Fudge Cupcake Murder

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Fudge Cupcake Murder Page 10

by Joanne Fluke


  “About Suzie’s father?”

  “That’s just part of it. Once people find out that Sheriff Grant was threatening me, they’ll think I killed him.”

  “Did you?” the question popped out before Hannah had time to squelch it.

  “No! Of course I didn’t kill him!”

  “Then stop worrying about it.”

  “I can’t. I’m going to be a suspect the minute somebody finds out about the fight I had with Sheriff Grant.”

  “Fight?” Hannah’s ears perked up. “When? Where? What did you fight about?”

  Luanne took a deep breath. “The when was Monday night, and the where was the school parking lot. The what is that Nettie called me and offered me the other half of their duplex. Sheriff Grant found out about it and he was waiting for me when I pulled in the lot.”

  “Okay,” Hannah said, remembering the altercation that Kate Maschler had overheard between Nettie and Sheriff Grant. “Did you accept Nettie’s offer?”

  “No. I wanted to, but I was worried about how Sheriff Grant would react. I told Nettie that we’d love to move in, but only if the sheriff said that it was okay.”

  Hannah already knew that Sheriff Grant had objected vehemently and that he’d fought with Nettie about it. “Tell me everything that happened that night in the parking lot,” she instructed.

  “I wanted to go to your class that night, but a customer came in right before I was ready to lock up. I took care of him as fast as I could and then I drove straight over to the school. Sheriff Grant was there in the parking lot and he motioned me over to his car. He looked really mad.”

  “How could you tell that by just looking?”

  “Well…his face was all red and he was moving in that impatient way he has. You know…jerky. I didn’t really want to talk to him, but I figured I couldn’t walk right past him and ignore him.”

  “I understand,” Hannah said. “Go on.”

  “I walked over to his car. He was eating something…I think it was a cupcake…and he put it in a bag on the seat. He said he knew that Nettie had offered me the duplex.”

  “What did you say?”

  “I tried to explain that I hadn’t accepted, but he yelled at me and accused me of taking advantage of Nettie because she missed Jamie so much. And then he said that for all they knew, Jamie wasn’t even the father and Suzie was somebody else’s baby. And then he called Suzie a…a…”

  “Never mind,” Hannah interrupted quickly. “I can imagine what he said. How did you react to that?”

  “I couldn’t say anything. I was too choked up. He was just so horrible and he said such awful things to me. I knew I was going to cry, so I just ran back to my car and drove off as fast as I could.”

  “Where did you go?”

  “I drove back to Granny’s Attic and just sat there for a while. I didn’t want to face anybody until I calmed down. When I was through crying and I’d washed my face, I drove home.”

  “What time did you get there?”

  “A little before nine. I looked at the kitchen clock when I came in.”

  “And Sheriff Grant was still alive when you drove out of the school parking lot?”

  “Oh, yes,” Luanne said, shivering slightly. “I saw him in my rearview mirror, standing next to his car and shaking his fist at me.”

  “What time was that?”

  “I’m not sure. I know I drove into the lot at five minutes after eight. I remember looking at my watch when I got out of the car to see how late I was going to be for your class. I don’t think I talked to Sheriff Grant for more than a couple of minutes, so it must have been about ten after eight.”

  “Close enough,” Hannah said, making a mental note to add Luanne’s information to her notebook. “Did anyone else see you with Sheriff Grant?”

  Luanne frowned and shook her head. “I don’t think so. If they had, they would have said something by now. There were lots of cars in the lot, but as far as I know, everyone else was inside the school.”

  “That’s all I need for now, Luanne.” Hannah slid down from her perch on the counter. “Thanks for being so honest with me.”

  “Do you…uh…have to tell anybody else about Suzie’s father?”

  “No, but I’m pretty sure Mother’s figured it out.”

  “That’s what I was afraid of.” Luanne looked sick. “I knew she was going to The Pink Giraffe and your mother could get information from a rock if she wanted to. The rock wouldn’t even know it had talked.”

  “True,” Hannah agreed with a grin. Delores could get information effortlessly. Andrea had inherited that same ability, and Hannah wished that she had, too.

