The Dead-End Job Mysteries Box Set 2

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The Dead-End Job Mysteries Box Set 2 Page 40

by Elaine Viets


  “What if Larry discovers they’re gone?” Helen asked.

  “The only thing he might notice missing is the cookie jar, and it wasn’t tagged. I know all Mom’s hiding places, so I found her good stuff.”

  “Mom had hiding places?”

  “She kept her good jewelry in a plastic bag in the flour bin.”

  “It was definitely safe from me there,” Helen said.

  “Larry, too,” Kathy said. “He never lifted a finger to help or to cook. His loss. We’ll check out our loot after dinner.”

  Dinner was quick and simple—spaghetti, salad and ice cream. After the dining room table was cleared, Kathy announced, “Grandma left special presents for everyone she loved. Let’s look now.”

  Kathy opened a cardboard box. Helen swore she saw a light dusting of flour inside.

  “Tom, these are Daddy’s Cartier cuff links. They’re for you.”

  “Classy,” Tom said.

  “Phil, this is my grandfather’s diamond stickpin.”

  “Cool Art Deco design,” Phil said. “Thank you.”

  “Helen, this is our grandmother’s diamond brooch. You were her favorite.”

  “Gorgeous antique setting,” Helen said.

  “Tommy, this is your grandfather’s pearl-handled pocketknife. I’m only giving it to you because you’ve been acting like a man. If I find you’re misusing it, the pocketknife is gone.”

  Allison’s chin was trembling, and Helen hoped Kathy had a present for her daughter. The little girl had been cranky and teary since her grandmother’s death.

  “Allison, this is the necklace your grandma wore when she was a little girl. It’s a gold heart with a real seed pearl.”

  Allison’s eyes lit up when she saw the delicate necklace. “Can I wear it now?”

  “Tonight only,” Kathy said. “Then you can wear it to church and for special occasions, like Megan’s birthday party.”

  Kathy had also carried home a box of Christmas ornaments. “Mom knew how to celebrate Christmas,” she said. “Some of these ornaments are nearly a hundred years old. Larry is too much of a Scrooge to know their real value.”

  Helen recognized the German glass ornaments from her childhood. “There’s the fat Santa Claus,” she said, “and the silver bells and the musical instruments, including violins and trumpets. We used to have a sleigh with reindeer, but I broke that.”

  “These antique glass-bead garlands were packed away in tissue paper,” Kathy said. “Mom left us her manger scene, too.” She opened a fragile white box with hand-painted figures.

  “Here are the Christmas stockings Grandma made you kids with your names on them. They used to hang on Grandma’s mantelpiece, but now they’ll go on ours.”

  “Grandma left us her Christmas,” Tommy said.

  “I also have Grandma’s wedding album,” Kathy said. “That’s for Allison.”

  “With the Grandma Princess picture?” Allison asked.

  “Yes, your grandmother did look like a princess in her white dress. I’ll put it in your room, so you can see her all the time. Tommy, you can have Grandma’s photo album of the two of you in Forest Park.

  “And here’s the best thing of all.” Kathy held up a fat yellow china duck.

  “Grandma’s cookie jar,” Tommy said. “Any cookies in it?”

  “Not now, but I have her Betty Crocker Cookbook. I’ll make cookies like she used to.”

  “Nobody can make cookies like Grandma,” Tommy said. “Her cookies were the best. Even the water tasted better at Grandma’s house.”

  He looked at his mother and said, “But yours will be good. You need practice to get better. Like me.”

  Helen saw her sister tear up and knew Kathy was tired after a long day. Tom must have recognized the same signals. “Bedtime, champ,” he said. “Give your aunt Helen and uncle Phil a good-bye hug. They’re leaving tonight.”

  “I don’t want to go to bed,” Tommy said, and stuck out his lip.

  “You’re an athlete. You’re in training,” his father said. “No whining.”

  Tommy hugged everyone and reluctantly retreated upstairs.

  “Nice line about him being an athlete,” Helen said.

  “Hey, it works,” Tom said. He carried a droopy-headed Allison upstairs to bed.

  Kathy waited until both children were gone, then said, “Wait till you see what’s in the cookie jar.”

