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Authors: Kathy Hogan Trocheck

To Live and Die In Dixie

BOOK: To Live and Die In Dixie
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Kathy Hogan Trocheck
To Live & Die in Dixie

A Callahan Garrity Mystery

Dedicated with love to my mother, Helen Hogan, and to the memory of her mother, Edna Rivers Waymire
.

Happy Birthday, Mom; miss you, Gram
.

Contents

T
HE LUMP UNDER THE SHEET stirred, ever so slightly. I poked it with my toe. No response. I poked again. Put my lips up to his ear.

“Give you a hundred dollars if you'll get up and put the coffee on.”

The only response was an exaggerated snore.

“A hundred dollars and I'll scratch your back for five minutes.”

He pulled the sheet up over his head and turned his back to me.

I sighed. “Okay. A hundred dollars, back scratching, plus…”

Before I could finish the offer he turned and put his arms around my neck, lazily running a finger down my bare spine.

I slapped his hand away.

“Forget it, MacAuliffe,” I said. “A hundred dollars, back scratching and first dibs on the shower. That's my final offer.”

He groaned loudly but sat up, pulling half the covers with him. It was June, but we'd cranked up my air-conditioner the previous night and the room was chilly. I snatched the covers back.

“Deal,” he said, then padded, naked, toward the bathroom.

I dozed a few minutes, until the doorbell rang. “Get the door, Mac,” I called, but the shower was still running full blast.

“Damn,” I muttered, feeling around on the floor for my robe. “Who the hell's here this early in the morning?”

By the time I'd groggily made my way through the hallway to the front door, the bell ringing had been replaced with a persistent knocking. I put one bleary eye to the front door peephole, took a look and tried to shake the cobwebs away.

I looked again, but she was still there. I shot the deadbolt and opened the door a crack, leaving the chain on.

A Southern belle from hell stood on my doorstep. She'd poured her two-hundred-pound-plus self into a long hoop-skirted ball gown made of some kind of white-and-green flowered imitation satin. The sleeves had been pulled down over her shoulders, forcing the double-D bosom forward at a gravity-defying angle. A green velvet sash was wound tight around her waist, so tight that her chubby cheeks were stained an unnatural pink. Her head was wrapped turban style in a faded yellow towel. She fluttered a pair of half-inch-long fake eyelashes and smiled coquettishly at me.

“Hey, Callahan,” she said sweetly, trying to push the door open. “Tell your mama I'm here for my combout.”

I held the door steady. “Edna's still in Swainsboro, at my cousin's wedding, Neva Jean,” I said. “What the hell are you doing in that getup at the crack of dawn on a Saturday morning?”

She fluttered the eyelashes again. “Come on and let me in, Callahan,” she said plaintively. “It's eighty-five
degrees out here already. I don' wanna sweat on my ball gown. Edna promised she'd be back in time to comb me out before I head up to Kennesaw for the big battle. She'll probably be here any minute now.”

“I've got company, Neva Jean,” I said, tightening my grip on the door. “I'll have Edna call you when she gets in. See you later.”

Before I could slam the door an arm snaked around in front of me, unlatching the chain. “What big battle?” Mac asked. I hadn't heard him come up behind me. He opened the door wide, forcing me to step back into the hallway. “Come on in, Neva Jean,” he said expansively. “Coffee's on.”

She bunched her skirts up tight to her body and squeezed past, treating Mac to another spasm of eyelash fluttering.

I gave Mac a sour look, but he smiled back innocently. “You never heard of Southern hospitality?” he whispered. He doffed an imaginary hat at the swaying backside of Neva Jean McComb, assistant head House Mouse, dressed up as a trailer-park version of Scarlett O'Hara.

Neva Jean doesn't always show up in costume at the front door to the bungalow Edna and I share in Candler Park. Usually, she and the other girls come in the back door. Generally, they wear white slacks and one of our pink or white House Mouse smocks. We run a cleaning business, you see, the best damn cleaning business in Atlanta, I think. We're pricey, but when a Mouse has been in your house, you know it's clean.

In the last year or so, we've acquired a sideline, one I hadn't planned on after I quit the Atlanta Police Department and bought the cleaning business. The new business cards don't mention it, but J. Callahan Garrity, the co-owner and president of House Mouse, has also—
reluctantly—gotten back into the private investigation racket.

