When the Sun Goes Down

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Authors: Gwynne Forster

BOOK: When the Sun Goes Down
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Also by Gwynne Forster
A Change Had to Come
A Different Kind of Blues
Getting Some of Her Own
When You Dance with the Devil
Whatever It Takes
If You Walked in My Shoes
Blues from Down Deep
When Twilight Comes
Destiny’s Daughters
(with Donna Hill and Parry “EbonySatin” Brown)
 
 
 
Published by Dafina Books
When the Sun Goes Down
Gwynne Forster
KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.
www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Chapter One
The biting cold and harsh January wind stung Gunther Farrell’s face and whitened the surface of St. John’s Lane, which led to and from St. John’s Cemetery just outside of Ellicott City, Maryland. Gunther glanced back over his left shoulder at the sound of rocky soil hitting the wooden box. The wind brought tears to his eyes, but he refused to shed them. His father didn’t deserve his tears, and not even the wind could make him do the old man the honor of crying at his demise. Not much of his heart was in that hole, but he knew that his sister, who was younger as well as softer and less judgmental than he, was despondent over their father’s death. He slung an arm across her shoulder and tugged her close to him, protecting her as he’d done since they lost their mother when he was fifteen and she was nearing her thirteenth birthday.
“Where are you going, Edgar?” he called to his older brother. “Don’t you think you should ride back to the house with Shirley and me?”
Edgar hopped onto the back of a friend’s Harley and hooked the helmet under his chin. “Look, I participated in this charade because you and Shirley begged me to be here, but it’s enough for me. I’m outta here.”
“You could at least go back to the house along with us,” Shirley said.
“I’ll see you there,” Edgar said. “By the way, brother. Did Donald Riggs mention when he’s reading the will? You’d think he’d tell me something, since I’m the oldest.”
“He hasn’t mentioned it to me,” Gunther said.
“Me neither,” Shirley assured him.
Edgar’s friend revved the big Harley, and a minute later, dust obscured the speeding vehicle.
Gunther and Shirley got into the backseat of the rented limousine that would take them to their father’s house. Neither of them lived in the family home, so the place would now be home to Edgar alone. After waiting for their older brother for more than an hour, Gunther locked the house and took Shirley with him to his duplex condominium.
“I’m going back to Fort Lauderdale in a couple of days,” Shirley told Gunther later as they sat in his living room sipping vodka and tonic. “My cruise leaves for the Mediterranean on Friday.”
“I wish you could stay until we settle Father’s estate. I’d bet my life it’ll be complicated.”
“Tell me about it,” Shirley said. “I wouldn’t be surprised if he left everything he had to somebody’s puppy.”
Gunther rested his glass on the coffee table, got up, and walked over to the window. The grim weather further darkened his spirit. “Father didn’t understand that you and I succeeded beyond what he had a right to expect, considering that we did it on our own with absolutely no help from him,” Gunther said. “He never seemed to appreciate that when I was nine years old, I got up at five o’clock every morning in order to deliver papers before going to school and that I worked every afternoon after school. In spite of that, I earned a scholarship to college, worked my way through, and got an MBA.”
“It maddened him that you didn’t join the fat cats on Wall Street.”
“I wanted to develop computer software for games and puzzles and to design games. He said that was nothing and that I should be ashamed. Now I’m doing that. I make a good living, and I can’t wait to get to work every morning.”
“We’re both lucky, Gunther. I wanted to travel, and I have a job as director of public relations for a major cruise line. I could live on a ship if I wanted to. Incidentally, do you think it’s odd that Riggs hasn’t mentioned the reading of the will?”
“I hadn’t thought of it until Edgar mentioned it. Father used to say regularly that when the sun went down on his life, we’d all three come apart like balloons with holes punched in them. So I suspect he’s done his best to ensure that his prophecy comes true.” He looked at his watch. “I wonder where Edgar went when he left the cemetery.”
Shirley sipped the last of her drink. “Who knows? I wish he weren’t so angry at everybody and everything.”
 