  “Do you think she’ll tell anyone?”

  “Mother?” Hannah didn’t say anything else. She just stared at Luanne in disbelief.

  “Never mind.” Luanne looked a bit embarrassed. “I know better than to ask that. If your mother hasn’t told anyone yet, it’s only a matter of time.”

  “I told her not to say anything until she heard from me and that should hold her for a couple of hours. If I were you, I’d call Mother and Carrie and tell them yourself. Maybe none of this will have to get out, but it couldn’t hurt to get them on your side, just in case.”

  “You’re right. That would be the smart thing to do. Do you think they’ll fire me when they find out who Suzie’s father is?”

  Hannah stared at Luanne in amazement. “They hired you without knowing who Suzie’s father was. Why would knowing make a difference?”

  “Then you don’t think they’ll care?”

  “Oh, they’ll care. They’ll probably bend your ear right off, trying to convince you to move in with Nettie.”

  “Because she’s all alone now?” Luanne looked a little sad at that thought.

  “No, because if you live right here in town, they can get you to work longer hours.”

  Chapter

  Twelve

  H

  annah woke up the next morning to the sound of contented feline purring. It grew louder and when she opened her eyes in the early morning gloom, she saw a pair of yellow eyes staring down at her expectantly.

  “Okay, I’m getting up,” Hannah said, sitting up with a groan and reaching out to flick off the alarm, which was due to go off any second. Moishe often woke her up right before the alarm sounded and she didn’t really mind. Waking up to a purr was much more pleasant than startling awake to eardrum-piercing electronic beeping.

  Hannah slipped her feet into the fur-lined moccasins she kept near the bed and padded down the hall to the kitchen. “Come on, Moishe. I’m too tired to fight with you this morning. I’ll just give you what you want for breakfast.”

  Even though she knew she shouldn’t have, Hannah’d given in last night and filled Moishe’s bowl with his regular kitty crunchies. Tip number six on her vet’s list of ways to convince him to eat senior fare hadn’t worked any better than tips one through five. Last night’s attempt involved drizzling the juice from a can of tuna over the bowl and, for a moment, Hannah thought it might actually be successful. Moishe headed straight for his food bowl and licked the senior pellets with gusto. Unfortunately, that’s all he did. When Hannah examined his food more closely, she discovered that Moishe had licked off every bit of the tuna-flavored juice and left the senior nuggets, pristine and untouched, in his bowl.

  The coffee was ready and Hannah poured a cup. She took one bracing sip, then went to the broom closet where she kept Moishe’s regular food. When he had been fed and watered, Hannah slugged down a mug of coffee and hurried off to shower and dress.

  Hannah often boasted that she could get ready for work on automatic pilot, without completely opening her eyes. This morning was no exception and fifteen minutes later, Hannah walked into the kitchen again. Her eyes were now wide open, her hair was dry, and she was appropriately dressed for her workday in jeans and a long-sleeved top that bore the legend, Take Life with a Grain of Chocolate.

  Moishe’s bowl was empty and Hannah refil
led it before settling down at her kitchen table with a fresh cup of coffee and what she’d come to think of as her crime book, the green-lined steno pad she carried with her constantly. This steno pad was no different than the dozen or so steno pads placed in every room of her condo. She’d also taken them to The Cookie Jar and put them in the kitchen, storage room, pantry, and coffee shop. Perhaps it was all those years of attending college lectures and taking notes, but Hannah tended to regard being caught without pen and paper as a sin even worse than substituting margarine for butter in one of her cookie recipes.

  What did she know about Sheriff Grant’s murder? Hannah paged through her notes. According to the autopsy report, the sheriff died between eight and nine-thirty and the cause of death was a blow to the head with a blunt instrument. Sheriff Grant had been standing a few feet from his car when he was assaulted. The killer then dragged the sheriff’s body at least ten yards to the school Dumpster and toppled him inside.

