SCREWED DOWN MURDER (Mrs. Fix It Mysteries Book 2) (6 page)

Carly shook her head as she put the finishing touches on a wreath for the viewing that night. “Jessica had just filed for divorce.”

Kate didn’t know that, but she should have been surprised that Jessica hadn’t shared that with her. Now she didn’t need a divorce. If she’d filed, then there was no reason for Dean or Jessica to have killed Dudley.

That left Kate with no suspects. She would have to begin from scratch. She’d have to look into what Dudley had been involved in. It must have something to do with his business dealings. He could have crossed the wrong person. Especially if he was choosing the contractors instead of picking the lowest bid. Sometimes a contract for a municipality could make or break a struggling company.

She’d have to think about what contracts had been awarded lately and who had been in the running for them, assuming the rumors of Dudley’s favoritism were true. He would have had to have kept the town council in the dark.

 

 

 

Chapter Six

Kate hadn’t left Carly’s shop before she received a call from Jessica.

“Hello”

“I need you to come over. I have a pile of little jobs for you to do. It’s Jessica Stuart,” she said.

“Okay. I can come over now.”

“Good. I’ll be here.” Kate turned to Carly. “I have to go. Jessica has some jobs for me.”

She hugged her friend. She always felt better after talking to Carly. Always.

“You feel better?”

“Yes, I do. Thanks.”

Carly smiled then waved as her friend left. Kate might actually be able to afford to fix many things on her truck if Jessica had that many jobs for her to do. The poor old thing could use new tires and an oil change. As handy as she was, Kate hated working on cars. So she didn’t, unless she absolutely had to.

Only Jessica’s car was in her driveway when Kate arrived at her house. She figured Dean must be preparing for his renovation of the community center. She couldn’t imagine what the job took to do. That’s why she did small jobs and nothing that required more than a few days’ time.

Kate parked her truck on the street. She knocked on Jessica’s door. The woman answered.

“I’m glad you were able to come over. I sent the family out grocery shopping. They are hovering, but they don’t seem to understand that I’m okay with Dudley’s death. I’m sad, but I neither loved him nor did he love me.”

Jessica led her into the kitchen.

“What did you have in mind for me to do?”

“I actually have a list. Dean and I went through the house on his lunch hour.”

It seemed Jessica wasn’t letting anything get her way of being with Dean.

“A list?”

“Yes. I want to put the house on the market. This is too big for me, alone,” Jessica said.

“So you have some odd jobs that need to get done before you can do that?”

“Yes, exactly.”

“Where will you live?”

“With Dean until we build a much less tacky house.” Jessica shuddered.

She had been the one with good taste, as Kate had suspected. Dudley had liked things colorful and not matching.

“Let’s go around the house. Can I have the list to make notes on? Then I can give you an estimate,” Kate said.

She enjoyed the idea that she would have steady work. She liked Jessica and she liked Dean, too.

“So why isn’t Dean doing this stuff?”

“He’s busy with the community center renovation, and he said he’d rather pay you to do it and not have to repair things when he came home from work.”

“Will you be living here while I do the repairs?”

“Probably not. As soon as Dudley is buried, I’m going to move in with Dean. “

“You don’t think people will talk?”

Jessica shrugged. “They might, but I don’t care. I finally have someone who thinks I’m smart and listens to me.”

“That sounds good.”

The two women spent an hour going through the house. When they were done, Jessica poured coffee for them and put out a plate of cookies. By then, Kate’s stomach was empty so she didn’t mind helping herself to a few.

Dinner would have to be healthy if this was lunch. She didn’t want to outgrow her overalls.

“Have you heard anything new about Dudley’s case?”

“No, just that he was tasered and had a heart attack.”

“Did you know he had a weak heart?”

“No, he kept those things from me,” Jessica said.

She understood how disheartening that was. It made Kate wonder about all that Greg had kept from her.

“Could it be something to do with his trucking company?”

“It might. As mayor, he was only there part time. He didn’t really have that much power.”

