Authors: Virginia Brown
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Women Sleuths, #Contemporary Women
When I returned to the porch, Bitty set her drink on the wicker side table and took the bottled water for the dog. Chen Ling drank half—yes, from the spout—then smacked her doggy lips, clacked her three front teeth together, and settled down on Bitty’s lap.
“I swear,” I said, “you treat that dog better than you do your guests.”
“Not true. Unless you’re referring to yourself. Then it’s only half-true.”
I nodded agreement because really, she’s right. Bitty was reared at her mother’s knee learning every social convention any hostess could dream up and use to put another hostess to shame. My upbringing was different, although not as much as one might think. Both our mothers had strict social guidelines, but where Bitty’s mother, Sarah, came from money and that seemed to require lots of social obligations most of us never have to hear about, my mother, Anna, came from a genteel but middle-class family with fewer rules. Bitty learned the proper function of every piece of dining utensil from a cocktail fork to a fish knife. My siblings and I learned not to throw dining utensils at the table.
My father, Edward Wellford Truevine, is a year older than his now-deceased brother, who was Bitty’s father. That makes Bitty and I first cousins. The best friends part of our relationship happened when we were around six, and held strong all through our childhoods, until young adulthood took us down different paths.
Even though I married and moved off and only returned to Holly Springs a little over nine months ago, we picked up right where we left off in terms of friendship. In a world that often seems to have gone crazy, this continuity is comforting. As well as a bit dangerous at times. Since returning home, my friendship with Bitty and a group of local women in a club known as the Dixie Divas has encountered . . . shall we say, rather bizarre situations. The oddest situation being murder. Until this past year, I had never known anyone who was murdered or a murderer. My education has broadened quite a bit.
I blame Bitty.
By that, I certainly do not mean that she is in any way to blame for the actual murder or murders. Or murderers. It’s just a very odd coincidence that in one way or another she has been connected to each of the deceased.
Despite my occasional jest at her expense—and only in the most loving way—I am well aware that Bitty just has the bad fortune to know most everyone in and around Holly Springs. A few spiteful people have mentioned that she seems to draw trouble these days, but I am not one of them. Well, not often and never in anyone’s hearing that would dare repeat it to her.
Of course, Bitty’s last divorce—from a newly reelected state senator—had been rancorous enough to draw attention from all over Mississippi and the nation’s capital. His unexpected death and the subsequent investigation had tongues wagging from the east to the west coast, I understand. Certainly, after it was all over, Bitty had gained a lot of male admirers who did not hesitate to send marriage proposals to a wealthy “widow” by mail. If most of the proposals had not come from the prison population, Bitty may well have embarked upon another adventure.
Thankfully, Jackson Lee Brunetti, her attorney and chief male admirer, does an admirable job of keeping away the riff-raff. He’s tall, handsome, of Italian descent, and is hopelessly in love with my cousin. Bless his heart. Now,
there’s
a match made in practicality paradise: a shrewd lawyer and a client prone to idiotic acts of self-incrimination. What could be more perfect?
That afternoon on her porch, I had actually begun to think the drama and danger of the past few months just might have ended forever. After all, we had gone for nine weeks without a single bit of trouble out of the ordinary. By that, I mean no one we knew had gotten murdered. Or arrested for murder. I felt congratulations were in order.
“We should congratulate ourselves,” I said to change the subject from Trina, “that nothing bad has happened in the past few weeks.”
Bitty lifted her freshly waxed eyebrows at me. “
Nothing bad?
Parrish and Patrice Hollandale won their lawsuit against me.”
“No, they didn’t really win. Since Philip is dead, your alimony payments would have stopped anyway. Jackson Lee just got you a really nice settlement instead.”
Bitty
“hmmphed”
at me but didn’t argue the case. She should have.
I have since learned that I have a tendency toward premature congratulation. One would think I would have realized that before. In retrospect, maybe I am still vulnerable to insanity. After all, I had recently divorced my husband of nearly thirty years, quit my job, and after long phone conversations with my elderly—and unexpectedly mobile—parents, decided it would be best if I came home to care for them. Hah!