Gunther got up the next morning, cooked breakfast for Shirley and himself, and sat down to eat. He’d done well for himself. At the age of thirty-four, he owned a company that created and published computer games and puzzles, and he owned an attractive condominium—more like a town house—in a modern building and upscale neighborhood. And moreover, he had substantial savings.
“Edgar’s smart,” he said to Shirley, “but he wants everything the easy way. One day, that’s going to get him into serious trouble.”
“I know. And it worries me.”
He reached for the phone that hung on the kitchen wall. “I’d better call Riggs. He hasn’t said a word to us, and that’s not normal. He’s been Father’s lawyer for at least twenty years, and he’s probably executor of the will. He ought to tell us something about this.” He dialed the number.
“Hello, Mr. Riggs, this is Gunther Farrell. When are you scheduling a reading of Father’s will?”
“How are you, Gunther? My condolences to you and to Edgar and Shirley. There’s a problem. I know Leon had a will that was properly executed, because it was witnessed and notarized in my presence, but he did not leave a copy with me. He also didn’t tell me where he put it. So we’ll have to find it.”

You can’t be serious!
He could have put it under a can in the garage, for heaven’s sake.”
“Yes. And he was capable of doing precisely that. I had a call from Edgar, and when I told him I don’t know where the will is, he said he’s going to court and have his father declared intestate.”
Gunther flexed the fingers of his left hand in an effort to beat back the rising anger and stress. “Can he do that?”
“I’m way ahead of him. I’ve obtained an injunction forbidding the disposal of the estate for one year unless the will is located within that time. Leon gave me an affidavit naming me as executor of his estate, but without a will, my hands are tied.”
Sensing trouble with Edgar, Gunther asked Riggs, “What can we do in the meantime? I’m not depending on anything from my father and neither is Shirley, but Edgar is always flat broke, so he’ll trash the place looking for that will.”
“He can do that, because he lives there. You and your sister can do the same, but you can get a restraining order to prevent him from disposing of anything that belonged to your father.”
Gunther thanked Riggs, hung up, and related the lawyer’s remarks to Shirley.
“Father must be somewhere laughing,” Shirley said in a disparaging voice.
“I notice you didn’t say he was
looking down.

“Trust me, I’m not feeling that generous. We’ve got to get hold of Edgar. Knowing how he loves money and how much he hates working for it, I wouldn’t be surprised if he did something illegal, thinking we wouldn’t prosecute him.”
“Yeah,” Gunther said. He didn’t trust Edgar. He got up and dialed the phone number at the family home.
“Hello.”
“Hello, Edgar. Shirley and I waited for you more than an hour last evening. Sorry we missed you. I see you’ve spoken with Riggs.”
“Yeah, man. That joker’s talking nonsense. I’m no fool. I bet he knows exactly where that will is. Damned if he’s gonna cheat me out of my inheritance.”
“Slow down, Edgar. Donald Riggs is not going to ruin his life and lose his ability to practice law over an estate as small as the one Father left us. And I’m warning you, if you sell one pair of socks from that house, you’ll be breaking the law, and I will see to it that you suffer the consequences.”
“How will I be breaking the law?”
Surely Edgar wasn’t going to play games with him. Edgar knew he wouldn’t be fooled by any phony display of innocence. “Because I will have a one-year restraining order against you,” he told him. “Every toothpick in that place belongs to the three of us. Find the will, and we take what Father left us.”
“Suppose there isn’t a will anywhere.”
“There is, because Riggs said he helped Father construct it and was present when witnesses signed it and a notary notarized it.”
“Oh, crap. That’s all I need! Now I have to wait a year, a whole bloody year to get myself straight. Man, I’m in debt over my head. You wouldn’t have a couple of thousand, would you?”
Gunther’s hand gripped the receiver. He hadn’t expected it, but he should have known it was coming. “Edgar, I have a firm policy that I apply to everybody. I do not borrow money, and I do not lend it. And especially not to anyone who already owes me. Period.”
“Why didn’t I know that? And you also never wear your baseball cap turned backward. Pardon me for asking.”
Gunther looked down at Shirley. “Damned if Edgar didn’t hang up on me.”
A quick frown slid over her face, and she patted his hand, eager for peace as usual. “I know it’s hard to love Edgar sometimes,” she said, “but he’s our brother.”
“Yeah. And if you told him how much like Father he is in some ways, he’d be ready to wipe the floor with you. He’s as self-centered as a person can be.”
 
