Farm Fresh Murder (12 page)

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Authors: Paige Shelton

BOOK: Farm Fresh Murder
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“Here it is,” he said. “I found plenty, ma’am.”
In only another second he was out of the storage area and back to the front of his stall.
I sat up and wiped the dirt off my face.
“Linda.”
“Becca, what the hell . . . ?”
“Hey, could you just call Allison and ask her to come over to your stall and help you with something?”
“Uh.”
“Please.”
“Okay. Sure. I’ll come up with something.”
“Thank you.” I closed the phone and crawled back to the other side of the storage area. If Don had to come back there again, I wasn’t going to hide. There was a better way to do this, I was sure, but I didn’t take the time to figure it out.
I peeked out of the side opening and waited. A short moment later, Allison hurried out of the office building.
“Good job, Linda,” I muttered. She must have come up with something good to put Allison in such a hurry.
I looked around again—this side of the tents and the office building were facing the main parking lot and there were people walking here and there, most of them toward the entrance to the market that was on the other side of the office. But it wouldn’t be too strange to see someone appear from the back of a tent, so I stood straight and walked out, making sure I looked like I knew what I was doing.
I stepped back into the office building and turned the knob on Allison’s office door.
Of course, it was locked. But that was easily overcome. Allison kept an emergency key on the frame above the door—I’d seen her use it only once, but the moment had made an impression. Allison was über-organized—the fact that she needed an emergency key made her more human than I’d previously given her credit for.
I swept my finger over the dusty frame, found the key, wiped it on my T-shirt, unlocked the door, and closed and locked it behind me.

Phew
,” I whispered to myself.
Allison’s door was probably circa 1970-something, and it had a window on the top. The pane was made of frosted glass so no one could see through it in either direction, but the fact that it was there made me feel exposed. I hurried to the desk.
I wasn’t exactly sure where Allison kept the vendor files, but after a quick opening and closing of a couple of metal drawers, I found a file tab that read Vendor Applications.
There wasn’t time to be nosy about anyone other than Ian. He was right there, the first one in the C section.
I grabbed a pen and a Post-It and jotted down the address. I was familiar with that part of town—all of the streets were named after Ivy League universities. Ian lived on Harvard Avenue. I hurried the file back into place and closed the drawer, grabbed the Post-It, and put it into my pocket. If Allison wasn’t on the other side of her door right now, it looked as though I’d managed my cloak-and-dagger maneuver.
But just as I put my hand on the doorknob, another idea popped into my head. Allison had mentioned that Abner had listed his sister’s address on his application. That address suddenly seemed like something I needed to have.
I went back to the drawer and fingered through the files to the Js.
Abner did, indeed, list an address other than the one I now knew was his—and it just happened to be located on Yale Avenue. I thought I was imagining things, so I double-checked Ian’s address.
Both of them lived in the same part of town—one street away from each other.
“Well, that’s interesting.”
Coincidence?
There wasn’t time to ponder the question, so I wrote down Abner’s sister’s address and put it in my pocket, too, and then went back to the door.
The office building wasn’t large, and even though Allison’s door was a few steps in from the building’s front door, she had a window that faced the front parking lot.
A blind was closed over the window, so I couldn’t see anything but I could hear some sort of diesel vehicle pull up right next to the window. There wasn’t a parking space, but I’d seen people stop there when they wanted to talk briefly to Allison or someone else in the office.
The diesel engine sputtered loudly outside the window. I wanted to leave the office, but whoever belonged to that truck would no doubt see me. I didn’t want that, so I stood still, my hand almost on the doorknob, and waited.
Someone approached—I could see the shadow through the frosted pane. I stepped to the side of the door so they wouldn’t see mine. The person knocked forcefully.
“Ms. Reynolds! Ms. Reynolds!” The male voice sounded urgent and maybe angry.
I didn’t really recognize the voice, but there was something familiar about it. I wanted him to speak again.
Instead, he reached for the knob and started to shake it. The maneuver sent me back to the desk, and though I didn’t think he could get the locked door open, the whole building was old enough that a good yank or shove might do the trick. He shook the knob more forcefully, sending the entire frame into a stiff warble.
I didn’t know what else to do, so I crouched and hid under the desk.
“Ms. Reynolds!” he yelled this time. Now I thought he must be angry, but I couldn’t be sure. He was silent long enough that I crawled out from under the desk. The shadow wasn’t on the other side of the door any longer. Outside the office window, the slam of a truck door sounded just before the diesel engine revved and tires sprayed gravel.
I leapt over a chair, went to the window, and pulled back the blind, but I was too late. I could only see the brown truck from behind. There was no way to distinguish who was in the driver’s seat.
But at that moment, two things became very clear in my mind—the shadow had been very tall. And Carl Monroe drove a brown diesel truck.
I had one more address to gather. And if Carl Monroe lived on Princeton Avenue, I’d know I’d gone beyond coincidence.
But just as I turned away from the window, I heard Allison’s voice as she walked back into the building. She was talking on her cell phone, and the volume of her voice increased as she got closer. My gut got mushy.
She was my sister and she wouldn’t hate me for long, but I didn’t want to be caught by anyone. And the fact that I was sneaking around on my own twin made me feel worse.
But other than throwing myself out the window, I didn’t have much choice but to wait and confess my sins.
Eleven
Somewhere in my youth or childhood, I must have done something good
. Though it hadn’t felt like it over the last few seconds of panic, I must have been living right somewhere along the way. Allison finished her phone call before sliding the key into the lock. Then, just as I was ready to throw myself at her mercy, her phone rang again. I couldn’t make out her words precisely, but I thought I heard her say that she’d be “right there.”
She left the small building, and I left her office as though the fires of hell burned at my feet, which in actuality they probably did. I’d later feel the heavy weight of guilt about my illegal and disloyal activities, but for now, I was grateful for the addresses I’d acquired and wasn’t willing to push my luck further for Carl’s. Ian and Abner’s sister would be a good start.
I locked Allison’s door and hurried out of the building, only to be greeted by Barry and a wagon full of corn.
“Hey, there, Becca. Where’re you off to in such a flurry?” he said.
“Oh, hi, Barry. I’m just going to run some errands.” I ignored the desire to sprint to my truck. I also ignored the anger I felt about Barry’s lies about just how well he knew Matt Simonsen. What he’d told me the day of the murder and what he’d shared in the market meeting didn’t jibe. Another day, another time, a time when I wouldn’t be afraid of getting caught, I would have a bunch of questions for Barry. As it was, I just wanted to get away and get to the Ivy League neighborhood.
“Don’t you usually work on Thursdays?”
“Yeah, but I hung out with Allison today—we went to a meeting.”
Barry looked at me like I was speaking Martian. He was probably wondering just what meeting I would willingly attend that he hadn’t been invited to. He was also smart enough to be suspicious that I hadn’t pushed him regarding his lies.
“Oh, well, all right, then. I needed to ask Allison a question. Is she in there?”
“No. Not at the moment. She got a call and hurried off somewhere.” I waved my hand through the air and then swiped a wisp of hair off my forehead. If Officer Brion had been watching, he’d have known I was guilty of something. Body language was probably one of his specialties. “Hey, Barry, have you seen Carl today?”
“Uh
,
nope. Come to think of it, I wondered about him, too. It seems kind of sparse in there. We have to move past this tragedy. You know that, don’t you, Becca?”
“Sure. Yeah, I’m sorry. I’ll be back tomorrow. I’m sure Carl will, too.”
“Uh-huh.”
“Hey, gotta go, Barry, but I’ll see you tomorrow. Promise.” I needed to get out of there before Allison returned. She’d know I’d been up to something.
“Good. Well, I guess I’ll see you later, then.” Barry’s nostrils flared roundly and he took off with the wagon.
I didn’t run, but I walked at breakneck speed to my truck. Once there, I took a deep breath and calmed my heartbeat down to something that wouldn’t attract vampires. I didn’t have the constitution for criminal behavior.
 
