Read Heaven Preserve Us Online

Authors: Cricket McRae

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths, #Large Type Books, #Detective and Mystery Stories, #Mystery Fiction, #Washington (State), #Women Artisans, #Soap Trade

Heaven Preserve Us (26 page)

BOOK: Heaven Preserve Us
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But still.

 
TWENTY-FOUR

BARR HAD TAKEN A quick nap but was awake again when I got
home. I filled him in on my encounter with Maryjake. Now that it
was done and over, he didn't seem quite so upset with me for
wanting to talk with her in the first place. Funny how that worked
out.

While I was gone, Kelly had dropped by with the letter James
had written Philip. Thinking back, he must have been in Philip's
office shortly before I let myself into HH with Meghan's key that
night. He was the one who'd left the light on. Scared the flip out of
me, finding that light on. Probably left the door to Philip's apartment unlocked, too. Didn't say much for Kelly's attention to detail, but he still seemed like a good-enough guy.

I bent over the page and puzzled over James' awkward scrawl.
Luckily, it was more of a note than a letter, so there wasn't much
to decipher.

 

Philip,

You don't love Maryjake, and you'll hurt her if you keep
this up. She deserves better than a fly by night playboy who
waves a bunch of cash around and then moves on to new
meat.

Stay away from my wife.

The missive wasn't signed, but there was no question who'd
written it. It wasn't half as angry as either Ann or Mandy's emails
had been. Instead it struck me as almost poignant.

"I expected something more..."

"Fire and brimstone?" Barr asked.

"Exactly. This hardly seems like a threat at all."

"Hard to tell," he said, all noncommittal.

"Not that that proves James innocent."

"No." Barr was still thinking about it, and until he was done, I
wouldn't get much more of an opinion than that.

Returning the note, I told him I had some work to do. He settled in on the sofa to do a little telephonic maneuvering of his own.
Having something to do seemed to give him more energy, and I
left him happily punching numbers into the cordless handset.

Downstairs, I started on the air fresheners. When I originally
experimented with the formulation for them, I used half-pint canning jars because the rubber-rimmed lids sealed the scent in so
nicely and kept them from drying. Since beginning to market
them, however, I'd discovered a supply of pretty blue jars with
chrome lids that worked just as well and looked nicer on a table or
shelf.

 

The fresheners were basically essential oils suspended in a simple gel created with plain old gelatin. As they dried, they released
the scent into the air, exactly like commercial gel air fresheners do,
except mine contained aromatherapy blends: a bright wake-up
scent with peppermint, tea tree oil, and eucalyptus for the officealso great for beside the bed if you had a cold. For the bedroom,
either clove and cinnamon if the customer was looking for something sensual, or lavender, chamomile, and orange if they were
looking for a good night's sleep. Those three were my biggest sellers, but I also had a balsam fir scent nice for the living room as
well as a blend with clary sage, lavender, and rose geranium.

I started water boiling and set up the jars to fill with the gel
mixture. Then I began melting gelatin and adding scents and finally poured the fresheners, blend by blend. Then I started on a
new batch. The intense bouquet of all those volatile essential oils
filled my nose and brain. A sense of calm and focus settled over
me as I mixed and poured, a cherished side benefit of my work.

As I finished the last of the order, a knock sounded on the door
leading to the back yard. Luke stood with his hand up to the window glass, shading his eyes as he tried to peer inside. As usual,
Seth stood behind and to one side of his brother.

I walked over and opened the door, smiling broadly. "Hello,
boys. Would you like some money?"

Luke stepped eagerly inside. "Meghan called. Said you had a
check."

"It's upstairs. We could've sent it, or dropped it by your house
if you didn't want to wait."

"We're out and about. No trouble coming by to pick it up."

 

"All right. I'll just run and get it." I went up and grabbed the
check off the corner of the kitchen counter and returned downstairs.

Seth had finally crossed the threshold and stood looking around
wide-eyed. When I handed his brother the check, I heard him inhale deeply.

"Kind of strong in here, isn't it?" I asked, watching him.

"It's nice. Really nice."

Luke rolled his eyes. "C'mon. Let's get going."

Seth looked away, embarrassed.

"I think it's nice, too," I said. "You want one of these air fresheners?"

Luke gave a little laugh, not unfriendly at all, but certainly conveying the opinion that real men don't need no stinkin' air fresheners.

"Wait," I said. "Give me a chance."

I walked over to the table and grabbed one of the balsam firscented jars off the table. It had been one of the first I'd poured,
and now it was gelling up nicely. I waved it under Seth's nose.

His eyes brightened, and his mouth turned up. "Smells like a
pine tree. Only, you know, better. Luke, take a whiff."

I was pleased as punch to hear him say that. For one thing, he
seemed so darn shy that getting him to say anything at all was a
kind of victory, and for another, if I could get men interested in
more of my products, I'd have a whole new marketing demographic.

Luke took a token sniff. "Nice. You ready?"

Seth held out the jar to me.

 

I shook my head. "Take it. You can always stick it behind the
seat of your truck or something. At least it's better than those little
cardboard thingies people hang from their rearview mirrors.

Seth gave Luke a look. "Yeah, lots nicer than those." He directed
another small smile my way. "Thanks."

"No problem. Thanks for all the work on the chicken coop,
you two. It looks great, and you did a fantastic job. Any reference
you need, just have them call us; Meghan and I will be happy to
vouch for you"

That put a big grin on Luke's face. "Glad to hear it. And don't
think we won't take you up on the reference, either."

They were nice kids, I thought, as they closed the back door
and headed off down the alley, Seth once again a few steps behind
his older brother. He held the little blue pot of air freshener in
front of him like a vase. I was sure they both missed their mother,
but I couldn't help but wonder whether Seth missed her more.

