refined sugar or meat. Bird lady Clara thinks Frank walked the beach clear to Chinook to eat hot beef sandwiches with mashed potatoes and gravy. Jack thinks he did it to ogle sweet young things. Clara doesnât like Michael. His pictures are strange. Heâs definitely a Grape-Nut. Georgette hated him.â
âWait a minute.â His full attention returned to her from the sports news. âWho told you this?â
âGladys from the Scandia. But she didnât tell me why. But Paige said that Georgie was a busybody and got on some peopleâs nerves. Maybe Michaelâs. Maybe Paigeâs.â
âHold it right there.â He came around to her side of the table and switched off the TV. Standing behind her chair, he rocked on his feet so hard the floor shook. âPaige Magill didnât tell me that about Mrs. Glick. And Gladys Bergkvist didnât even mention this Michael. Not to me.â
âNobodyâs going to offer up information to you, youâre the law. Youâre the sheriff investigating a murder in their tiny village. Theyâre confused and scared. Donât know what they might say that could incriminate them even if theyâre innocent.â
âIâve known most of them for years. Most of them voted for me.â
âThat was before a little old lady was shot to death practically in their front yards. Get real.â
âYouâre talking to me. And youâre a stranger.â
âDid you wine them and dine them and console them? You admit you think theyâre all Grape-Nuts.â Why was he playing dumb with her?
âI have to feed you, you donât have a car. Now I want to hear everything you learned today, lady. I donât want you withholding one stray thought. You listening to me?â
Charlie gave him a second-by-second re-creation of her afternoon leaving out no detail and making it as boring as possible. She even included the wonderful messages on the T-shirts Jack offered for sale at the Earth Spirit.
The sheriff had taken the chair beside her and was showing signs of drowsiness when she, lifting the wine bottle theyâd emptied between them, wrapped up her discourse with, âWhatâs all the gunk left on the bottom of the bottle? Wait, I know, donât tell me, thatâs theââ
âStructure. See, our vineyards are young, our vintners still learning the soil and climate. But more and more often now you pick up a bottle of the local stuff and it blows you aaa-way.â
He leaned too close and Charlie drew back. âHow many wives have you gone through, Wes?â
âThree too many. And three divorces. And never again do I get into that.â
âGood plan. Just cooking for you would be an experience.â
He grunted. âWould you believe my last wife wouldnât even cook? Big-deal career woman.â
âI can believe. How many kids, three?â
âHowâd you know? One by the first, two by the second. But no more. Cops shouldnât marry.â
He was leaning again. When this man leaned it was like Mount St. Helens about to tip over. Charlie slid out the other side of her chair. âHow did Frank explain his wifeâs riding her bike at night?â
âThey had a fight.â
âYour kids live with their mothers?â
âI pay support for two of them. Oldest, I canât deal with.â
âWell, I deal with and support one. If youâll excuse me,â Charlie grabbed the last of the cherries and headed for the telephone.
âWhatâs going on down there? I told Grandma youâd better have that cat in the shelter by now.â Charlie could hear a rattling sound in the background. âIs that the cat or Doug?â
âOh, Mom, you should see him. Heâs cracking me up. Heâs sticking his cold wet little nose into my neck.â She squealed and the rattle deepened. That was the cat.
âTell her you and the cat
sidney d
CJ Hawk
Judy Astley
Malcolm D Welshman
Sue-Ellen Welfonder
Eric J. Guignard (Editor)
Wanda E. Brunstetter
Jennifer Malone Wright
Nancy Bush
Alasdair Gray