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Authors: Judith Alguire

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BOOK: Judith Alguire - Rudley 04 - Peril at the Pleasant
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Chapter Three

 

Late May

Donnie thought a lot about Mr. Pritchard’s jewellery store while he sat in his basement apartment staring at the walls. The memory of the subdued sheen of the display window gave him pleasure, if not hope. He had pretty much given up hope. His unemployment insurance cheques were about to run out. The only jobs available were in fast-food establishments and every time he imagined wearing one of those uniforms and working with a bunch of teenagers — worse, waiting on people who were used to seeing him in a suit and tie — he cringed. A counsellor had suggested he might go back to school to brush up on his skills. He didn’t have the energy for that. Then something happened one night that drove him out of his funk.

He’d sat in his apartment terrified while the couple upstairs fought. They were new to the building, a whip-thin woman and a stringy punk with a perpetual scowl. They had a baby and a girl about five. The fight — about nothing more than a glass of milk the kid spilled — started in the usual way, with raised voices, but it soon escalated, growing louder and more incoherent, with the baby wailing and the little girl screaming. Then someone got slapped hard. Furniture was knocked over. A door slammed and the man pounded down the stairs. The baby continued to wail but the little girl no longer screamed. He listened for the sound of her feet skipping across the floor and was relieved later when he heard them. The fight jolted him out of his torpor, reminded him of who he was, and told him he had to get out of there. At that moment, the only way out seemed to be through Mr. Pritchard’s jewellery store.

He told himself it would be easy.

·

What Donnie didn’t count on was Mr. Pritchard standing in front of a mirror when he crept up on him and he didn’t count on Mr. Pritchard turning on him and clawing the bandana from his face. He responded by punching the man in the face, hard enough to send him reeling back against the wall, breaking the mirror, and collapsing to the floor, unconscious. Donnie strangled him with the bandana. He grabbed the bag Mr. Pritchard had been about to empty into the safe, stuffed it into his shopping bag, and walked out the back door. He discarded the gloves he’d worn and the bandana in a garbage bin and went home.

Back in his apartment, he put the bag into the closet, put on the kettle for a cup of instant coffee, and sat down on the cot. He held his hands out in front of him and stared at them. He didn’t regret killing Mr. Pritchard. He had no choice. The old man could have identified him. He had no intention of going to jail. He’d struggled too hard to make a life for himself. He didn’t deserve to be punished for events he had no control over.

He made his coffee, took a few sips, then got the bag from the closet. He found a roll of bills and a smaller canvas bag he assumed contained jewellery or stones. He counted out the cash. Three hundred and fifty-two dollars. He chuckled ruefully. He’d killed the old man for grocery money. He checked the smaller bag, hoping for unset gemstones, and started. The small bag contained a gun and a box of bullets. He checked the gun carefully. It was loaded. He emptied the magazine and returned the bullets to the box. He put a few dollars on the coffee table and returned the gun to the canvas bag with the rest of the money. He emptied the vacuum cleaner bag and stuffed the money and gun into it. Finishing his coffee, he lay down on the bed, and had a nap.

He woke two hours later feeling hungry. Although he was disappointed with his take, he felt cheered by the prospect of a decent meal out.

He chose a Korean restaurant several blocks away, eschewing the places he usually frequented when he seldom had more than enough for a plate of fries and a cup of coffee. He also thought he would be less likely to be remembered. He had heard that Asian people had a hard time identifying Caucasians and vice versa. Something to do with the facial features each group focused on. He had a nice but not extravagant meal, was polite but remote, and left an appropriate tip. He had brought a newspaper with him and pretended to be absorbed with it as he ate. No one seemed to pay any particular attention to him.

It was only after he got home and removed the money from the vacuum bag to recount it that he noticed every bill was marked with a red squiggle in the lower right-hand corner. Every single one. He guessed Mr. Pritchard probably marked the bills so he didn’t double-count.

He sat still, staring at the bills, holding his breath. The bank would know the squiggles. And if the bank knew, the police would soon know. They’d sweep the neighbourhood, asking if anyone remembered seeing the marked bills. He squeezed them hard. He wasn’t going to be able to spend any more of the money for a long time. He took a deep breath and tried to relax. He reprised his visit to the restaurant and decided he had acted appropriately.

