Read Monica Ferris_Needlecraft Mysteries_04 Online

Authors: Unraveled Sleeve

Tags: #Women Detectives, #Mystery & Detective, #Needlework, #Fiction, #Women Sleuths, #General, #Minnesota, #Mystery Fiction, #Devonshire; Betsy (Fictitious Character), #Needleworkers, #Women Detectives - Minnesota, #Murder

Monica Ferris_Needlecraft Mysteries_04 (2 page)

BOOK: Monica Ferris_Needlecraft Mysteries_04
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“That decorator I think I could've taken,” Godwin said with a snort when the shop was empty of all but the woman walking her fingers through the counted cross-stitch patterns in the half-price box. Betsy's tears turned to laughter at that, but the laughter died instantly when she heard that infernal
bing
that meant someone else was coming in. She turned a stony face to the front door.

Shelly Donohue was standing there, looking startled. “Wow, something's got your underwear in a knot,” she said, a half-formed smile fading.

Shelly was a medium-sized woman who worked in the shop part-time. She was about thirty-five, with long hair pulled into an untidy bun at the nape of her neck. She wore a full-length, down-filled coat and boots that looked suitable for walking on the moon. In honor of the sunshine, the coat was open.

“It's all right for me to be here,” she said, because school was in session and she taught fourth grade. “My students are on a field trip to the Minneapolis Art Museum this afternoon. What's wrong, anyway? You don't look well.”

“I'm just tired,” said Betsy, shoving her fingers into her hair, a gesture she was afraid might become habitual.

“And every sales rep on the planet is on the phone or here in person, trying to cut himself a slice of Betsy's inheritance,” said Godwin. “I've been telling her all morning she should go to Cancun for a week, get away from all this. She could soak up some rays by day and party by starlight. Enough strawberry margaritas will
scare away the nightmares while she gets a break from the money mongers.”

“Nightmares?” echoed Shelly, coming to put a hand on Betsy's arm. “How awful! I just hate it when I have a nightmare.” A smile with a trace of envy in it appeared. “What are you dreaming, the IRS is after your money?”

Godwin said, “This is serious! She's dreaming about death and corpses—”

“Oh, ish!”

“Hush, Goddy,” said Betsy, adding to Shelly, “They're about what you'd expect after what I've been through lately. Kind of a delayed reaction to December, I guess.” Around Christmas, someone had tried to murder Betsy. “I'll be all right pretty soon. I'd take Godwin's advice, but we're shorthanded as it is, and Joe is being difficult about selling me this building, and anyway I've got some ideas for changes I want to make in the shop, so I need to talk to an architect or—” Shelly and Godwin exchanged swift glances of dismay. “What?”

“What kind of changes?” asked Shelly.

“Nothing drastic,” said Betsy. “I was thinking of replacing that dresser up by the front door—”

“No, no, you can't do that!” said Godwin.

“Why not?” asked Betsy. “The drawers don't go back far enough to hold the bigger canvases, some are curled up in there. And the veneer on the top is lifting.”

Godwin said, “Honey, there are people who, if they walk in here and don't see that dresser, will think they've come to the wrong place.”

“Okay, we can find a carpenter who will build us a dresser just like the current one, only two inches deeper front to back.”

Shelly turned and walked to the dresser. “But don't you see? If you push out two inches into the walk space
here, then you'll have to cut two inches off the counter.” She turned and put a hand on the counter. “You can't do that; I just love this old counter.”

“So do several antique dealers who have offered me enough to pay for both a new counter and a new dresser.”

“Oh, Betsy, please don't sell this counter! Don't change anything! This place is perfect as it is!”

“I agree,” said Godwin, nodding sincerely.

Tired as she was, Betsy understood what was really going on. Betsy's sister Margot had founded Crewel World, had brought in the counter and the dresser, had put the wooden pegs on the wall and the curious set of canvas doors. She had been a compassionate but driving force in this town, with countless friends. So long as these things remained, Margot was, in a way, still here.

