Cut to the Corpse (3 page)

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Authors: Lucy Lawrence

BOOK: Cut to the Corpse
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“Did he ask you out?” Tenley asked, looking hopeful.
“No,” Brenna said. She tried to keep the disappointment out of her voice, but Tenley gave her a sympathetic look anyway.
“What did he want then?”
“I’m babysitting Hank for a few days,” Brenna said.
“Oh? Where’s he going?” Tenley asked. She fussed with a box of cutouts, trying to make them look neat.
“I don’t know,” Brenna said. “I didn’t ask.”
Tenley frowned at her. “You’re watching his dog. You’re allowed to ask.”
“It felt nosey,” Brenna said. “If he wanted me to know, he would have told me.”
“If you say so,” Tenley said. “The Porter twins are going to tell everyone that you’re dating, you know.”
“That’s okay,” she said. “He insisted on buying me coffee, so Marybeth DeFalco will probably start telling everyone that I’m expecting his child.”
Tenley laughed out loud, and Brenna shrugged. “I tried to warn him.”
Brenna stored most of her decoupage projects in a large armoire at the back of the shop. On the upper shelves, there were small letter boxes, breakfast trays, a wooden canister set, and a few other small items, all placed strategically for sale by Tenley.
The armoire itself was one of Brenna’s prized pieces. Not that she wouldn’t sell it if the price was right, but she had spent an entire summer working on it and was quite attached to it. Rescued from a secondhand shop in Boston, she had painted it a rich blood red and then used old images of powder-wigged lords and their delicate-waisted ladies to decorate each of the bottom three drawers and the cupboard doors above. It had a decided Louis XIV flavor to it, and though it matched nothing, Brenna loved it. Tenley loved it, too, and had badgered Brenna until she agreed to let her use it in the shop.
Brenna stashed many of her rare papers in the bottom drawers of the armoire as well as supplies that she gathered for her classes. It was the bottom drawer she opened now as she hefted out a stack of clear glass plates she had purchased at a party rental place that was going out of business. The plates were square in shape with a narrow lip around the edges.
She had checked each plate to make sure it was free of chips or bubbles. These were in mint condition and tonight she was going to use them to teach her students to do decoupage under glass.
She put a plate in front of each chair and then took two plate holders out of the bottom drawer of the armoire. In the second drawer she had two plates that she had already decoupaged and she put them on display one, in each plate holder at the end of each table.
One she had decorated with cutouts of antique keys and then backed with several thick coats of creamy white latex paint. She used this plate as a key holder. The other she had covered in cutouts of old coins from all over the world. When she looked at the top of the clear glass plate, the copper, silver, and gold coins adhered faceup on the bottom of the plate and then painted over in forest green paint made it appear almost as if real coins were scattered across the dish. She ran her fingers across the smooth glass surface, pleased with how well the plate had turned out.
“Those look fantastic,” Tenley said.
“Let’s hope the class thinks so,” Brenna said.
The bells jangled on the front door and the first few students trickled in. The Porter sisters were first, followed by Lillian Page the local librarian and Sarah Buttercomb, who owned the bakery on the corner. Sarah was carrying a pink box full of sugar cookies. She frequently brought leftovers from the bakery, much to the delight of the class.
Margie Haywood came in a few minutes later. She was married to John Haywood and had been the school nurse at Morse Point Elementary for forever and a day. There wasn’t a knee under the age of twenty that she hadn’t stuck a Band-Aid on.
Margie was one of the cornerstones of Morse Point, and as president of the women’s auxiliary, she ran their annual June rummage sale, which raised funds for the community. She was short and gently rounded with close-cropped dark brown hair that was slowly fading to gray. She doled out hugs as easily as others gave hellos, and she was one of Brenna’s favorite students.
With Margie came Tara Montgomery and another woman, who looked to be a slightly older version of Tara. Her features were delicate like Tara’s but had a maturity about them that no amount of cosmetic surgery could erase. She wore her blond hair in a neat blunt cut that ended at her shoulders. Unlike Margie, this woman was not rounded with middle age but rail thin. Her clothes were cut perfectly to fit her narrow frame, and it was easy to see that there were no sales racks in her life. Brenna knew right away she must be Tara’s mother.
