Wreath of Deception

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Wreath of Deception Page 14

by Hughes, Mary Ellen


  “How could she accidentally fall?” Charlie asked, still looking over the rail.

  Jo turned back. There was a narrow, grassy strip just on the other side of the rail. “Perhaps she dropped something, maybe her keys, or saw something she tried to reach for? That could be the reason, I suppose, that she tied up the dog first.”

  Charlie looked at her. He didn’t believe it any more than she did.

  “On the other hand, the rail isn’t all that high. A person could be pushed over it fairly easily.” Jo tried to picture Pete struggling with Genna. It wouldn’t have been much of a struggle, slight as she was compared to his brawn. It didn’t feel right to Jo, though. She just couldn’t see Pete actually doing that.

  Who else, though, had connections to both Genna and Kyle? Jo realized she had shifted beyond trying to prove herself innocent to wanting to prove Pete innocent as well. He had a step up on her, though, with his coworker alibi. But would it ultimately hold up? And was she trying to protect someone who was actually guilty and might go on to murder again?

  “Let’s go,” she said to Charlie. “I’ve seen all I need to here.”

  “You’ll probably find Mr. Schroder at the storage shed,” the woman at the country club desk informed them, “with his crew. They’ll be getting ready to smooth out those tracks someone made with their SUV the other night—kids, probably.” Her eyes narrowed as she looked over her half-glasses at Charlie. “It’s just extremely lucky the ground is dry, or they would have made an even worse mess.”

  “I don’t even have my driver’s license yet,” Charlie complained as he and Jo walked across the grass. “Why do all teenagers, especially guys, get lumped together?”

  “Now you know how I feel when I have to talk to Lieutenant Morgan.” Jo wiped away a bead of sweat forming on her temple. The late-afternoon sun beat down warmly. If anything was predictable about September weather in southern Maryland, it was that it was unpredictable.

  “Don’t worry, Aunt Jo. You’ll be able to set him right before long.”

  Ah, the optimism of youth, Jo thought. Since she wasn’t exactly ancient, having only recently crossed into the latter half of her thirties, Jo wondered where her own optimism had gone. Up in smoke with the explosion in New York? Or was it simply the nature of the beast to fade away over the years? Whichever it was, she rather missed the feeling, along with the comfort it provided.

  “There’s Garth, over there.” Charlie pointed ahead to a group of teens loading rakes and shovels into the back of a pickup. “He’s the one in the red shirt.”

  Jo saw a muscular teen with the sleeves of his shirt ripped off, presumably to better display his well-defined biceps. His dark hair had been trimmed short, and he sported a bit of chin hair just under his lower lip. He looked up as they approached, greeting Charlie with an unsmiling, but not unfriendly, “Hey!”

  Jo spotted an older man who fit the description of Hank Schroder, looking every bit the aging but fit ex-Marine, and sounding like one too as he barked orders to his crew.

  “Jason! Get the lead out and load these tampers. Brett, bring that roller over, like I told you!”

  “Mr. Schroder?” Jo called out as she and Charlie drew closer.

  “Yeah?” Schroder squinted in Jo’s direction, his leathery face wrinkling so much that she wondered if he could see out at all.

  “They told me I could come talk to you about a part-time job for my nephew here. I’m Jo McAllister, and this is Charlie Brenner.”

  Hank Schroder, hands on his hips, looked Charlie up and down as though he were some kind of mutant weed that had just sprouted on Schroder’s pristine golf course. “You want to work for me?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “This is hard work. You look kinda puny to me. Ever do much landscaping?”

  “I cut the grass at our house, front and back. And I helped my dad put in some rose bushes for my mom.”

  Schroder spit, thankfully in the other direction but clearly making the point he was less than impressed. “I need guys who can lift fifty-pound bags of mulch. And work in the hot sun til the job’s done. Your mama ain’t gonna be bringing no lemonade and telling you to take it easy. Can you handle that?”

  “I guess so.”

  “One way to find out. Go on with this crew to work on some repair. We’ll see how you do. If I think you’re up to it, I’ll put you on the list for a job, soon as there’s an opening.”

