Elaine Orr - Jolie Gentil 06 - Behind the Walls

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Authors: Elaine Orr

Tags: #Mystery: Cozy - Real Estate Appraiser - New Jersey

Elaine Orr - Jolie Gentil 06 - Behind the Walls
Jolie Gentil [6]
Elaine Orr
Lifelong Dreams (2013)
Tags:
Mystery: Cozy - Real Estate Appraiser - New Jersey
There’s something hidden behind the walls of the hurricane-damaged house Jolie bought in her New Jersey beach town—something someone seems willing to kill for. After Jolie and Scoobie find a small sack of jewelry, as they do a mold attack on her bungalow, Jolie is pursued by a purse thief and a burglar. But the guy she’s most worried about is the one who left an elderly auctioneer dead on her porch swing.
In between appraising houses and planning a fundraiser for the food pantry, Jolie tries to figure out if there is more stolen bounty around town. Is the feared killer the same person who burned some vacant houses or the as-yet unmasked Peeping Tom? And are they willing to kill again to get to the hidden riches?

BEHIND THE WALLS

By Elaine Orr

 

Cover image by Patty G. Henderson

 

Copyright © 2013 Elaine L. Orr

All rights reserved.

ISBN
978-0-9851158-7-6

 

This electronic edition of
Behind the Walls
is licensed for your personal use and

may not be copied in any form.

 

Discover other books in the Jolie Gentil Series

Appraisal for Murder

Rekindling Motives

When the Carny Comes to Town

Any Port in a Storm

Trouble on the Doorstep

 

www.elaineorr.com

www.elaineorr.blogspot.com

 

 

 

DEDICATION

 

To my sister Diane, who keeps more balls in the air than the
Harlem Globetrotters.

 

 

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

 

Thanks to the
Decatur critique group for asking good questions and pointing out some of the things that looked obvious to me, but might not to a reader. Lorena Shute again came through as a good cold reader and copy editor. As always, thanks to my husband, Jim, for putting up with the crazy schedule I keep when I write.

 

 

CHAPTER
ONE

 

“AND WHAT DO I HEAR for this antique brass bed with its pink ruffled bedspread?”

“How about ten dollars to burn it?” Scoobie asked, quietly.

“You secretly want those ruffles,” I said, eyes on the elderly auctioneer.

Scoobie snorted. “Not on a cold day in Hades.”
He winked at me and turned to walk toward an elaborate train set that had been set up on a piece of plywood.

It was a beautiful spring day on a lazy Sunday, and that buoyed my mood.
Nothing keeps a Jersey girl down long, not even Hurricane Sandy.

My eyes swept the crowd as well as the assorted furniture and remnants of lives. I was looking for stuff for my bargain-priced bungalow that was a few blocks from the center of Ocean Alley and five blocks back from the ocean.
My house would have been a lot more expensive if all of the plumbing worked. Considering that not long ago my future seemed destined to be a room at Aunt Madge’s Cozy Corner B&B, having a house, no matter how small, was a luxury.

Except for the rotten wood on part of the back porch and the bit of mold in the living room.
Okay, there’s no such thing as “a bit” of mold, but after a week of bleach and sponges, I think I got it all.

I put a lot of things in storage when I left my gambling husband eighteen months ago, but I hadn’t kept much furniture other than what I took with me to Aunt Madge’s.
Robby and I had bought every piece together. I didn’t need to look at it.

So here I was at the Sunday auction of Moira Peebles’ possessions. I had already bought her home, but its contents had been in a storage locker a few miles inland since late last fall.
According to the
Ocean Alley Press
, she had passed peacefully, so I didn’t feel bad, the way I would if it was an auction because people got booted out of their home.

Like most local auctions, it was held outside with furniture spread around a yard and tables that held smaller items. This auction had things from many people who had contracted with the auction company but didn’t have enough to warrant a sale of their own.

I looked again at the rows of tables with odds and ends that were going to be sold in a couple of minutes. Aunt Madge had warned me that auctioneers knew people want the furniture but not a lot of the miscellany, so they made buyers wait while the junk sold.

“And look at this…thing.
I’m not sure what the holes in this metal box are for. Humph. And there’s this sliding mechanism.” He leaned over to talk to a younger colleague, and then his face turned a deep shade of red. “You just don’t see a genuine suppository mold any more,” the elderly auctioneer said.

There was a great deal of laughter and I deliberately did not look at Scoobie.