Slowly, I trailed Mac and Neva Jean back into the kitchen. As usual, she had her head poked inside the refrigerator. Her voice was muffled, but audible. “Didn't I see a plate of sausage biscuits in here yesterday?”

“Gone,” I said. “Mac had a midnight snack off 'em.”

Neva Jean stood up straight and waggled a finger at me. “Callahan Garrity, your mama would have a conniption if she knew you were entertaining overnight company while she was out of town.”

Mac had the grace to blush, but I waggled my finger right back at her. “Guess again, Neva Jean,” I said. “Mac spends just about every Friday night here. It's too far for him to drive back out to Alpharetta.”

Neva Jean gasped in horror, but Mac shook his head in agreement. “It's true,” he said, handing her a mug of steaming coffee. “These Garrity women are very open-minded.”

While Neva Jean drowned her outrage in her coffee I sat down at the oak kitchen table and ran my fingers through my hair, trying to pretty up a bit for my gentleman friend, Andrew MacAuliffe.

“Neva Jean,” I said reluctantly, “run that battlefield thing past me again, would you? Just exactly what are you doing on a battlefield and why are you dressed in that tacky getup?”

Neva Jean slurped her coffee loudly. “Tacky. Gawd-amighty, Callahan. I had this dress made special. Had to give near sixty dollars just for the material alone.”

“It shows,” Mac agreed.

“Thank you,” she cooed. “Swannelle just loves this dress. He can't keep his hands off me when I wear it.”

“Swannelle can't keep his hands off you, period,” I groused. “That's the horniest man I ever met.”

Neva Jean smiled proudly. “Ain't he, though? He'd be too much man for any normal woman.”

“I know that's right,” I agreed. “Now what's the deal with the battle?”

“You know, I don't think you listen to a word I say around here,” Neva Jean pouted. “I been talkin' about Swannelle's Battle of Kennesaw reenactment for weeks now, and you ain't heard a word. For the last time. It's the Battle of Kennesaw. Remember, the big Civil War deal? Swannelle's unit's been camped up on the mountain for two days.”

“What unit?” I said blankly.

She sighed impatiently. “The Gate City Old Guard. Swannelle's in charge of the cannon this year. He got a promotion.”

Mac whistled in appreciation. He's a sort of Civil War buff himself, although he's definitely not one of those types who run around with the Confederate Stars and Bars flying from his truck with a bumper sticker that says '
Fergit Hell
.

“That's a big job,” he said, setting his coffee cup down. “How long has he been in this outfit?”

“It's his second year,” Neva Jean said. “His brother-in-law, Rooney, Rooney Deebs, he's a captain of the outfit. Rooney's got Swannelle so crazy over this reenactment stuff he's give up his slow-pitch softball team.”

“All right,” I said. “But if it's Swannelle who's doing the reenactment, why are you all tricked out, Neva Jean?”

“I been tryin' to get to that,” she said. “Tonight's the CSA Benevolent Society Fancy Dress Ball. I just put the dress on this morning so Edna could envision how I'll look when she combs me out. But now I don't know what to do. It's too late to get a hair appointment.”

“Too bad,” I sympathized. “Edna will be back, but she said it'd be after noon.”

“Damn,” she said, stomping her pink fuzzy house slipper. “I'll just have to come back.”

“Maybe Callahan could comb you out,” Mac suggested.

Neva Jean's eyes swept over my own coiffure. My curly black hair has started to run to gray in the last couple years, and I hadn't had a cut recently. To be honest, my hair looked like the back end of an aging French poodle.

“No, no,” she said quickly, edging toward the back door. “I wouldn't want to intrude on you lovebirds. I'll come back later.”

“I'd be glad to help out, Neva Jean,” I said, with a hint of maliciousness. “I know right where Edna keeps the curling iron and the Aqua Net. In fact, I've been dying to get my hands on your hair.”

“No really,” Neva Jean said, nervously. “I'll wait.” She slid past me and bolted out the back screen door. “Tell your mama I'll be back around one.”

BOOK: To Live and Die In Dixie
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