  Hannah stopped and stared at her notes. Perhaps it wasn’t all that important, but she should find out if Sheriff Grant had been dead, or alive when the killer dragged him to the Dumpster. Andrea could get that information for her. All her sister had to do was call Doc Knight, ask him some trumped up pregnancy question, and get him to talk about the autopsy.

  Once Hannah had written Dumpster—dead or alive? on her to-do list, she snapped the notebook shut and reached for her jacket. But before she had her arm in the sleeve, the phone rang.

  “Mother,” Hannah muttered, earning a mini-growl from Moishe. Delores Swensen’s name did not appear on his list of favorite people, or even of those people he could tolerate. Hannah dropped her jacket and reached for the phone. “Hello, Mother.”

  “It’s not Mother. It’s me,” Andrea’s voice came over the line. “But I’m calling you about Mother. Do you know what’s wrong with her?”

  “Many things, but she’s our mother and we love her anyway,” Hannah shot back with a grin.

  “Don’t joke, Hannah! I really think there’s something wrong. Mother’s just not herself and…and…I couldn’t sleep at all last night thinking about it. That’s why I’m calling so early.”

  “Calm down, Andrea. Getting upset isn’t good for the baby. What do you mean, Mother’s just not herself?”

  “Well, you know how she feels about Tracey. Mother adores her, right?”

  “Absolutely.”

  “And she loves to spend time with Tracey.”

  “That’s true, she does.”

  “Well, I called her last night and asked her if she wanted to come to the library with us next Saturday. They’re having a special program for kids and their grandparents.”

  “That’s right up Mother’s alley. She loves things like that.”

  “That’s what I thought,” Andrea said with a sigh, “but Mother didn’t seem all that eager. And then, when I suggested that she take Tracey after the program and keep her overnight, she said she’d have to let me know, that she might have other plans.”

  Hannah frowned. That wasn’t like their mother at all. Delores loved to keep Tracey overnight and her granddaughter always came first. “What other plans did Mother have? Did you ask?”

  “Of course I did, but she told me it was none of my business. And then she said I should remember that she had a life of her own.”

  Hannah’s mouth dropped open. “Mother has a life?”

  “That’s what she said. Do you think it’s a man?”

  “Mother?! Not a chance.”

  “But you’ll find out for sure, won’t you? You’re so good at investigating, Hannah.”

  “I’ll try,” Hannah said reluctantly, mentally adding it to her list of things to do, right behind solving the murder and clearing Bill, and just ahead of trying to run a business and get her stubborn cat to eat his new food. “I’ll let you know as soon as I find out anything.”

  “Good. Is there anything I can do to help?”

  Hannah bit back the urge to say, Stop giving me things to do, and glanced down at her steno pad. “You can help with the murder investigation. Think of some excuse for calling Doc Knight and see if you can get him to tell you whether Sheriff Grant was dead when the killer put him in the Dumpster.”

  “Yuck!”

  “I know, but I don’t want to ask Mike for any favors and Bill can’t find out this time.”

  Andrea sighed. “You’re right. I’ll do it today. I’m not quite as queasy as I was yesterday. I’ll get all the results of the autopsy while I’m at it.”

  “Do you think Doc’ll tell you?”

  “Of course. I’m a real estate agent. We’re trained to get information.”

  Hannah thanked her sister and hung up the phone. She’d just finished filling Moishe’s food and water bowls and was stuffing her steno pad into her purse when the phone rang again. She grabbed it and sat down in the chair again, pulling out her notebook. “That was fast! What did Doc say?”

  “What was fast?”

  Hannah groaned as she recognized her mother’s voice. “Sorry, Mother. I thought it was Andrea. She promised to get back to me.”

  “Is there something wrong with the new baby?”

  “Not that I know of. Why?”

  “You mentioned Doc.”

  “Right,” Hannah began to smile. Perhaps she could use her mother’s worry about Andrea to her advantage. “Andrea called a couple of minutes ago.”

  “But it’s not even six-thirty yet!”

  “I know. She was having trouble sleeping. I told her to call Doc and maybe he could give her something.”

  “That was a good idea. The poor dear is probably worried sick about Bill.”

