Read Broken Vows Mystery 03-In Sickness and in Death Online
Authors: Lisa Bork
Tags: #Misc. Cozy Mysteries
“Excellent. How much are they?”
“Around forty thousand.”
“Who do I make the check out to?”
I pulled the phone from my ear and looked at it. She must be nuts. No bargaining? No negotiating? I put the receiver against my ear again. “Leslie, I wanted to talk with you more about these cars. I’m not sure they’re the best value for your dollar.”
“I’ll be right over.”
“Leslie?”
She’d hung up on me.
I sat at my desk and waited for her arrival, finding myself in the awkward position of not wanting to make the sale. These Caterhams didn’t merit their asking price, and the dealers didn’t seem inclined to bargain. Hiring me to broker the deal seemed silly, especially considering the fact that Leslie could locate these guys by herself if she just got online. And, even though it wasn’t my concern, I didn’t think owning a Caterham would be the answer to her prayers. If this man she desired was so shallow that he could be won over with the purchase of a British sports car, he couldn’t be worth having in the first place.
Had I become the love police? Maybe I should just let Leslie and, for that matter, Erica, decide what was right for them.
Nah. My new mission was to help people, whether they realized they needed help or not.
When the yellow Mustang convertible pulled into the shop’s parking lot a half hour later, I knew Leslie was the woman I’d seen at The Cat’s Meow.
She entered the showroom through the front door, stamping snow off her tan work boots. I walked out to greet her, thinking Cory had described her quite well.
Leslie Flynn had thinning sunburst red hair. I would have said it was a dye job, but the abundance of freckles visible even on her tanned skin suggested it was natural, or, at least, a simulation of natural. Her teeth were not only crooked but stained, and the brown Carhartt overalls and matching jacket she wore emphasized her unfortunate weight. As Cory had said, it wasn’t pretty. And she smelled kinda funny, too.
She looked me up and down. “You’re a cute little thing, aren’t ya?”
I felt my cheeks flush. “Thank you. Please, come in and sit down in my office.”
Her work boots clunked across the floor behind me. She dropped with a whompf, expelling all the air from the seat cushion.
I wasn’t sure quite how to begin, never having tried to talk a customer
out
of buying a car. “That’s a nice Mustang you’re driving now.”
She straightened and beamed with pleasure. “It handles well.”
“It’s a popular car. More popular than a Caterham.”
Her head bobbed up and down. “I know, I know. But have you ever seen Gatekeepers or eX-Driver?”
“No, I’m not familiar with those.”
“They’re Japanese animated cartoons, and they feature the Caterham. The man I’m interested in loves the Caterham and those cartoons.”
“You’ve talked to him about the cars and the cartoons, then?”
“Many times.”
“So you two already have a relationship?”
Her lips parted and her eyes narrowed as she appeared to consider my words. “I sell him eggs. Fresh brown eggs.”
“I see.” I didn’t really.
Leslie must have sensed my confusion. “My brother and I run a dairy farm. We have chickens, too. We also sell flowers and planters.”
Now I recognized her perfume. Eau de Manure.
Farms covered the hills and valleys of the Finger Lakes countryside, most run by Mennonites with family names like Weaver and Hoover who spoke with German-like accents. In fact, the Finger Lakes region had received the dubious distinction of hog-farming capital of New York, dubious because the swine aromas didn’t mix well with the fine wine aromas that the dozens of surrounding vineyards preferred to promote. The Mennonite farmers were tourist attractions, however, given their farm stores that sold homemade cheeses and fresh eggs as well as quilts, jams, wooden toys, and handcrafted furniture. Their simple clothes, refusal to use electricity or phones, and use of horse and buggy transportation or bicycles, which gave them their lean muscled physiques, also intrigued visitors to our area.
With her bright yellow Mustang and her less than toned body, I didn’t figure Leslie Flynn for one of our more touristy farmers.
She went on, “The farm has been in our family for a hundred years. My brother and I still work it. We have hired help, too.”
I wondered why Cory had made it sound like she was only visiting the farm. She seemed fully immersed in it on a daily basis. “Is farming a lucrative business?”
Leslie’s eyes rolled back in her head. “It’s a living. We can supply most of our own food needs. I can wear coveralls every day, so we have money for other things like cars, don’t you worry.”
“I wasn’t worried about that. I’m just curious. I haven’t spent time on a farm.”
“You haven’t missed much. I’m planning to spend less time there in the future. I want to see the rest of the country. I just have to find a bookkeeper for my brother. He’s a nightmare when it comes to organization and paying bills.”
I could understand her desire for a different setting. After living in Wachobe all my life, I’d started to wonder what else was out there. Maybe her plans to leave had given Cory the idea she was only visiting her brother. I wondered what her brother thought about her plan to seduce a man with a Caterham. It was the kind of idea Erica would come up with. I thought it best not to ask, but I couldn’t let the opportunity pass to ask Leslie about her brother. “Is your brother a redhead, too?”
“He sure is. We’re twins, born two minutes apart. I’m the older, wiser twin.”
“The women are always the wiser ones.”
Leslie bellowed. “I’m learning that more and more every day. My brother’s a bit of a hothead. It’s all I can do some days to keep our help from quitting when he gets the notion to light into them.”
“My sister met a red-haired man the other night … at The Cat’s Meow.” I rushed on, embarrassed to admit my sister was hanging out at a strip club. “She took quite a liking to him. Do you think it might have been your brother?” Perhaps their lack of organization and ability to pay bills had brought them together.