  She lifted the duck’s head. The jar was overflowing with currency. “It was Mom’s stash,” Kathy said. “I think there’s about twenty thousand dollars in here.”

  “Sweet,” Helen said. “Larry would have a fit if he knew that much cash escaped his clutches.”

  “Like I said, if Larry had spent any time with Mom, he would have known where she hid her money.” She pulled out a fat wad with a rubber band around it. “Here’s five thousand dollars to cover the Florida end of Mom’s funeral.”

  “I don’t want it,” Helen said. “That was my gift to Mom. I have money now, remember? Put that cash in the kids’ college fund, in case they don’t get sports scholarships.”

  Phil checked his watch and said, “We have to return the rental car and fly home.”

  The St. Louis airport was easier to negotiate than the one in Fort Lauderdale. St. Louis didn’t have mazes of parking garages attached to one another like tumorous growths, or masses of lost, confused, multilingual tourists. Helen and Phil went through security and were soon on the plane.

  Helen felt her heart lift as the plane left the runway, as if she could really leave Rob’s death behind. She liked flying at night, when the city lights looked like diamonds on black velvet.

  When their plane was comfortably in the clouds, the flight attendant announced that the passengers could turn on their electronic devices. Phil stretched his long legs and let his seat settle back into a more comfortable position. The seat next to him was empty. The drone of the engines covered their murmured conversation.

  “I hope Margery has recovered from Jordan’s death and is her old self again,” Helen said. “Peggy thinks she’ll get better.”

  “I want Peggy to be right,” Phil said. “But Margery isn’t young anymore. I’m worried, too. Margery wants me to investigate Jordan’s murder and prove Mark’s innocence. I promised her I’d investigate. But Margery is not going to like what I find. She’s convinced Mark was framed by a mythical burglar. I’m sure Mark killed Jordan in a jealous rage and there was no burglar.”

  “Jordan was sneaking around on Mark with Danny,” Helen said. “Maybe not that night, but she’d had several dates with Danny before the developer dumped her. Mark was definitely jealous. I’m not blaming the victim, but Jordan gave Mark an excuse to kill her. I just hope Margery will believe you.”

  “Do you still want her to marry us?” Phil asked.

  “Of course,” Helen said. “She’s a minister. Ordained by mail, but she can legally marry us.”

  “What else do we have to do to make you legal?” Phil said.

  “I have a copy of my divorce decree,” Helen said. “Now I need to get my Florida driver’s license. That’s my priority tomorrow morning. Then we can apply for a marriage license.”

  “How did you get on the plane without a driver’s license?” Phil asked.

  “I have one,” Helen said righteously. “It just isn’t mine. I borrowed it from the lost-and-found box when I worked at the bookstore.” She opened her wallet and showed him a license for Wanda Tiffany Parker.

  Phil squinted at the license that had belonged to a freckle-faced redhead. “That doesn’t look like you.”

  “Women change their hair color all the time,” Helen said.

  “And add freckles?” Phil raised one eyebrow. “How did you fool airport security with that thing?”

  “I added some freckles with an eyebrow pencil,” Helen said. “You didn’t even notice them.”

  “Beautiful,” Phil said. “You used someone else’s license to board a plane. What if it was reported stolen? Wha
t if Wanda was wanted for a crime? How much trouble would you be in then?”

  “But it wasn’t,” Helen said. “And Wanda doesn’t live at that address anymore. The store tried to contact her when she lost her license more than two years ago. Besides, my ticket isn’t in Wanda’s name. I used your credit card when I bought our tickets.”

  Phil groaned.

  Helen was glad she didn’t tell Phil she’d buried Rob in the church basement if he went ballistic over a driver’s license.

  “Those days are over,” Helen said. “How legal do we want to get? Do you want to wait to get married until the tax situation is straightened out?”

  “That could take years,” Phil said. “You’ve set the process in motion. Rob can’t come after you demanding money, and the law can’t arrest you. That’s good enough for me.”

  “The lawyer suggested we keep our lifestyle simple for now, so we should probably continue to live at the Coronado after our wedding,” Helen said.

  “Should we keep both apartments, or only one?” Phil asked.