  “Actually, no.” Hannah took a deep breath and prepared to drive in the nail. “Andrea’s worried about you.”

  “About me? Why would she worry about me?”

  “She said you didn’t jump at the chance to keep Tracey next Saturday night. And when she asked you why, you told her that you had a life.”

  “Oh.” Delores was silent for a long moment. “Well…I suppose I could change my plans and keep Tracey if it’s that important to her.”

  “What plans are those, Mother?”

  “None of your business, dear. I may be your mother, but I’m entitled to some privacy when it comes to my personal life.”

  Hannah gave it up as a bad job. Her mother was almost as stubborn as Moishe. When Delores decided to keep a secret, no one could pry it out of her. “Okay, Mother. We won’t discuss it any further.”

  “Good. You’re the daughter with the most sense, Hannah. Except when it comes to men, that is. How you could date that awful Mike Kingston is beyond me!”

  Hannah didn’t rise to the bait. It was just too early in the morning to fight. “I’ve got to get to work, Mother. Is there anything specific you wanted?”

  “Yes. Thank you for reminding me, dear. I called to tell you that Sheriff Grant’s funeral is on Sunday at Jordan High at two o’clock.”

  “It’s at the school?”

  “Yes, in the auditorium. It’s the only place that’s large enough. He was very well liked and they expect a huge turnout. You’re going, aren’t you?”

  Hannah sighed. She hated funerals. “I don’t know, Mother.”

  “Well, you have to go. The killer always shows up at the graveside.”

  “What?”

  “That’s the way it happens in the movies. By the way, all the businesses in town are closing at noon on Saturday as a sign of respect.”

  “They are?” Hannah was surprised. This was the first she’d heard about it.

  “They will when they read the notice in the paper. Carrie and I wrote it up and Rod promised to publish it today.”

  “Okay, Mother,” Hannah said. With Delores and Carrie spearheading the effort, any business in Lake Eden that didn’t close at noon on Saturday would be roundly criticized.

  “Andrea should go to the funeral,” Delores went on. “It’s right for Bill to stay away since he’s a s
uspect, but the family should be represented.”

  “So Andrea’s going with you?” Hannah asked, glancing up at her apple-shaped clock. The hands were moving inexorably forward and if she wanted to finish most of the baking before Lisa came in, she’d have to leave in less than five minutes.

  “She can’t go with me dear. The Regency Romance Club is doing something special. We’re all arriving together and we’re going to sit behind Nettie in a show of support.”

  “That’s nice, Mother.” Hannah said warily. She had the feeling she knew what was coming next.

  “That’s why I want you to take Andrea. Call her the minute you get to work and tell her you think she should go with you.”

  Hannah was about to say she still wasn’t sure she’d be attending Sheriff Grant’s funeral, but before she could even open her mouth, Delores said goodbye and hung up.

  “She did it again,” Hannah said to Moishe, who was staring at the phone with his ears back. He always seemed to know when his least favorite person called. Delores liked to be the one who ended the conversation and hung up first, and she usually succeeded. It was par for the course for the woman who always wanted the last word.

  Chapter

  Thirteen

  B

  y the time Sunday morning rolled around, Hannah was frustrated beyond belief. She tried the rest of the tips on the list and Moishe hadn’t even sampled his new food. She planned to call Doctor Bob in the morning to see if he had any new suggestions, but for the present, she was stumped. And since she didn’t feel like fighting with her stubborn four-footed roommate this morning, she caved in again.

  Moishe gave a sound that was half purr, half grateful mew as Hannah filled his bowl with his regular crunchies. But instead of gobbling them up as he usually did, he came over to rub against her ankles.

  “You’re welcome,” Hannah said, pouring her second cup of coffee. “You can go ahead and eat. I’ll just sit at the kitchen table and wake up.”

  As Moishe crunched happily, Hannah’s thoughts turned to Sheriff Grant’s murder. For the most part she was getting nowhere fast, but one of her questions had been answered. Although Doc Knight had refused to give Andrea a copy of the autopsy report, he answered her question off-the-record. The blow Sheriff Grant suffered to the back of his skull killed him almost instantly.

 

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