Read Trouble's Brewing Online

Authors: Linda Evans Shepherd,Eva Marie Everson

Tags: #ebook

Trouble's Brewing (8 page)

“Evie—it’s not what you think.”

“It’s exactly what I think! Why are you looking at an old picture of Doreen Roberts?” I asked. But before he could answer I turned on my heel and headed for the door. “No, never mind. I don’t think I want to know.” I stopped at the desk, where my cake sat on top, and whirled back to face Vernon. He hadn’t moved from behind his desk. “Here’s the cake you wanted. I hope you choke on it!”

I turned again and headed out the door.

“Evie, wait!” he called out, but I kept walking, slamming the door on my way to the parking lot, where once again I saw Bob Burnett. This time, though, he was headed away from the bank.

“Evie, you all right?” he asked.

“I’m just fine, thank you very much,” I said, not so much as stopping. Mainly for fear that Vernon would come out the door and make a scene in the middle of town. A quick look over my shoulder, however, told me that he had made no such move.

“Trouble in paradise?” Bob asked.

I stopped and glared at him. “Paradise, Bob Burnett, is a fairy tale made up by people too silly to grow up and face the realities of life.”

Bob laughed loudly. “I don’t have a clue as to what you’re talking about, but if you and Vernon are having a little tiff—and I suspect you are—then this is my lucky day. I wanted to ask you earlier if you’d like to go to a movie or to dinner or something … but then Donna interrupted me and—”

“Do you mean like on a date?”

Bob shrugged. “If you want to call it that. If you don’t, we can just say we’re two old friends having dinner … or going to a movie …”

“But we’re not old friends. We’ve hardly been friends at all.”

“We’ve known each other our whole entire lives, Evangeline. Sure we’re friends.”

“Why me, Bob Burnett? I’d have thought you’d be calling … what was her name? Dee Dee?”

Bob grinned at me. “Jealous?”

From the corner of my eye I saw the front door of the county building opening and then Vernon stepping out. “Evangeline!” he called, but I ignored him.

Bob chuckled again. “If this were paradise,” he said, reverting to the old subject at hand, “I’d say the snake has just crawled in, and Eve’s got a decision to make. You gonna eat from the tree or not, milady?”

I looked from Bob to Vernon (who had come to a stop between us and the building, I suppose trying to figure out what was going on) and back to Bob again.

Bob Burnett. He’d always been a weasely man in my opinion, but I guess not altogether distasteful. At least he didn’t have Doreen Roberts in his background, clouding up what could have been and should have been the bright spot of my entire lifetime.

I turned toward my car, took a few steps, then turned back and said, “Tonight. Pick me up at 7:00, and we’ll go get something to eat.” I was just loud enough for Vernon to hear me, and I glanced his way to make double sure he had. From the look on his face, my fiery dart had hit the mark. I looked back to Bob. “And don’t be late.”

13

Between a Rock and a Hard Place

If he hadn’t been hot on the trail of another story, Clay would have missed what was surely something he needed to look into a bit further. Evangeline Benson, frozen between Bob Burnett and Sheriff Vesey.

He rolled his jeep to a slow stop near the side entrance of the county building, then leaned over and rolled the passenger’s side window down just enough to hear the confrontation.

Evie Benson and Bob Burnett? Going out on a date?

Well, this should make Donna happy, if nothing else.
He pondered whether or not to call her. She’d be getting ready to head to L.A. Maybe, if he caught her off guard, he could find out who she was going with and if she were meeting Harris there for a … fling.

He closed his eyes against the thought, then jerked straight when Sheriff Vesey spoke from the opened window. “Get what you came for, Clay?”

Clay stared into the steely eyes of the sheriff. “Ah …” he stammered, then flushed. “Just dropping by to check the arrest sheet.”

“Arrest sheet, my eye,” Vernon retorted. “Go on, now. Get off government property before I make you a permanent resident.”

