Authors: Amy Vansant
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Cozy, #Literature & Fiction, #Women's Fiction, #Humor
“Darla!”
“What? I meant his
face
. Now who has the dirty mind? Didn’t you think he was handsome?”
“I guess. Why didn’t any of you ever tell me about him?”
Darla and Mariska exchanged a look.
“Oh, honey. We all thought he was gay.”
Charlotte wrote
find Erin’s killer
on her wall. It seemed dramatic, so she erased it and replaced it with
solve mystery
. The statement was vague enough that if someone saw it, they wouldn’t jump to the conclusion that she was nuts. She could say the mystery was the location of a missing earring, or the clicking noise her dishwasher made.
Speaking of which…
She added
fix clicking
to the board.
It had been twenty-four hours since she’d found a skeleton in her backyard, and while life went on as usual, she felt strange in her own home. She fought a persistent urge to peek out her back window. A tingling feeling on the back of her neck made her suspect that at any moment, she’d find Erin Bingham standing in her lanai.
But in what state? Would she look like she did when she was alive? Or a zombie? Or would she find a skeleton with a broken mandible tapping on her door?
She couldn’t stop thinking about the poor woman or her handsome son. She felt terrible for Declan. She’d lost her own mother at a young age, so she empathized. To relive his loss through such a gruesome discovery; she could only imagine what impact that might have on the enterprising pawnbroker.
Maybe the body wasn’t his mother’s? It would be a while before the officials identified the remains, but the appearance of the necklace didn’t bode well. Maybe, the necklace wasn’t unique. He’d only been a child when he bought it for her, surely, it wasn’t very expensive. Maybe a local store had sold hundreds of them.
Her mind was still racing through the possibilities of both necklace sales and hauntings when she found Mariska and Darla waiting outside in their swimsuits and floral cover-ups. Mariska sat behind the wheel of her light blue golf cart, Darla in the passenger seat, her nose slathered in bright yellow sun block. Charlotte hopped on the rear seat and set her towel beside her.
“Any news on your bones?” asked Darla.
“No. Any details from Frank?”
“Oh, you know that man. Getting him to talk is like pulling teeth. I told him about Declan’s mother and he just grunted at me and asked what was for dinner.”
“He’s our only hope,” said Charlotte. “I don’t think the police are required to share information with the person who found the body. That would be Katie, anyway.”
“It’s just so awful,” said Mariska. “You never think this sort of thing is going to happen in your neighborhood. The next thing you know we’ll have the
Dateline
people lurking around.”
“Ooh, I hope so,” said Darla. “I like that Keith Morrison. He’s like sexy old saddle leather.”
Charlotte turned to look at Darla, “I don’t even know what that means, but I do
not
want an explanation.”
“Do you think this will lower our property values?” asked Mariska as she stomped on the pedal.
“Yes,” said Charlotte, grabbing the cart to keep from flying off the back. “I think our homes will plunge tens of dollars.”
She closed her eyes and enjoyed the artificial breeze created by the moving golf cart until they reached the community center. The pool sat to the right of the large multi-purpose building. The pool was always clean and warm. Retirees possessed ample time to lodge complaints, so it was easier to do things right the first time.
Mariska stopped the cart in front of the community bulletin board to look for news. A notice hanging from a thumbtack, printed on neon pink paper, announced a new committee.
“Another club,” said Darla. “This place has more clubs than a deck of cards.”
Charlotte read the note, her eyes growing wider with every word.
“The
Corpse Committee
! Committee to get to the bottom of the mystery behind the body found in the backyard of Miss Charlotte Morgan.”
Darla looked at Mariska.
“I guess we’ll have to join that one.”
“I did this morning. I saw it when I walked Miss Izzy. I wasn’t sure how you’d feel about it, though, Charlotte.”
“Well, I don’t feel great being named as the benefactor of the
Corpse Committee
, but what can I do? I assume this is Penny’s handiwork?”
Darla wrinkled her nose at the name of the community founder’s wife.
“You know she has to get to the bottom of everything,” said Mariska. “Gossip, trouble…”
“Glasses of scotch, her husband’s bank account…” mumbled Darla.
Mariska giggled and slapped her friend’s arm. “You’re terrible.”
The cart lurched forward and Charlotte clutched the sidebar.
Charlotte walked to the pool and threw her towel and bag on her usual chair. For the most part, she loved being semi-retired at twenty-six. When her grandmother died, Charlotte had inherited her prefab community home. Estelle had purchased the house for fifteen thousand dollars in full, so she had no mortgage.
Charlotte’s father had died shortly after her birth, killed in a fall while working construction. Her mother died of cancer when she was eleven. Though her family wasn’t rich, they had insurance, and with her modest needs, she knew she could live most of her life on her inheritance.
She had a small land lease fee to pay every month, and easily made that amount doing work for an embroidery web site, DoodleSport.com, owned by Mariska’s son, Sebastian. On DoodleSport, people ordered different products with any one of thousands of animal and hobby designs embroidered on them. Sebastian and his wife Emily lived in Maryland, and had named the site after their Labradoodle, Gordon. When business increased, Emily and Sebastian offered to buy Charlotte an embroidery machine of her own and make her home their southeastern division. The giant machine sat in Charlotte’s shed and she spent two to ten hours a week stitching various critters on blankets and polos.
Charlotte spotted her handiwork on every towel and bag at the pool. The local ladies weren’t shy about requesting items for themselves at the Pineapple Port discount of thirty percent off. At Christmas, Charlotte received so many orders from the locals that she barely had time to do her own shopping. She’d added a t-shirt heat press to her collection of hardware and spent weeks afterwards stamping pictures of grandkids.
