Halfway to Half Way

Read Halfway to Half Way Online

Authors: Suzann Ledbetter

 

 

 

Halfway to Half Way
Suzann Ledbetter

 

 

 

 

 

 

For Dave, my forever prince,
who proved happily ever after isn't just the stuff
of fairy tales and fiction.

 

 

CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 16
CHAPTER 17
CHAPTER 18
COMING NEXT MONTH

 

 

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Yet another battalion of advisers and sources gave generously of their time and provided answers for a desperately in-need novelist's weird questions. Thank you SO much: Darren L. Moore, Greene County (Missouri) Prosecuting Attorney; Cheryl Smith and Pat Tripoli, Research Dept., Joplin (Missouri) Public Library; Tracey Gillenwater, LOM, Clayton Jones Agency/American Family Insurance, Nixa, Missouri; American Family Insurance consultants, John C. Christensen, Don P. Minter; John S. Korte, Manager, Life & Health Section, Missouri Department of Insurance; Mark A. Elliston, Elliston Law Offices, Webb City, Missouri, Jim Hamilton, Senior Staff Writer, Community Publishers, Inc., and Veda Boyd and Jimmie Jones.

 

 

And a special thanks to Mm. [Robin] Rue, stellar literary agent and fortune-teller's namesake, and to Lara Hyde, my new editor who jumped into this project at the (ahem) halfway mark, but with full-tilt enthusiasm from day one.

 

 

 

1

I
t was shortly after daybreak when Hannah Garvey snuck through Valhalla Springs' brick-and-wrought-iron gates. Actually, she drove through them. It only felt like sneaking. As the retirement community's resident operations manager, Hannah was supposed to be on site and available, 24/7. Although the employment manual didn't expressly forbid sleeping with the sheriff at his house a couple of nights a week, she assumed it was an unwritten rule.

 

 

Posted in no uncertain numerals was Valhalla Springs' inchmeal speed limit. Hannah rode the Blazer's brakes up the gentle slope, as if abiding by that rule washed out breaking the big one. Again. And again. And—well, over the past two months, the rough estimate of her serial sneak-outs and sneak-backs was in the low twenties.

 

 

Aware that her scruples were as thin as her brake shoes, Hannah steeled herself for the scourge that callous disregard would inevitably wreak on four hundred innocent senior citizens. A fire. A flood. Hordes of locusts, at the very least.

 

 

Except once again, the bearded, smite-happy Almighty she'd been terrified of as a child must have been looking elsewhere the past eleven hours or so. A lawnmower's echo was the lone disclaimer to "The closest thing to Paradise" part of Valhalla Springs' advertising slogan.

 

 

Dandelions didn't dare sprout in the manicured acreage tended by an army of groundskeepers. Birds twittered happy songs in the trees and squirrels ran double-helixes around their trunks. Mare's-tail clouds festooned a brilliant blue Ozarks sky, honeysuckle perfumed the air and…

 

 

Delbert Bisbee's turquoise '58 Edsel was parked in Hannah's circle driveway.

 

 

Compared to a fire, flood or insect swarm, a Delbert drop-in was at most a point-zero-seven on the Divine Retribution Meter. And a nine-point-nine on the God Has a Wicked Sense of Humor scale.

 

 

Hannah shut her eyes, counted to one, then opened them. Alas, the vintage Ford with a snazzy Continental kit was not a mirage.

 

 

It never had been before. Why would this otherwise splendid mid-July morning be any different?

 

 

The first time Delbert and his gang of elderly gumshoes commandeered Hannah's cottage for their headquarters, she'd had the locks changed. Ditto the second time. Before a third set was installed, "Sam Spade" Bisbee had purchased a lock-pick gun from Private Spy Supply.

 

 

Since then, neither rain, sleet nor dark of night deterred the retired post office supervisor and his hench-persons from trooping into Hannah's house at will. Even when she was home and definitely not alone. Or dressed to receive visitors, as they said in the good old days before lock-pick guns were invented.

 

 

Hannah toyed with the idea of making a U-turn and leaving central Missouri for somewhere remote, such as Nepal, except she wouldn't get far on a quarter tank of gas. Besides, Valhalla Springs' geriatric Mod Squad had several sort-of solved homicides, felonious assaults and a couple of kidnappings to its credit. Tracking down an AWOL resident operations manager before she crossed the Kinderhook County line would be a snap.

 

 

After she'd parked her truck, Hannah opened the passenger door and grabbed her purse from the floorboard. The leather overnight bag beside it, she'd carry in after Delbert left. Years of experience had shown that lying about where you'd been had a lot more credibility without luggage, than with it.

 

 

"Moomph,"
said Malcolm, her impatient passenger and eighty-five-pound other love of her life.

 

 

The instant she freed him, the giant Airedale-wildebeest went airborne and landed kersplat on the lawn like a belly-down B-52 with fur. From this perspective, it was clear his ancestry included Dalmatian, golden retriever, Irish setter, Russian wolfhound and a wanton fling with a Shetland pony.