It probably took me longer than any normal person would have required to figure out that my return home to nurse feeble parents was in reality a new position as travel agent and caretaker to an endearing, if neurotic, dog and a couple hundred feral cats. My parents require no nursing, just chauffeuring to and from airplane and boat terminals. I am willing, if not delighted, to oblige.
In return, they have been willing, if not delighted, to watch Bitty and me self-destruct in a number of inventive ways. Bitty is very creative. I am a lemming. I promise myself I will not join in to whatever madness she concocts next, but I almost always do. I do not really know why. Perhaps one day a doctor will explain it to me once I’m safely installed in a padded room at Whitfield, the state “rehabilitation” facility for people prone to idiotic acts of self-destruction.
Cady Lee Forsythe, a Diva and long-time friend, has observed that putting Bitty and me together in the same space is quite similar to putting gas and a lit match together in the same space: highly combustible.
Maybe it’s true. We do tend to draw unusual occurrences into our sphere of the planetary orbit. It must be Bitty’s magnetic field.
“Really,” said Bitty after her second sip of mimosa, “I can’t understand why that woman doesn’t consult a stylist. And I don’t mean just for interior decorating.”
Apparently we had gone back to the topic of Trina Madewell. I sighed.
“Maybe she doesn’t think she needs to. Besides, think how much pleasure it gives you to criticize her wardrobe. Would you want to end that?”
Bitty flapped her hand at me as if to dismiss my observation entirely. “Oh, Trina gives me more than enough reason for criticism. She has the personality of a sock puppet and the business sense of a rock.”
I shrugged at her rude assessment. “You’re just mad because she said you have tacky taste in furniture.”
“Of all the nerve! And after I invited her into my home, shared my hospitality with her, she goes off and tells everyone my antiques are cheap copies, and my settee is filled with rocks instead of horsehair.”
“You must admit, the settee
is
uncomfortable,” I said soothingly.
Bitty bent a stern gaze my way. “I invited her to
tea
, Trinket, not a critique of my antiques.”
“No, you invited her to an
interrogation
. You just happened to serve tea with your questions.”
“Well . . . yes, I suppose that’s true. I didn’t mean things to get out of hand like they did. And I certainly didn’t think Trina would be so hateful afterward.”
“Blame that on the alien in your lap. She’s the one who jumped in the middle of the tea tray.”
“My poor precious,” Bitty crooned to the pompous pug in her lap. “All that fuss and shouting kept her tummy upset for a week.”
I sucked down an inch of champagne and orange juice before I said, “It didn’t do my stomach any favors, either. Tell me again why we’re having this waltz down Memory Lane? Are we already out of other things to complain about?”
Bitty sighed and laid her head back against the fat blue cushions of her wicker lounge chair. “Well, I’m tired of talking about how hot it is. Why on earth did that nice Al Gore ever start all that stuff about warming the globe? It’s done nothing but cause trouble, and raise my air conditioning bill—it’s higher than a politician’s hair at a Sunday School picnic.”
While I tried to figure out that non-sequitur, Bitty rambled on about other world events of great importance, such as how the rule about not wearing white after Labor Day should be amended since it was still so hot in September now, and how Trina and Trisha Madewell had put out a color brochure advertising their family home as a bed and breakfast but didn’t include one word about a famous murder there, and didn’t I think it was spiteful of Miranda to name her silly pig something so close to Chen Ling’s name . . . Truthfully, somewhere in there I zoned out. I listened to the katydids in the trees hum louder and louder as the afternoon lengthened, and wondered idly if Bitty’s sprinkler system would drown out the cricket serenade when it switched on at dawn. I thought about my parents and how happy they seemed lately, poring over travel pamphlets at the kitchen table while I looked for the Maalox and prayed they wouldn’t try to climb Mount Everest or the Matterhorn. I had recently hidden a lovely brochure they sent off for about visiting pyramids in the Valley of the Kings in Egypt. Twice. My parents are nothing if not resourceful. I fully expect to one day receive a post card from Cairo with a photo of both my parents waving to me from the back of a disgruntled camel. By then my mail will no doubt be addressed to me in care of Whitfield Sanitarium. Or the nearest bar.
