Skeleton in a Dead Space (A Kelly O'Connell Mystery) (2 page)

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Authors: Judy Alter

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BOOK: Skeleton in a Dead Space (A Kelly O'Connell Mystery)
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Now I felt guilty about both girls. “I’m sorry, Maggie, I had sort of an emergency.”

“Well,” Maggie said in her determined voice, “Daddy was never late. I just hope I’m not too late for ballet.”

I wanted to scream and ask her how she remembered that her father was never late when he hadn’t seen the girls in three years. And besides, if he was never late picking her up, he was always late with payments, be they mortgage, car, or child support. Nowadays he wasn’t even making the latter.

Em moaned. “Do I have to watch Maggie’s ballet lesson?” This earned her a jab in the ribs from her older sister, which set Em to wailing.

“No, Em. You and I will go to the grocery while Maggie’s in her lesson. And you’re not late, Maggie. Your ballet things are right there in the back of the car where you put them.”

“I didn’t put them anywhere,” Maggie said, “They’re laid out in my room.”

My instant thought was, “I told you this morning to put them in the car.” But instead of making a deteriorating situation worse, I said, “Fine. We’ll go home and get them. It will only take a second, and you’ll still be on time.”

And she was, but barely. One of the advantages of living and working in Fairmount is that everything is handy, even the school and the day-care. I raced into the house, grabbed Maggie’s ballet clothes, and was back in the car before the girls could start fussing at each other.

After we’d walked Maggie into class—never let a child out of the car by herself is one of my rules—I said to Em, “Let’s you and me rush to the grocery for a few things and then surprise Maggie with pizza.” Keisha was always complaining that I fed the girls junk food, but when you’re late and tired, pizza and frozen dinners sure are easy. I know better, and I am always resolving to make home-cooked meals, but I usually only manage one or two of those a week.

“Okay, Mom, pizza would be good. I like it.”

I’d been a single working mom for three years. I loved my children, I loved my job, but I was getting tired of juggling. When Tim was there to share, it was a lot better—I couldn’t believe that thought even went through my mind. But Tim loved his daughters—or had then—and carried his share of parenting responsibilities. It was just now that he’d dropped out of their lives like a stone dropping into deep water, and I knew Maggie missed him. She remembered the good times—and so did I.

For a long time, Tim and I were happy. We had all the things young couples want—and sooner than most couples. I later found out that was because Tim wasn’t paying bills, but at the time I enjoyed the dinner parties we gave, the Christmases when Tim bought way too many presents, the vacations we took.

Sometimes I look back and think I was blind and dumb.

****

The pizza was a success. I got Em settled into pajamas in front of her favorite video, something about Dora, and I sat down at the dining table to help Maggie with her homework. By eight o’clock the girls were in bed, and I was exhausted.

Once I was in bed, my imagination took over and shock set in. That skeleton once was a person, someone with a life of her own (I was convinced it was a small woman), with joys and sadness, hopes and dreams, but she couldn’t have expected to end up as dry bones hidden away in a box. Who was she? What happened and why? Was she dead when sealed up, or did death come slowly, locked in a dark box—too horrible a thought to contemplate, like Poe’s “The Cask of Amontillado,” which would give anyone chills.

A fantasy began in my mind. She was young, blonde, and beautiful of course, a schoolteacher, a churchgoer, an all around small-town girl come to the city. But she fell in love with a scoundrel who cheated on her; she confronted him, and he strangled her. I was so close to working out a novel in my head that I named the skeleton. Maybe it was those wisps of once-flowered material, but she made me think of Miranda from
The Tempest
. That, I decided was how I would think of her instead of “the skeleton.”

Could the police solve a mystery all these years later? I assumed it was many, many years, and yet to let it go unsolved seemed barbaric. And the idea of rats and mice—I didn’t want to think about that again either. It made my flesh crawl. At last I drifted into a troubled sleep, but the ringing phone startled me awake.

When I mumbled “Hello,” a deep voice said, “Forget about the skeleton. Don’t investigate or you’ll be sorry.” Whoever was on the other end slammed the phone down in my ear. I looked at the clock: three o’clock, and for me, sleep was over for the night. Who would call with that strange, threatening message? Who, besides me, could care about an old skeleton? And how did they know so quickly? Should I call Mike Shandy? No, he’d just tell me to lock my doors and let the police handle it. A hidden place deep inside me was scared, but I was also angry. Nobody was going to threaten me. I’d learned a lot in the three years I’d been single, and protecting myself and the girls was the biggest lesson. I got up to check them, but they were sleeping peacefully. Once back in bed, the endless questions played themselves in my mind. Who was Miranda? How did she get there? And how long ago? Why?

