The Murder in Skoghall (Illustrated) (The Skoghall Mystery Series Book 1)

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The Murder in Skoghall (Illustrated) (The Skoghall Mystery Series Book 1) Page 4

by Alida Winternheimer


  Jess called Shakti into the living room and gave the command, “Kennel.” Shakti backed away from Jess, then turned tail and ran into the music room. “Shakti? Come on, girl.” Jess shook the box of dog cookies, which usually brought the puppy running, but not this time.

  She closed the front door to the sound of Shakti’s whines.

  Jess took a table near a window where she could look into the garden. April had not been a particularly rainy month, and the water wheel turned lazily if at all. A blue jay shouted its squaw! squaw! from a tree branch over the spring, then swooped to the ground under a feeder where small sparrows were contentedly perched, pecking at the seed. A young woman with pale blonde hair pulled up onto her head and pinned into a loose fan-shaped bun slid a menu onto the table in front of Jess, though her gaze was turned out the window. Across from them, a young man stood outside the ice cream parlor, leaning against the porch rail, smoking a cigarette. Jess made a disapproving face.

  “I know, right?”

  She looked at her server, surprised by the sudden remark.

  “I mean, that’s an ice cream parlor. That’s the first place people with kids go, and he’s out there smoking.” She shook her head. Her name tag said Denise. Denise wore a shear white blouse with large red polka dots over a camisole. At her neck she’d tied a scarf, also polka-dotted, only these were smaller and navy blue. Her thick-rimmed glasses reminded Jess of Buddy Holly. Denise’s lipstick matched the red polka dots on her blouse, which was an unfortunate choice against her extremely pale skin. A short, pocketed apron covered the front of a pair of skinny jeans. Or jeggings. Jess didn’t know the difference.

  “Do you know him?”

  “Yeah. That’s my boyfriend, Bruce. Total jerk, but he’s my jerk,” Denise said with a bounce to her voice. “Can I get you something to drink?”

  “Do you live in Skoghall?” Jess asked when Denise brought her iced tea to the table.

  Denise stopped moving for a moment, as though she had to think how best to answer. “Naw. I’m from Bay City, which is only slightly less hick than this. Bruce and I both got jobs in Skoghall so we can carpool and stuff.”

  “Even though he’s a jerk?”

  Denise smiled wryly. “Yeah. Even though."

  “Is Tyler here? Would you tell him Jess, the ruh-writer, says thank you for the housewarming gift?” Tyler had sent her home with a nice cabernet after their impromptu dinner.

  Denise raised one penciled eyebrow above the rim of her glasses—an impressive feat given the thickness of those rims.

  “And I’ll have the spinach omelet.” Jess held her menu toward Denise.

  Denise slid her order pad into an apron pocket and took the menu. “Omelet,” she said and turned on her heels.

  Jess took a small notebook out of her purse and worked on her list of many things. She added “bird feeders” to the paper as a pair of cardinals joined the chickadees in the garden. When Tyler came out from the kitchen, Jess was lost in thought, gazing out the window with the end of her pen in her mouth. She didn’t realize she was being watched until Tyler stood beside the table, smiling down at her, her plate in one hand and silverware in the other.

  “Hi.” He set the plate before her. “Can I join you?”

  “Please.” Jess unrolled her silverware. “This looks delicious.”

  “Wait until you taste it.” He winked. “Flattering the chef will only get you dessert.”

  “I love your hair. You’re looking sharp today. What a nice place you have…”

  Tyler laughed and mugged for Jess, sticking out his chin and turning his profile to her. “Got a sweet tooth, do you?”

  “Chocolate is the way to my heart.”

  “I’ll keep that in mind.”

  Jess’s cheeks colored. It seemed forever since anyone had flirted with her. She tucked her hair behind her ears and picked up her fork. Tyler was still smiling, his interest apparent, and Jess felt like a teenager swelling with nervous excitement. She had to say something before she popped from embarrassment. “What do you do when it’s this quiet?” She gestured with her fork toward the otherwise empty dining room.