I went to check out the chicken house, imagining how the hens
would like it. Meghan and I had discussed it ad nauseam, and finally decided on a black-and-white barred Plymouth rock, a classic Rhode Island red, and two Araucana, or Easter egg chickens.
The first two laid brown eggs, and the second two would lay light
green or blue eggs.

I was half tempted to go buy the chicks that afternoon. The
first eight to twelve weeks we'd keep them in the mudroom, so
they'd be plenty warm. At the very least, I could set up the nursery
for them.

The mudroom is where Barr found me, hanging a heat lamp
from the bare beam above so it would shine directly down on the
pen in the middle of the floor. The pen was a thirty-six-inch square box, cut down to eighteen inches tall, and overlaid with a
wire lid created from the side of Brodie's old dog crate. The lid was
removable for easy cleaning, would keep the girls in when they
started thinking about running, jumping, and flying, and would
support old towels as a roof to keep the temperature in the nineties while the chicks were still tiny. Three inches of fine pine shavings lined the floor, and the waterer and feeder sat up on bricks so
they wouldn't get gunky.

 

He came and stood in the doorway, taking in my cobbledtogether chick nursery. "That'll work pretty well"

"You think so?" I could hear the worry in my voice as I surveyed my work. "Neither Meghan nor I have done this before, and
I'd hate to kill the little things just because we do-or don't dosomething out of ignorance."

"We had chickens the whole time I was growing up. You'll be
fine. They're not that tough to take care of."

Barr had grown up on a ranch in Wyoming, once a working
cattle outfit, but for years now a dude ranch of the first order.
Guests came to ride horses and work cattle, go fly fishing, hang out
on the river, hike, camp, or cross-country ski in the winter.

"I'm grateful for any suggestions. Don't hold back because you
don't want to hurt my feelings," I said.

He smiled. "Oh, don't worry, I'll speak up. If you're done with
this little project here, though, why don't you come into the
kitchen, have a cup of something, and I'll tell you what I've learned
about James and Kelly so far."

I obeyed with alacrity.

Settled in at the table with a cup of Bewley's Irish tea for me
and a cup of Earl Grey for him, he brought me up to speed.

 

"Kelly O'Connell is indeed who he says he is. Has a private investigator's license in New Jersey, and is well enough thought of
by the authorities there."

A wave of relief washed over me. Meghan's bad luck with men
might be turning after all. I hoped so. I really hoped so. I was even
starting to like Kelly myself, after his frank admission the other
night, and his obvious devotion to Meghan, even after such a
short time.

"And James Dreggle? Did Owens find out anything about him?"

"Not Owens."

"You did ask him, didn't you? Or is the favor bank getting low?
Can you ask Officer Dawson?"

"I could, but didn't. Just because I'm not on active duty at the
moment doesn't mean I'm not still a cop, you know."

Being in the hospital and now housebound was making him
cranky. I couldn't blame him. I'd be the same way.

"Of course," I said. "So you called his work?"

"I did. And his supervisor confirmed James Dreggle was out of
the state for a couple weeks, in New Mexico doing some count or
other-the supervisor kept calling it "ground truthing," but I finally gleaned it had something to do with finding out how many
of a certain species of bird there were in a given area."

"Sounds tedious."

"He was with a team of two other people the whole time. They
didn't return until the afternoon of the preserves exchange."

"Great" I took a noisy sip of tea. "He could have given the
beets to Philip before he left, right? Then he'd have an alibi if there
was any suspicion, and Philip would be out of commission and unable to cuckold him while he was on his business trip. Maybe he
didn't even intend to kill him."

 

He looked doubtful. "It's possible."

I slumped in my chair. "But not very probable. He'd be leaving
an awful lot to chance."

He nodded, thoughtful. "Yeah. Could have been a hopeful shot
in the dark, I suppose."

I said, "Maryjake made a good point today. James is a pretty
straightforward guy. Botulism poisoning is, well, anything but."

"And yet," Barr said, "he's a scientist, and he'd know about botulism. And it's also possible that if Maryjake knew he did something to Philip in a, as you say, straightforward manner, it could so
alienate her that he'd never be able to save his marriage."

"Yeah. Maybe. But how do you give a guy something to eat when
he knows you hate him?"

"You make him think it's from your wife."

I pointed a finger at him. "Right. Well, maybe it happened that
way. But if it did, unless we can actually trace the beets to him,
there's no way we could prove it."

Barr sipped his tea and looked his rueful agreement at me.

"Hungry?" I asked.

"Oddly enough, I am a little."

"Why oddly?"

"Uh, did you see the huge plate of food you set in front of me
this morning? And I ate every darn bite of it, too, after you abandoned me."

I was pleased to hear his appetite was returning. "That was hours
ago. How about a sandwich?"

"Sounds good."

 

"Egg salad? Tuna?"

"Do you have any peanut butter?"

Did we ever. I bought the stuff in the industrial-sized container.
I got up and sliced off a couple pieces of bread from the loaf on the
counter. Almost time to make more, I noted, as we'd plowed
through both loaves Meghan had made last Tuesday. Erin's lunches
used up a lot of it. I reached for the raspberry freezer jam, then
saw the apricot jelly from the preserves exchange that Meghan had
been eating on her health muffin.

I turned to Barr, a jar in each hand. "Would you rather..." But
I trailed off, looking at the lovely amber of the apricot.

"What?" he asked.

"Did you see all those jellies Jude brought to the preserves exchange? All backlit with the little white Christmas lights? There
must have been five different kinds."

"I guess."

"No, really, do you remember?" I needed him to recall that
scene the same way I did.

"I wasn't feeling so hot, if you'll recall." He squinched his forehead in concentration. "But, yeah, I think so. He had them set up
next to Maryjake's stuff."

BOOK: Heaven Preserve Us
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