running down the sidewalk with Dan close behind her. Both soon engulfed her in a hug, making her aware of just how badly she needed one.
“Bonnie Smithers called,” Carrie explained. “She said police cars were all over the place here. We were scared to death something had happened to you.”
“It’s Cuddles. The clown. He’s back there, dead.”
Carrie looked toward the storeroom wide-eyed. “My God! And you found him?”
Jo nodded.
Dan’s mouth pressed grimly into a straight line. “What happened?”
Jo shook her head. “I don’t know. There was blood. I don’t know if he fell on something or what.”
“Oh, Lord.” A strange look passed over Carrie’s face.
“What? What are you thinking?” Jo asked.
“Nothing. I mean, oh, I don’t know. It’s probably terrible to think of at this time. But I just wondered if your insurance covers something like that? Things like accidental death on your property?”
Jo stared at Carrie, not getting it at first. Then she got it. “Oh, Lord,” she echoed. “You mean, maybe I could be sued?”
Carrie nodded.
“I have no idea if that’s covered. But what could have happened there that would be my fault? I keep paper and paints back there, not spears jutting upward, for heaven’s sake, waiting for the unsuspecting to fall onto.”
“You said there was blood. Did you see what might have caused it?”
“No. But I didn’t hang around too long looking.”
A uniformed officer came up to them. “Mrs. McAllister? Lieutenant Morgan wants to talk to you.”
Carrie and Dan started forward with her but were stopped by the officer. “Just Mrs. McAllister for now.”
“We’ll be right here,” they said to her, and Jo nodded gratefully. She still felt shaky, and now began to worry about exactly what had happened to the hapless clown in her storage room. The officer led her to an alcove of the store, near the yarns. The lieutenant stood there, appearing, oddly, to be in search of the perfect set of knitting needles for his next project. He turned at her approach and held out his hand.
“Mrs. McAllister? Russ Morgan.” He shook her hand briskly, then looked down at his notebook. “This is your store?”
“Yes. Today was my grand opening.”
“And you hired this man, Kyle Sandborn, to work for you?”
“For five hours. He was handing out free gifts and such for us, out front.”
“How long have you known him?”
“About five hours.”
Lieutenant Morgan’s eyebrows arched upward.
“I never saw him before he showed up today at eleven. I hired him through the Stewart Entertainment Agency in Baltimore.”
“He lives and works right here in Abbotsville. You never saw him before?”
“I’m new here, Lieutenant. I know very few people so far. No, I never saw him before, although I understand he does some acting at the Abbotsville Playhouse.”
“You knew that.”
“Yes, he mentioned it as I was writing his check.” Why was she starting to feel very uncomfortable? Was it this man’s dark eyes, boring into her as if trying to read her mind? Jo slipped her hands into her pockets, then pulled them out, realizing as she did so that she was fidgeting.
“He was here until the end of the day?”
“No, just until four.”
“What did he do after that?”
“I thought he left. I was very busy around that time. He took his check and I assumed he left soon after.”
“You never noticed if a man in white face paint and fuzzy red hair walked out your front door?”
“No, I didn’t.” Jo’s discomfort flared into anger. What was he implying? “He told me he wanted to change in the back. If he had, he would have walked out looking like anyone else. I never noticed that he hadn’t left.”
“And when was the last time you went into your storeroom?”
“Besides when I found him dead?”
“Yes.” Lieutenant Morgan stared hard at her. Jo glared back just as hard, ready to spit out her answer, then realized she didn’t have one.
“I don’t know,” she admitted. “I went in this morning,
before we opened up. I’m sure I ran in a few times during the day, but I can’t remember just now when the last time was.”
“You closed up when?”
“At six.”
“You didn’t go into the back room at that time?”
“No. Carrie—my coworker, Carrie Brenner—and her husband, Dan, whisked me away for dinner. It was an exhausting day. Lieutenant, tell me, please. What happened to Cudd—, I mean, to Kyle? What killed him?”
The lieutenant’s eyes bored into her once more, but Jo stood her ground, waiting. It was a reasonable question, she felt. She had every right to know before someone—Kyle Sandborn’s mother? or wife?—slapped her with a million-dollar lawsuit for wrongful death. The lieutenant didn’t seem to see it that way, however.