Then he remembered the woman at the cash desk. She had examined the bills, turning each to face her, smoothing them, then dealing them into the cash drawer like a veteran card shark. He assumed it was her way of screening for counterfeits, but someone as precise and practised as she would have noticed Mr. Pritchard’s little red squiggles. No matter what nationality she was, if she could take in details of paper money that quickly, she could have taken him in too.

He checked his wallet, hoping he had used only his own money. He still had forty dollars. That meant he had used three fives and a ten with the red squiggles.

He wanted to get up and leave, pack a bag, and walk away. But any abrupt move on his part might raise red flags. He decided to wait for his last unemployment cheque, then let the landlord know he would be moving on at the end of the month. He’d go to the landlord and hold out the cheque helplessly. “This is my last cheque. I guess I’ll have to move in with my mother for a while.” The landlord would ask about his mail. He’d tell him he’d arranged to have the post office forward it.

He stared at the money. He should get rid of those bills with the red squiggles, take them out to a vacant lot and burn them. Instead, he bundled them together with the gun and returned them to the vacuum cleaner bag.

·

Lloyd appeared at the desk, pulling a load of suitcases on a dolly.

“I see that the Sawchucks have arrived,” said Margaret.

“You’d think those grandchildren of theirs could have carried the luggage,” Rudley sniffed.

Lloyd grinned. “They ain’t very big.”

Margaret lowered her voice. “Are they little people?”

“Guess so,” said Lloyd and added, “I guess ’cause they’re just little kids.”

“How little?” Rudley demanded. “The Sawchucks implied they were teenagers.”

“Little,” Lloyd persisted. “Maybe eight.”

“Damn.”

Margaret gave Rudley a nudge as the door opened and Doreen and Walter Sawchuck hobbled in. “Rudley, mind your manners.” She came out from behind the desk to greet the new arrivals. “Mr. and Mrs. Sawchuck. It’s good to see you.”

“It’s good to see you too, Mrs. Rudley.” Walter peered at the desk. “Rudley?”

“Did you have a good trip?”

“Exhausting,” said Doreen as Margaret trotted across the lobby to get her a chair. “Our son-in-law drove all the way from Rochester. We wanted to fly but they wanted to take the car to Montreal to catch their plane to Europe.”

“He never wants to stop as often as we need to,” said Walter.

“Which must be every ten minutes,” Rudley murmured, cognizant of Walter’s prostate problems.

“He’s all right,” Doreen said. “But…”

“Our daughter likes him, I guess,” said Walter.

“That’s a nice arrangement then,” said Margaret. “Why don’t we just have Rudley sign you in. You can rest a bit, then we’ll help you to your room.” She patted Mrs. Sawchuck on the arm. “I’m going to run out to the kitchen and get you a nice, cold drink. What would you like?”

“Just sparkling water,” Doreen said. She paused, waving her hand. “No, lemonade. But no ice.”

“It hurts our teeth,” said Walter.

“My teeth are starting to hurt too,” Rudley muttered. “From clenching them.” He put on a smile. “You usually enjoy your trip from Rochester.”

“Yes,” they said in unison. Walter started to say something, then stopped as Doreen tugged at his jacket.

The door opened and a tall man with a beard and a short woman with frizzy hair entered. The man turned and said impatiently, “Come on.”

The woman turned and said, “You know what we discussed.”

Two children entered, their hands clasped behind their backs. The man stepped forward. “I’m Jim Danby. My wife, Delia, and our children, Ned and Nora.”

“Trevor Rudley.”

“Say hello to Mr. Rudley,” the woman cued the children.

“Hello, Mr. Rudley,” they chorused.

The man sighed.

“We were expecting teenagers,” said Rudley.

“Oh,” said the man, “not teens, twins. I guess you didn’t catch that.”

“No, I didn’t.”

“Well, no matter,” said Danby. He turned to the children. “Now, I want you to pay attention to Grandma and Grandpa Sawchuck.”

“Yes, sir,” the children murmured.

“Good.” He reached into his pocket and slipped the kids each a bill. They looked at them, shrugged, and stuffed them into their pockets.

Mr. Danby turned toward the door. His wife was already halfway out.