Flustered, Clay forgot about his reporting assignment and headed back toward his one comfort in life: Higher Grounds Café.

14

Rye Getaway

I had spent a busy morning running errands around town. Now, I walked down to the bus stop, located only a few hundred yards down the mountain from my bungalow, pulling a piece of Lisa Leann’s red designer luggage behind me. The suitcase left a trail of grooves in the layer of fresh snow.

The noontime sun warmed my face as the frigid air frosted my breath. As I walked, I reviewed my and Vonnie’s bold escape plan to slip out of Summit View for a mad-dash weekend trip to Los Angeles. I felt a shiver of excitement as I sat down on the bench and swung my large canvas bag beside me.

“Besides the suitcases you’ll need a tote bag,” Lisa Leann had informed me. “For the personal things you want to take on the plane, including your purse, a water bottle, a good book or magazine, and food. That is, unless you want to pay ten bucks for a greasy, oversized hamburger at the gate.”

As an inexperienced traveler, I had taken Lisa Leann’s advice, borrowing a tote bag from my dad before packing it with a couple of Reuben sandwiches for Vonnie and me.

Beneath the startling blue sky, I inhaled the cold air into my lungs and looked down the mountain into the town spread before me in Rye Getaway miniature. From my vantage point, I could watch the progress of the town’s shuttle creeping up the grade toward me and belching puffs of bus exhaust.

As I surveyed the town, I could see the “Potluck Players” were moving into place.

Fred’s truck was pulling out of his neighborhood toward town. And Goldie’s car was already in front of the Higher Grounds Café, parked next to a blue jeep. Lucky for us, Goldie had the afternoon off because her boss was entertaining an old friend. I had called her at her daughter’s home the night before. She’d been rather enthusiastic. “You got it, girlfriend! I’d love to help Vonnie by playing a decoy and driving the two of you to DIA. Sign me up!”

Even now, she was probably sitting in the café, watching Clay watch her. I could just imagine him sipping his coffee and jotting notes on the fact that Goldie’s car displayed a bit of luggage protruding out of the backseat (my own, but he would never guess that).

My bus pulled up to the stop, and the double doors opened. I nodded at the driver and took my seat. The bus turned around at the end of the cul-de-sac across from my log bungalow, then headed back toward town.

It was a beautiful day. The pines were iced with snow while the aspens lifted their now sleeveless arms into the clear, cold sky. A warm feeling of satisfaction engulfed me. All was ready. This would be a good day to outwit Clay Whitefield. Let the games begin.

It was, in fact, Clay who opened the door to the café for me as I struggled to roll my luggage through. It was just my carry-on, but he had no way of knowing that. In fact, my whole rendezvous with Goldie at the café was a ruse to point suspicion in Goldie’s direction, without having to lie.

“Here, let me help you.”

Clay’s eyes were shining bright with anticipation. “Looks like you’re heading out for a trip.”

I shrugged. “Looks that way.”

He followed me to Goldie’s table. She looked radiant with her new haircut, but the glow on her face, well, even Lisa Leann’s high-powered blush couldn’t have painted that. It had to be from the anticipation of our “great escape,” I decided. I sat down across from her. “Looks like I have time for the ham quiche special and a cup of coffee,” I said. Even as I spoke, Sal was on the job, pouring a cup.

“The quiche,” she said, having overheard me.

I nodded, and she disappeared.

I looked up at Clay, who still stood at our table. “You’re staring, Clay.”

“Well, I’m curious. Where are the two of you going?”

Wade Gage undraped himself off a nearby stool at the counter and joined Clay.

“Morning, Wade.” I turned back to Clay. “The two of us?”

Clay indicated Goldie’s car with a nod of his head. “You’re not the only one with luggage I see.”

Goldie beamed. “I’m not going anywhere but to drop Donna off at DIA. That’s her luggage I picked up earlier.”