An hour later, the veracity of Gunther’s statement was fully demonstrated. Donald Riggs looked Edgar in the eye. “Are you suggesting that I mortgage your father’s estate for fifty thousand dollars, give the money to you, and you will relinquish further claim to it? Ten percent for me. Is that what you’re asking? How do you know it’s worth fifty thousand or that it isn’t already mortgaged?”
“Look, man, that house is worth at least two hundred grand, maybe twice that much.”
Donald leaned forward and spoke through clenched teeth, using every bit of willpower he could muster to refrain from expelling Edgar bodily from his office. “If you think I’ll ruin my life in a shaky deal with you, you’re dumber than I thought.”
Edgar rose to his full height of five feet ten inches and glowered at Riggs. “Nobody calls me dumb, man. My frigging daddy didn’t even do that. I’ll see you around.”
Donald shook his head, bemused. “At times like this, I’m glad my wife and I don’t have any children,” he said aloud, and began to map a strategy for finding the will. He couldn’t check safe-deposit boxes until he got a copy of the death certificate, and that would take another couple of days. He phoned his wife and told her of his conversation with Edgar.
He could almost hear her yawning. “Honey, I thought you told me Edgar’s father didn’t think he was worth the energy it took to beget him. Don’t you get mixed up with that boy. Betty Lou’s gon’ drop by around noon, and we’ll work on the blankets we’re making for the homeless. Let me tell you, Bobbie Dean pitched a hissy fit this morning ’bout something or other. You could hear her all over the neighborhood. I declare, Bobbie Dean’s so unladylike.”
“I’ll try to get home early, and maybe we can go see a movie.”
“Honey, you’re the sweetest man.”
He hung up. Whenever he needed relief from stress, he called his wife. She had a way of belittling the biggest problem and making him believe it wasn’t as important as he thought. With the kooks he had to deal with every day, having her was a true blessing. And he was going to need more than one blessing if he was to get the Farrell estate settled. How could one man sire sons as different as Gunther and Edgar? A half-laugh slipped out of him. How could kids remain sane with parents as different as Leon and Catherine Farrell? He let out a long and labored sigh. Finding that will would mean taking his time from other, more urgent cases, but he’d do the best he could.
 
In the meantime, Gunther arrived at a similar decision, more for Shirley than for himself. “I’m going to take the day off from the office,” he told his sister. “If we don’t locate that will within a year, the state will take what it wants and stipulate who gets what part of the rest. I have to look for that will.”
“Where will you start? Since I’m here, I can help.”
“Let’s go over to the house and start looking there. By now, Edgar’s probably wrecked the place.”
They searched for hours until, exhausted, Gunther threw his hands up. “I’ve lived this long and this well without access to Father’s money, and I am not going to exercise myself about that will a minute longer.”
“That makes two of us,” Shirley said. “Father should have been ashamed of himself for doing such a thing. Let Edgar and the state of Maryland sweat over it.”
“Anyway, I want to get out of here,” Gunther said. “He’s been gone only a week, and already this place has a stale, musky odor.”
“Yeah. Sort of like decaying mushrooms. Edgar should open some windows.”
Edgar roared up on his Harley as Gunther and Shirley were about to get into Gunther’s car. “Any luck?” he asked, his piercing gaze pinned on Gunther.
“Nothing,” Gunther replied, “and we’ve been here for more than four hours. I can’t imagine where he put it. I never thought Father was devious, but what else would you call this? He wouldn’t spend a penny to execute a will and then destroy it. So he hid it somewhere. Good luck trying to find it.”
Edgar stared at Gunther. “You’re giving up? You’re not going to try again? Man, you can’t do that. I need the money. I quit my two-bit job the day the old man died, figuring I’d come into some money. This is terrible. It’s the pits.”

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