Only recently, the urge to find a
calling
had begun creeping into her subconscious. She couldn’t complain about her stitching work. With the industrial-sized embroidery machine tucked in her shed, there was no beating her commute to work. To ensure she never lost this gem of a job, she endeavored to find local sales as well. Being in Florida, she couldn’t count how many anchors, shells and boat names she’d stitched. In addition, everyone in Pineapple Port had a pet or knew someone with a pet, so she cranked out beach towels featuring West Highland terriers and cat-faced kitchen towels. She attended farmers’ markets and community yard sales to supplement the website orders.
Still, she’d never actually dreamed of becoming an embroiderer. She felt like there had to be something better, something more
meaningful
. She wanted to feel passionate about her work. At twenty-six, she felt too old to live so aimlessly.
She’d hopped from teenager to retiree in the blink of an eye.
Charlotte stepped into the pool and waded to the center. Jackie Blankenship, the water aerobics leader, set down her boom box and popped in the instruction tape. The tape was superfluous; all the ladies, and a smattering of men, had the routine memorized. Jackie once tried to introduce a new tape, but the ensuing mutiny ended her dreams of novelty. She grumbled bitterly about it. It was no secret she regretted offering to run the program, and the fact that no one would let her break the monotony of the routine added insult to injury.
“I was hoping it would rain,” said Jackie to Charlotte as she walked by. “I don’t know why I ever offered to run this stupid club.”
“I know, Jackie,” said Charlotte. “I know.”
“The water is warmer again,” said Mariska. “They turned off the heat last week and people nearly lost their minds. It dropped to 79.”
“It might be more refreshing it if wasn’t body temperature,” said Charlotte.
“Oh, don’t you even
try
and suggest that,” said Darla. “Blasphemy.”
Penny half-walked and half-swam to the group, her dark bob wet and slicked back across her scalp.
“I’d love for you to be a guest speaker at the new committee,” Penny said to Charlotte as she arrived, her leathery skin crinkling as her mouth formed something like a smile. Charlotte wasn’t sure if Penny was being friendly or had just successfully lured children into her gingerbread house.
“I saw the flyer. I’m guessing you’ll have less to talk about if I don’t show up.”
Penny thrust out her chin with a level eight sniff
(How Dare You!)
“Is that a threat?”
“What? No! It’s an observation. I’ll come. I can’t imagine the rumors if I don’t.”
“Yes, you have to come. This is very serious. We need to find out who this person is and what happened to them!”
“I think I know who she is, but I would like to know what happened to her.”
“You know who she is? It’s a
she
?”
“It’s that pawnshop fellow’s mother,” said Susan Hecht from the back of the pool. Half the ladies claimed to be deaf, but they always heard juicy gossip from several miles away.
“I thought it was his girlfriend,” said another woman, new to the neighborhood. Charlotte had forgotten her name, but she knew she lived alone. She’d heard the woman kept twenty-five bowls of dog food scattered around her house, so if she dropped dead, her Pug wouldn’t starve to death.
“He killed her for cheating,” the woman added.
“I thought he was gay?” said Katherine O’Malley, tilting her head so the decorative flaps on her swimming cap flopped to one side like dominoes.
Charlotte rolled her eyes. “It might be Declan’s
mother
, not his girlfriend.”
“But he is gay, right?”
“
No.
I mean, I don’t know. What does that matter? Either way, he didn’t kill anyone.”
“How do you know?” asked Susan.
“He’s barely older than the bones. I doubt he killed his mother when he was eleven and buried her in my backyard.”
“Declan is a funny name,” said the new lady. “Maybe he killed her as a boy, like in that movie…”
“Oh! What was the name of that movie?” asked Penny. “I know what you mean. The little boy killed everyone.”
“The Omen,” said Charlotte, mentally thanking the neighborhood for her vast knowledge of old movies. “And no. Don’t be ridiculous. Declan isn’t Damien.”
“Ah right! Damien!” said Penny. “That’s
like
Declan…”
“If he isn’t gay, let me know?” asked Katherine. “My granddaughter is coming next week. I could set them up.”
Katherine’s granddaughter was an ex-beauty pageant winner. Charlotte felt an odd pang of anxiety and dread.
What was that?
She swallowed and vowed to drink less coffee in the mornings.
Katherine continued musing to herself, mumbling just loud enough for Charlotte to hear.
“Come to think of it…I think I set them up years ago and
she’s
the one who told me he was gay…hm…”
“I’m sure I don’t know,” said Charlotte, her tone sharper than she intended it to be.
“Are you talking about the dead woman in your yard? The one Declan killed?” asked Andie Davis, wading into the pool in her bikini. Andie was only fifty, but her husband met the age requirement by a good ten years. The other ladies eyeballed her outfit and exchanged disapproving glances. Charlotte always wore a one-piece to avoid such scrutiny.
“Declan didn’t kill her!” said Charlotte, her voice growing shrill. “It’s probably his
mother
, who went missing fifteen years ago.”
“Sometimes kids kill their mothers,” said Andie.
“Like Damien Omen Two!” said Penny. “You can’t close your mind to any possibility.”
“Damien is a devil child from the movies. Declan is a
real person
,” Charlotte said as steadily as possible to anyone who would listen.
“All the people on
Dateline
are real people, too,” said Penny. “And now they’re in jail!”