  Charlie glanced at Jo. Neither of them had expected this, and she didn’t know what to tell him. Before she could say a word, though, he gamely said, “Yes, sir,” and jumped forward to help with the last of the loading. Within seconds, Charlie was riding on the back of the truck over to the fourth green.

  “They’ll be back in an hour or so, if you want to come pick him up,” Schroder said to her.

  “Uh, thanks for giving him this chance.”

  Schroder nodded, and turned toward his own truck to follow the group. Jo thought rapidly. “Mind if I ride along with you?” At Schroder’s look of surprise, she explained, “I promised his mother I’d make sure he’d be working in a safe environment. One of her brothers lost two fingers in a construction accident, and she worries.”

  “The kids don’t handle any of the power tools here. They do all the grunt work—lifting, shoveling, raking. But come on along if you want to.” He gestured toward the passenger door of his truck.

  “Thanks,” Jo said, climbing in. “His mother’s home with the baby, or she would have come herself,” she said, feeling like she needed to further explain her presence, and hearing herself, with some alarm, start to babble. “She might have managed if she just had the twins to bring along, but she’d have trouble keeping them from running off with having to carry little Alphonse.”

  Schroder’s only comment, thankfully, was a grunt as he put his truck into drive and took off.

  Thinking it best to drop the subject of Carrie’s nonexistent brood, and wondering where in the world the name “Alphonse” had popped up from, she gazed around at the landscape as Schroder drove on the paved cart lane.

  “You really keep things beautiful here,” she said.

  “Ain’t easy.”

  “I’m sure it isn’t. Especially when there’s dry periods like we’ve had. How do you manage to keep it all so green?”

  “Sprinkling system. Pipes are underground; grass gets watered overnight.”

  “Really? So, what, does someone have to be here to turn it on and off?”

  “Nah! It’s all automatic. When it works, that is.” Jo saw the muscles in Schroder’s cheek quiver, and wondered just how hard he was clenching his jaw.

  “You’ve had problems with it?” she asked, knowing the answer but hoping she could get him to elaborate.

  He shot her a dark look. “Thought I did. Wasted a lot of time working at it. Darn near tore the whole thing apart before I figured out what was happening.”

  “Yes?”

  “Where’re those fools going to? I told them the fourth green!” Schroder began beeping his horn and waving furiously to get the attention of the truck ahead. It pulled over, and he stuck his head out the window, spewing words Jo hadn’t heard for a long time, dealing mostly as she did with the genteel ladies of her craft shop.

  “Sorry,” he apologized as he pulled his head back in.

  “That’s all right. I understand. It’s not always easy dealing with people who don’t have their mind on the job, is it?”

  “You got that right, lady. And I don’t always have final say about who gets hired around here either. Gordon’s picked a few prizes.”

  “Yes, I heard that Kyle Sandborn might have been one of those prizes.”

  Jo watched carefully, but Schroder suddenly had a need to spit, turning his head away and out the window once more. Jo was finding Schroder to be a tough nut, but she pressed harder.

  “Kyle was the fellow who was killed at the craft shop. He worked here at the tennis desk.”

  “Yeah.” Schroder st
ared ahead.

  “He seemed to be quite a goof-off around here. From what I heard.”

  “Lady, I’ve had my fill of goof-offs. If they work for me, they don’t work for me long. If they get in my way, they just better watch out. That’s all I can say. I hope that nephew of yours knows how to follow orders or he won’t like it here.”

  “Oh, Charlie can—” Jo started, but Schroder wasn’t listening anymore, having pulled over and braked behind the first truck. He swung out of the cab in an instant, barking out directions in the process. Jo climbed down and watched as Charlie pitched in with the crew, hauling out tools and equipment, and then got to work. It wasn’t exactly what he’d bargained for when he joined this detecting expedition, she knew, but he dug in gamely.

  Jo saw she wasn’t going to get anything out of Schroder while he bustled about, clearly furious over the damage done to his course by the renegade SUV and intent on erasing all signs of it as quickly as possible. She watched him handling the crew. He’d never earn their affection with his drill-sergeant manner, and the ones who didn’t work as hard or as fast as he wanted got the full blast of his wrath. Thankfully, Charlie wasn’t one of them. Or perhaps Schroder held back with her there.

