Read Down Home and Deadly Online
Authors: Christine Lynxwiler,Jan Reynolds,Sandy Gaskin
Tags: #Mystery
“Be careful, though. Dressing to aggravate your mother is one thing, but marrying for that reason would be taking things a little too far.”
A flash of irritation crossed her face.
Had I overstepped the bounds? After all, this was my boss I was giving advice to.
“That wouldn’t be the reason. Like I said, it would just be a plus.”
“I don’t know. It seems like it would be a good idea to come to terms with your mother before you make permanent plans with anyone else.”
“Is that Dear Pru speaking?” Sarcasm dripped from her voice.
“I’ve just seen too much unhappiness because of unresolved problems,” I answered soberly. “Dear Pru sees a lot of sorrow. I’ve learned plenty from my readers.”
“I’ll think about it.” She stood abruptly
,
and I followed her down the hall past the restrooms and break room. Tiffany pointed to a room near the door. “Do you realize that every newspaper Uncle Hank put out is in that room? If we were as up
-
to
-
date as most cities, it would all be on computer by now.” She sighed. “But we’re not.”
I knew she was just trying to dispel the awkwardness my unwelcome advice had left between us, but I was curious. I pushed the door open and glanced inside at the rows of newspapers. “Wow. That’s a lot of information.”
“Yeah, probably forty years
’ worth
at least. And all filed by date.”
Wouldn’t it be easy to solve a murder if I could organize my mind like
this room
?
While I was still daydreaming about that, Tiffany cleared her throat. “I’ve got to run.”
As we exited the building, I thought about what I’d learned. Amelia’s whole theory about her daughter not being able to attract men was skewed by her faulty perception of Tiffany. Sometimes I felt the same way about solving J.D.’s murder. Like there was a piece of the puzzle in plain sight that we just weren’t seeing.
*****
Dear Pru
,
I am nearing thirty
,
and not to be cliché or anything, but my biological clock is ticking. I have met a man I really care for and am considering marrying him. He loves me, but I’m not sure if what I feel for him is love or if I am just settling so that I can have a family.
Not Sure
*****
Not
S
ure,
If you aren’t sure, there’s a good chance you aren’t in love. Only you can decide if marrying a man you “like” in order to have a family is worth giving up on the real thing.
*****
“Is this my favorite attorney?” I grinned as I imagined Alex on the other end of the phone line.
“It depends. Who’s this?” he asked playfully.
“Your favorite waitress.”
“Debbie?”
“Very funny.”
“Oh wait! I recognize that sarcasm. This is Jenna, isn’t it? Then, yes, this is your favorite attorney.”
“Good, because I’m about to do something I’ve never done before and ask a man out on a date.”
“Anyone I know?”
I snickered. “You’re in rare form today, Counselor. Carly called
,
and she and Elliott want us to ride to
Jonesboro
with them to get some restaurant supplies.” Before he could make a smart remark about how exciting that would be, I rushed on, “And eat at El Acapulco while we’re there.”
“That sounds good
,
” Alex
said.
An hour later, the four of us were on the road in Elliott’s SUV and deep in discussion. With Elliott and Carly in the front seat and Alex and me in the middle seat, we covered everything from religion to politics, all those subjects you were supposed to avoid. How cool that we shared similar points of view on most things.
Halfway to
Jonesboro
, we
started
dissecting a Will Smith movie we had rented and watched together
.
Elliott
glanced at Carly.
“
Keeping his identity a secret was what got him in trouble.”
Carly jerked her head around to look at him. “He didn’t do it on purpose at the beginning. And if she had known, she never would have gone out with him.”
Elliott shrugged. “Still, keeping secrets like that keeps relationships from growing.”
“H
u
mph.” Carly crossed her arms. “Shows how much you know. They ended up together, didn’t they?”
Elliott kept his eyes on the road, but his knuckles were white on the steering wheel. Carly turned and looked out the passenger window.
Alex and I stared at each other in bewilderment. I shrugged. Elliott was just the brother-in-law I wanted. And I was pretty sure he was the husband Carly wanted. So what was the problem with these two lately? Sometimes they seemed thrilled to be together
;
other times they got upset with each other at the drop of a hat.
“So who do you think killed J.D. Finley?” I asked
,
more
to
break the silence than any real hope that my three traveling companions would know.
Nobody spoke for at least thirty seconds
,
then Elliott’s death grip on the steering wheel slowly relaxed. “Well, I don’t really know any of these folks very well. Lisa took a few lessons at the
country club
, and she struck me as a lady who knew what she wanted and how to get it.” He kept his eyes on the road.
Carly glanced toward him. “That doesn’t mean she’d kill someone, though. Lots of folks look out for number one. And they don’t kill whoever gets in their way.”
Oh boy. To think I’d been trying to smooth things over. “You’re both right,” I said. “And the suspect list is pretty sparsely populated. The only other person I’ve thought of so far is Larry.”
“Who’s Larry?” Elliott asked.
I told them about Larry and the way he had acted when he nearly ran me down at the gym. And how he’d yelled at Lisa.
“Sounds like a rough character,” Elliott agreed. “And you think his motive would be jealousy? If he did it, I mean.”
