Caught in a Bind

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Authors: Gayle Roper

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BOOK: Caught in a Bind
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There, gleaming softly under the harsh overhead light, sat a silver convertible.

“It came three days ago.” Randy ran his hand lovingly over the sleek curve of one fender. “Isn’t it beautiful?”

“That it is.” I began to circle the car. I didn’t want to prick Randy’s balloon, but all I could think of was how inappropriate this expensive car was for a novice driver. The potential for a serious accident was incredible!

If Randy met a sycamore in this marvelous car, he would be in big trouble.

I bent down to peer inside. I might as well study the upholstery before it was drenched with Randy’s blood.

Someone had beaten Randy to it.

Blood stained the passenger seat and floor.

I knew there had to be very little, if any, left in the very dead man who slumped against the gray leather interior….

Books by Gayle Roper

Love Inspired Suspense

See No Evil
#39
Caught in the Middle
#50
Caught in the Act
#54
Caught in a Bind
#58

GAYLE ROPER

has always loved stories, and she’s authored more than forty books. Gayle has won a Romance Writers of America’s RITA
®
Award for Best Inspirational Romance and finaled repeatedly for both RITA
®
and Christy
®
awards, won three Holt Medallions, a Reviewers’ Choice Award, the Inspirational Readers Choice Contest and a Lifetime Achievement Award as well as the Award of Excellence. Several writers’ conferences have cited her for her contributions to the training of writers. Her articles have appeared in numerous periodicals including
Discipleship Journal
and
Moody Magazine,
and she has contributed chapters and short stories to several anthologies. She enjoys speaking at writers’ conferences and women’s events, reading and eating out. She adores her kids and grandkids, and loves her own personal patron of the arts, her husband, Chuck.

GAYLE ROPER

CAUGHT IN A BIND

REVISED BY AUTHOR

When I am afraid, I will trust in you.


Psalms
56:3

For Christine Tangvald with love.

You are a woman of God who knows how to live godly in Christ Jesus. And you are fun! I wouldn’t have missed all those writers’ conferences and Disney World visits for anything.

CONTENTS

CHAPTER ONE

CHAPTER TWO

CHAPTER THREE

CHAPTER FOUR

CHAPTER FIVE

CHAPTER SIX

CHAPTER SEVEN

CHAPTER EIGHT

CHAPTER NINE

CHAPTER TEN

CHAPTER ELEVEN

CHAPTER TWELVE

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

CHAPTER NINETEEN

ONE

T
his time I got myself into trouble without Jolene’s help. Not that she didn’t contribute, but at least she wasn’t the cause. Edie was. Or rather, Edie’s husband.

Edie Whatley is my coworker at
The News: The Voice of Amhearst and Chester County
, where she is editor of the family page and a features writer. I’m a general reporter and features writer.

“Edie,” I called across the aisle that separated our desks. “Can I do the ironmonger’s mansion at Hibernia Park for the Great Homes of Chester County series?” I thought it would be fun to write about that the big pale orange home set on the knoll above the gently sloping lawn.

There was no response from Edie.

“Edie!”

Still nothing.

I frowned. It wasn’t like her not to answer, especially since she was doing nothing but staring at her CRT screen.

Then spoke Jolene, Queen of Tact. “Edie, what in the world’s the matter with you, woman? You’ve been a mess all day.”

“Jolene!” I was appalled, but I had to admit that she got Edie’s attention. Edie blinked, skewered by Jolene’s accusing gaze.

“Spill it,” Jolene demanded. “Is it Randy?” Randy was
Edie’s fifteen-year-old son whose life journey kept all of us glued for the next painful installment.

“Randy’s fine,” Edie said.

Jolene and I looked at each other, then back at Edie.

“He is?” I blurted with more disbelief than was probably good for our friendship.

“Well, probably fine is too strong a word, but he’s not bad.”

“He’s not?” Jolene’s surprise was equally obvious.

Edie’s face scrunched momentarily as she understood what we had inadvertently revealed about our opinions of her son. Then she got huffy, Edie-style. “I said he’s fine.”

“Well, if it’s not Randy,” Jolene continued, unabashed at having hurt Edie, “then what? Is it Tom?”

Edie smiled too brightly. “Tom? What could possibly be wrong with him?”

A good question. He and Edie doted on each other and didn’t care who knew. Being around them was instant tooth decay due to the sweetness of their relationship. I don’t mean just lovey, which I happen to think is good, or considerate, which I happen to think is necessary. It was the touching, the patting, the unconscious back rubbing and collar adjusting.

Tom was Edie’s second husband, and therein lay part of Randy’s problems. He didn’t like his stepfather.

Not that Tom should take that lack of appreciation personally. Randy didn’t appear to like any adults. He also didn’t like many kids, and I strongly suspected he didn’t care much for himself either.

But Tom took the brunt of all the boy’s angst and anger. More than once, Edie had come to work teary-eyed, only to tell Jolene and me about Randy’s latest verbal abuse and disobedience.

Randy’s father was a giant of a man, all muscles, charm, and good looks, a certified financial planner who over the
years had made a mint in the stock market both for himself and his clients. Randy resembled him in size and coloring, a fact that gave the boy immense pride.

Tom on the other hand was a slight man, five feet eight inches in his hiking boots, gentle, pleasant and balding.

“He’s a car salesman!” Randy would mock, as if automotive retail was on a par with prostitution.