“We’re looking into that,” he said. “Now, this Carrie Brenner. Is she here?”
Jo sighed. This wasn’t going to be easy.
Jo flopped into her bed after what felt like days since she’d left it. She had been right after all, she thought as she punched up her pillow, although being right wasn’t offering any satisfaction. Never get too optimistic, no matter how great things seem to be going. It only sets you up for the fall. Expect the worst, and maybe it won’t be such a shock when it slams you in the face.
Except, how in the world could she have even halfway expected what slammed her today?
A less-than-grand opening—that she had been prepared for. Things going wrong, nobody showing up—those she knew were all possibilities. Even catastrophes like floods or fire—forget famine, Carrie would always have food around. But natural catastrophes one’s mind could deal with. They happened. Finding dead bodies in one’s back room, however, didn’t happen, or wasn’t supposed to.
Why, oh why, had she ever hired that man in the first place? He was a headache for her while he was alive, and now dead—Jo caught herself. What was she thinking! This man, Kyle Sandborn, was dead. Whether she’d liked him or not, whether he’d been a major pain the whole day or not wasn’t important anymore. The guy was dead! After what he’d probably expected to be a normal, boring, safe job, he was dead!
Yes, her grand business venture, her new life start had probably gone down the tubes. But shouldn’t she still put it in perspective?
Jo tried. She tried to think of Kyle Sandborn as a man deserving her sympathy, but his whining, grinding voice kept slipping through, grating at her. She tried reminding herself that he was dead, whereas she was alive and well. But thoughts of the horrendous bills she still had to pay off, the inventory that would sit unsold in her stockroom, the workshop registrations that would be cancelled faster than you could stamp the words NO WAY! crowded everything else out.
Who would ever want to step into her shop again after what had happened? Her cozy Craft Corner had turned into a shop of horrors that would be shunned by all the decent, safety-conscious people of Abbotsville. She would never ring up a sale again.
Poor Kyle Sandborn, she tried to think, but it kept detouring into what am I going to do now!
Chapter 4
Jo stood outside her Craft Corner, watching mournfully as the crime-scene cleanup crew, gear in hand, invaded her store. The police had informed her that this was a necessary step, as they turned the store back over to her after having finished gathering their evidence.
“But I’m perfectly capable of washing things up,” she had protested, thinking of the expense.
“No, ma’am. I’m afraid the blood from the scene is a biohazard, and this is a place open to the public. It’s required.” The officer gave her the names of a couple of firms in the area and left, leaving Jo to worry where she would find the money for it.
Dan came to the rescue with his advice to check with her insurance. “This kind of thing is probably covered, though nobody ever expects to have to use it.”
He had been right—on both counts. Thankfully, her insurance would pay, and Jo arranged to have a crew come out the next day. She had envisioned, though, the usual housekeeping or janitorial-type workers, quietly doing their job with mops and buckets and such. What arrived was a huge van—bright yellow—which the driver parked smack dab in front of the store. The crew that emerged from the van suited themselves up in spacemanlike outfits complete with breathing apparatus, and unloaded high-tech-looking equipment, which they dragged into her store.
Crowds quickly gathered, of course, eyes wide with curiosity, heads together exchanging whispers and pointing fingers, all of which caused Jo to groan. This was not the way she ever wanted to draw a crowd. Her cozy Craft Corner, she feared, was doomed to be forever known as the house of death.
Hold on, she instantly chided herself, don’t be so quick to give up. Yes, things had come to a bad state, but shouldn’t she be looking at this cleanup as a turnaround? She had been a take-charge person in the past. Wasn’t this an opportunity to put things back on track?
“Hi, Aunt Jo.”
Jo turned to see Charlie, hands jammed deeply into pants pockets and shoulders hunched. She was glad to see him, and said so. “Are your folks here too?”
“They went to Amanda’s soccer game, but Mom’s not staying long. She said I should come over and see if you need some help.”