Sleep came again fitfully at dawn, less than an hour before the alarm went off. Sleepless though the night had been, I turned off the alarm and got right up. In that space of time before the girls were up, I sipped coffee and read the newspaper. Once, Tim and I employed an agent who never read the paper. I was almost firm with the woman about how important keeping current was. After all, the business section had lots about real estate trends and developments, and the general news was important. You couldn’t talk to clients and say, “What hijacking?” when then news the day before spent six hours following the travels of a truck and its woman driver hijacked by a man she did not know. No, I was convinced it was important to know what went on in the world but also to know what went on locally. Besides, I loved reading the local news in the peace and quiet of the early morning. It was one of my favorite times of day.

On page three of the city news section, in the “Local Briefs” column, there was a piece about a skeleton being found in a house under renovation in the Fairmount addition. It gave the address of the house and said that the remains had been sent to the county coroner’s office for possible identification, adding that authorities were not yet sure of the gender or age of the victim nor when the death occurred. I didn’t learn anything from reading it, but I wished that O’Connell and Spencer Realtors were mentioned—anything for publicity. On second thought it occurred to me that maybe the omission was good—future buyers might be turned off by a house that held a skeleton for who-knew-how-many years. As it was, curiosity seekers would drive down Fairmount today, just to see the house where a skeleton was found. And they’d see the O’Connell and Spencer sign out front. The article could bring forth someone who knew something. It might work to my advantage and to that of the police. In the bright light of a Texas morning, a skeleton seemed more of a curiosity than a threat, worth only a mention in the local brief news. I decided not to tell Mike Shandy about that strange call in the early morning hours.

Chapter Two

I should have woken the girls up ten minutes ago.
I’d gotten so absorbed in thinking about what that tiny news brief did or didn’t mean that I lost track of time. I flew up the stairs, trying hard to be gentle even though I wanted to scream that we were all late and they better jump to it. They stumbled around, looking for toothbrushes and the clothes that we laid out the night before—I didn’t exactly approve of the color combinations. Em chose an orange shirt and blue plaid pants, but I didn’t object. I raced downstairs to pour cereal and milk into bowls and pack peanut butter and jelly sandwiches in lunchboxes. Maggie would say, “Peanut butter again?” Mental note: put lunch meat on the grocery list. While they ate their cereal, I went upstairs to throw on slacks and a turtleneck, topped by a blazer—my standard outfit. Maggie was at school in good time, but Em was a bit late. “That’s okay, Mom,” she said. “It’s only pre-school and they aren’t as strict.” I hugged her. Then, frazzled before the day began, I headed to the office.

Keisha thrust a sheaf of pink slips at me as I walked in the office door. “You win the lottery or something?” Keisha was a young, large African-American woman—not fat but big-boned, large all over—and she dressed to take advantage of her size, sporting long glittering fingernails, a huge beehive hairdo, lots of makeup, and wearing sweeping loose clothes, even caftans. I blessed the day I called the school district’s vocational program to find an administrative assistant. Keisha was much more—and she didn’t even mind making coffee. She was also friend, confidante, and occasional babysitter.

“I think what happened,” I said, “is that I lost the lottery—and a lot of other contests. All these this morning?”

Keisha nodded. “And if this phone don’t stop ringing, I’m tearing it out of the wall.”

“Be my guest,” I said as I wandered toward my desk. Mostly Tim and I found it easiest to do business ourselves, without agents, and I didn’t hire anyone after he left, so the room always seemed large and bare. But so far I was doing fine by myself, though I often felt pushed by too much to do. If I ran into the perfect agent, I’d reconsider. I riffled through the call-back slips. Joanie called. No choice there—I’d call Joanie first. She was must be worried about me after seeing that piece in the paper.

Joanie Bennett was maybe my best friend. We’d met when Tim and I first came to town, at an open house. Joanie was looking at houses she couldn’t afford. But she was talkative, and I was always chatty on the job because that’s part of real estate, so we hit it off. She seemed to bubble over with enthusiasm for life in general, and I liked that. We’d meet for lunch and gradually I found out that she was in advertising, working with high-dollar clients for one of the most prestigious agencies in town. She was also single and longing to be a wife and mother—but she never seemed to meet the right guy. Tim and I would include her and the current man-of-the-moment in our dinner parties, and I agreed with her—whoever he was, he wasn’t the right guy. Joanie, I decided, wasn’t a good picker. After Tim left, Joanie was great support for me, and I came to rely on her visits. We’d drink wine late into the night, and many times she fell asleep on the couch. The next morning we both felt awful.