  “Between us we have a total of four rooms, two kitchens and two bathrooms,” Helen said. “That gives us maybe fifteen hundred square feet, total. We’ll need the two bathrooms. Let’s keep both apartments for now. We can move to a larger place when my tax problems are settled.”

  “Also fine,” Phil said. “Where do you want to go on your honeymoon?”

  “I liked that vacation we took in the Keys,” Helen said. “I want to stay at a hotel in Key Largo with an ocean view and room service.”

  “You won’t get any argument against that from me,” Phil said.

  “But we have to solve Chrissy’s murder first,” Helen said, “or Detective McNally will be going with us on our honeymoon. I don’t care what he said—Danny the developer killed his wife. I know it. I heard them arguing. Her death has something to do with what she called the house of the seven toilets.”

  “That’s where I’ll start my search tomorrow,” Phil said. “I’m going to look up the property owned by everyone who was at Snapdragon’s the morning of the murder, not just Danny Martlet. We’ll find Chrissy’s killer and then live happily ever after.”

  He kissed Helen as the seat belt sign came on in the cabin and the pilot announced there was heavy turbulence ahead.

  CHAPTER 24

  Clunk. Thunk. Rattle.

  Helen yanked on the old red Samsonite suitcase wedged between the wall and the water heater in her utility closet at the Coronado. The suitcase popped free with a resonant clang!

  She set the hard-sided suitcase on her kitchen table and opened it. It was stuffed with shabby old-lady underwear she’d bought at a yard sale for twenty-five cents. Helen shifted the graying circle-stitched cotton bras and snagged support hose, then picked up a pair of flower-sprigged panties big as a parachute.

  “Your trousseau?” Phil said.

  Her fiancé leaned against the kitchen doorjamb, looking adorably rumpled in his blue terry bathrobe. He was joined by a grumpy Thumbs.

  “Sorry. I didn’t mean to wake you up,” Helen said. “The keys to my new life are buried in this granny underwear.”

  Helen held up the prepaid disposable cell phone she’d used to call her sister while she was on the run. “Won’t need that anymore. It’s out of minutes anyway.” She tossed the phone in the trash.

  The crinkled cellophane she’d kept to quickly end conversations with her mother went in after it. Helen would pretend that static had broken up their awkward chats to avoid a fight. There was no chance she could ever change Dolores’s mind.

  Heavy orthopedic hose hid two cards. Helen held them up. “My Social Security card and my Missouri driver’s license. These will ease my reentry into respectable society.”

  “Isn’t that license expired by now?” Phil asked.

  “Nope,” Helen said. “Missouri licenses are good for six years. And look! A hundred dollars from my original stash of ten thousand. I thought that money was all gone. It was hidden in this.” She held up an ugly orangey beige girdle.

  “A good way to stretch your money,” Phil said.

  “I’m glad we didn’t get married in June,” Helen said.

  “Why?” Phil said.

  “Because our marriage wouldn’t have been legal. I was missing too many documents. I’m going today to get my Florida driver’s license. Now I have everything I need: my Social Security card, my Missouri driver’s license and my Coronado lease for proof of residency. My name change has been approved already. I can download those documents and take them with me.”

  “Are you going to keep the suitcase?” Phil asked.

  “I can use it for storage,” Helen said. “And I want it for sentimental reasons. Mom gave it to me for my high school senior trip to Washington, D.C. It’s about all I have left from my old life.”

  Phil looked puzzled. “Why did you think a bright red suitcase was a good hiding place? What if the police had a search warrant for your home?”

  Helen held up the mass of shabby underwear and twisted panty hose. It seemed to writhe in her hands. “No man would touch these, even with gloves on.”

  “There are women in law enforcement,” Phil said.

  “I guess I can dump the ugly underwear, too,” she said, and dropped it in the trash. “Fortunately, my theory was never tested.”

  Phil kissed her nose and then her lips. “Your hair smells nice. You’re letting it grow longer. I like that.”

  “I like your hair long, too,” she said.

  “We should go back to bed,” he whispered. “We got home after midnight.”

  “I’m not interested in sleeping,” Helen said.

