Death of a Garage Sale Newbie (9 page)

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Authors: Sharon Dunn

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths, #General, #Christian, #Suspense

BOOK: Death of a Garage Sale Newbie
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Somebody
had
been in their house.

“’Scuse us?” Ginger shaded her eyes and stared up at the tall, slender woman on the roof of 112 Fremont. Kindra stood beside her with her arms crossed over her chest, rubbing her bare arms. With the sun lowering on the horizon, a slight chill hung in the summer air.

The woman on the roof wore a large brimmed hat with a hot pink sash. Ginger couldn’t see her face. She grabbed another shingle out of a box and lifted her hammer. Judging from the way she moved, she must be quite young.

Ginger shouted above the hammering. “Excuse me, ma’am.” Oblivious, the woman pounded away.

Kindra gave Ginger a shrug and bolted up the ladder. She crawled to the top while Ginger held the bottom.

When she saw Kindra, the woman stopped hammering midswing. “Sorry, I didn’t hear you. Got to get these shingles replaced before fall.” She looked at Kindra and then down at Ginger “And who might you two be?”

“Can’t you pay someone to do that?” Kindra asked.

“Fixed income. ’Sides I’ve always done the repairs on the house. My late husband, David, was busy with his work, so I learned how to do the plumbing and change the oil in the car.” She tore off her hat. “How can I help you ladies?”

Ginger was momentarily speechless as she tilted her head. The woman under the hat had to be at least seventy. Her steel gray hair was pulled into a bun, and intense blue eyes were surrounded by skin that looked like crinkled tissue paper. She wore a man’s wool shirt that Ginger recognized as being from the Pendleton catalog, maybe twenty years ago.

“We need to talk to you about a garage sale you had two Saturdays ago.”

“Why don’t you ladies come up here? My name is Arleta McQuire, by the way. I’ve got some lemonade in a thermos. I’m not asking you to live dangerously. There’s a little balcony up here where I take my breaks.”

It seemed an odd invitation to offer a stranger, but Kindra climbed over the ladder and onto the balcony, so Ginger followed.

The balcony was a six-by-six flat spot with a railing snuggled between dormer windows. There was a small bistro table with two matching chairs. French doors led into the upper floor of the house. Arleta slapped her forehead. “What was I thinking? I only have the one cup.”

“I’m okay,” said Kindra. “I’m not thirsty”

“You sure?” Arleta unscrewed the cap. “I could go inside and get us some glasses.” Kindra shook her head. Arleta poured some lemonade into the cup she had on the table, handed it to Ginger, and then poured herself some in the cap of the thermos. She invited Ginger to take one of the chairs.

“Now which garage sale are you talking about? I had three of them.”

“Two Saturdays ago, July 15.” Ginger sipped the lemonade, which was homemade. Who had the time to squeeze dozens of lemons? She allowed the sweet-sour liquid to linger on her tongue. What a treat. “Did you sell a vest, a box covered in shells, or a photo album at any of your sales?” This woman seemed so friendly, but she might have something to do with Mary Margret’s death.

Arleta nodded. “I sold my husband’s vest and his old photo album. I took the pictures out that mattered to me. Don’t recall selling a shell box. But there was a lot of junk I sat out in boxes, and people sorted through and took what they wanted.”

“Do you remember the woman who bought them?” The woman was sharing the information without hesitation. Not a sign of someone with something to hide. “She had white hair, a real bubbly personality A little taller than me.”

Arleta perched in the other chair on the balcony. Kindra remained standing. “Oh yes, I remember her. We had a nice visit. She said she sold real estate. She gave me her business card. I don’t remember where I put it.”

Kindra said, “Mary Margret was like that. She gave everyone her business card.”

Arleta took a sip of lemonade. “She was going to use the vest to go fishing with her grandson, said something about buying a fishing pole at another sale. My husband wore that vest when he went on his digs. He liked it because of all the pockets.”

“What about the photo album?” Kindra crossed her arms, visibly shivering.

“She said she liked it because it had pictures of Three Horses before all the development and subdivisions went in. My husband was an amateur photographer with an interest in architecture. I remember she remarked about the black-and-white photos of the downtown buildings.”

The older woman smiled. Light glinted in her clear eyes. What a sweet lady. There was nothing sinister or guilty acting about her. Despair inched its way into Ginger’s thoughts. This had all been a wild goose chase.

“Why do you want to know about the stuff I sold?” The woman held out her hands palms up. “I’m not taking any of it back. It took me three sales to get the clutter out of this house.”