 

 

While he watered his three favorite trees, Hannah entered the cottage and deposited her purse on the desk. A wooden railing separated the office nook from the spacious great room. Apart from an oak dining set used as a conference table, the cottage was furnished like a private residence. Which it was, when the gumshoes, prospective tenants, current ones, department supervisors, lost tourists and the odd paroled convict weren't cluttering it up.

 

 

"Delbert?" she called. "Where are you?"

 

 

A cranky, disembodied "Right here" shot her seventeen inches vertically, then into a neat, horizontal half twist. Hand clapped to her chest, she was momentarily blinded by Delbert's madras Bermudas, red-checked gingham shirt and yellow smiley face crew socks—a typical Bisbee ensemble that was probably visible from one of Pluto's moons.

 

 

"Damn you, Delbert," she wheezed. "You scared the living crap out of me."

 

 

The snowy-haired home invader was standing on a metal toolbox, poking a screwdriver into her thermostat's exposed innards. "Didn't you see my car out front?"

 

 

"Yes, but—"

 

 

"Then you knew I was here when you came in—"

 

 

"Yes, but—"

 

 

"—from wherever you'd gallivanted off to." He gave Hannah a withering paternal up-and-down. "And I guess I don't have to ask where
that
was."

 

 

Delbert in protective father-figure mode was annoying and endearing. Delbert with a screwdriver in his fist kindled memories of perfectly functional appliances being reduced to rubble.

 

 

First things first.
"I guess not," she said. "You know I can't start on the payroll without picking up the time sheets from the department supervisors."

 

 

This was true. It had no bearing on his remark, but Hannah's twenty-five years in the advertising industry qualified as a Ph.D. in the ol' bait and switch.

 

 

"Oh. Well." He sawed a finger under his nose. "Now that you mention it, ladybug, I reckon this is the second Tuesday of the month."

 

 

The pet name sufficed as an apology for implying she'd spent the night having mind-blowing sex with Sheriff David Hendrickson. Just because the human love of her life had left to respond to a meth lab explosion before they'd had a chance to get naked didn't make her feel any better about deceiving Delbert.

 

 

Guilt from being caught doing something you shouldn't paled in comparison to getting away with it and feeling like a two-faced slimeball. Hannah's confession was in the composition stage when she heard a distinct
zzzt.

 

 

The screwdriver sailed past her left ear. A puff of smoke shot toward the ceiling. Sparks showered downward like tiny meteorites. Delbert yelled, "Battle stations! Mayday! Get the fire extinguisher!
Quick!
"

 

 

Minutes later, the wall beside the breakfast room doorway was a seething blotch of powdery yellow residue several shades brighter than Mr. Fix-It's socks. His complexion pretty much matched his shirt and the fire extinguisher's red-enameled barrel. He handed it back to her with a quiet, but sincere "Oops."

 

 

It's said you can choose your friends, but not your family. Delbert and the gumshoe gang had become both. As with her real family—long gone to that single-wide trailer park in the sky—the urge to strangle him, or the other four, on a fairly frequent basis went with the territory.

 

 

Hannah inquired, "Are you sure the fire's out?"

 

 

"Ya gotta have flames to have a fire." Delbert straightened to a full five foot three, which put the top of his head level with her chin. "Leave it to a woman to make Mount Rushmore out of a molehill."

 

 

Misogyny was his premier line of defense. Objecting to it was, in the immortal words of her great-uncle Mort, like teaching a pig to sing. Hannah set down the fire extinguisher and made a mental note to have it recharged. And buy a backup. Maybe two.

 

 

"Next question," she said. "Why were you ramming a screwdriver into my thermostat?"

 

 

"Because every window in the ding-danged house was open when I pulled up out front."

 

 

She cocked her head, gnawed her lower lip, then finally had to admit she had no clue what the hell he was talking about.

 

 

"It hit eighty-eight degrees yesterday afternoon," Delbert said, as though addressing a toddler, or a lunatic. "It's supposed to be over ninety today. Not bad for July, but when I saw your windows open, I figured the central air was on the fritz."

 

 

Hannah eyed the mustardy mess with a rectangular lump in the middle, formerly known as a climate-control device. "I'll bet it is now."

 

 

He nodded, then hung his head. "I was just trying to help, ladybug."

 

 

Valhalla Springs had a full-time maintenance department. Reminding Delbert of it was akin to telling Malcolm to recite the Analects of Confucius in Mandarin.

 

 

Hannah hugged Delbert's sparrow shoulders. "My windows were open because I like real air. And fans. Especially at night." She planted a smooch on his sweet Old-Spice-scented cheek. "We didn't have air-conditioning when I was a kid, then I spent two-thirds of my life in a hermetically sealed condo in Chicago. Listening to a fan and the crickets are like revisiting my childhood. The good parts."

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