  “Me, either,” Phil said, and kissed her again.

  Helen forgot her plans to legalize her life for more than an hour. They fell asleep again after making love and woke up when Thumbs walked on their heads, howling for breakfast.

  Phil scrambled eggs while Helen fed the cat. Thumbs had given them the cat cold shoulder for about ten seconds after they returned home late yesterday. When they’d been properly chastised, they were permitted to scratch his ears. He was still peeved and demanding this morning.

  Over breakfast, Helen handed Phil a list of names.

  “Vera Salinda. Danny Martlet. Roger Cardola. Loretta Stranahan,” he read. “Why are you giving me these?”

  “You asked who was in Snapdragon’s Second Thoughts when Chrissy was killed,” Helen said. “You’re researching the house of the seven toilets today, remember?”

  “No way I could forget. Who is Roger Cardola?”

  “The hunky surfer guy who valet parks at the hair salon,” Helen said. “He is Vera’s best surviving source for high-end designer duds. The police are sniffing around him.”

  “He’s definitely worth checking into,” Phil said, tucking the list into his zippered leather portfolio. He poured coffee for himself and Helen, then kissed her again.

  “Shall we face the day?” he asked.

  They carried their coffee mugs outside by the pool. Purple bougainvillea blossoms floated on the water, and palm fronds whispered overhead. The humid Florida breeze felt like a caress on Helen’s face. It had the slight salt tang of the sea. She breathed deeply and said, “It’s so nice to be home. I love the humidity here.”

  “St. Louis has humidity, too,” Phil said.

  “But it’s not bracing,” Helen said. “Midwestern humidity is sticky. It drags you down.”

  “Bracing humidity,” Phil said. “We must remember to tell the Fort Lauderdale Convention and Visitors Bureau. They can use that phrase in their ads.”

  Peggy had turned the poolside umbrella table into an outdoor assembly station. COME AND GET IT, CHOWHOUNDS! barbecue aprons covered the surface. Her red head was bent over her work. She was muttering to herself as she picked at the crossed beer bottles on an apron.

  Pete the parrot peered from her shoulder like a small green supervisor.

  “Good morning, lovebirds, and welcome back,” Pe
ggy said. “We missed you.”

  She moved a stack of aprons onto a chair and said, “Sorry. My work has spread like kudzu. Sit down. How was St. Louis?”

  “Good,” Helen said. “Or as good as a funeral trip can be. Mom had the ceremony she wanted with all her friends. I’m on the way to being legal at last. I’ll apply for my Florida driver’s license today, then go to work. Phil is going to research Chrissy’s murder. Once we find Chrissy’s killer, we’re free to marry.”

  “Oh, is that all?” Peggy asked, and grinned. “The police haven’t made any progress, but I suppose Super Phil can outdo two police forces.”

  “It’s my job to do the impossible.” Phil winked and sat beside her. “How’s the apron business?”

  “Not good,” Peggy said. “Mike rejected my first shipment.” She showed an apron to Helen and Phil. “See? He says this one is not up to his quality standards.”

  “What’s wrong with it?” Phil asked.

  “Mike said the crossed barbecue forks should be one-eighth of an inch lower,” Peggy said.

  “They look fine to me,” Helen said.

  “I prefer the crossed beer bottles, but the forks look okay,” Phil said.

  “My crossed beer bottles were crooked—according to Mike,” Peggy said. “All twenty-five of them. I’d used a ruler, too. Every single apron had something wrong with it. I was so sure my work was good that I’d already ordered another shipment, completed the aprons and sent those back, too. I got another e-mail from Mike this morning. The second shipment has been rejected. I’m trying to see if I can dissolve the glue and reapply the barbecue forks, but they tear.”

  “Not worth your time,” Phil said. “You’ll never please Mike, or whatever his name is. That’s part of the scam.”

  Helen waited for Peggy to say the aprons weren’t a scam, but she seemed too discouraged to fight back. “How do you know it’s a scam?” she asked in a small voice.

  “How much was that glue gun?” Phil asked.

  “Two hundred fifty dollars,” Peggy said.

  “I can buy it online for one hundred thirty dollars, including shipping,” he said.

 

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