  “Today, I am perfecting my crepes. Pretty soon things will pick up for the season. Come mid-May, the college kids start coming home. Then in June all the schools let out. The River Road is happening Thursday through Monday. People roll into town, hungry from hiking up bluffs, or touring the Little House on the Prairie, or posing with an eagle over at the raptor center.”

  “I’ve done all of those things. I didn’t realize I’m such a tourist.”

  “It’s what keeps a village like this on the map, so don’t think I’m putting it down.” Tyler waved Denise over to the table. “Do you want anything else?” Jess shook her head. “Grab me an iced tea.”

  Tyler watched Jess eat until his drink came. “Thanks,” he said to Denise. “Are we set up for the dinner service?”

  “Working on it.” Denise returned to the back of the café and her task of rolling silverware into napkins, filling condiments, and other prep work.

  “She’s a good kid,” Tyler said. “Funny dresser.”

  Jess laughed when she wasn’t expecting to. She covered her mouth with her napkin and coughed to clear her throat, then took a drink of her iced tea. “Oh gosh. I was thinking the same thing when I first saw her.”

  Tyler ran his hand through his hair, again exposing the scar on his head. Jess had the urge to ask him if it still hurt, but stopped herself just before the words popped out of her mouth. “How’s the old homestead?” he asked.

  “Good.” Jess glanced out the window at the cardinal perched on the shepherd’s hook and felt like she’d just been caught in a lie. “It’s good. There’s a lot to do. I’ve been at it for over two weeks now, and I guess I got a little lonely. I’m so used to the city, people everywhere. You know?”

  Tyler reached across the table and took up Jess’s notebook and pen. He opened it to a blank page and wrote something. “No need to feel lonely. Just give me a call when you want to get out. Or if you need help with something. If I’m not busy here, I’m usually free.”

  “Right. The new kids.”

  “The new kids.” Tyler raised his iced tea glass and Jess clinked hers with his.

  They talked until a family of five came into the café and Tyler had to go back to his role as chef. When Jess asked for her check, Denise told her there was no charge. Flattered, she tipped the girl generously, although Denise’s boss had actually served her meal. On her way out, she looked back through the kitchen door, hoping to say thank you, but Tyler was focused on layering toppings on a pizza. He wore his apron again and his dark hair was tucked under a cap with a swirling red pattern that, unfortunately, made his scar appear even brighter. Jess realized she’d been watching him, his hands deftly dancing across his work area, for longer than seemed reasonable. She left without catching Tyler’s eye, his phone number tucked in her purse, and a deepening appreciation for his skill as a chef.

  “Hello,” Jess said as she entered Skoghall Hardware.

  Beckett was kneeling before a drinks cooler, one hand holding the door open while his other arm was seemingly being eaten by the fridge. A case of bottled drinks sat on the floor beside him. “Got it,” he said and extracted his arm. He held a bottle of orange juice. “Sometimes they fall over at the back. Oh, it’s you.” He looked at Jess before rising to his feet. His hair swung freely, its blunt ends just long enough to reach his chin. Beckett offered her the orange juice.

  “No, thanks.”

  “I didn’t mean, ‘Oh, it’s you.’ I meant, ‘Oh, it’s you,’” his inflection changing from negative to positive. “Got your lights sorted out?”

  “No. I need some recommendations. And some paint. And do you know anyone who could help me move an old iron stove?”

  “Got plenty to recommend. Paint is aisle two. Move it from where to where?”

  Jess paused to consider if she was being imitated, and if so, whether she ha
d sounded that brusque. “Um, the stove. I want to move it from an old smokehouse into my office.”

  A small table and chairs sat in the corner of the store near the window. Beckett motioned Jess over to it. He opened the orange juice for himself and took a swig before sitting. Jess sat facing a new display of bird baths and feeders in the window.

  “Now,” he said, “are you removing an old stove from the office?”

  “No.”

  He arched an eyebrow and Jess was again caught off-guard by the blue of his eyes. “Is there a hearth? A fireplace? A chimney?”

  Jess put her hands to her head and shook it. “Ah. I’m being dumb. Again.” She looked at Beckett and decided he was being nice—however he rubbed her, this was him being helpful. “I guess I need to figure out that stuff first.”