Leslie scratched her cheek. “He spends a lot of time there, I know that. I had to go over there the other day and cover a check he bounced. If you tell me her name, I’ll ask him about your sister when I get home and let you know. Now, how about you tell me about these cars you found?”
I supplied Erica’s name, then spent the next half hour comparing and contrasting the two vehicles, emphasizing their selling points as well as their drawbacks. Overall, I hinted to Leslie that no matter how fun a sports car the Caterham might be, it would not buy her a boyfriend.
She leaned back in her chair when I finished and hooked her thumbs around the straps of her coveralls. “You don’t seem keen on me buying this car, Mrs. Parker. What’s wrong with a Caterham?”
“Nothing, and please, call me Jolene. If you have the money and you think you’ll enjoy driving the car, then you should buy it. It’s just—”
“You don’t think it’s going to get me a man.”
“No, I don’t.”
Leslie examined her dirty and cracked fingernails. “I read an article that said men find women who drive these cars attractive. I know he likes these cars already. I just thought he might notice me as a woman if I drove one, too.”
“If I had to guess, Leslie, I’ll bet the article you read was written by a man trying to lure more women into buying sports cars. Most of them are bought by men.”
Leslie’s knee bounced up and down as she appeared to consider my words. “You’re a married woman. Tell me, how did you attract your husband?”
I smiled. “He thought I was pretty.” Just like Valerie Bertinelli, but I kept that to myself. I didn’t want Leslie Flynn to try to remodel herself to look like a Caterham. She’d have a hard time becoming sleek and racy.
Leslie glanced down at herself with a rueful grin. “I ain’t pretty.”
Although I’d just had that thought myself, I felt obligated to disagree. “Nonsense. A new hairdo, a little makeup, clothes that emphasize your womanly assets—he’s sure to notice a change in your look.” I sounded much more confident than I felt. He would notice, but who knew if he would find her attractive? I tried to push that thought out of my mind. Something about Leslie Flynn made my heart go out to her. I felt the need to help her in any way I could.
She fiddled with the buttons on her flannel shirt. “I don’t know how to pick out clothes. I get my haircut at the walk-in place for eight bucks.” She darted a glance at me from the corner of her eye. “Can you help me pick out some clothes?”
I laughed. I’d be no help there.
Leslie stiffened. Her brow furrowed.
I held up my hand to appease her. “I’m sorry. I’m laughing because I don’t pick my clothes out, either. I buy them at Talbots across the street. The manager picks them out for me.”
Leslie’s eyes brightened. “She’s a nice gal? She might help me?”
I laughed again. “Nice might be too strong a word, but, yes, she will help you.”
I put on my
coat and walked Leslie across the street to Talbots. The sun had come out in full force today, melting away all traces of last week’s snowfall. In fact, the temperature felt downright warm, and my wool coat felt too heavy for the day.
As we approached the store, I could see Celeste Martin through the window. She was waiting on a customer. From her gestures and facial expressions, I had no doubt she was telling the woman exactly what to buy. Celeste had a gift for fashion. She also had a gift for gossip and attracting men. I was hoping I could get at least two of her gifts to work in my new friend Leslie’s favor. From experience, the gossip would always work against me.
By the time we entered the store, Celeste was ringing up her customer’s purchases. Leslie and I hovered in the vicinity of the cash register while I waited to catch Celeste’s eye.
She handed a tiny red and black envelope to her customer. “Here’s your receipt. And here’s your bag.” She caught sight of me. Her eyes narrowed, but her smile remained firmly in place. “Thank you, Mrs. Dean. Please be sure to stop back next week. Our fall clearance prices will be in effect.”
She walked around the counter. “Jolene, I haven’t seen you in months.” Her gaze traveled down my body to my dress boots. “You’ve lost weight. You’re a size four now. Your sister must be jealous.”
“Have you seen Erica lately?”
Celeste nodded. “At the restaurant. She’s put on a few pounds.”
“Have you seen her this week?”
Celeste raised an eyebrow. “No. Is she missing?”
I swallowed my pride. Celeste knew all about my family’s mental health issues. In fact, last year I’d learned she even dated my father for a while shortly before his death, a revelation that came as quite a shock to my world. Even more shocking was the fact that no one in town told me about it while it was happening. They usually loved to spread “news” as soon as they heard it. “Yes.”
She glanced at Leslie, looking her up and down. “I’ll keep my eyes open.”
“Thank you.” I gestured to Leslie. “This is Leslie Flynn. She wants to have a new look. I told her you would be able to help her.”
Leslie pointed to Celeste’s head. “You have beautiful hair. I’d like to have hair like yours.”
Celeste raised a hand to her blonde, perfectly coiffed hair that always brushed her chin but never, ever would dare to get in her eyes. It might not even have the nerve to grow, since it always looked the same. I’d never seen a dark root on her, but we had gone through school together. Celeste was a natural brunette. However, knowing her, she was a blonde all over now. “It’s not your color. I don’t think this cut would suit you, either, but I can give you the name of my stylist. He’s been known to work miracles.”
Leslie’s head bobbed up and down, an excited grin on her face. Clearly, she’d missed the insinuation that a miracle was required.
“Celeste, can you help Leslie pick out a few things? I’m going to try on some pants.”
Celeste moved toward the stairs leading to the Plus size department. “I’m sure we can find … something for you, Leslie.”
Leslie clapped her hands together, smiled at me, and lumbered after her. The two disappeared into the loft.