Read Dirty Little Murder Online

Authors: Traci Tyne Hilton

Dirty Little Murder (8 page)

Jane looked at her empty hand, hanging there. Had she really just sold herself down the river?

Jane spotted Caramel on the back patio, talking on her phone, as she left. As Jane loaded her cleaning supplies in the car, she listened in.

“Can we make it tomorrow, Joey? I’m just exhausted today.” Her voice cracked.

Jane felt for her. What would life for Caramel be like without
Douglas
? Not the same, that’s for sure.

“Fine then, if you come by here. But if I were you, I’d stay away for a while longer.”

Jane shut the door of her car, cutting off her access to the conversation. Joey was probably the brother who sold her the expensive ring, which would explain why he wasn’t welcome at the house.

Except
Douglas
was dead, so Joe should be more than welcome. Broken families broke Jane’s heart. How sad for Caramel that at a time like this she thought her brother shouldn’t come around.

This time Jane went to Paula Ehlers’ house unannounced
. She rang the doorbell and hoped her hunch was right. If Paula, who had spent her whole life serving others, was ever going to accept help from a kid like herself, she couldn’t have advanced warning.

Paula opened the door in her bathrobe. Her eyes were bloodshot, and her nose was swollen and red. Her cheeks were tear-streaked. She waved Jane in.

Jane went straight to the kitchen without a word. She filled the sink with hot water and soap. “Ignore me, Paula. I just really want to be here for you in some way.”

Paula crumpled into her leather armchair and blew her nose.

Jane washed out the breakfast dishes. “Have you had lunch yet?”

Paula didn’t answer. Her face was buried in her hands, but her body was perfectly still.

Jane put the kettle on. She didn’t know if Paula was a hugger. It seemed like she would be if the culture she had served in all those years had been a demonstrative one, but Jane wasn’t sure. It didn’t look like Paula wanted a hug.

Paula was curled up in the leather chair, her face hidden behind her hands, her bare feet hanging off the edge of the seat.

Jane finished all of the dishes, and then wiped down the counters. She found a tea pot and made one cup of Tetley. She sat down on the couch across from Paula and waited in silence, the tea cup on the table between them. She had been there for almost a half an hour, but the time didn’t seem wasted.

Eventually Paula sat up. She wiped her cheeks with her sleeve. “I’m sorry.” Her voice was a choked whisper.

“Please don’t be sorry. You need to cry.”

Paula nodded.

They sat quietly together for another ten minutes in silence, but again, they weren’t long minutes to Jane. She prayed as she waited with Paula, and every few moments she stole a glance at her mentor. Paula’s posture began to relax. Her head lifted, and her face, which had been twisted in agony, was relaxed now, like the storm had passed.

“Thank you, Jane, for coming here and just being with me.” She reached over and patted Jane’s hand. “You have a very comforting presence.”

“Thank you.” A warm glow spread over Jane. She had almost given up hope of pleasing Paula.

“I need to pull myself together and get some work done today.” Paula stood up and stretched. “But I’m really glad you came over for a spell.”

Jane followed Paula’s lead. “Thank you for letting me stay for a little while.”

Paula opened the front door for Jane. “Come back again, okay?” Her eyes were terribly sad, but they had the light of a potential smile, something Jane hadn’t seen since they had received the terrible news.

The next morning, Jane went to the Swanson’s to open it up for the day. She got in with no problem, and found her directions on the kitchen counter. It looked like all she had to do was open all the curtains on the main floor, make a pot of coffee, and turn on all of the office equipment. And clean all of the bathrooms. From the scratchy tangle of letters that made up that line item, Jane guessed Caramel had added it at the last minute to make the job worth paying for.

But why? It was Caramel’s house and Caramel’s money. She could spend it on a maid to boot up the computer if she wanted to.

It was rather nice to picture Caramel getting up late, stumbling into the office with a mug of coffee, and getting straight to work, whatever that might be.