Now, I assumed she was calling about the skeleton. “Joanie, it’s Kelly.”

“Kelly? I’m so glad you called right back. Thanks.”

“It’s okay, Joanie, I’m okay. Just sort of dazed. Finding that skeleton was bad enough, but seeing it in the newspaper and getting twenty phone calls by nine o’clock is a bit too much.”

“Skeleton? What skeleton?” Joanie’s tone was one of complete surprise.

Someone else who doesn’t read the newspaper.
“Isn’t that why you called?”

“No. I called because I have a huge problem, and I have to talk to you about it right away. Not lunch. Not a restaurant. It has to be private.” Joanie passed over the skeleton and went right back to her own problem, whatever it was that demanded privacy. Joanie’s requests for advice—which she usually ignored—weren’t that unusual. Neither was the oblivion to what was going on in someone else’s life. It was just Joanie.

“Busy day, Joanie. I’ve got a stack of calls to make, got to check on a house I’m negotiating for....” I also wanted to start checking city directories to find out who lived in the house on Fairmount.

Joanie wailed. “I have to talk to you today. It can’t wait. Kelly, this is big, really big.”

“Okay,” I relented. “Come by the house tonight, after the girls are in bed. About eight?”

A dramatic sigh on the other end of the line. “You can’t do anything before that?’

“Nope,” I said, my voice firm. Give Joanie an inch and she’d take a mile.

“Okay. Oh, and you can tell me about the skeleton. That’s a disgusting thought.”

“Thanks. See you tonight.” I hung up, with more of a slam than I meant.

Next I returned a call from Christian, my friend at the title company. Christian was a good guy, willing to work with clients, and I gave him all the closings I could. We’d lunched a few times, during which he talked about his wife and baby and how wonderful they were. I sort of envied him that domestic bliss. But he was also a caring person, and I could hear concern in his voice now.

“Kelly,” he said, “what’s going on? What’s this about a skeleton in that house on Fairmount?”

“It’s true, Christian, and I need your help.” He could do a title search that would turn up owners, deeds, wills, trusts, mortgages, judgments for the last thirty years. I had a sinking feeling that I would need to know about owners beyond thirty years ago—that was, after all, only the ’70s. But what he could do was a start and maybe the title company’s old card file would tell me more.

“Sure. What do you need? But, wait, are you okay?”

“Yeah, I’m okay. Just a little shaken. And a whole lot curious.”

“I bet.”

“Can you have your office do a title search? We may have to go back beyond the usual thirty years—the house is ninety years old, and there’s not a good way of dating skeletons. But it’s important to know who owned the house.”

I heard him take a deep breath. “You give me your title business for the next thirty years?”

“Cross my heart,” I said.

“Okay, Kelly, I’ll see what we can find. But it will take some time. Can you be patient?”

‘No, but I’ll try. It will take time to do tests on the skeleton too. Meantime I’ve got to fight to keep publicity down. And I’m also going to check city directories, so we can compare title holders to residents.”

He laughed. “In Fairmount in the last twenty years that could prove a puzzle. Take care and let me know how you’re doing.”

Fairmount is an inner-city neighborhood of homes, most built in the 1920s, most bungalows but also some spacious two-story homes and some architectural gems, such as original Craftsman houses. Starting in the ’60s or maybe earlier, Fairmount began to go downhill; houses became ill-tended rental property. By the ’90s that began to turn around—the neighborhood was close to the hospital district and to downtown, and young professionals found it convenient and charming. They began to buy the older, deteriorating houses and restore them. Then a neighborhood association stepped in, and the business streets—mainly Magnolia Avenue and Rosedale Street—began to perk up with new restaurants and boutiques. Some of the old-standbys remained of course, like the Paris Coffee Shop which has been a breakfast meeting place for people from all walks of life and all businesses for years. At noon, people stand in line for the pies. Tim saw the opening for growth in Fairmount early on. O’Connell and Spencer specialized in buying older homes and renovating them for sale. But these days I don’t turn away an outright sale either.

What Christian meant about Fairmount proving a puzzle was that when Fairmount was on its downhill slide, becoming rental property, people moved in and out at a rapid rate, and nobody seemed to care about fixing houses up. It was not what you’d call a stable neighborhood. Checking occupants fifteen, twenty years ago, might well provide me a long list—and the people listed might be impossible to find.

I wadded up the slips that were calls from newspaper and television journalists and threw them in the wastebasket. Keisha was impressed by my aim and clapped every time one hit the basket. She frowned when I missed, because I didn’t get up to pick the paper up and put it in the wastebasket—I’d do that later. One or two were business calls. I returned them, even getting an appointment to view a house for a new listing. Then I began to sift through the paperwork on my desk.

