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Authors: JIMMIE RUTH EVANS

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BOOK: Leftover Dead
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“If you want to, you know you’re welcome to come along. Chasing you around that track would give me even more incentive.” He leered at her.
“Oh, behave.” Wanda Nell tried not to laugh. She stood up and started gathering the remains of their late breakfast—or early lunch, she noted as she glanced at the clock. It was almost eleven.
Jack got up to help her. “I’ve got something interesting to tell you,” he said, putting the juice away. “I think I’ve found what I want to work on for the new book. It just fell into my lap, so to speak.”
“This morning? Because you sure didn’t say anything about it last night.” Wanda Nell turned on the hot water to rinse their plates and utensils before putting them in the dishwasher.
“I didn’t know about it last night. There I was this morning, doing my stretches before I started my run, and old Gus showed up.”
“The custodian? You mean he’s still there?”
“Yeah, he is, but this coming school year is going to be his last. Can you believe it? He’s been custodian at the high school for forty-seven years now.”
“How old is he?” Wanda Nell asked. “Surely he’s old enough to retire.”
“He said he’d be sixty-six by the time he retires next spring, so he must have been about eighteen when he started the job.”
“That’s really something,” Wanda Nell said, impressed. “I hope to goodness they do something real nice for him when he retires.”
Jack shrugged. “With our school board, who knows?” He took the plates from Wanda Nell and put them in the dishwasher.
“So how did Gus give you an idea for a book?” Wanda Nell dried her hands, wrung out the dishrag, and draped it across the faucet before going back to the table to sit down.
“I guess he was just in one of those moods,” Jack said, pulling her chair out for her. Once she was seated, he sat down, too. “Thinking about retirement, and thinking about the things that have happened at that school during the time he’s worked there.”
“What could have happened there that would be make a true crime book?”
“I was surprised, too,” Jack admitted, “because I’d never heard the story until Gus told me. He said they found a girl dead on the football field thirty-one years ago, and the case was never solved.”
Wanda Nell frowned. “I don’t remember that at all. I mean, I was only about eleven or twelve then, but I can’t recall hearing about it.”
“Gus said there was a big uproar for about a week, and then it just kind of faded away. Which is pretty strange, but Gus said he figured some big shot in town was probably involved, and it just got hushed up.”
“Wouldn’t surprise me a bit, not in this town.” Wanda Nell paused for a moment. “Mayrene might know something about it. She almost always does, and she would have been in her twenties.”
Mayrene Lancaster, who lived in the trailer next door, was Wanda Nell’s best friend. Thanks to her job at Tullahoma’s most popular beauty shop, Mayrene heard all the gossip in town that was worth hearing. She wasn’t shy about sharing it with Wanda Nell, either.
“Was she in Tullahoma then?” Jack asked. “I thought she told me once she’d been here only about twenty years.”
“Yeah, you’re right. I’d forgotten that.” Wanda Nell grinned. “She still might know something about it, though. The things she hears, you wouldn’t believe sometimes.”
“I definitely want to talk to her, then. Gus couldn’t tell me many of the details, except that he did remember the girl was a complete stranger in Tullahoma. Nobody knew her or where she came from.”
“At least not that they’d let on,” Wanda Nell said. “She had to be in town for some reason, unless whoever killed her was just driving through and decided to dump her body here. But why on the football field, of all places? Seems to me, if I wanted to get rid of a dead body, I wouldn’t be putting it somewhere like that, where it would be found right away.”
“That’s one of the things that really intrigues me,” Jack said. “It does seem stupid on the killer’s part, but it makes me wonder whether somehow it isn’t important to why she was killed or who killed her.”
“Maybe.” Wanda Nell shrugged. “But there don’t seem to be much to go on.”
“Not at the moment, but surely there were police reports and articles in the paper, if nothing else.”
“You could always ask Elmer Lee,” Wanda Nell said. Elmer Lee Johnson, for a long time Wanda Nell’s nemesis, was the sheriff of Tullahoma County. “He’s only a year older than me, though, so he might not remember anything, either. But maybe he could look through the files at the Sheriff’s Department.”
“I’ll keep that in mind, but he might be touchy about that. Since there’s no statute of limitations on murder, the case is still technically open. He might not want someone like me having access to that kind of information. Plus I don’t think he’s all that fond of me.”