I briefly contemplated the relaxing properties of champagne that allowed me to deal with not only septuagenarians, but grumpy pugs and rattle-brained cousins. If not for fermented grapes, I definitely would be on strong medication. Too bad my stomach does not allow me to be an alcoholic. I think I have all the rules down pat.
Then Bitty brought me back from my reverie by leaning over to poke me with one finger. “You’re not listening,” she accused.
I took a wild guess at the conversational topic. “Of course I am. You’re talking about Trina Madewell’s interesting wardrobe choices.”
Bitty sat back in her lounge chair and looked at me with slitted eyes. “You just took a good guess, I’m sure, but yes—that is what bothers me.”
“Why?”
“Well, for heaven’s sake, Trinket, because anyone who dresses like she does has no right to say my antiques are just cheap copies! Haven’t you heard a word I’ve said?”
“I hang upon your every word like it is a precious pearl of wisdom, my dear.”
Bitty said something quite rude, I responded by fanning my face with one hand and drawling, “My, my, it’s so vairy, vairy wahm out heah,” and then we both laughed. I suppose you have to be there to get the essence of our craziness, but we tend to enjoy it.
Perhaps that’s one reason we get into trouble without even trying. As adolescents, it wasn’t surprising; as adults, my mother is mystified by this new course our lives have taken. So am I. It’s unnerving that we can just be sitting around and a chance phone call, or some other means of modern communication, suddenly plunges us into a world of trouble. Almost always, Bitty is right smack in the center of the chaos.
So imagine my surprise when trouble came from a completely different direction.
There we were on the porch discussing—arguing—about whether or not saying Trina Madewell usually looks like an unmade bed is gossip or fact, when Rayna Blue screeched her SUV to a stop in front of the house. It’s a new one to replace the last one that took a dive off a back road and into a gully, and very shiny. No one has dinged it yet in the parking lot of the Piggly Wiggly or at Walmart. That’s why it seemed odd to me that she would slam it into Park and jump out and leave the driver’s door wide open.
“Rayna sure does seem to be in a hurry,” Bitty remarked. “She’s going to end up with a heat stroke if she isn’t careful.”
Rayna was going so fast she was almost running as she cleared the curb, sidewalk, and shoved open the iron gate to Bitty’s fence. Her dark hair was pulled straight back from her face into a pony tail, and she wore a sleeveless white blouse and jeans with what looked like paint all over them. Her paint-smeared tennis shoes were untied and the laces flapped against the brick walkway as she came up to the porch.
“Hey Rayna,” said Bitty, “we’re drinking mimosas if you want one.”
“I need you to come with me,” Rayna said, not even responding to Bitty’s offer of a cool drink. “It’s Rob. He’s in trouble.”
Rayna is married to Rob Rainey, who is a local bondsman as well as insurance investigator. Rob has been kept pretty busy lately bailing out Divas, so naturally, we both said we would go with her. We didn’t even ask what kind of trouble or where we were going. We just got our purses—and Chen Ling’s traveling harness—and climbed into Rayna’s car.
I looked over at Rayna once we were moving down College Street toward town. Fine white lines etched her face, and tension made her knuckles white on the steering wheel. This was something really bad, I figured. Rayna just didn’t get this upset about most things. Not that she is immune to fits of pique; the last one she’d had got both of us into trouble way over our heads. But that is the exception rather than the norm.
“You okay?” I asked her, and she shook her head.
“No. I’m scared out of my mind.”
Sitting in the back seat with Chen Ling cuddled against her chest like some mutant papoose in a doggy sling, Bitty asked bluntly, “So what kind of trouble is Rob in?”