The auctioneer went into his rapid-speak patter, which meant I didn’t understand what he was saying except for, sometimes, the amount of a bid. I planned to bid on a small sectional sofa and maybe a dinette set.

Auctioneer Norman Fitzgerald turned his attention to the tables of household goods, small tools, art supplies, and costume jewelry.
Really? Who would buy used crayons and paint brushes?

“Jolie!”
I followed my friend Ramona’s voice and saw that she was looking at the art supplies. She does pen or charcoal drawings on the boardwalk all summer.
Maybe I do know someone who would buy used art supplies.

“Hey, Ramona.”
I walked to the table she was examining.

She pulled a large box of colored chalk toward her.
“I’ve never done anything with chalk because…”

“Too many colors for you?” Scoobie asked.
He grinned and moved aside a few inches as she tugged on his dark blonde hair, which today hung over his shirt’s collar. His sometimes cocky demeanor belies his struggle with depression, which he works hard to manage.

“You’re as funny as sea nettles,” she said.
“I’ve been thinking of doing some chalk drawings on the part of the boardwalk that’s concrete, you know, near the bandstand. It would be like free advertising for my caricatures. But I’m not sure I want to put in all that work and then have the rain wash it away.”

“Maybe you could draw stuff on the sidewalk outside the Purple Cow. Roland would love that,” I said, trying to hide a smirk.
The owner of the office supply store where Ramona works is a nice guy, but he’s a serious businessman, despite what he named his store.

“That’ll be the day.”
She shifted through more of the art supplies. “I’m going to bid on the easel over there.”

I followed her gaze. I hadn’t noticed some of the furniture and such that was on the other side of a large tree, so I walked over to look at it.

There were two recliners, one of them quite new with a handle that raised the seat, and a large rocking chair that I thought was maple. I felt as if I was looking at Moira Peebles’ progress through old age. First a standard rocker, then a recliner, then one that helped her get out of the chair when she couldn’t do it herself.

As if to affirm her (or someone’s) physical decline, there was a port-a-potty next to the newest recliner, and one of those bedside tables you roll up and down.
I pushed this depressing mental picture aside and checked out several pieces of oak bedroom furniture. Aunt Madge’s affinity for antique oak had become mine.

I really liked a large oak chest of drawers.
It would fit perfectly along one wall in my small bedroom. I tried the drawers. All but one were a little sluggish, but I knew Aunt Madge could tell me how to fix that. I couldn’t get the top right drawer opened, and gave up.

I fished my customer number out of the pocket of my navy blue slacks.
I would need to hold it up to bid.

 

TWENTY MINUTES LATER I had not gotten the sofa or dinette set, and I was determined to win the chest of drawers.

“Ladies and gents, this is a beautiful oak bedroom set, probably from the early 1900s or so, but you’ll have to be the judge of that.
Let’s open the bidding on all four pieces at four hundred dollars.”

I didn’t want a bed, chest of drawers, dresser and mirror.
Especially the mirror. It was so old the glass was sort of wavy.

No one said anything, and Fitzgerald brought the opening bid down to three hundred dollars.
Finally, he said that as much as it pained him, he would break up the set. Bidding was lively for the dresser and mirror, which went for a price well more than I would have paid. I watched two women who looked to be sisters confer about their purchase as the bed went up for auction. There were fewer takers there, probably because the mattress and old-fashioned springs would have to be replaced.

Finally the chest of drawers was on the so-called auction block, which was actually a sturdy picnic table.
I’m short, so I moved a bit to the right so the auctioneer would be able to see my bidding number. “We’ll start this beautiful oak-crafted chest of drawers at one hundred dollars,” Fitzgerald said.

No takers.
When he was down to fifty dollars for a starting bid I held up my number, which was fifty five.

“Who wants to go to sixty dollars for this handsome…?”
One of the two women who had bought the dresser held up her number and he nodded at her. “Okay then, how about seventy?”

I held up my number and he nodded at me.
I was not going to go more than one hundred dollars, and had about resigned myself that I would not get the chest when I saw the two auburn-haired women, who were not a lot older than my twenty-nine years, exchange a look.
Aha. They’re running out of money.

I bid one hundred dollars and was disappointed that they bid one hundred five, but I took a chance and raised my number when the auctioneer asked for a bid of one hundred ten dollars.

“Do I hear one-fifteen?” he called out.