“Will you be staying for lunch?”

“No, Mr. Rudley. We have to be on our way. We have a plane to catch.”

“I hear you’re going to Switzerland,” said Margaret, who had returned with the drinks and was fussing over Mrs. Sawchuck, who was fanning herself vigorously with a newspaper.

“Yes,” Danby said and disappeared out the door after his wife.

“That plane must be taxiing as we speak,” said Rudley.

“He’s always hell bent for leather,” Walter said crossly.

“He’s anxious about being on time,” said Doreen. “It isn’t easy in the airports these days.”

“Which is why I try to avoid them,” said Rudley.

“Will the children be having lunch?” Margaret gave them an encouraging smile.

They smiled back.

“If they want to,” said Walter. “Although I don’t know how much more they can stuff in.”

“We stopped at McDonald’s,” said Doreen.

“Perhaps some dessert,” said Margaret. “I know Gregoire has a lovely chocolate pie chilling in the refrigerator. If you’ll come into the dining room, I’ll get you some pie and something to drink.”

The children followed her into the dining room.

Doreen stopped them as they passed her. “Remember,” she said. “Six o’clock.”

Nora rolled her eyes. “Yes, Grandma.”

“Say ‘thank you, Mrs. Rudley,’” said Doreen.

After a pregnant pause, both children turned and said, “Thank you, Mrs. Rudley.”

Lloyd escorted the Sawchucks to their room and returned for the luggage.

“Twins,” Rudley muttered.

“Both of them,” said Lloyd.

Margaret came out of the dining room. “They seem like nice children, Rudley.”

“I’m sure Doreen told me they were teenagers when she made the reservations.”

“Perhaps in her mind they are, Rudley.”

“That could be true,” said Rudley. “After all, in her mind a spider is a matter of national security.”

“And children grow up so much faster these days. Eight-year-olds today probably seem like the thirteen-year-olds of yesteryear.”

“I’m not sure how I feel, Margaret, about the Pleasant being responsible for such young children in their parents’ absence.”

“The Sawchucks are responsible for them.”

“That would be a novelty. I haven’t known them to be responsible for anything since I met them.”

“Now, Rudley, the children are quiet and polite. I’m sure they won’t be a bit of trouble for anyone.” She gave him a peck on the cheek. “I’m going up to make sure the Sawchucks are settled in.”

He listened to her quick steps up the stairs and grinned. Most nimble feet west of the Bolshoi, he thought. Then the children came to mind and the smile vanished. It was a shame to see children at eight being thought of as teenagers. When he was eight, he couldn’t even imagine being a teenager. His days were full of bicycles and sleds and baseballs and tramping around in the woods with his pal, Squiggy Ross. He shook his head with nostalgia. Dear old Squiggy, that winsome lad with the blond curls and gap-toothed grin, now bald and toothless, squatting on a corner in downtown Galt. But at eight, he and Squiggy didn’t have a care in the world. He found it repulsive that children as young as seven were tarted up and expected to take an interest in the opposite sex. He barely knew he was supposed to be interested in girls until he turned thirteen and his father gave him the talk. Not easy for his father, who, although an affectionate father, was not accustomed to intimate conversations with his sons. Of course, it helped that he was a medical doctor with charts and diagrams. He delivered the talk as if he were lecturing a class of medical students. When the lecture ended, Rudley was horrified but not much better informed. And to think that five-year-olds were subjected to such information!

“Rudley” — Margaret appeared in front of the desk — “you look as if you’ve swallowed something disagreeable.”

“Children grow up too fast these days, Margaret.”

“That’s what my mother used to say.”

“Makes me long for that age of innocence.”

“Yes, children were working in the coal mines then.” Margaret turned toward the dining room. “I’ll nip in and see how they’re getting along.”

Rudley shook his head. He didn’t agree with child labour, not that he discounted the discipline such work encouraged. The Victorians had one thing right: Children should be seen and not heard. He paused and smiled a cheery smile. Preferably not seen and not heard. Preferably several miles away. Preferably on their own continent. People should be incubated in cocoons, he decided, and emerge as complete adults. He thought for a moment, then nodded. Yes, a much more sensible arrangement.