Wanda Nell thought it wise not to respond to that last sentence. Elmer Lee had been a bit odd around Jack ever since he heard that Wanda Nell was getting married again. Even though he had come to the wedding, he hadn’t stuck around for the reception. T.J., Wanda Nell’s son, had told her more than once that Elmer Lee was carrying a torch for her, but Wanda Nell had never been sure. She had come to respect Elmer Lee, and sometimes she almost liked him, but she could never imagine being attracted to him.
One thing Jack said didn’t register at first, but then the full implication of it hit her.
“If the case is still open,” Wanda Nell said, frowning, “that means the killer could still be around here somewhere.”
“Yes,” Jack said, “although in thirty-one years, who knows what could have happened?”
“Even if the killer isn’t around,” Wanda Nell said, “somebody might still not be happy if you go poking around. Didn’t Gus say the case got hushed up, more or less?”
“That’s what he figured,” Jack replied. “He didn’t know that for sure.”
“The point is”—Wanda Nell was growing more concerned the more she thought about it—“trying to find out who killed that girl could be dangerous. It’s not like those other two cases you wrote about, where the killer was behind bars, or executed.”
“I know,” Jack said, “and it’s certainly a risk. I thought about all that on the way home, but I just can’t get the image of that girl, lying there dead and alone, out of my mind.”
Wanda Nell sighed. “And you’re the one always worried about
me
getting mixed up in murders.” She sighed again. “But you’re right, I don’t like the thought of that poor girl just lying there, either. It’s not right.” For a moment she saw that girl lying on the football field, and her face looked like Juliet’s. She suppressed a shudder.
Jack reached over and clasped one of her hands in his. “No, it’s not right. Maybe me poking into this will do some good. Who knows?” He squeezed her hand. “Will you help me?”
“Of course, but we’d better be mighty careful. This whole thing could get pretty ugly.”
Two
“Yoo-hoo! You two lovebirds up and out of bed? If you ain’t decent, let me know, and I’ll come back later.”
Wanda Nell and Jack started at the sound of Mayrene’s voice coming from the living room. They hadn’t heard the trailer door open.
“We’re in the kitchen,” Wanda Nell called out. “Come on in.” She and Jack exchanged amused glances. Mayrene had been carrying on like this ever since they got married.
The front door shut, and moments later Mayrene walked into the kitchen. She dropped a hand on Jack’s shoulder and squeezed, grinning down at his upturned face. “What’s up with you two?” She sat down. “As if I didn’t know.” She laughed.
Wanda Nell blushed. She couldn’t help it.
Seeing her friend’s face redden slightly, Mayrene laughed again. “Honey, I’m so happy for the two of you, I’m just about to bust. Every time I see the smiles on your faces, I say ‘thank you, Lord’ for getting you two together.”
“I’m pretty thankful myself,” Jack said. “Sometimes I still can’t quite believe it.”
“I’m just glad you two decided to stay here. I don’t know what I’d do if y’all had moved into Jack’s house instead.”
“We thought about it,” Wanda Nell said. “It was closer to the high school, but since Jack was only renting, and the trailer is close to being paid for, it seemed like more sense for him to move in here.”
“And it was a small house,” Jack added. “There’s actually more room here.” He winked at Wanda Nell. They also had a bedroom with more privacy here, since it was at one end of the trailer and Juliet’s bedroom was at the other. In the house he had been renting, there were two small bedrooms right next to each other.
Wanda Nell blushed again. Mayrene had never been in Jack’s house, but she was shrewd enough to figure it out. To distract her friend, Wanda Nell asked, “Guess what? Jack’s got an idea for a new book.”
“Really?” Mayrene turned eagerly toward Jack. “You know I loved both your books. What are you going to write about now?”
“Something that happened right here in Tullahoma about thirty-one years ago.” Jack paused, waiting to see if Mayrene would pick up on his cue.
Mayrene shook her head. “That long ago? I wasn’t here back then, and I don’t reckon I’ve heard tell of anything that you could make a book out of.” She grinned. “I hear stuff you wouldn’t believe down at the beauty shop, but most of it’s about who’s stepping out on a wife, or a husband who’s too blind to see what’s going on.”