“We won’t make you take them back.” Kindra kept her arms crossed and added stomping to her dance routine. The temperature hadn’t dropped that much. The kid needed some meat on her bones. “The woman you sold that stuff to was murdered later that day.”

“Murdered?” Arleta sat her glass on the little table. “Didn’t the paper say it was an accident?”

“Long story,” Ginger said.

“I would be happy to look at the stuff, if you have it with you, and see if I can remember if she said anything else.” Arleta tapped her temple. “The memory is not totally gone yet.” She stood up next to Kindra. “Besides, this poor thing is going to catch her death if we don’t get inside.”

Ginger was doubtful that Arleta would be able to help them, but she found herself saying okay because the look of hopeful expectation on the older woman’s face tugged at her heart.

Arleta clapped her hands together. “Well, that’s just peachy.” She gripped Ginger’s hand firmly.

Five minutes later, Kindra and Ginger were in Arleta’s house sitting at her kitchen table, drinking more lemonade and eating peanut butter cookies. “I used to make cookies for David’s students all the time. It’s just a habit I can’t seem to break. It’s nice to have someone to share them with. I usually just throw them away.” Arleta flipped through the photo album while Kindra zipped and unzipped all the pockets in the vest.

Ginger leaned over Arleta’s shoulder. Most of the photos were of brick buildings or grain silos or of David and Arleta on digs.

“What is that one?” Ginger pointed to the photo of David in his vest surrounded by pine trees. One side of the photo revealed houses and a radio tower, indicating that the dig was not far from a town. The photo stood out from the others because no digging or excavation was taking place, and it wasn’t architecture.

Arleta bent closer to the album. “I don’t remember taking that one. Not at all. One of David’s students must have snapped it.” She tore the photo off and gazed at the back. “David wrote the year. 1986.”

“Hey, look what I found in one the pockets.” Kindra placed a piece of paper with six numbers written on it on the table. “It’s not Mary Margret’s writing.”

Arleta picked up the paper. “No, no, that is my David’s writing.” She rubbed the paper with her thumb, a faint smile crossing her face. “This was probably written somewhere around the time of his last dig. I don’t know what it means. Maybe the call number for a library book.”

“License plates can have six numbers after the county designation,” Kindra offered.

Arleta ran her hands over the vest. “He wore this old thing all the time.”

“You must have loved your husband very much.” Ginger touched the older woman’s fingers.

Arleta nodded and sighed. “That I did. It was a good marriage. We were soul mates.”

Soul mates? Ginger gazed around the room filled with pictures of Arleta and David. Standing with Stonehenge in the background. Digging into the side of a mountain. Working together painting their house. Arleta had found a way to be a part of David’s world.

The photos Ginger had in her house were of the whole family at Disneyland and camping, Earl standing with their two sons and the buck they had shot, Ginger with Krissy and Heidi and the quilt they made together. She couldn’t think of a single photo that had just her and Earl in it doing something together. They had been busy bees buzzing around in separate worlds, coming together to do stuff with the kids.

“Soul mates,” Ginger whispered. She flipped through the photo album. There was nothing here, nothing suspicious. Arleta certainly wasn’t a criminal. That only left the shell box and Keaton Lustrum.

Kindra took her last gulp of lemonade, then checked her watch. “We should go.”

Arleta rose to her feet. “So soon? At least let me box up some cookies for you. I’ll just throw them away otherwise.”

“I have to get back to the dorm and shower and do some homework before midnight shopping.” Kindra hopped to her feet.

“Midnight shopping?” Arleta pulled a container out of the cupboard where rubber storage bowls were neatly stacked. The spices as well stood in tidy rows. Ginger pictured Arleta alone in the house arranging and organizing and reorganizing, hour after hour.

All of the photos were of Arleta and her husband. No children, no girlfriends. “Arleta, do you have any relatives?”

She placed the cookies carefully in the container. “I have a sister in England. I see her twice a year.” Arleta put several more cookies in, then pressed the lid on.

This sure was a lot of kindness to show a stranger. “Would you like to go shopping with us? They open the doors of the mall at midnight, and the discounts are incredible.”

“Oh, I—” Arleta leaned across the table and handed the container to Ginger. “I hadn’t thought about it.” She touched the back of her head and released a nervous cough.

Mild tension slipped into the room. Moments passed as Arleta ran a dishrag under the faucet and wiped the crumbs off the counter.

Kindra sidled over to Ginger and tapped her finger on the rubber container. “Thanks for the cookies.”