Chapter Four

 

Five days after Mr. Pritchard’s death, the Fredericton newspapers reported that a woman had witnessed a man crossing the parking lot behind the jewellery store at about the time the murder was believed to have occurred. She couldn’t offer a good description as he was wearing a floppy hat that obscured his face. Besides, she was mainly focused on the shopping bag. It was brown with a big purple iris on it. She remembered that because it came from a gourmet food shop where she sometimes bought gifts but couldn’t afford to frequent on a regular basis.

The newspaper item left Donnie cold. He never imagined anyone would notice the bag. He’d taken it because it was the sturdiest shopping bag he had. He’d been in the store just once, to buy a Christmas gift for his boss, who had a thing about smoked salmon. His gaze darted over the coffee table, the newspaper he was holding now collapsed in his lap. He shook his head, incredulous. What if he went to jail because of a five-dollar bill with a red squiggle and some foodie with an eye for bags with logos?

He had to get rid of the bag and hope that no one else had paid any attention to it. He knew his thinking wasn’t logical but, in his mind’s eye, he saw thousands of people watching the news item and discussing it at water coolers, people at the Gourmet Shoppe straining to remember likely suspects, people in the neighbourhood trying to remember who they’d seen carrying that bag. He was glad he had worn the hat but now he’d have to get rid of that too.

He waited until dark, tore the incriminating logo off the bag, and flushed it. He rolled up the brown bag and put it into a plastic one along with the floppy hat. He ducked out of his apartment and deposited the bag in a garbage bin. Then he went into Harvey’s and ordered a burger. He noticed one woman staring in his direction but then he realized she was near-sighted and was trying to read the menu. He went home, ate his burger, and considered his situation. In the end, he decided it was best to proceed with his previous plan: collect his last cheque, which was scheduled to arrive in the next couple of days, wait out the few days until the end of the month when the rent was due, then hand in the key to his landlord, reasoning it would look suspicious if he left precipitously.

But something would happen two days later that would change his mind.

·

The auxiliary police officers in their bright yellow vests were merely calling at a house where a citizen had reported an abandoned bicycle. Donnie didn’t linger at the window long enough to see them take the bicycle and wheel it to their truck. When he saw the officers he closed the blinds and went into the bathroom, anticipating their knock, waiting for them to go away.

Maybe they were searching the neighbourhood for clues. Maybe someone saw him walking home with the bag and its faded purple iris. Maybe they had found his hat in the garbage bin. He couldn’t imagine they would check every garbage can, but maybe in a murder case they did, especially since — if the newspapers were correct — George Pritchard was a much-loved man and the community, in the words of the police chief, was incensed at the killing of an eighty-five-year-old. And for what? the proprietor of Around the World with Tea was quoted as saying. The few dollars his old friend George would have had in the till after the half-day Wednesday?

He thought about the crumpled bills with the red squiggles. He took the money because he needed it. He hadn’t planned to kill the old man. He froze as he heard a knock at the door, then relaxed when the door across the hall opened to a girl’s voice and laughter.

He took a deep breath and ventured out into his sitting room. He thought for a moment, then started to pack a bag, hesitating before he took the gun from the vacuum cleaner and shoved it into his shaving kit. He spent the night roaming his apartment in the dark with the curtains drawn, praying that his cheque would arrive on time.

The cheque was in his mailbox the next morning. He cashed it, picked up his suitcase, and left.

·

Rudley was at the desk when the children came down.

“Grandma said you have a games room,” said Nora.

Rudley looked up from his paper. “I suppose she meant the drawing room.” He pointed in that direction.

“What kind of games?”

“The usual, I suppose.”

“Do you have Angry Birds?”

“No, I would say ours are usually quite benign.”

Nora and Ned gave each other a look and went off to the drawing room.

Twenty minutes later, the kids returned. They stopped in front of the desk, arms folded. “There’s nothing in there but a bunch of board games,” Nora said.

Rudley looked at them over his paper. “I beg your pardon?”

Nora stamped her foot. “You heard us.”

“And there’s an old lady in there who wanted us to play cards for money,” said Ned.

“And she cheats,” added Nora.

“I see you’ve met Aunt Pearl,” said Rudley.

“Our father said there’d be computer games and an arcade.”

“I’m afraid your father was misinformed.”

“We want something to do.”

