warned.
âYou were late today,â Judith remarked, putting the checkbook back in her purse. âWas something wrong?â
As ever, it was a loaded question. âWrong?â Phyliss fanned herself. âYou bet. I had to call for the doctor. I thought I was heading straight to meet the Lord.â
âDid the doctor come?â asked Judith, feigning interest.
âNo.â Phyliss shook her head. âBut he told me how to cure myself. I put my head in a grocery sack, called on the Lord, and the next thing I knew, it was a miracle. I could breathe again.â The cleaning woman offered Judith her most beatific smile.
âYou were hyperventilating,â Judith said.
âWhat? I was dying, thatâs what I was doing,â Phyliss said with her own brand of tattered dignity. âCouldnât catch my breath. Awful. A step away from the Pearly Gates.â
âIâm certainly glad youâre better,â Judith said in her most sympathetic tone. âI wonât keep you, Phyliss. Weâre running behind this morning, for all sorts of reasons.â
âDonât remind me,â Phyliss responded, and headed for the back stairs just as Renie came into the kitchen.
âSheâs gone?â Renie, who had no patience with either Phylissâs hypochondria or her evangelizing, let out a sigh.
âOnly temporarily,â Judith replied with a droll expression. âShe decided not to quit after all. The next thing I know, sheâll be trying to save the guests.â
Renie didnât comment. âNo takers on that note you found?â she asked, rinsing out her coffee mug in the sink. âThe guest interviews are over. Joe and that young detective just came from upstairs. They looked annoyed.â
âI suppose.â Judith was searching the refrigeratorâs freezer compartment for luncheon possibilities. âJoe canât believe this happened so close to his retirement. I wish heâd go to work and forget about it for a few hours.â
âYouâre right,â Renie agreed, looking out through the window above the sink. âThere are plenty of reminders. I see some uniforms combing the area.â
Judith joined Renie at the window. Two policemen were searching the Rankersesâ hedge, while a third was heading for the front of the house.
âOh, great,â Judith sighed. âI suppose theyâll mark the entire property with crime scene tape. What will the neighbors think?â
Renie grinned. âThat youâre at it again?â
âShut up.â Judith set her jaw, then turned as J. J. Martinez poked his head into the kitchen. âMrs. Flynn? Could I see you for a moment?â
âOhâcertainly.â Judith had forgotten that she, too, would have to be interviewed. âIn the front parlor?â
J. J. nodded in his jerky fashion. âAfraid so. Should have questioned you first, but Joe filled us in.â
Asking Renie to keep an eye on the guests in the living room, Judith followed J. J. into the parlor. âDo you need more coffee?â Judith asked, ever the hostess. âSomething to eat? Iâm going to fix lunch in a little while.â
âToo much caffeine already.â J. J. rapped a mug with his knuckles. âJoe says it makes me jumpy. You think Iâm jumpy, Mrs. Flynn?â
âWellâ¦â Judith bit her lips. She figured that an extra âJâ could easily be added to the detectiveâs nickname. âJumpy,â âJittery,â or âJerkyâ would work. âMaybe a little. And please call me Judith. Iâve known you for quite a while, J. J.â
âOh. Yes. Thatâs true.â J. J. gave Judith a surprisinglydiffident smile. Still, she couldnât help but wonder if his manner proved effective in unsettling suspects. Or at least throwing them off-guard. âNow tell me exactly how you found the victim,
Anne Bishop
Lisa Heaton
Katie Graykowski
D. Harlan Wilson
Kahlen Aymes
Dru Pagliassotti
JT Schultz
Jenn Vakey
Fletcher Flora
Shelly Fredman