“Oh, you are welcome, dear. You are the kind of student David would have loved.”

Mentally, Ginger kicked herself. She hadn’t meant to make Arleta uncomfortable or call attention to her loneliness. “If you change your mind, we’ll be at the south entrance when the doors open at midnight.” Ginger’s voice sounded forced, too singsongy.

“Thank you. I’ve still got a lot of home repair to get done.”

After Kindra gathered up the vest and photo album, she followed Ginger out the door.

Ginger drove her Pontiac through the older neighborhood unable to shake the picture of Arleta alone in her house. Such a nice lady. Maybe God would allow their paths to cross again.

Kindra’s cell rang. She took the call. Her “Hi, Suzanne” was followed by a series of “un-huhs” and “okays.”

Ginger glanced in the rearview mirror. Phoebe sat in the backseat perched in her booster.

Kindra tucked her cell back in her purse. “As if you can’t figure it out, that was Suzanne. She said there was so much going on at city commission meetings twenty years ago, she has no idea what Mary Margret might have been looking for. She did talk to the records clerk, who said that Mary Margret left a message on Saturday. She called saying she wanted to look at the records first thing Monday when the office opened. Suzanne is headed home to get her kids dinner and take a nap. She’ll meet us at the mall at ten to midnight.”

“We are no further ahead than we were earlier today. Arleta is not a criminal.”

“Sure we are. We know Mary Margret went to the library and that something about the city commission twenty years ago interested her.”

Ginger gripped the steering wheel a little tighter. “We’re missing something here. Someone killed Mary Margret. Somehow she ended up in that forest outside of town with an arrow through her.”

“So if her death is not connected to the garage sale stuff, what could ‘something terrible, something from the past’ be?” Kindra traced the seams on David’s old vest with her fingers.

“It has to be something she found or saw between the first and second phone call, between eight o’clock and a little before noon, when we were supposed to get together at her house.”

“We can assume that someone made her drive her car out to the place where she died, and we can assume that same person brought the car back.”

Ginger yanked on one of her curls. “Was Keaton Lustrum even around twenty years ago?”

Kindra shrugged. “He looks forty or fifty in that picture.”

Anybody over twenty-five looked forty or fifty to Kindra. “Mary said something on her message about popping over to see another agent about some property. Maybe we can swing by her old office and find out which agent it was and if Mary was upset when she saw that person.”

“Maybe. And we need to talk to Keaton Lustrum.” Kindra made clicking sounds with her tongue as she tapped the glass of the car window. “All of this detective work is exhausting. Forward one step and back two.” She slumped down in her seat. “Sometimes when you’re not thinking about something directly, that’s when the answers come to you. I’m looking forward to midnight shopping to get my mind off of all this.”

Ginger turned onto the street that led to Kindra’s college dorm. “Me, too, kiddo. Me, too.”

Tammy had just bent
her arm, bringing the barbell up to her shoulder, when she saw her mother’s reflection in the floor-to-ceiling mirror. Hannah Krinkland’s lime green capris and summer sweater with flamingos on it looked out of place in the athletic club weight room. But it was her expression, a combination of fear and weariness, that made Tammy grip the metal weight even tighter. Mom’s eyes were dull and her mouth hung slightly open. Her finger rubbed up and down her purse strap.

Tammy’s bicep tensed. She closed her eyes. Mom was not in the habit of hunting her down while she worked out to ask what she wanted for dinner. “Mom?” her voice came out in almost a croak.

“Trevor left. I went to the church to help fold the bulletins. When I got home, he was gone. No note.”

Tammy held on to the barbell, but her arm went limp. She stared at the ceiling. Why did this have to be so hard? Couldn’t Trevor see that she was trying to protect him?

“You had to know this was going to happen.” Mom stepped toward her and touched her arm lightly. “You can’t keep a fifteen-year-old under house arrest.”

“Mom, he shoplifted.” The last thing she needed was a sermon from her mother. “Today it’s shoplifting, and tomorrow it could be selling and doing drugs. I know the pattern. It’s never an improvement in behavior.”

Though her impulse was to throw the weight across the room, Tammy placed it carefully in the stand. She took several deep breaths filled with wordless prayer before standing up straight. Losing control wouldn’t help anything. But it sure would be nice to scream into a pillow right now. “I just don’t want him to get into something that could—”

Mom pursed her lips.

Tammy appreciated her mother’s restraint. She shook her head and grabbed her workout towel. While she patted the sweat off her neck, she pulled herself together and strategized. Back into the parenting fray. “Okay, list the most likely places you think he might have gone.”