  Eventually, the ruts got smoothed and reseeded, and the crew packed up to go. Charlie, red-faced from the heat but with all ten fingers safely intact, took his place once again in the back of the pickup. Jo climbed back into Schroder’s truck as she saw him heading over. He barked a few more orders, then jumped behind the wheel and headed back toward the shed.

  “The kid’s not too bad. If he wants the job, I’ll put him on the list. Might be someone leaving before too long.”

  “That’s great,” Jo said, feeling a twinge of guilt at the deceptions involved, but she was reasonably sure that Charlie wouldn’t leave a hard-to-fill gap by not following through on a callback. “You run a very tight ship, Mr. Schroder.”

  “Learned a long time ago you gotta show ’em who’s boss.”

  Jo could see that was very important to Hank Schroder. Which is why it must have really rankled to be played for a fool by Kyle Sandborn. Had he known it was Kyle, though? Schroder was being very closed-mouthed on the subject. Jo decided to try him on another one.

  “On the way here we looked at the place that young woman fell to her death. Genna Hunt.”

  Schroder grunted.

  “I had met her recently, so what happened seemed especially tragic. Did you know her, Mr. Schroder?”

  Schroder shot Jo a quick look. “Yeah.” Jo waited. “She’s related to my ex-wife,” he said, then fell silent once more. Jo was about to ask in what way, when Schroder spoke again.

  “Never did like those people.”

  “Oh?”

  “Bunch of busybodies, always poking their noses in where they shouldn’t.”

  Schroder stared straight ahead as he said it, but Jo wondered if there was a veiled warning for her in his comment.

  “I’m new to Abbotsville,” she said, “so I still have a lot to learn about the town. I’ve noticed one big difference, though, from New York City, where I lived. There, people barely knew their neighbors. In this town I’ve found quite a tangled network of relationships among the townspeople. Everyone seems to be connected to everyone else in one way or another.”

  “You got that right. Tangled network.” Schroder seemed to mull over the words. “A net. Things get caught in nets, don’t they?”

  “Sometimes they do,” Jo agreed.

  Schroder spit out his window.

  “The dumb ones, that is.”

  Chapter 20

  “How’re you feeling?” Jo asked as she and Charlie made their way back to the clubhouse.

  “Okay. Just pretty hot. And dry. Schroder didn’t even give me a soda or anything. The other guys had there own stuff to drink, but I wasn’t going to ask anyone for theirs.”

  “Sorry you got sucked into that job, Charlie. Hank Schroder just got an hour’s free labor out of you, didn’t he?”

  “I didn’t mind. But I didn’t get to talk to anyone much. It’s hard when you’re scraping away at dirt. And riding on the back of that truck I was too busy trying not to get mashed by that sliding roller thing.”

  “You deserve a big, icy drink.” Jo held open the door leading to the restaurant/bar. “As do I. Schroder’s truck wasn’t air-conditioned. Or maybe he kept the windows open to accommodate his delightful little habit of watering the landscape with his, uh, saliva. Let’s get our drinks to take out. I want to stop in at the tennis shop.”

  They each ordered a large Coke and gulped down a large portion thirstily; then Jo led the way to Kyle Sandborn’s old job area. Tracy, the blond desk attendant, was sorting through a shipment of tennis T-shirts and looked up with a bright smile at their entrance. To her credit, it faded only slightly as she recognized them.

  “Hi! How’s the craft show coming together?”

  “Little by little.” Jo thought Tracy looked a bit stressed, despite the cheery “greeting” smile she had flashed. “How’ve you been?” she asked.

  “Hanging in there, I guess. It’s been kind of a rough week.”

  “Sorry if I’ll be adding to it, but do you mind if I ask a bit more about Kyle?”

  Tracy shook her head. “No, go ahead. Might as well.”

  “I wondered, since I only saw Kyle’s less attractive side that day at my shop, did he have a charming side? Were girls attracted to him?”