Jane started with the coffee. Five was early, even though early was normal. Jane leaned on the kitchen counter while the pot was brewing. She stared out the kitchen window. The Swanson land rolled off into the distance, green, green lawns with white horse fence. Far down the hills and off to the side somewhere was a stable full of horses. She wondered if the horses noticed
Douglas
was gone now. When the coffee was down, Jane poured herself a mug, and slipped off to open windows.

The sunshine poured into each room she unveiled. The day was brilliant and her heart was easy. She might have felt differently if she had wandered into the hot tub room, but the absence of
Douglas
and his insinuations and the untrustworthy gleam she had seen in his eye was a relief. It’s not that she was glad he was dead… but she had to admit, she breathed easier knowing he wasn’t about to pop around the corner.

The office wasn’t as big a mess as it had been last time she was in it, but it had the dusty, unused smell of a classroom opened up after summer break. The stack of photos was gone from the desk, and the room looked emptier. Jane bent down to turn on the surge protector that had the computers plugged in. The carpet next to the desk was flattened, like something heavy had been on it. She really hadn’t been cleaning the Swanson house for long, so it took a minute to remember that a tall cherry wood filing cabinet used to sit there. She got all of the machines turned on and then stepped back to look at the desk set-up. It looked off-centered with the filing cabinet gone, but that also explained why the room felt emptier. She turned around and ran the toe of her shoe across the carpet. There had been a bookshelf against that wall… she was almost sure of it.

She moved on to the bathroom cleaning. There were five of them, but Caramel was living alone now so it wouldn’t be that hard to clean them all. Especially if Caramel was starting to unload
Douglas
’s old furniture.

She was right. The bathrooms looked spotless. She ran a dust cloth across the horizontal surfaces and sprayed them all lightly with disinfectant. She swished the toilet brush and a little cleaner around the toilet, and then went to the master bedroom. She hesitated. Was Caramel still in bed? Had Caramel intended her to do the master bath when she had listed clean all the bathrooms?

Jane knocked lightly on the door. There was no answer, so she nudged it open and peeked. The room was huge, and the bed was against the far wall. She poked her head in and peeked. Caramel was still in bed.

Jane’s heart leapt to her throat.

Caramel shifted in her sleep and let out a soft mutter.

Jane shut the door and leaned against it. She took a deep breath. It wasn’t a repeat of the Crawford death. Caramel was still asleep, as she should be.

Jane left it at that. She wasn’t going to risk waking up the sleeping widow.

She drove straight from the Swansons’ to a very early meeting with her ministry team. She joined the other ladies at the mall food court, where Kaitlyn would be opening her Bubble-Bubble Tea shop in an hour.

“Thanks for meeting me at the mall again.” Kaitlyn swept her blond hair over her shoulder. The mall was opened for walkers, but none of the shops or restaurants were open yet.

Jane brought her own coffee with her—purchased from the Stumptown in the parking lot. They sat directly under an air return, so between the early hour, and the blast of cold, dusty smelling air, her paper cup of coffee was a welcome comfort.

“I think I figured out what we can use to connect with the kids.” Kaitlyn pulled a stack of colorful, round pieces of cardboard from her purse.

“Pogs?’ Jane leaned in and poked the stack.

“Pogs!” Kaitlyn beamed, her eyes and smile shining like the winner of a beauty pageant.

“But do kids still play with Pogs?” Jane poked the stack again. The little worn circles spilled across the table.

“What are Pogs?” Valerie swept an assortment of the cards over to herself and began to sort them by color.

“It’s a game. I’ve got tons of these.” Kaitlyn had a gleam in her eye that made Jane nervous. “But you can’t buy them anymore, which means we have the monopoly.”

“That’s a good thing?” Valerie shuffled a stack of Pogs like they were poker cards.

“Yes! Because we can start a Pogs meet-up like they used to have when I was a kid. We’d be the only place in town where a kid could get their Pog fix. Totally proprietary. We could play and pray. It’s perfect.”

Valerie drew her eyebrows together. “But do kids still want to play with these? Wouldn’t it be better to draw on something they are actually into right now?”