The Porter sisters exchanged a look with raised eyebrows, but wisely said nothing. Margie brought Tara and her mother over to Brenna.
“Brenna, I hope you don’t mind, but I thought I’d bring Tara and Tiffany to class tonight to meet some of my friends,” Margie said.
“Not at all,” Brenna said and she shook Tara’s outstretched hand and then Tiffany’s. Both women gave her a solid, warm handshake. There were no cold, limp-wristed women here.
Tara was even prettier close up, with large sky blue eyes and a cute upturned nose. Brenna could see why Jake Haywood had fallen for her.
“Tara is marrying my son Jake,” Margie said. Her eyes were wide when she said it. The engagement was only a week old, so Brenna figured she must still be trying to wrap her brain around gaining a daughter-in-law.
“Congratulations,” Tenley said as she joined them. “And welcome to Morse Point.”
“Thank you,” Tara said with a smile so genuine it was infectious. “It’s such a lovely town. I just know Jake and I are going to be so happy here.”
“Margie, you’re going to have to draft this young lady to help with the rummage sale,” Lillian said. “We’re trying to raise funds for new police cars.”
“Really?” Tara asked. “I’d love to help.”
“Then start going through your closet for donations,” Sarah said. “It’s an excellent excuse to refresh your wardrobe.”
The ladies all laughed.
“That reminds me, Margie, I have a couple of items in the back,” Brenna said. “Can you take a look and tell me if they’re what you’re looking for?”
“Sure,” Margie said and followed Brenna into the workroom.
Brenna had several designer suits she’d worn in her former life, working in an art gallery in Boston, hanging in the break room. She’d brought them in knowing she was going to see Margie. It felt like a bold maneuver to donate them to the rummage sale. As if she were making an official break from her old life and embracing this new one.
“These are exquisite,” Margie said. She ran her hand over a plastic-covered, plum Nicole Miller. “Several steps up from what I’m donating at any rate.”
Margie gestured down at her feet and Brenna saw she was wearing a pair of tan work boots.
“You really want to part with those?” Brenna asked. “They could be pretty spiffy with some hot pink laces.”
Margie smiled but it was rimmed with sadness. “They’re Jake’s. He outgrew them before he even scuffed them. I’ve been using them in the garden, but they’re too good to keep for myself. It seems like just yesterday he and Clue were catching tadpoles in the lake and begging to keep them as pets, and now he’s getting married.”
“Lillian says once you’re a parent the days are long and the years short,” Brenna said. She looped her arm around Margie’s shoulders and led her back out into the main room. “It’ll be all right.”
“Maybe you could donate some of your furs, Mom,” Tara was saying as they rejoined them.
Tiffany gave Tara a weak smile, and Brenna knew she was clearly not as enamored of the thought of her furs in the rummage sale as her daughter.
Brenna glanced over at the Porter sisters. They both looked disapproving and she hoped they didn’t give Tara or her mother a hard time.
“Why don’t you ladies help yourself to some wine and cheese?” Brenna said, and she led the way to the refreshment table. On the way, she leaned close to the Porter sisters and hissed, “Be nice.”
They both gave her wide-eyed innocent looks, and she shook her head. This was going to be a long class.
Tenley brought two chairs from the break room and shifted the places at the table to make room for the Montgomery women, while Brenna grabbed two more clear glass plates from the armoire. Tara oohed and aahed over Brenna’s work and even her mother seemed impressed.
When all of the women were seated, Brenna had them sift through the baskets of paper cutouts until they found enough to use on their plates. She then had them turn their plates upside down and glue the pictures facedown onto the glass.
“That’s a lovely engagement ring, Tara,” Lillian said as she leaned over to grab a bottle of white glue. “It’s very delicate.”
“Thank you,” Tara said. She turned her hand in the light to watch the diamond sparkle. “It was Jake’s grandmother’s.”
Margie gave her a wistful smile. “My mother wore that ring from the day Daddy proposed until the day she died.”
“And I will, too,” Tara said. She clutched her hand to her chest, looking painfully earnest.