Kate suspected that Dudley took more than was his share if the rumors were true. “Have you been through the books at the company?”

“No, but I have a private accountant auditing them. You’re welcome to talk to him if you think it will help you figure out who killed him.”

“If you don’t mind.”

“Not at all. As much as Dudley and I had our differences, I don’t want his murderer to get away.”

“Thanks. I appreciate the help.” Kate licked her lips then broached a more sensitive subject. “There are rumors that Dudley played favorites in giving out contracts. That he didn’t take the lower bidder.”

Jessica put down her coffee mug. “I’ve heard that also. When I confronted Dudley, which is what we were arguing about when he left that morning, he insisted that he didn’t do that. I have no proof of what he did. You might have to talk to the other council members. They might have a better idea of what the exact complaints had been.”

She could talk to Larry, who had been the fire chief, but now had taken over his father’s hardware store after Carl had been taken away on murder charges. Larry used to be interested Kate but had been scarce since his father had threatened her for investigating Jackie’s death.

She didn’t blame Larry for anything. He wasn’t his father’s keeper. It wasn’t surprising that Larry would feel guilty. He was that kind of man.

“Good idea.”

“Let me get the card for the accountant.”

“You already hired him?”

“I had him on retainer because I’d already filed for divorce from Dudley. I didn’t want him to be able to hide any assets from me.”

Dudley had underestimated his wife. She’d probably been underestimated her whole life. She was smart and savvy. Knowing what she knew now, Kate wondered why Jessica had ever married Dudley.

“Can I e-mail you the estimate? It might take me a day or two. I need to figure out supplies,” Kate said.

“Of course. I’m in a hurry, but I understand that you want to do this properly,” Jessica said.

“Yes, I do,” Kate said.

That’s one of the things her father had taught her. Never do bad job. Ever. People remembered those things. Kate had no doubt that he’d been right.

Though Jessica’s list was long, none of the jobs were too much for her to handle. Kate would have steady work for several weeks.

***

With the check cashed for fixing the window, Kate was now able to get an oil change on her truck. She drove it over to Bob’s Garage to see if he could fit her in.

No one was at the desk when she entered the lobby. The place was from a bygone era when one could let the customer into the bay to see what you’d been doing on his or her car. There wasn’t the same separation as modern facilities.

Kate sat down to wait. A television blared at one end of the waiting room. Kate wasn’t interested in whatever was on. A bunch of women talking over each other. She never understood that, but she’d never been part of a group of women like that. She’d mostly been a loner in high school until she caught the eye of the star quarterback. The cheerleaders hadn’t been happy with her since they had all wanted to date Scott.

Her social status plummeted even further when she and Scott were first seen together. He didn’t care what others thought, but there were days of teasing when she wanted to break up with him just to get relief from it.

She shuddered at the memory of high school. Her sons had been athletic, and so they’d had an easier time in those four years than she’d had. Greg had been a runner. They must have inherited their athletic prowess from him.

Kate heard voices and then Beth Chance, a reporter with
The Sentinel
, appeared in the doorway to the bays.
Oh crap.
She’d want to talk to Kate who had been able to avoid the woman for days.

Beth’s face lit up, telling Kate that this would be an inquisition. Lucky her.

Bob, whose name was on the building, was right behind Beth. “Give me about fifteen minutes then I can give you an estimate.” He looked at Kate. “What can I do for you?”

“Oil change, but I can wait until you are done with your estimate.”

Not that she wanted to talk to Beth. At all. She could get through fifteen minutes without answering any questions. She’d done it before.

Beth sat down across from her. A table littered with magazines sat between them. Kate picked up a gossip one, leafed through it and hoped that Beth would get the hint. She didn’t.

“So I’ve been trying to track you down, Kate. I have some questions.”

“I don’t have any answers for you.”

“Come on, Kate.”

“The story is a few days old. My viewpoint can’t be that interesting now,” Kate said.

“Well it still is. You apparently directed the police to the person who could give Jessica Stuart her alibi?”