Charlie, unlike what Carrie had bemoaned in the past, didn’t look as if this time he had to be pushed very hard. As he spoke, his neck craned to see what was going on inside the store.
“So it happened back there, huh?”
“Yes, it did.”
“So, will they let us in, do you think?”
“No, Charlie. I’m sorry, they won’t. They have those biohazard suits on because it’s considered dangerous.”
“Oh.” Charlie’s face fell, and Jo moved to console him.
“But once they give us the all-clear, you can come in and help me move things back where they should be. That should give you the chance to look around.” Jo didn’t add that by the time they went in, all that would be left to see would likely require much work by Charlie’s imagination.
What she said seemed to satisfy Charlie, and he hung around, watching with Jo as the crew trudged back and forth from the back room. They sometimes carried sealed bags, and Jo guessed they might hold cleaning utensils that came in contact with the blood. As they had suited up, the lead man of the crew had explained about some of the concerns with blood-borne pathogens, such as HIV or hepatitis. Who knew if Kyle Sandborn’s blood actually contained anything dangerously contagious? But no one, apparently, could take the chance that it didn’t. Jo, on reflection, was grateful not to have to deal with it herself. But, she thought, glancing back at the gawking crowds, she did wish this crew could have somehow handled it more discretely.
Carrie showed up as the crew packed away the last of their gear.
“How did it go?” she asked.
“The professional’s are done,” Jo said. “Looks like just some tidying up to do.”
“Good. I’ll help you straighten up in the storeroom. Charlie,” Carrie said as she turned to her son, “I’d rather you stay out of there, okay? There’ll be plenty to pick up in the front part of the store.”
Jo smiled to herself, thinking that was probably as hopelessly wishful as trying to hold back tidewater. Charlie would manage, one way or another, to get an eyeful of the crime scene, and Jo was also sure that at fifteen he would be okay with it. She settled up with the cleaning crew and watched them drive away. She, Carrie, and Charlie then slipped into the store. As she locked the door firmly behind her, Jo saw the last stragglers from the crowd outside wander away. The show was over.
“Well,” Carrie said, looking at the floor, “I guess tracked-in dirt isn’t considered bioharzardous.”
“No. They focused on the back,” Jo said, making her way to the storeroom. “The fingerprint powder is cleaned up,” she said, poking her head in, “and the floor looks good. But the stock is all over the place. We have a lot of reorganizing to do.”
As she said it, Jo slipped once more into wondering if
it would be worth all the effort. She had the depressing feeling that her budding craft business faced an insurmountable obstacle in trying to recover from its disastrous opening day. She avoided saying so to Carrie, though.
Carrie and Dan had helped her so much and had been pulling so hard for her, that, although the Craft Corner’s failure would be Jo’s loss, she worried as well about the effect it would have on them. So she tried her best to push away thoughts of the likely futility of it all, and plugged on.
As she and Carrie sorted through the stock, Jo realized she had not lost as much as she had feared. Though greatly disarrayed, her sealed boxes of supplies had remained sealed, and the crime-scene techs had thankfully restricted their powdering to surfaces that would reasonably retain a fingerprint. Unlike most of the flat surfaces, it would have been difficult, if not impossible, to thoroughly clean her heaps of Christmas greenery and trimmings. A few items that had been close to Kyle’s body had been carried off, presumably for further testing at the crime lab, but Jo had been given a receipt with some vague hope of either return or reimbursement.
As she moved about the room, visions of the dead Cuddles/Kyle lying there continually intruded, and Jo struggled to keep them down. Charlie might be excited over the idea of violent death, but his fascination, she knew, came from the movies, not reality. Jo, however, had come face to face with reality, finding a person lying dead who had been alive and well just a short time before. There was no fascination to it for her, only shock and a fervent wish never to have seen it at all.
“We’ll have to dump some of these yarns, don’t you think?” Carrie asked, breaking into Jo’s thoughts. She held out two skeins that had been in open cartons and showed signs of dark powder having drifted through. A few others had been knocked onto the floor.
“Right,” Jo agreed. “There are also things over here that either got stepped on, or mashed by something heavy being set on top. No use trying to salvage them either.”
Wreath of Deception Page 3