“I guess so. If we knew the motive
,
I think we could figure out who did it.” I glanced at Carly. “Unless it was a stranger like Carly hopes.”
He nodded. “I agree with Carly. I don’t like the thought of someone from
Lake
View
being a cold-blooded killer.”
I smiled at Alex. Finally
,
I’d found something they agreed on. He gave me a discreet thumbs
-
up.
At Sam’s Club, Alex and I left Elliott and Carly to gather restaurant supplies
while we
wandered among the books and CDs. Before too long, Alex met a fellow lawyer
,
and they were soon engrossed in the intricacies of trout fishing
:
fly fishing versus live bait.
I listened for a while, but finally my attention span reached its limit.
“I’m going to go help Carly,” I whispered and received an absent nod in response. “I’ll call when we’re done.”
My stomach was growling, and I figured the sooner we got supplies taken care of, the sooner we could eat. A fajita was calling my name. I headed toward the back and
had
flipped my phone open to call Carly
,
when I heard her voice, strangely agitated. I closed the phone but could still hear her loud and clear. Apparently from the next aisle.
“I can’t help it, Elliott. I don’t think it’s the right thing to do.”
“You think keeping secrets is the right thing? Come on, Carly. I think you’re avoiding the issue. Your family is so close. How will they feel when you finally tell them? Someone, probably Jenna, will want to know when you found out. Then what?”
*****
*****
Barkin’ up the wrong tree
I stayed out of sight but waited for my sister to answer. What was going on?
“I think I know my family better than you,” Carly answered tartly.
“Fine.” Elliott sounded more resigned than angry.
My curiosity meter was on full alert. Secrets? From the family?
Did this have to do with the whole Travis situation? Or was there something else?
And what was that ‘probably Jenna’ crack about? I retraced my steps to Alex. I’d lost my desire to help gather supplies, as well as my appetite.
I was thankful
Alex was alone when I found him. I quietly told him what I’d heard.
He put his arm around me
,
and I stood for a
few
second
s
listening to his steady heartbeat. “I know it’s hard,” he said softly. “But maybe this is something personal between the two of them. And that’s really a good thing, isn’t it? You
are
hoping that they’re getting serious, right?”
“You mean like maybe they’re about to get engaged and she isn’t ready to tell us yet?”
He shrugged. “I don’t know if that’s it or not. But she’ll tell you when she gets ready.”
I nodded. “How do you do that?”
He raised an eyebrow. “What?”
“Make me feel better.”
His dimple flashed. “It’s a gift. Now let’s find the secret
-
keeping couple and go eat.”
I kissed him on the cheek. “Thanks.”
“Anytime.”
We met Elliott and Carly rolling two loaded
carts
toward the checkout. “Did you buy out the store?” Alex called
,
and they laughed. Any awkwardness I felt vanished. Alex was right. Carly would tell me when she was ready.
At the Mexican restaurant, my appetite returned with a vengeance. The swarthy young waiter brought chips and white cheese dip then took our order. He repeated each thing we said as he wrote it down and waited for a nod.
“He wants to be sure he gets it right, doesn’t he?” I said after he left. As a newly
minted waitress, I couldn’t imagine how hard it must be to have a language barrier in addition to all of the other difficulties of the job.
“That reminds me of
Marco
,” I said.
Carly nodded. “Speaking of
Marco
,” she drawled
,
“I wonder if he has problems with his roommates or something. He acts like he never wants to go home.”
“Yeah, I’ve noticed that
,
too. But he does a really good job
,
” I said.
“I think because English is
n’t
his native language, he pays close attention to all his orders. He makes fewer mistakes than
.
.
.
” She put her hand over her mouth and looked at me.
“What?” I looked right back. “I
know
you don’t mean me.”
“Of course I don’t,” Carly said. “I just realized it might be unprofessional to discuss my employees.”
“So, who
do
you want to discuss?” Alex asked
,
and we all laughed.
I cleared my throat. “We could talk about employers.”
“Now wait a minute,” Carly drawled.
“I mean ex-employers, silly. I was just going to say that even though I’m sorry that it took Lisa getting in trouble to do it, I’m relieved that I’ve kind of made peace with Bob.”
“Funny you should mention Bob and peace in the same sentence.” Elliott dipped a chip in the cheese dip.
I frowned. “Why?”
He shrugged. “Just that I heard something weird
out on the links
this week.” He stuck the chip in his mouth.
“About Bob?” Alex said.
Elliott nodded
t
hen chewed the chip for what seemed like forever. Maybe I was wrong about him being the perfect guy for Carly. Didn’t he know I was dying of curiosity over here?
He swallowed. Finally. “I heard he and Wilma were full-fledged hippies back in the day. You know, peace, love, flower power. All that stuff.”
“Like when they were teenagers?” Carly asked.
Elliott shook his head. “I honestly just heard bits and pieces, but I think it was more recent than that. Maybe when they were our age.”
“So they were old hippies,” Alex murmured.
“Speak for yourself,” Carly and I said at the same time.
We grinned.
“Wonder what changed him?” I mused.
Elliott took a drink. “From what I heard, something big.”