Wade folded his arms, a look of suspicion etched on his face. He turned to Clay. “I can tell you where Donna’s going,” he said. “Wasn’t it just a month ago when she took up with her new Hollywood boyfriend, David-what’s-his-name?” He frowned. “She’s going to see him.”

Wade’s twist to my carefully created intrigue was one I hadn’t thought of, but it only added to my ruse. I gave the boys the protest they expected, careful not to deny or confirm their conclusion about my destination. “David Harris is not my boyfriend.”

Clay turned and looked at me, contemplating this new idea. “Wade, that’s something to consider.”

Again, I repeated myself, this time with irritated emphasis. “David Harris is not my boyfriend.”

Wade turned back to Clay, who said, “The lady doth protest too much.”

Wade followed with, “Definitely a cover-up.”

I rolled my eyes. “Wade, even if Dave Harris and I were, ah, close, it’d be none of your business.” I turned my attention back to Clay. “Or yours.”

Clay asked, “But you are going to L.A., right?”

“If you must know, an old friend is in the hospital. Goldie’s dropping me off at DIA.” I finished my coffee and stood up, walking to the counter, where Sally was waiting. “Give me the quiche to go,” I said. “I’m out of time, and I’ve still gotta swing by the bank.”

Moments later, as Goldie and I put my suitcase in the backseat of her car, Clay and Wade stepped out onto the sidewalk to watch our departure.

“Have a nice trip, ladies,” Clay said. “I want a full report on how David Harris is doing when you get back.”

Wade pulled his denim baseball cap lower over his eyes. “Well, now, that makes two of us.”

Before Clay could get in his jeep to follow us out of town, Lisa Leann called to him from her shop, right on cue. “Clay!”

She darted across the street. “You’re just the man I wanted to see.” She turned to Goldie and me as we climbed into the car. “Pardon me, ladies, Clay and I have some unfinished business.” She winked at me, then put her arm through Clay’s and led him back to the restaurant door. She said, “Now, the next edition of the paper comes out on, what day did you say, this Monday—or is it Wednesday?”

Clay looked back over his shoulder, and I waved to him. For a moment he looked confused, but before he could react, Lisa had pulled him through the door, leaving only Wade to stare at our departure.

Goldie giggled. “That was the most fun I’ve had in ages,” she said, pulling into the bank parking lot. “Honey, I had no idea you had so many beaus.”

“Those two knuckleheads?” I asked. “No thanks to either one of them.”

She pulled to the back of the bank, next to Fred and Vonnie’s pickup truck. Even if Clay had his nose pressed to the Higher Grounds window, he would never be able to see our little gathering.

As I was getting out of Goldie’s Crown Victoria, Evie popped her head out of the bank and glared. Oh boy. She must have somehow found out about our secret mission to L.A. If so, she’d be especially steamed because she would know I had rather intentionally neglected to mention it when I saw her down at the county building earlier.

“Donna Vesey, what kind of stunt do you think you’re pulling? Did you think I wouldn’t find out about these shenanigans?”

“Good afternoon to you too, Evie. What stunt are you referring to?”

“Now, I’m not saying that what you’re doing isn’t right. I mean, we’ve got to get Vonnie to L.A, and behind Clay Whitefield’s back too.”

I studied her. Evie was once again wearing new clothes, a cute denim appliquéd jacket, new jeans, and kicky black boots with heels. What a difference from the Evie of a month ago who looked like she’d been stored in mothballs in the back of her closet. I blinked. Why, she even appeared to have a dash of Lisa Leann’s lipstick splashed across her prim mouth. Hopefully she wasn’t planning on kissing my dad with those painted lips.

I took a deep breath.
Be nice,
I told myself.
Don’t show her a spark of your outrage.
I kept my voice even, though my hands were perched on my hips. “So, Evie, what’s the problem?”

“The problem is you’ve tried to leave me out of one of the biggest coups the Potluck’s ever pulled.”

“You mean you didn’t know?”