“Skateboard park, arcade, Joe’s house, mall, Kevin’s house. Some of his other friends, I’m not clear on their names.”

Tammy shook her head again then glanced at her watch, eight o’clock already. “I had stuff I wanted to get done. I was going to tell that Ginger lady that I think something bad did happen to her friend. I wanted to tell her in person.”

Her mom’s fingers fluttered to her mouth and her forehead wrinkled. “You could be back on patrol…or worse.”

“Keep your voice down. Cops work out here.” Tammy glanced from one treadmill to another and then to the StairMaster. She didn’t recognize anyone from the department. All the same, she leaned closer to her mother and whispered, “Didn’t you and Dad teach me to do the right thing, no matter what it cost?”

Mom nodded. “That we did.”

“Something is going on, and I intend to get to the bottom of it.” Tammy sauntered into the locker room with her mother trailing behind her. She grabbed her gym bag off a bench. No time for a shower. She’d just have to call Ginger and see if she could come by later. She wasn’t going to put this off another day. She slipped sweats over her workout suit. “I’ll take his friends’ houses and the skateboard park.”

“I’ll take the arcade and the mall and then head home to see if Trevor returned.” Her mom folded Tammy’s workout towel and handed it to her.

Only her mom would take the time to fold a dirty towel. Tammy unzipped her gym bag and set it on top of her street clothes. “When you get close to a phone, call me with a progress report.” Mom was probably the only person over twelve in America who didn’t own a cell phone.

The women left the locker room and headed toward the club exit. Tammy stood at the glass door. At this hour, the sky had only the faint hint of gray. Evening light waned. Already the tension had crept into the muscles between her shoulders. “One of us may have to go out to Kevin’s house. If we just call him on the phone, he’ll lie about Trevor being there. I don’t know about his other friends.”

On the sidewalk outside, a woman pushed a baby carriage past them. Tammy’s shoulders slumped. She closed her eyes and tried to picture Trevor as a baby. He’d been so beautiful. And she had been so hopeful, imagining a bright future for her boy, a college education, a good-paying job, a pretty girl to marry, and a love for the Savior to guide him. With the exception of the recovery of her faith, she had managed very little of that for herself. What silly notion had made her think it was possible for Trevor?

The woman stopped pushing the carriage, bent over, and gathered a bald baby into her arms. As though she’d been punched in the gut, Tammy felt herself crumpling from emotional overload.

Her mom touched her shoulders. “Tamela, dear, you have to stop trying to do this alone.” The older woman rubbed her back like she’d done when Tammy was little and couldn’t sleep. “He’s a boy. An old lady and an overworked mother can’t turn him into a man.”

Tammy took a deep breath. “You know, Mom, my brain just feels so hammered. I can only focus on the next thing I have to do, which is find my son, make sure he’s breathing and not on the way to the police station again.”

The clock in Ginger’s kitchen said that it was nine-thirty. “What time did that police lady say she was coming by?”

She sat at the table pushing her mashed potatoes around her plate while Earl ate his late dinner. She’d noticed the lasagna in the container was gone, but Earl had not argued with her when she suggested she warm him up something. It had been ages since they’d eaten together. Here she was knocking the word
soul mates
around her head, and they couldn’t even manage to have a meal together.

“She said she’d come by a little after eight.” Earl made a crater in his mashed potatoes and poured gravy into it.

They sat at either end of the table. Phoebe perched on the chair between them, the chair that had been their son Patrick’s. Ginger had put a pillow on it so Phoebe could see better. The cat’s huge head was just visible above the table.

Ginger unfolded her napkin by flipping it outward. “I’m not going to wait all night for her.” She really wasn’t interested in hearing more bad news from the police department. She placed her napkin on her lap. That poor Tammy woman seemed to be their official bringer of bad news.

“Aren’t you just going to bed?” He tore open his roll and slathered butter on it.

“The girls and I are going midnight shopping. I told you that.” Or at least she had put it in a note for him somewhere. “I have some other errands I want to run before that, and I told Kindra I would pick her up.”

“It might be a good idea to talk to the police.” His knife scraped the plate as he cut up the roast beef. “I got this strange feeling this afternoon that someone had been in the family room. The door was open, and some stuff was knocked around.”

Ginger glanced at the garage sale stuff she had brought in from the car. The room felt suddenly colder. “Someone was looking for something in our place?”

“It’s not like the room was torn to pieces, but my stack of books was knocked over, and your bills were spread out all over the desk.”