  Tracy thought for a moment. “I wasn’t. But maybe that’s because I saw too much of him around here. He wasn’t bad looking, but that’s not the only thing that matters to me.” Tracy shook out a brightly striped T-shirt and slipped it onto a hanger. “I guess, now that I think about it, some of the women players used to flirt with him a bit. He was on his most charming behavior, of course, dealing with the members here at the desk. They never saw the other side of him, the side that dreamed up scandals about them when they were off on the courts.”

  “What I need to know is would he be likely to stir up jealousy from someone’s boyfriend, if Kyle seemed to be getting too much attention from the girlfriend?”

  “Maybe,” Tracy said, hesitantly. “If the boyfriend didn’t really know him, that is. Kyle wasn’t really a studly type. He didn’t go after girls. Not that he was gay or anything. I don’t mean that. He just seemed too involved in himself, in his ‘big acting career’ that was coming, to care much about anything else.”

  “Told you,” Charlie said smugly to Jo. “Pete Tober would never have been jealous of Kyle.”

  “But perhaps,” Jo argued, “he didn’t really know Kyle, as Tracy says. Perhaps he just saw the ‘actor’ Kyle, with Genna gazing lovingly at him on stage.”

  “Genna Hunt?” Tracy asked. “That girl who was killed?”

  “Yes. Did you know her?”

  “Kinda.” Jo waited for another Abbotsville “tangled network” explanation, something along the lines of “my mother’s-cousin’s-dry-cleaner’s-neighbor.” What actually came surprised her.

  “She roomed with Bethanne Fowler, our tennis pro.”

  “Oh!”

  “Bethanne’s a wreck. She canceled all her lessons this week. I was on the phone for hours, getting in touch with everyone. It’s been a madhouse around here, with Mr. Gordon running in every other minute, insisting we find another pro to step in before all the tennis programs fall apart. Like we have pros sitting out there just waiting to be called!” Tracy sighed. “This was the first chance I’ve had to do anything with the clothing. The new shipments have been piling up. These shirts have been sitting here for days.”

  “Genna roomed with your tennis pro,” Jo said, still holding tightly to that nugget amidst Tracy’s flowing vent. She glanced at Charlie, whose eyebrows were wiggling.

  “Yes. They’ve been friends, I heard, for years. Practically sisters.”

  Was this significant, or merely a coincidence? Whichever, it was the first real connection between Kyle and Genna that J
o had found so far, tenuous though it may be. It definitely warranted looking into.

  “I see how hard this must be on Bethanne,” Jo said, “especially coming, as it does, on the heels of Kyle’s death. I image Bethanne and Kyle were rather close too?”

  Tracy looked puzzled. “Close? No, I wouldn’t say that at all. They really didn’t like each other very much. Kyle mixed up Bethanne’s lesson appointments a couple of times, and I remember that made her pretty mad. I wondered, actually, if Kyle did it on purpose, ’cause he sometimes referred to Bethanne as the ‘Prima Donna,’ behind her back, of course. He did have a point, though. Bethanne sometimes acted like we were all working here specially for her convenience. It got on my nerves too, but if I was too busy to do what she wanted, I told her so, and she usually backed off. Kyle, I think, needed to do more, just to prove to himself he was superior or something.”

  The phone rang, and Tracy excused herself.

  “Well,” Jo said quietly to Charlie, “that’s interesting, isn’t it? I wonder what else we can find out.”

  She glanced around, noticing for the first time several photos on the wall, and went to examine them. Several were of tennis teams: groups of men or women arranged smilingly around a trophy, with the date superimposed on the photos. The more recent photos contained a recurring figure, a young woman who was dark haired and a bit shorter than the others.

  Jo gawked, and, hearing Tracy finish on the phone, called out, “Is this Bethanne, here?”

  Tracy came over and peered at the photo Jo indicated. “Uh-huh. That’s her. Her teams did really well this year.”

  “She has quite a resemblance to Genna.”

  “Yes, she does, doesn’t she? Bethanne used to joke that with a little makeup she could stand in for Genna in one of her shows at the playhouse and no one would notice until she opened her mouth and tried to sing.”

  “She’s right. They could practically pass for sisters. Did Genna play tennis?”

  “A little, but just for fun, not anything like Bethanne. I think she preferred the fitness classes here for her exercise. Bethanne got her a good discount on them.”

 

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