“You could read a book.”

“We didn’t bring our Kindles. Dad said we wouldn’t need them. He said you’d have all that stuff.”

“You could watch television.”

“Where?”

“There’s one in the drawing room.”

“That little thing? You’ve got to have a bigger one somewhere,” Nora complained.

“With cable,” said Ned. “That one has three channels.”

“I’m afraid that’s all we have,” said Rudley. “We don’t watch much television.”

Nora heaved an exaggerated sigh. “Come on” — she poked Ned in the ribs — “let’s go.”

Margaret came out of the kitchen and said hello to the children as they passed. They ignored her.

“I think their manners are slipping,” said Rudley. “And rather quickly.”

“Oh, I think they’re just out of sorts from their trip or not feeling comfortable in an unfamiliar place. Children of that age aren’t very good at hiding their emotions.”

“You’re a forgiving woman, Margaret.”

“Just well practised.”

While Rudley was trying to decipher the meaning of that comment, the front door opened to a smattering of chuckles and chatter revealing Norman and Geraldine Phipps-Walker, each laden down with a backpack and two suitcases. Norman paused to inhale the aroma from the dining room before arriving at the desk.

Rudley turned the register to face him. “Mr. and Mrs. P.-W., are you planning to take all of that into the wilderness?”

Norman offered a bucktoothed smile. “Of course not, Rudley. Most of this is for the rest of our stay. I can assure you, Geraldine and I will be stripped down to the essentials. We’ve taken excursions where our entire kit fit into my hip pocket.”

“I take it you’re talking about your American Express Card.”

Geraldine waved him off. “Oh, Rudley, you’re so wry.”

“Looking forward to the trip, Rudley?” Norman asked.

“Not particularly. I think these jaunts are disruptive and ghastly. Why would anyone want to go anywhere when they can stay here?”

“I have heard, Rudley, that it is necessary to seek out new experiences to keep life from falling into a predictable pattern. Falling into predictable patterns makes our lives mundane. Novelty keeps our lives from flowing away on us.”

“If you say so, Norman.”

“They say travel is broadening, Rudley.”

Rudley folded his arms across his chest. “I travelled once, Norman. I went to England. I met Margaret. I saw things that were less grand than I had imagined them to be. I decided travelling was not all it was cracked up to be.”

“I suppose that’s possible, Rudley,” Norman responded, “if you expect real life to resemble picture postcards.”

Geraldine patted him on the arm. “Oh, you’ll love it, Rudley.” She cast a fond look into the dining room. “I’m glad we decided to check in a day early. It gives us a few hours to enjoy Gregoire’s cooking before we’re reduced to living off the land.”

“He’s preparing quite the feast tonight with that in mind.”

“We’ll just stow our gear and be down for lunch in a flash,” said Norman.

“I’m guessing salmon quiche,” said Geraldine, inhaling deeply. “And do I detect a hint of chocolate cake?”

“I’m sure you do.”

Geraldine and Norman went on up the stairs, laughing and chatting.

“That woman could ferret out a lemon tart at a hundred paces,” Rudley told Albert.

Geraldine Phipps-Walker was a big woman, not obese, but tall, big-boned, and substantial. She ate like a lumberjack, and with gusto. She did everything in a large way. He cocked an ear. He could hear the Phipps-Walkers twittering away all along the second-floor corridor.

“Geraldine and Norman just checked in,” Rudley told Margaret, who had come out of the dining room. “They seem to be in especially high spirits.” He paused as Geraldine’s shout of “Oh, Norman” floated down the stairs. “Exceptionally high spirits.”

“It is their anniversary this week, Rudley.”

“It’s amazing how you remember these things, Margaret,” Rudley responded, thinking he could barely remember his own.

“It’s wonderful to see a couple who have been married so long and who so clearly enjoy each other’s company.”

“I hope she doesn’t expect him to carry her over the threshold. For old time’s sake.”

“I’m sure she doesn’t, but I know he’d be game for it.”

“I’m glad you didn’t expect me to perform that silly ritual, Margaret.”

“I had other plans for you, Rudley. A wrenched back wouldn’t have fit with them.” She gave him a peck on the cheek. “I’m going to see how Tiffany’s doing.”