Ginger’s neck muscles pinched. “I always put the bills in a pile.”

Earl took a bite of his roll. “I know. From now on, I’m locking the house when I go out to the garage.”

She willed herself not to think about someone being in their house. Earl knew her habits. She knew his. But they didn’t know each other, not really. Not like Arleta had known David. She scooped up a forkful of mashed potatoes. It tasted like sawdust. From his chewing to the tinkling of silverware, every sound Earl made was almost deafening.

She took another bite of sawdust, chewing slowly. “Earl, do you remember any time that we did stuff together?”

“Sure, we went to the kids’ games and recitals and baptisms.” He stabbed the green beans with his fork.

Exactly, everything centered around the kids. “No, I mean really do something together, like go on an archaeological dig.”

Earl set his fork down. The creases in his forehead multiplied and became more distinct. “Go on an archaeological dig?”

What was she trying to say? “That’s just an example. What I’m trying to say is—” What she was trying to say was that if she had to live in a house where the only noise was the smacking chewing sounds he made, she would go insane.

On the drive home, Ginger had gone through the catalog of everything they had done together, every conversation she could remember. They must have talked about something besides the kids. Was the depth of their communication limited to how they would weatherize the house before winter hit? She hadn’t known that his dream was to invent something that changed the world. All this efficient, functional talking couldn’t be what soul mates said to each other.

Earl’s blank expression caused all the coherent thoughts to leave her head. All she could think about was the bulb of gravy on his upper lip. She pushed his napkin toward him, hoping he would get the hint. Earl bent his head back and narrowed his eyes at the napkin, like it was a neon lizard crawling across the table, but he didn’t pick it up.

Ginger traced the flower pattern in her tablecloth. Why wasn’t he following her? He was the one who suggested that their marriage lacked something in the first place. He was the one reading all those books.

“Do you remember the night Mary Margret disappeared?” Gathering courage, Ginger pushed her chair back and stood up. It was now or never. She put her hands on her hips and straightened her back. “What did you mean when you said I wasn’t supportive of you, that you needed a cheerleader?” There, she couldn’t be any more direct than that.

Earl wiggled in his chair and took two more bites of roast beef. He spoke slowly as though he were pulling each word up from the underside of his toenails. “I just meant that sometimes you say things that hurt my feelings.”

Phoebe yowled.

“Hush, Phoebes, Mama’s having a talk.” She had cooked and cleaned for this man for over thirty years. She kept his sock drawer organized. Not an easy job. Why didn’t he say thank you? Her feelings were hurt, too. “Earl, I don’t want to live in a house this quiet. What’s happening to us? Don’t we have anything to talk about?”

“It doesn’t have to be this quiet.” Finally, he picked up the napkin and wiped the gravy off his lips. “This is the next chapter of our lives. We should live a little, do something adventurous.”

“Something adventurous?” It was her turn to have a blank look on her face. The way Earl changed his tune every ten minutes was likely to give her emotional whiplash. First, it was that she wasn’t supportive, and now he wanted to have an adventure. Why couldn’t he just make up his mind?

“I just think now is the time for us to chase our dreams. I’m going to invent something big. I am.” Earl rose to his feet and grabbed Ginger’s arm just above the elbow. “We could buy a Harley and tour the United States.”

Ginger gasped. Becoming a motorcycle mama had never been on her to-do list.

His shoulders slumped a little. “That’s just an example. All I am saying is we should do things we haven’t done before. Can’t you think of something you’ve never done before that you have always wanted to do? That you couldn’t do because we were busy raising the kids?”

Ginger shook her head. She had always believed she’d missed something by marrying so young. Now that she thought about it, she didn’t know what she would have done different. Did she have dreams beyond alphabetized spice racks and balanced budgets?

Earl grabbed his milk off the table and took a gulp. “I know. Go out tonight and pay full price for a dress.” He slammed the empty glass on the table. “That would be daring for you.”

Her vision clouded. She blinked fast five times. “Full price?” The words sounded foreign on her tongue. Her chest felt tight. She slumped back down in her chair. Full price? Was she having a heart attack? Her voice was a squeaky whisper. “I have never paid full price for anything in my life.”

Earl seemed energized by the idea. His eyes kept getting bigger and rounder. “That’s why it would be daring…for you. We don’t need to get motorcycles. That’s for later. We’ll take baby steps.”

Now he paced back and forth in the kitchen like he was center stage at the Met. “When we had four kids and money was tight, I appreciated that you found a way to make sure everyone had warm coats and winter boots.”

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