Brenna glanced at the ring. A small round diamond was nestled in the center of an ornate gold filigree ring. It looked very Art Deco, which would be about the right time for Jake’s grandmother to have been engaged.
The diamond was not the usual size that someone of Tara’s social standing would normally wear. Brenna glanced at Tiffany’s hand and noticed she wore several diamond rings, all of which dwarfed the petite diamond on Tara’s hand.
Tiffany took Tara’s hand in hers to study the ring. “It has an old-fashioned charm,” she said. “It’s a lovely starter ring.”
Margie bit her lip, and Brenna couldn’t tell if she was holding back a sharp retort or if it was a reaction to having her feelings hurt.
“Does everyone have their pictures glued on?” Brenna asked, swiftly changing the subject.
Ella Porter was just gluing on her last picture. She wiped the excess glue off of the glass with a damp rag and looked up at the rest of the table.
“Okay, we’re going to let these dry until our next class, and when we come back, we’re going to paint the back of the plate with latex paint. I have several colors here, but you’re welcome to bring your own. When the paint is dry, we will then seal it with polyacrylic to protect it from chipping. So start thinking about what color you want to use for your backing.”
“I’m so glad I get to come back,” Tara said. She had chosen several ornate spoon cutouts, and Brenna noted that she had done a nice job with her layout. “Aren’t you, Mother?”
Tiffany glanced at the plain plate in front of her. She had done nothing with it. “I don’t think that will be necessary.”
A low buzz of conversation began amongst the students, while Brenna and Tenley began cleaning up after the night’s class.
Brenna was carrying a tray full of white glue bottles into the break room when Tiffany Montgomery approached her.
“I was wondering if I could speak to you, Brenna?” she asked.
“Sure.” She motioned for Tiffany to follow her into the break room, where they also stored their supplies, while she checked the tops on the glue bottles and put them back on their shelf.
“I had an inspiration during your class,” she said. “I’ve been trying to think of a clever wedding favor, Jordan almonds are just so last century, and while I was sitting in your class, it hit me.”
Brenna wiped a spot of glue off of the tray and turned to give Tiffany her full attention.
“I want to hire you to decoupage something brilliant for Tara’s wedding favors,” she said.
“Okay,” Brenna said slowly, not wanting to appear un-receptive. “What did you have in mind?”
“Well, we’re inviting three hundred people, and I’m sure they’ll all come, so it has to be something that you can do in the next two months.”
“Three hundred wedding favors?” Brenna asked. “Wow.”
“I know it’s a lot, but just think what a boost it will be for the shop and for your personal business,” Tiffany said.
“I’ll have to talk to Tenley and see if she can help,” Brenna said.
“Absolutely,” Tiffany said. “I’m willing to pay top dollar for your time. Since this is Tara’s first wedding, I want to go all out.”
“First wedding?” Brenna asked.
“Certainly,” Tiffany lowered her voice. “You don’t really think she’ll stay married to a mechanic, do you? We raised her to have higher expectations than that.”
“But she loves him,” Brenna said. “In fact, I don’t think I’ve ever seen two people more in love.”
Tiffany sighed. “Yes, she loves him today and probably for a year or two, but then, she’s going to want to have children, and she won’t want to raise them here in this limited suburbia. She’ll want to raise them in Boston where they can have every advantage. Don’t get me wrong, I like Jake. He seems like a fine young man, but I don’t see him leaving Morse Point, and I don’t see Tara staying.”
“So, why throw such an elaborate wedding?” Brenna asked. “If you think it’s doomed to fail, why not encourage them to live together?”
“Because a big wedding is what Tara wants,” she said, as if it were obvious.
Brenna felt an ominous thumping behind her eye. She had been born and raised in Boston by parents not much different than Tara’s. Their life was a whirlwind of society events and exotic travel. They could no more see what a town like Morse Point had to offer than they could understand why some people preferred it.
In their high society world, your value was equal to the sum of your bank statement and the worth of your personal possessions. In Morse Point, your value was based upon what you contributed to the local community and the sort of person that you were, hardworking or lazy, kind or cruel.
Brenna knew she preferred to be judged by the latter and she also knew that her parents didn’t understand it, which was undoubtedly why they had yet to come and see her here.

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