He smiled a lopsided smile. “I think I would have managed somehow.”

·

Donnie Albright bought a ticket from Fredericton to Montreal, planning to transfer to a bus to Toronto. But when he arrived in Montreal, he found he would have to change stations and the bus was a milk run. He decided to proceed instead to Ottawa and from there catch an express to Toronto, which would be quicker. If questioned, he would say he was planning to look up one of his foster brothers. He knew one of them still lived close to a house they had shared. Their foster mother sent him a card every year. He never responded. He supposed she did it out of some sense of duty. He guessed she thought he was fond of her. Maybe because of his smile. He learned early that the way to get more of what he wanted from her was to smile.

He almost fell asleep on the bus. He must have dozed off for at least few minutes because when he came to, his head was on the shoulder of the lady in the next seat. He took a deep breath and sat up straight, forcing himself to keep his eyes open.

·

Tim came out of the kitchen, rolling a trolley laden with food.

Rudley looked up from his newspaper. “It looks as if everyone ordered in.”

“It’s for the Benson sisters,” Tim said. “And their guests.”

Rudley looked at him blankly.

“They’ve invited the children to join them.”

“Senility has finally won out, I would say.”

Tim rolled his eyes. “The children discovered the sisters have their very own fifty-inch television with an unlimited supply of
DVD
s. Right now, they’re engaged in a
Rocky
marathon. They’ve ordered Philly cheese steaks, cherry cheesecake, made, of course, with Philadelphia cream cheese, litres of Pepsi, heavenly hash ice cream, and a special platter of Gregoire’s dream fudge.”

“We’ll find them all dead in the morning from a sugar coma or a coronary.”

“Nothing is too much for such sweet children,” Tim said. “I’m quoting the sisters, of course. You wouldn’t believe it, but those little monsters are absolutely mealy-mouthed around them.”

“Our problem is solved.”

“For a few hours anyway.” Tim shook his head. “The kids thought you were lying about the television situation. So they went from cabin to cabin peeking in windows until they came to the Elm Pavilion.”

“And there they found three ladies frozen in front of that hideous screen.”

“More or less. Louise saw them at the window and waved them in.”

“She probably couldn’t see who they were.”

“Oh, she saw who was there. She saw the most adorable moppets clinging to the window sill, their eyes wide.”

“And she let them in.”

“Of course. After all, they were merely seeking a kind adult to give them some attention — what with their parents away, with everyone so busy, with everyone misunderstanding them. And such an adorable little girl and sweet little boy.”

“Maybe they’re fattening them up for the oven,” Rudley remarked.

“That’s what I was hoping,” said Tim. “But the sisters seem genuinely besotted with them.”

“We’ll have to keep an eye on that. Make sure they aren’t after the old dolls’ cache of laudanum.”

“I’m on it, Boss.”

Tim went on his way. Margaret came down the stairs with a list in her hand. “Rudley, the Sawchucks have presented me with a preliminary list of their concerns.”

“Preliminary?”

“In case they think of something they need to add later.”

Rudley checked the list, his eyebrows dipping into a ‘V’. “‘Who,’” he read aloud, “‘will be responsible for arranging our boating outings while you are away?’”

“Well, how in hell do I know? Ask whoever happens to be hanging around the desk.” Rudley looked again at the list. “‘Who will be responsible for emergencies involving vermin?’”

He crossed his eyes. “The cat. We’ll chain Blanche outside the door, Mrs. Sawchuck.”

“I doubt if that would put her in a good mood,” Margaret observed.

“That cat’s a persnickety old thing. Couldn’t you tell that when you adopted her, Margaret? She was the only kitten left. Didn’t you wonder about that?”

“They explained, Rudley, that people kept passing her by because she didn’t seem particularly cuddly. I don’t think it’s fair to shun someone simply because they’re reticent.”

“True, we can’t all be charming.”

She let that pass. “I’m afraid Blanche won’t be available in any event, Rudley. The sisters want her as their guest while we’re away.”

“The sisters are losing their marbles.” Rudley turned back to the Sawchucks’ list. “‘Who will make sure we have an adequate supply of prunes and prune juice on hand?’” Rudley threw his pen down, exasperated. “I’m sure Mrs. Millotte is capable of following a basic stock inventory.”

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