  “The good news is you can get everything you need right here. Including a mason. I built my own kiln. Laying brick is only a little harder than building with Legos. We have chimney pipe, too. You should hire someone to vent it to the outside, but the rest is pretty easy.”

  Jess was nodding at everything Beckett said. She looked up to meet his eyes. “So, did you just offer to build my brick hearth?”

  “Yeah, I guess I did. You have to buy the materials here and I get a case of beer, the kind to be decided by me. And it won’t be cheap beer.”

  “Deal.” Jess extended her hand. Beckett’s hand felt firm and warm, despite just being inside a cooler. His face softened with their touch, his cheeks dimpling when he smiled in a genuine way. Jess noticed a wash of light freckles across his nose and cheeks. “Well,” she cleared her throat and they released each other’s hands. “Um…I need something else, too. I have to move a desk and bookshelves. I’m willing to hire help. I mean, I don’t want to be presumptuous.”

  “Don’t worry,” Beckett said. “We’ll get it done.”

  “Really?” She couldn’t help smiling in relief.

  “I know what it’s like to move on your own.”

  Beckett returned to filling the cooler while Jess pored over the rack of paint chips. She left Skoghall with a bird feeder and seed, paint samples, a padlock for the smokehouse door, the name of an electrician, Beckett’s offer to help her, and Tyler’s phone number. She sang as she drove home, feeling infinitely better about everything. As she navigated her long driveway, being careful to avoid the worst of the ruts, she realized that she had forgotten to send Chandra an email while in town. Hopefully the Wi-Fi would be working. And the phone. And her computer.

  Jess opened the front door and called hello to Shakti. The puppy whined and scrambled to her feet, her claws scratching the plastic tray of her crate. Shakti stood at the door, wagging her tail expectantly, the stink of urine making Jess pull back before opening the crate.

  “Oh, Bear!” She couldn’t help sounding disgusted. She’d only been gone a couple of hours. As soon as the door was open, Shakti leapt out, knocking Jess over in her desperate need to be comforted. Jess carried her upstairs, grimacing at the feel of damp fur against her bare arms. “You stink.” Shakti raised her head and licked Jess’s face. “Yeah, great,” she said.

  The rest of the day, Shakti shadowed Jess from room to room, and she remained irritated, despite reminding herself the puppy couldn’t help it.

  At bedtime, Jess checked the doors to make sure they were all soundly locked, then scooped up the dog and carried her up to the front bedroom. Jess was excited Beckett had agreed to help her move her furniture. She liked the idea of facing the front of her property and writing with the morning light. She pictured it furnished with her desk, the bookcases, and maybe the stove from the smokehouse. She turned to leave, her hand on the light switch, when she stopped. There was something sitting on top of the television, something that had not been there before: the little cowboy from out in the yard.

  Chapter Three

  The early evening sun shone through the kitchen windows, lighting everything with a warm glow. The sunflower curtains over the sink were parted so that Bonnie could look out at the woods. She had asked John to put a birdhouse on one of the big ash trees this spring, and yellow-rumped warblers had taken up residence. Bonnie couldn’t wait to see the young emerge. She stood at the sink, peeling carrots into her scrap bucket. John and Johnny played together in the living room, pushing dump trucks around the braided rug in front of the television. She cut the carrots into large chunks and laid them in the roasting pan around the chicken, then began peeling the potatoes. Her hands moved on their own while she gazed out the window, watching for the warblers. They liked the evenings. When the potatoes where cut and in the pan, Bonnie carried her scrap bucket out the back door and emptied it into an old pie tin sitting on the ground.

  As she was rinsing out the bucket, John came in from the living room, walking softly on bare feet. Bonnie smiled to herself as she watched his reflection grow in the window over the sink. He slipped his arms around her small waist and kissed her neck. She reached a hand up to cradle the back of his head.

  “How come you’re never surprised?” he asked.