“No comment.”

She turned a few more pages, but Kate knew no one in the magazine. She didn’t watch much television. She didn’t listen to current music. These people were strangers to her. Still, it was better than having Beth interrogate her.

“What did the body look like?”

Why would she want to know that? That was just gruesome. No reader needed that graphic detail.

“So what are you getting an estimate on?” Kate said.

She could ask questions also. Beth’s mouth opened then closed. “I hit a concrete barrier with my car. It was in the newspaper’s parking lot. I need to see if I have the money to get it fixed or if I have to file a claim with my insurance company.”

The television droned on. The show had changed to another set of women talking over each other. Kate didn’t see the entertainment value in it.

“I see.”

Beth stopped making eye contact. What was she feeling guilty about? Why would Kate care about how her car was damaged?

“He’s taking a while,” Beth said.

“He said it would be at least fifteen minutes,” Kate pointed out.

Everyone was in a hurry these days. Kate appreciated the chance to sit still for a few minutes. At least she’d derailed Beth’s questions.

Or so she thought.

“So back to my questions, Kate.” Beth pulled out her phone and began typing into it. “You found the mayor. Why were you there?”

“No comment.”

“That’s an innocuous question, Kate.”

“No comment.”

Kate knew that if she answered one question, Beth would get her to answer more, and she wasn’t opening herself up for that. She wanted to sit and wait for her truck to be done. Of course no one else entered the lobby during this inquisition.

Kate would have longed for anyone to break up this conversation.

“Give me something here, Kate. The public wants to know.”

“No comment, Beth. That’s all I have to say to you. You can save yourself grief and stop asking questions. I’m not answering any of them.”

“Why not? You seem to know a lot about the case. More than the cops.”

Kate doubted that. She knew more than the average person who read
The Sentinel
. It wasn’t a hotbed of journalistic accuracy. In fact, the paper had twice been caught printing libelous stories. They were given the choice to retract them or face lawsuits.

The paper had not been kind to her when Greg had disappeared. The editor had contemplated that she had something to do with her husband’s vanishing. They’d intimated without going into an outright accusation that she might have taken care of him. They’d had no basis for the accusation. As far as anyone knew, she and Greg had been a happy couple.

As far as she knew, she and Greg had been a happy couple. Each time she uncovered something else about his life, she wondered if her whole marriage had been a lie. She wanted to believe that Greg had loved her and the boys, but she wasn’t as sure as Carly was.

She could never forget how horrid the editor had been to her. She even refused to advertise in the local newspaper. She hadn’t had a subscription in years. She’d never been a news junky, and she had other sources for the information she needed.

None of this was Beth’s fault, but Kate still could not bring herself to help the organization that Beth worked for.

“You won’t give me one good quote for the paper?” Beth asked.

Kate admired her persistence, but she wasn’t giving in. She knew how words could get twisted and people were misquoted.

Bob returned and Kate had never been so eager to see anyone.

“I have your estimate, Beth,” he said.

He handed her a piece of paper. She frowned at it. “Okay. I’ll call and make an appointment if I decide to get it fixed.”

“Let me drive it out of the bay.” He turned to Kate. “Then you can drive your truck into the bay.”

“Sure.”

She’d parked on the street. Beth was able to drive her compact car out. Kate put hers in the only bay in the garage.

“Might take me a half an hour.”

“I’ll probably go find lunch. I haven’t eaten in hours,” Kate said.

“I think you might have company,” Bob said.

When Kate looked in the direction that he was pointing, she saw Scott standing there, his arms folded over his chest. He looked as if he were waiting for her. Did he have a tracker on her?

He seemed to turn up wherever she was. Not that Rock Ridge was a small town, but Kate was beginning to be convinced that Scott had spies everywhere. She knew the town was rooting for them to get together, but she didn’t think everyone would go as far as keeping tabs on her to make that happen.

 

Chapter Seven

Kate strode out to see Scott. A smile lit his face.

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