 
The short trip to the Ivy League neighborhood of Monson al
lowed me to clear my head—I hadn’t gotten caught, that was good.
I needed to find out what Ian really knew about Matt Simonsen, and I needed to attempt not to be irritated at him for not telling me the information sooner. He wasn’t obliged to. But still, he should have said
something
. And perhaps I could get something useful out of Abner’s sister. I wasn’t quite sure what I wanted to get out of her, but I’d figure that out.
The Ivy League neighborhood was one of my favorites. I’d often thought that if I ever got tired of my wide-open spaces, which was unlikely, I’d want to live in one of the old homes on Harvard, Princeton, or Yale. The yards were filled with tall trees and there was nothing cookie-cutter about the houses, most of which were made of brick. My favorite coffee shop and bookstore were also nestled quaintly on one corner. “Nestled” was the best word to use when describing this neighborhood.
Ian’s was my first stop. I turned onto Harvard and searched for the address. The house was spectacular. It was tall, with lots of windows, a line of small ones across the second—or was that the third?—floor. The architecture was French Tudor and made me think of pastries. I parked in front and headed for the driveway. If Ian lived in the garage, it must be somewhere along that path.
I debated whether I should stop at the house and announce myself, but I decided not to. The garage was, indeed, at the end of the long driveway, and Ian’s truck was parked to the side of it.
I didn’t see anyone else as I made my way, but as I approached the garage, I heard the rumble of music. It wasn’t loud enough to reach the house or any of the other houses in the area, but it vibrated the aluminum garage door.
There were no windows in the front, but there was a side door that had a window at the top of it. I shaded against the glare with my hand and peered in.
Ian was there, working on something that required the use of a large polishing cloth. He was shirtless, so I was getting to see some of his tattoos.
I pressed my nose closer.
He was working on a round piece of metal, flat and about the size of a basketball. The large cloth moved quickly over the surface. The force of his efforts caused the muscles in his arms and chest to expand and contract enough that the starlike design on his right forearm and the lines of a design I couldn’t quite distinguish on the left side of his chest moved. The tattoos were both only in black ink, and they blended with his skin more than they stood out.
Ian was thin, but there was nothing skinny about him. And even more than my voyeuristic enjoyment of looking at his body, I liked watching him move. He was athletic; smooth, with the ability to make his body do sports things. I’d never quite gotten there, having given up on sports after a terrible childhood experience with kickball. From my vantage point, I concluded that Ian probably hadn’t ever had a bad day of kickball. Most likely, he’d ruled the field.
He had on jeans, so if there were any other tattoos, I’d have to get to know him better to see them. I pulled my nose away from the glass and lifted my hand to knock.
“Can I help you?” a voice said from behind me.
“Oh!” I turned, fully expecting to see Officer Brion. But it wasn’t a police officer at all. An old man, in a bow tie and suit, held his hat in his hand as he inspected me, the intruder.
“I’m sorry. I’m a friend of Ian’s. I was just about to knock. Should I have stopped by the house first?”

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