  “That’s my secret.” She turned to face him, staying in his embrace. She had to tilt her head toward the ceiling to kiss her tall husband. Bonnie reached a hand up and ran it through his short sandy-colored hair. They kissed each other’s mouths, keeping their eyes open, while John spun them around and leaned Bonnie against the kitchen table. It was a heavy pine thing with legs as sturdy as a milkmaid’s. As far as Bonnie knew, it had always been in that exact spot. Probably the house was built around the table since there was no way to fit it through one of these doors. Not without sawing it into pieces. She laughed when John’s breath tickled a spot behind her ear and she swatted him playfully. “What’s Johnny doing?”

  “Playing.” John’s lips brushed her earlobe and he put his hand to her hair, moving her strawberry blonde curls away from her face.

  “Really, John. I don’t like him alone for so long.”

  “I know, but I haven’t seen you all day.”

  “There will be time for that once Johnny’s asleep.” Bonnie listened for their son, for any sounds coming from the living room. She put her palm against John’s chest and pushed him away, her head turned toward the doorway.

  John stepped back from his wife and got down a glass. He turned on the faucet and looked out the window. “You know you’re attracting raccoons and such tossing those scraps out there.”

  “I happen to like raccoons, Mr. Sykes. Besides, if you’d buy me a little piggy I could feed the scraps to her.”

  “A little piggy, huh?”

  “Or…we could start a big garden out there,” Bonnie pointed through the dining room and out a southern window, “and I could compost. That’s what my granny did with her scraps.”

  “Well, Mrs. Sykes, I will take the piggy and compost ideas under consideration.”

  Bonnie made a little curtsy, holding out the ruffled edges of her yellow apron. She wore pale blue pants and a white cotton tunic with three-quarter sleeves, a V notched into the neckline and long ties that nobody ever tied. The sound of the television drifted into the room, carrying the serious voice of a newscaster and the sound of choppers. She hated that sound. It always preceded bad news. Even when the report was meant to encourage the folks at home, Bonnie could only think of death and destruction. She didn’t care what side you were on or whether you lived in a high rise apartment or a little grass hut, nobody should be stuck in the middle of a war. She hurried into the living room and John followed her.

  Johnny sat in the middle of the braided rug, his hand on his dump truck but his eyes on the television. They were showing a Vietnamese town of some affluence, Bonnie supposed. Instead of jungle and grass huts, rectangular houses with sloping corrugated tin roofs were packed close together. Laundry flapped from fence rails and clotheslines. Little boys in their shorts and pajama tops stopped walking when they saw the camera and affected strongman poses, making fists and kicking their scrawny legs. The newscaster was tal
king about our allies, how the people of South Vietnam love the Americans and how “our boys” were helping them build their city on the China Sea. The footage showed some American soldiers carrying long planks on their shoulders through the town of Tien Sha, part of the Da Nang seaport. Two women wearing those conical straw hats zipped in front of the camera on a moped.

  Bonnie glanced away from the television to look at Johnny. He was frozen with an almost mystical fascination. She reached out to snap off the television. “What is it about little boys and guns?”

  “Hey now,” John said. “That wasn’t even fighting. It was just…villagers in pajamas and soldiers with…” he gestured toward the wooden console, “lumber.”

  “You know I don’t want him exposed to that stuff, John. He’s only two.” Bonnie lifted Johnny from the floor and his legs automatically wrapped around her hips. She kissed the top of his head and tousled his towhead white hair. His thumb went to his mouth. “Pictures get into our heads. Why, I can still see that car wreck plain as if it was today…”

  “I know, honey. You’ve told me.”

  “Well,” Bonnie huffed a little at being reminded that her story was old news. “I was only five, you know.”

  “I know.” John reached out to Johnny and he leaned away from his mother, into his father’s arms. “Are cowboys and Indians permissible?”

  “As long as they don’t k-i-l-l each other.”

  “I’ll make sure it’s all peace pipes and Pony Express.” John winked at her. He was a good sport, though Bonnie knew there was truth to the adage “boys will be boys” and she supposed it wouldn’t be long before they were reenacting the shootout at the OK Corral, or some other violent nonsense.

  Bonnie watched John carry Johnny across the room to the shelves in the corner beside the fireplace. John kept his father’s cigar box on their bookcase and he opened it, whispering something to their son.

 

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