“Is Tom sick?” I asked.

Edie shook her head. “Not that I know of.”

Not yes or no. Not that I know of.

“Did he lose his job?”

Edie actually smiled at the thought of Tom losing his job. “Hamblin Motors would fall apart without him.”

I nodded. Even I, a relative newcomer to Amhearst, knew that Tom was Hamblin’s mainstay. Of course, my major source for this information was Edie, and I recognized that she was a wee bit biased.

“He just won a trip for two to Hawaii because of his winter doldrums sales. Only ten prizes were awarded in the whole country, and he won one.”

“Hawaii?” Jolene looked impressed. “When do you go?”

“In three weeks.” Edie looked uncertain, then nodded. “In three weeks.”

“Then what are you so upset about?” Jolene wouldn’t let well enough alone. “I mean, Hawaii!”

“I’m not upset.”

“And I’m not Eloise and Alvin Meister’s little girl.” Poor Edie. She was about to be slaughtered on the altar of Jolene’s curiosity and need to know.

“Jo,” I said quickly, “I think your plants need watering.” If anything would distract Jo from Edie, it would be her plants.

Jolene glanced around the newsroom at the lush greenery that made the place resemble a nursery. A giant grape ivy that
had once tried to eat me alive sat on the soda machine. A huge jade plant graced the filing cabinet, and spectacularly healthy African violets sat in perpetually blooming splendor on the sill of the big picture window by the editor’s desk

She shook her head as she checked the soil of the spider plant on her desk. Baby spider plants erupted from the stems like little green and white explosions. “They’re all fine. I watered them yesterday.” She checked my philodendron and Edie’s croton, then returned to her grilling undeterred.

“Come on, Edie. I know something’s wrong. Of all the people who work here, you’re the most stable.”

“What?” I turned to Jolene, irritated. I was unstable?

Jolene grinned at me. “We all know I’m an emotional wreck, though you’ve got to admit I’ve been getting better in recent weeks.”

She paused a minute, looking expectantly at Edie and me. After a short pause, we realized what she expected.

“Right,” Edie said hastily. “You’re getting better.”

I nodded. “It’s church. You’re listening to Pastor Hal.”

Jolene shrugged. “Maybe. Maybe not.” Church was new to her and still made her uncomfortable. She returned to her commentary on office personnel. “We all know our noble editor Mac is so on edge over the buyout of the paper that he can’t think straight.”

Edie and I nodded. Mac was certainly acting strangely though I thought maybe Dawn Trauber, director of His House, had as much to do with his foul mood as the paper.

“And you, Merry,” Jolene continued, “are so bemused over Curt that you’re always on some far mental planet.”

“I beg your pardon,” I said, miffed. “I am very much in control, aware and on top of things.”

She gave her patented snort, the unfeminine sound always a surprise coming from someone as lovely as Jolene. “That
control and awareness are why Mac has been waving at you for the past five minutes, I guess?”

“What?” I looked quickly over my shoulder toward the editor’s desk. Sure enough, Mac was scowling at me so intensely that his eyebrows were one long line from temple to temple.

“You could have told me.” I rose and made my way toward Mac. “And Edie, ignore her. You don’t have to answer any of her questions.”

Jolene agreed. “We’ll wait for Merry. She wants to hear what’s got you in such a tizzy too.”

Edie smiled weakly at me as I walked past her desk. “I’m okay,” she said with all the spunk of a groveling puppy.

Suddenly Mac’s bellow tore through the newsroom. “Edie, for goodness’ sake. Get over here!”

I stopped and pivoted to return to my seat.

“Where are you going, Kramer?” Mac snarled.

“But you said Edie.”

“I want you both.”

I turned back and walked to his desk. Mac had been acting editor for the past several months while the
News
was for sale. Recently the paper had been purchased by a man named Jonathan Delaney Montgomery. As I saw it, the greatest danger in waiting for Mr. Montgomery to decide whether Mac still had a job wasn’t Mac’s career. It was the incipient development of ulcers in everyone in the newsroom.

I spoke softly across his cluttered desk. “Please be easy with Edie. She’s upset about something, and if you yell at her, it won’t be good.”

“You mean she’ll cry?” he asked in disgust.

“Could be.”

Mac looked at me with barely concealed contempt, whether directed at me for offering unwanted advice, or Edie
for being a possible crier, I couldn’t tell. “I am always considerate of my people,” he barked.

I bit my tongue and said nothing.

He turned from me to Edie. “Now, Whatley, I’ve got a great assignment for you. I want you to do an article on spousal abuse.”

Edie shuddered and actually swayed. She put out a hand to steady herself, gripping Mac’s desk hard enough to whiten her knuckles.

“Edie.” I grabbed her elbow. “Are you all right?”

“And you, Kramer.” Mac plowed on as if he hadn’t noticed Edie’s distress, and he probably hadn’t. “You are to do a profile of Stephanie Bauer, director of that organization that helps abused wives. You know the one. It’s down a couple of blocks on Main Street.”

I kept hold of Edie. “You mean Freedom House?”

“Yeah, that’s it. Find out how the place works and see if you can interview some of the abused women. You know, tear-jerker stuff like you did with those pregnant girls at Christmas.”

I nodded. Not a bad assignment.

“You two are to work together on this thing.” Mac looked from Edie to me and back. “Got that?”

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