The phone rang almost immediately. Keisha forwarded it to my phone. When I answered it with “Kelly O’Connell” and heard, “Ms. O’Connell, Mark Sullivan here.
Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
We’d like to do a feature story on the skeleton you found yesterday—you know, play up the mystery aspects, interview people who lived in the house, and all that. You game?”

I tried to keep a tight rein on my temper and my tongue. The
Star-Telegram,
these days, was the only general newspaper in town, and it paid to have good relations with the newspaper. “No, Mr. Sullivan, I’m not game. I want to sell that house, so I don’t want to spread the story far and wide about a skeleton being found in it. Too many people might think it’s haunted.”

Long silence on the other end of the line. Clearly that was exactly the aspect that Mark Sullivan planned to play up—a haunted house. “You sure? You might benefit from the publicity.” He knew it was a weak hope; I could tell from his voice.

“I’m sure,” I hung up the phone and looked across the room. “Keisha?”

Keisha shrugged. “I’m done taking those calls, Kelly. You’re gonna have to tell them yourself.”

“Thanks a lot. I’ll treat if you’ll go get lunch—a cheeseburger from the Grill with curly fries and lots of ketchup.”

“You got a deal,” Keisha said. “I’ll go about 11:30, beat the crowd.”

I worked steadily all morning, finishing the contract that should have been done the day before and clearing my desk so that I could spend the afternoon beginning to explore city directories. Should I begin in the present and work back or in 1917 and work forward? That skeleton had to be there say, ten years, but to start in the middle seemed risky.

Keisha brought me a salad. “You got to eat right,” she said. “You feeding those girls the way you eat?”

“I fix healthy, balanced meals. And this salad is perfect. Thanks for adding grilled chicken to it.” I tried to put indignation into my voice, but I know she caught the glimmer of a giggle. I wanted that cheeseburger.

I finished the salad, wrapped up the loose ends on my desk, and made a note of two houses I wanted to do a curb assessment on. I could tell from the curb whether or not I wanted to see a particular house. Tim knew the business and he taught me well. The marriage didn’t do as well.

I still couldn’t pinpoint where it went wrong, when it began to sour, except that it was right after Em was born. Our last year together was miserable. Tim never wanted to go anywhere, do anything. Gone were the days when we entertained and went to parties, out to nice restaurants, lived the life of the happy young couple. There was no affection—and no sex. Dumb thing that I am it took me a long time to realize he had a girlfriend, and a lot of those “calls” had nothing to do with real estate. I guess in some ways I’ll always be Pollyanna.

****

I was about to head out the door when Keisha said, “Phone for you.” I raised my eyebrows in a question.

“Nope,” Keisha said. “You best take this one.”

Emily Shannon, Em’s pre-school teacher. Em loved the fact that she and “Miss Emily” shared a name. I didn’t love what I heard now.

“Kelly, Em’s been fighting. I’m afraid she’s pretty upset, and you better come take her home.”

Em fighting? Impossible.
“I can’t believe it,” I said.

“Neither could I,” Miss Emily echoed, “but Sarah said something that upset her. I’m sending Sarah home too. They were scratching and kicking and screaming.”

“No biting?” Apparently biting was common in children, but I couldn’t imagine it.
Not my girls.

“No biting,”

I called over my shoulder, “I’m gone for the day. I’ll have my cell phone on.”

****

Em sat in the reception area, with a teacher’s aide beside her. The aide held her hand and whispered words of comfort. But the poor child was sobbing. I knelt down and wrapped my arms around her. “Baby, baby, what is it? What happened?”

Em raised a tearful face. “Sarah said you had a skelton in your closet. She said her mom said that was bad. What’s a skelton? Is it in the closet at home?”

Oh dear God
.
How was I to know I should have explained it to the girls? And how do you tell a four-year-old the difference between a real skeleton, awful enough, and a skeleton in the closet, that old phrase that Sarah’s mother probably used jokingly. But just at the wrong time. And both little girls misinterpreted it.

“Were you sticking up for me, Em?”

“Yes, Mommy. I didn’t want anyone to say bad things about you. And she kept repeating it, like she was singing a song.”

“It isn’t anything bad. The skeleton’s not in my closet but I found one yesterday in the house Anthony’s working on. And it was sort of scary. That’s why I didn’t tell you.” I rose and held out my hand. “Come on, Em, let’s go home, and I’ll tell you all about the skeleton. Can you say it that way—skel-e-ton?”

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