“Well, they found a girl’s body on the football field,” Wanda Nell said. “Gus, the custodian at the high school, told Jack about it this morning.”
“I reckon Gus would know,” Mayrene said. “He knows about everything going on at that school, let me tell you.” She waggled her eyebrows. “His wife comes to the shop, and I do her hair. She’s told me some pretty juicy stuff.”
“Have you ever heard about this dead girl?” Jack asked.
Mayrene shook her head. “It’s news to me. How old was she?”
“Gus didn’t really say, but she couldn’t have been that old, or he would have said ‘woman’ instead.” Jack frowned. “That’s something I’ll have to check out.”
“Gus also said there was a fuss over it for about a week, and then it all just died down,” Wanda Nell added. “He reckoned some big shot in town got it hushed up.”
“So they never found out who killed her?” Mayrene shook her head knowingly. “If that’s the case, then somebody got paid off somewhere. You can bet on that.”
“You’re probably right,” Jack said. “And if I could find out who did
that
, then I’d probably be a lot closer to knowing who killed her, and why.”
“Yeah, and you may be stirring up a hornets’ nest if you start digging into this,” Mayrene said.
“He knows that,” Wanda Nell replied. “And so do I. But I don’t like the thought of that poor girl being killed, and nobody having to answer for it. She had to have some family somewhere, surely, and they at least deserve to know what happened.”
“Yeah, I see your point,” Mayrene said, “and I don’t think some bastard should get away with killing a girl, even if it was thirty-something years ago. I don’t know what I can do to help, but you know you both can count on me.”
“Thanks,” Jack said. “I’m going to be looking for leads anywhere I can find them.”
“I know what I can do.” Mayrene’s face took on a sly look.
“Start talking about it down at the beauty shop,” Wanda Nell said.
“Of course,” Mayrene responded. “I told you, all kinds of stuff gets talked about there. Ain’t no reason I can’t prod it in the direction I want, instead of just waiting to hear what somebody else wants to talk about.”
“I appreciate that,” Jack said. “But I want you to be careful. If word of this gets around too quickly, it might make things more difficult for me.”
“You don’t want to tip your hand too soon,” Mayrene agreed.
“Exactly.” Jack nodded, the light glinting off his glasses as his head moved.
“Good point.” Mayrene glanced back and forth between Jack and Wanda Nell. “How about, then, if I hold off poking around for a bit until you’ve had time to do some digging on your own?”
“Thanks,” Wanda Nell said. “I think that’s a good idea.”
“That’s settled, then.” Jack stood up. “I think, if you two will excuse me, I’ll go start making some notes about this.” He grinned. “I know you have other things you want to talk about that don’t necessarily include me.”
He blew Wanda Nell a kiss before he left the kitchen.
“You two are just so dang cute.” Wanda Nell tried hard not to blush again at Mayrene’s description.
“That’s enough of that,” Wanda Nell said. “Now let’s talk about you.”
“What about me? Ain’t much to tell that I know of.”
“Don’t give me that. We haven’t seen much of you this week, so I figured you had a hot date every night.”
Mayrene snorted. “Don’t I wish.”
“So what’s going on? I thought you and Dixon were doing real well.” Wanda Nell watched her friend in concern. Mayrene had been dating Dixon Vance, a policeman in Tullahoma, for several months now, and Wanda Nell had thought everything was fine with them.
Mayrene shrugged. “I don’t know.”
“Come on now, you know you can tell me. Have y’all had a fight?”
Mayrene looked away, and when she finally turned to face Wanda Nell again, her face was red. “Yeah, we did. And it wasn’t the kind you can have fun making up afterwards.”
This was sounding pretty bad. “So what was it about?”
“He thinks I should go on a diet,” Mayrene said, her voice so low Wanda Nell could barely hear her.
“He
what
?” Wanda Nell wasn’t sure she had heard correctly.
“A diet,” Mayrene repeated, her voice louder. “He thinks I need to lose weight.”
Wanda Nell knew she had to choose her words carefully. As long as she had known Mayrene, her friend had been more than a bit plump. She could probably stand to lose about twenty pounds, but Mayrene had always seemed perfectly comfortable with her weight. It certainly hadn’t kept her from finding plenty of men to date.
BOOK: Leftover Dead
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