Shelly looked a little ashamed. “I know, don't say it, we don't have the right to make demands like this. Crewel World is yours now, so you get to do whatever you want with it.” She looked around, her smile upside down. “At least you didn't close it.”

“For which there are a lot of grateful people,” added Godwin. “But you shouldn't make any decisions about changes right now. You should go away for a week, even a couple of weeks, then you'll see the place with new eyes, and be better able to decide what you really want to do.”

“But don't go anywhere Godwin suggests,” said Shelly. “His favorite places are like Animal House every night. In fact, go farther away than Mexico. Have you ever been to Spain?”

“No, just England and France.”

“Well, I went to the Costa del Sol one winter, and it was marvelous. It's warm and sunny, it has sleepy little towns with winding narrow streets, and there's the Mediterranean Sea to bask beside. Barcelona is nearby, with
a cathedral you have to see to believe, and there's a castle called Montserrat—”

“Spain's too far!” objected Godwin.

“But that's the attraction,” replied Shelly. “It's far from here, way over on the other side of the Atlantic. And the Costa del Sol has these lovely little shops, nothing like here at home. I bought an alabaster statue of a medieval saint for about twenty dollars, very crudely done, but powerful, his eyes just glower at you—”

Godwin said, “Yes, the very thing for someone haunted by bad dreams. Cancun is just as warm and it's lively and never boring. Their beaches are really nice, and there are dolphins who will come and play with you.” He sighed. “Wish I could go there now myself.”

“But Spain's so exotic, and full of history, with—”

The conversation, which was bordering on argument, cut off when the door sounded, marking the arrival of three members of the Monday Bunch. A group of women stitchers who met every week at Crewel World to work on projects, the Monday Bunch gave advice and support to one another, and indulged in Excelsior's favorite pastime, gossip.

Within a few minutes two more arrived, making six, counting Shelly. Stout Kate McMahon, with her graying red hair and broad smile, was finishing up a hardanger project. Betsy had thought to take up hardanger, and so she came to stand behind Kate and watch.

“What is that, a satin stitch?” she asked.

“Not exactly. I push the needle in here, coming up here, four threads up. You have to watch carefully, because this square has to match exactly the square across from it, and also line up with this square and this square. See, here or here is wrong.”

Betsy leaned closer and felt her eyes cross. She couldn't quite see what the difference was. “I think I need to be more nearsighted to do hardanger.”

Kate laughed. “Yes, I take my glasses off when I do this.”

Betsy went back to her chair and took out the needlepoint project she was working on, a pillow with rows of geese in various poses alternating with the heads of daisies. If it went on as well as it had begun, she planned to display it in her shop.

Godwin, working on a lush and colorful counted cross-stitch pattern of a medieval castle, said, “Betsy's thinking of taking a vacation. March in Minnesota is the pits, don't you agree?”

Alice Skoglund, a broad-shouldered woman with a strong chin and a tendency to verbal faux pas, agreed. “I hate early spring. That's when the snow starts to melt and uncovers all the little animals that died during winter.”

“Mercy, Alice!” exclaimed Martha Winters.

“Well,” she said, only a little abashed, “it is.”

Bing!
went the door to the shop.

“That's why I like to fly away to Cancun,” said Godwin, consulting his pattern and grimacing at the number of half stitches in the section he was working. “I've suggested Cancun to Betsy.” He glanced up toward the door. “Oh, hi, Jill. We're talking about a getaway for Betsy. She really needs one. Can you join us for a while?”

They all looked at Officer Jill Cross standing just inside the door, big in her uniform, her smooth pale face looking back placidly. “For half an hour,” she said, lifting a bulging plastic bag with the Crewel World logo on it.

“I think Betsy should go to romantic Spain,” said Shelly.

“Too far,” said Godwin. “Go to Mexico—you don't have to worry about your internal clock getting all wonky.”

“I think she should go to Hawaii,” said Kate. “It's tropical, but it's also America.”

“There are Minnesotans who winter in Mexico,” noted Martha, around the end of a piece of floss she was moistening in her mouth. “You might find yourself in the middle of Old Home Week down there. That would be nice.”