I held my breath.
When several seconds had passed, he pointed a long finger at me and said, “Sold to number fifty-five for one hundred ten dollars.”

I was very pleased with myself.
When I finally got all my stuff moved into the bungalow I’d have a place to put clothes. I walked toward the chest and met the eyes of the taller of the two women. “All’s fair in love and war, I guess.”

She smiled, but seemed to be covering irritation.
“Yes. I should have taken a bit more out of the bank this morning,” she said. “Fiona Henderson.”

“And I’m Patricia Franklin,” the other woman said.

“Jolie Gentil.” I pronounced the J and G softly and letting both names end in the sound of a long e. It’s French, and means
pretty nice
. I periodically grouse at my French-Canadian father for his choice, and am constantly telling people it’s pronounced Zho-lee Zhan-tee.

“I think I know your aunt,” Patricia said.
The dark-haired man holding her hand retained his somber expression and said nothing.

“Who doesn’t?” I asked, smiling.

Behind Fiona, a man said, “The drawers are awfully shallow. You would have hated it.” He was about forty, with the sort of rugged good looks that I associate with someone who is a tennis coach at a private club.

“Men.
What do they know?” Fiona asked.

We all laughed politely, and they moved away.
The man continued to gently tease Fiona, and she swatted him on the fanny.

I tried to tackle the recalcitrant drawer again.

“Want some help?” Scoobie asked.

“Let me give it one,” I tugged, “more” a bigger tug, “try.” The drawer slid open abruptly and it forced me to step backward about three paces.

“Stuff in it,” Scoobie said as he peered in the drawer.
“Oops, ladies’ stuff.”

I pulled out something that was a kind of filmy pink and quite large.
I held it up and started to laugh. “I’m not sure I’ve ever seen underwear this…”

There was a clicking sound and I looked up to see the junior reporter from the
Ocean Alley Press
. “You print that and you’re going to have to park your car indoors!” I yelled.

Several people turned to look at us.

“Oh, I won’t!” She backed away, stumbling slightly over the bottom of her jeans, which were overly long with holes along the sides at artful intervals.

“Now, now,” Scoobie said. “You know who gives Tiffany her assignments.”

“Yeah, yeah, and I heard her emphasis on the word I.” A picture of George Winters floated to the front of my brain. I had an achy feeling in my stomach and turned back to Scoobie. “Who do we know who has a pickup truck?” I asked.

“You came to an auction to buy furniture and didn’t think about how to get it back to your place?”

“There’re guys who hang out at these auctions with their pickups. I’m going over there to talk to a couple of them. It’ll be cheap.”

Half an hour passed quickly and the auction was winding down.
I reflected on the fact that eight or ten people had either called over to me or stopped to talk for a couple of minutes. Ocean Alley is small, only twelve blocks back from the ocean and about two miles long. I went to eleventh grade here. When I first moved back from Lakewood, I resented that the town was so small. It didn’t take much time for half of the year-round residents to know I was the soon-to-be ex-wife of a man who had gambled away all of our money. And started on his bank’s before they wised up to him.

Now that I’ve been here awhile, I like the cozy atmosphere in the off-season.
People always nod if they meet your eyes in a store, and I’ve rekindled friendships with people like Scoobie and Ramona. Well, Scoobie. Ramona is pretty much a new friend. The only thing I really remembered about Ramona was that I tripped over her art portfolio in geometry class.

I meandered back to the chest of drawers and stopped about five feet from it.
The drawer I’d had so much trouble with was gone.

 

“YO, JOLIE.” It was Scoobie giving his traditional greeting as he walked onto my front porch. Then I heard him swear, rare for him.

“What?” I called.

He poked his head around the door jamb. “There’s so much old junk on your porch you’re going to get somebody killed. Is it safe to come in?” he asked.

I looked up from where I was scraping mottled wallpaper off the plaster wall in my living room.
I was still seething about buying a chest of drawers that was now minus the top right drawer. “I’m going to put the gardening stuff in that tiny shed out back. And it’s as safe as it was yesterday.”

“See you later, then.”
When I threw a small gob of soggy wallpaper and glue at him, he added, “Now you know why I asked. Want some help for a few minutes?”

Scoobie’s getting a two-year degree to become a radiology technologist.
This particular Monday he had just finished a test on radiation protection that he’d spent half the night studying for, so I shook my head. “Nope, it’s almost four o’clock, I’m getting ready to quit for the day.” I pulled off a rubber glove and lobbed it at him.

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