“How could I? I only found out because of Lisa Leann’s insistence that I call her.”

“Imagine, Evie, you not staying in touch with the girls enough to know when their lives have been turned upside down. Something, or should I say someone, else captured your attention lately?”

Evie stood staring at me with her mouth open, wanting to defend herself but not wanting to give me a report concerning the status of her relationship with my father.

She unfolded her arms, then refolded them. “I am keeping up,” she finally said. “That’s why I’m here.”

“Good, then you’ll help us get this show on the road.” and I exchanged glances as we followed Evie into the bank. I wasn’t prepared for what I found there.

Vonnie and Fred sat in the brown padded leather chairs in the bank’s lobby. Fred was staring into space while Vonnie dabbed at her eyes with a crumpled tissue.

“All set?” I asked.

Fred stood. “I’ll get your luggage,” he said to Vonnie, Goldie following him so she could open her trunk. I turned back to Vonnie, who rose slowly as Evie gathered her into her arms. “Vonnie, you poor dear. You’re a mess.”

“If only Fred would go with me,” she said, watching him load the car. “But he’s barely speaking to me as it is.”

“It’s that bad, is it?” Evie said.

Vonnie nodded and blew her nose.

Evie hugged her again. “Then I’ll pray. I’ll pray for your trip, you, and of course, Fred.”

“I appreciate that, Evie, I really do.”

The two women walked through the door. I followed them, then walked around to the car and started to pull the suitcase out of the backseat. It had served its purpose as a prop at the Higher Grounds Café but now needed to go into the trunk so I would have a place to sit.

Just as I bent over to plop the suitcase onto the pavement, two cowboy boots stepped into my line of vision. “Here, let me get that.”

I looked up. Wade was standing before me. “That goes in the trunk,” I said.

He stared down at me, then turned to watch Vonnie climb into the front passenger seat. “Donna, what’s going on here?”

“Well, the girls and I are trying not to alert the local press.”

“Clay? He’s on alert, all right. He’d be here himself if that Lisa Leann woman hadn’t shanghaied him. Is something going on between you two?”

“Me and Clay? No. It’s just that he’s following a particular story a little too closely, if you know what I mean.”

Wade stared at Vonnie, then at me. “Then you are going to California, but with Vonnie?”

I nodded. “That’s right. And that’s a little fact I’d like you to keep to yourself.”

Wade popped my luggage in the trunk and shut the lid.

“All right, but only if you promise me something.”

I climbed into the backseat, and Wade leaned over the door.

“What’s that?”

“You and I have some unfinished business. When you get home, we need to talk.”

I nodded reluctantly as he shut the door.

After our good-byes, Goldie giggled as she pulled out of the parking space and toward the exit. When she turned onto Main Street, she headed away from the café and on toward Highway 9.

“Darlin’,” she said, “you are full of surprises. You’d better not let Lisa Leann find out about how many men are wild for you, or she’ll be planning your weddings. But what I want to know is which of these bachelors will be waiting behind the door of the church?”

I sank into the seat and covered my eyes with my hands. “Neither.”

Vonnie leaned over the seat and patted my leg. “This thing with you and Wade, it’s bothering you, I can tell. Do you want to talk about it?”

“No.”

“Why not, dear? You and Wade almost got married when you graduated from high school. Whatever happened between you two?”

“That was a bazillion years ago, and nothing happened that I’d care to discuss.”

Goldie made eye contact with me through the rearview mirror. “Well, when you’re ready, the Potluck girls will be there for you.”

Ready?
I mused to myself. That would never happen. There were some parts of my dark past I’d never be ready to reveal. Ever.

Other books

The Back of His Head by Patrick Evans
Forever Yours by Candy Caine
His Acquisition by Ava Lore
The Oathbound Wizard-Wiz Rhyme-2 by Christopher Stasheff
Triple Threat by Regina Kyle
Island Girls (and Boys) by Rachel Hawthorne