Betsy frowned at the thought of Minnesota sales reps on a vacation won by never missing an opportunity. Suddenly distant Spain seemed more attractive.

Shelly spoiled that by saying, “Liz and Isobel are going to Spain. Actually, so is Father Rettger—but I think he's going to Compostella, not Costa del Sol.”

Godwin, seeking to change the subject, said, “Martha, some people think it's
not nice
to lick your floss.”

Martha, complacently relicking her floss before threading her needle, said, “Some people should find more important things to worry about.”

Jill came to the table with a small sheet of paper in her other hand. “Here,” she said, putting it in front of Betsy.

Betsy picked up the sheet of paper. It was an announcement for a stitchers' retreat. “Where did you get this?”

“Off the mirror on your dresser.” Jill gestured with a minimal nod of her head toward the front of the store. “I saw it when Godwin put it up there a couple of weeks ago, but it got covered up by that announcement about CATS.” CATS was a big convention for stitchers coming to Minneapolis in November.

“May I see that?” asked Kate, and Betsy handed her the flier. “Oh, Naniboujou! I've heard of that place.” She twisted around to look up at Jill. “But it's way up on the North Shore, isn't it? Practically on the Canadian border.”

“Brrrr!” Godwin shivered dramatically. “It's still the dead of winter up there!”

“It's still the dead of winter down here,” said Betsy, surprised.

“No, it isn't,” said several women, equally surprised. Pat said, “Why it's only March and there's bare spots on the ground already, and if you look at the branches of the trees, you can see the buds are swelling. I'm expecting a crocus any day now.”

“I've been to Naniboujou,” said Martha Winters, working her needle under some finished stitches on the back of her linen before starting to stitch—she might be a floss licker but she would never tie a knot at the end of her floss. “Only in the summer, of course. But it's a beautiful place, a lodge with a big dining room that serves wonderful food, right across from a state park with miles of hiking trails. Lake Superior is right outside your window, and they have these old-fashioned Adirondack chairs down on the shore, so you can sit with a glass of iced-tea and watch the waves.”

“Just the thing to do in March on the North Shore,” said Shelly. “Wade a mile or two through six feet of snow in a state park, and rest afterwards on the lakeshore with a glass of iced tea while watching the next blizzard blow in from Canada.”

Even Martha laughed at that.

“Did they have a band on Saturday night?” asked Godwin.

“No band, no bar, no television,” said Martha. “Not even a phone in your room.”

Kate handed the flier back to Betsy. “The application is still on this. Which isn't surprising, nobody we know would want to head north this time of year, would they?”

There was a murmur of agreement.

Betsy looked up at Jill. She was a tall woman, strongly built—though most of her bulk was from the
bulletproof vest under a heavy shirt and winter-weight jacket. She had ash blond hair and equally pale eyebrows on a face that rarely showed what she was thinking. She was looking at Betsy now with that calm, unreadable face.

The calm transmitted itself to Betsy.
Nobody I know, no television, and no phones, no phones, no phones,
thought Betsy. “If the stitch-in is this weekend, can we still get a room?” she asked.

“I called in my reservation six weeks ago,” said Jill. “And got the last room. I had to take one of the expensive ones, with a fireplace. It's also a double. The stitch-in is just for the weekend, so you can move into your own room on Monday. I'm staying a week; I had to take some vacation or lose it, and I thought I'd get in some cross-country skiing.” Jill was made for Minnesota; Betsy was sure she considered summer to be a sad break from winter sports.

Betsy looked again at the brochure. The room had knotty pine walls, the bed looked comfortable. One whole week—She looked at Godwin. “Can we get enough part timers for you to manage a whole week?” she asked.

Godwin sighed dramatically—but he did everything dramatically. “Well, I don't know if I should try to help you, if you won't take my advice and go someplace warm and fun.” Then he smiled and said, only a little less dramatically, “All right, Cancun won't go broke because you don't go there this year. And of course we'll manage. Didn't two of our part-timers complain last week that they weren't getting enough hours? We'll manage just fine.”

BOOK: Monica Ferris_Needlecraft Mysteries_04
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