Kaitlyn looked undaunted. “The kids at Spencer’s youth center love Pogs.” She gathered all of her little round cards together. “Shall we review how the game works?”

Jane took a deep breath. She had come here to support Kaitlyn and to move forward with their idea… but… Pogs? “Kaitlyn… how do I say this? Spencer’s youth center is in the
Philippines
.”

“Yup.” Kaitlyn began to pass out Pogs.

“And he mostly tries to connect with kids from the slums, right?”

Kaitlyn nodded. She was counting under her breath.

“And the kids from the slums don’t have like, Nintendos or Playstations.”

“Or Angry Birds,” Valerie added.

“There really isn’t any entertainment competition with that group. Pogs are in because…”

“Because that’s all they have.” Valerie’s voice was completely matter of fact.

Kaitlyn laughed. “I had a Playstation, and a DS. We had the Internet and all that jazz, but we were wild for Pogs, too. It’s a super fun game. Kids just love it.”

Valerie put her hands on the table, palms down. “I feel like there are just too many unknowns with this plan, Kaitlyn. Help me see how you would make this work.”

Kaitlyn exhaled. She was shivering with nervous energy. “We will start a once-a-week Pog meet-up at the mall. Games followed by Bible. It’s a place and an activity that can help those who are being bullied build community with each other and begin a relationship with the One who will never reject them or humiliate them.”

Jane caught Valerie’s eye and offered a smile. “It’s a good vision. Who do we talk to at the mall about getting permissions set up?”

Kaitlyn blinked. “Um…” She looked over Valerie’s shoulder.

“You don’t have that worked out yet?” Valerie took a drink of the coffee she had brought in with her, a tired look washing over her face.

“If we go to the management office, we can figure that out.” Jane smiled again, nodding from Valerie to Kaitlyn, trying to get them to make eye contact with each other. “We have some logistics to work out, but we can get it done. No doors have been closed on us yet.”

“I think we should just jump in with both feet.” Kaitlyn lowered her voice and leaned forward. “I think we should start immediately—today, even. Once we’ve started and the kids love it, no one would make us stop.”

Jane opened her mouth to speak, but nothing came out.

Jake Crawford was standing behind Kaitlyn grinning like the Cheshire Cat. He held a tray filled with sample cups filled with pastel yogurt smoothies.

“Good morning, ladies. Can I interest you in
Portland
’s finest frosty breakfast beverage?” He lowered the tray and winked at Jane. “Three hot ladies like you need something cool to drink.”

Valerie snorted softly, but took a pink cup.

“Excuse me?” Kaitlyn’s face flushed.

“Thanks, Jake.” Jane took a cup. The less said right now, the better. If Jake succeeded in getting a rise from them, he’d never stop.

“Hmmm, that is good.” Valerie helped herself to a second sample.

“Yo-Heaven fruit and yogurt smoothies. What yogurt will be like in heaven.”

Kaitlyn placed a hand over her stack of Pogs. “Will you excuse us? We’re having a private meeting.”

Jake leaned down, his mouth close to Kaitlyn’s ear. “A private
Pogs
meeting?” Jake lingered by Kaitlyn’s ear. He inhaled, a look of pleasure crossing his face.

Jane didn’t miss the sarcastic edge to his voice.

Kaitlyn pulled away from Jake. “I’m engaged to be married!”

Jake straightened up and spun his tray, like a basketball, on his finger tips.
“Congrats. Have a drink on me.”

Valerie pushed her chair out from the table and stood up, taking her time. “Thanks for the samples. Girls, I’ve got to get to work. Let’s meet about this again on Friday night. Can you all meet me at the new Bean Me Up Scotty’s at seven?” She eyed the Pogs hiding under Kaitlyn’s protective hands. “I suggest we each bring an idea to the table and decide on our final plan then.”

Kaitlyn’s eyes filled with tears. “Jane and I believe in this ministry.”

Jake’s eyes were glued to Jane’s face. Jane mouthed the words, “
Go away.

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