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Hell in a Handbasket: Rose Gardner Investigations #3 by Denise Grover Swank (2)

Chapter 2

It took Joe thirty minutes to get everything sorted out, including reassuring Officer Ernie, who was livid that his case had been “stolen from him” even though he’d been desperate for backup. Of course, Joe was the only one not covered in food.

Reverend Baker was hauled off in an ambulance because his bad back had been thrown out of whack, and the two cousins said they weren’t sure whether they wanted to press charges against each other.

Ernie made noises about arresting them for disturbing the peace, but then he cast a glance at Calvin and quickly backtracked. Calvin Clydehopper was on the city council and could have Officer Ernie fired, an idea that didn’t upset me at all, but Ernie decided not to risk it.

When the whole police mess was cleared up, Joe and Officer Ernie left the clucking church women to clean up the mess. Joe walked over to me and Ashley. I hadn’t managed to convince her to return to the blanket, but Mike had come down to join us midway through the hubbub.

Joe nodded to my brother-in-law. “Mike.”

“Didn’t expect to see you here,” he said in a cold tone.

My gaze flicked up in surprise. While I knew Mike was upset with me, this was the first indication that he was also pissed at Joe.

“Violet invited me, although I was obviously running late.”

“Violet invited you?” Mike and I asked at the same time.

I didn’t mind sitting with Joe. We’d long since gotten over our breakup, and last I’d heard, he was dating Dena Breene, who owned the cupcake shop in the town square. The question was why didn’t Violet tell me or Mike? Was she up to her matchmaking mischievousness again? Heaven knew she’d tried it before, and she knew my dating situation wasn’t exactly stable. I’d recently told her about my short-lived involvement with Levi Romano—I’d gone on a few dates with Henryetta’s attractive new veterinarian, but I didn’t have feelings for him. (I’d broken it off with him the night Violet admitted she was dying, and typical Levi, he’d been nothing but understanding.) She’d proceeded to guess that there was someone else, someone I cared about despite myself, and I’d admitted it was true, though of course I hadn’t mentioned James by name. It would be just like her to try to distract me with another man. A man she thought would make sure I was all right after she was gone.

Joe gave me a stunned look.

“Wait!” I said, “I’m happy you’re here. I just know how much you eat,” I teased. “I hope I brought enough food.”

“Oh, that’s okay,” he said. “Dena and I brought our own food.”

“Dena?” And then I felt like an idiot. Why wouldn’t he bring Dena? They’d been dating for several weeks, and according to Neely Kate, they were seeing each other three or four nights a week. “That’s great!” I glanced around the thinning crowd. “I didn’t see her.”

He laughed. “She went up to sit with Vi. She said something similar happened last week with her half-priced cupcake day and left me to it.” He thumbed toward the hill. “I’m starving. Let’s go eat. Dena made some sandwiches I’m dying to try.” Then he swung Ashley onto his shoulders and forced Mike into a conversation about the Little Rock Travelers baseball team.

I watched them walk toward Violet and Dena, and my heart filled with gratitude that we’d been given one more day with my sister. And hopefully one more day after that.


Since the picnic had ended up in a disaster, there was only enough time left for half the games. Joe ended up doing the three-legged race with Ashley and winning.

It was a good thing that the picnic was cut short because Violet tired out soon after we ate.

“I hate that everyone is leavin’ on account of me,” Vi said with tears in her eyes. “I wanted to spend more time with Rose.”

“We only have a couple of clients tomorrow,” I said with a gentle smile. “How about I bring you lunch and hang out with you and the kids for a while? Isn’t Mike goin’ back to work tomorrow?”

“Only half days,” he said defensively, as though I were challenging his place in Violet’s world. “I’ll be home by lunchtime.”

Violet glanced up at him with a patient look I wasn’t used to seeing on her face. “Mike, you’ve been gone from the job sites for weeks. Let Rose come spend some time with me and the kids. We’ll all be fine.”

He shot me a look that suggested he had his doubts but remained silent.

I packed up the food while Mike corralled the kids. Joe and Dena offered to take me home to save Violet and her family the trip, but I told him he only needed to drop me off at the landscaping office. Mike had picked me up there, so my truck was still parked nearby.

“That works out perfectly,” Dena said, “since Joe offered to help me pull out some exhaust vents that are stuck in the hood in my kitchen.”

“That sounds like a fun afternoon,” I said with a grin. “Not as fun as breaking up an epic food fight, but still . . .”

Joe laughed. “Could you believe those two? They were acting like two teenage girls fighting over a guy.”

Dena’s eyes lit up. “Well . . .”

I shot her a look of surprise. “Wait. They were?”

“Let’s just say rumor has it money wasn’t the only thing Carol Ann was looking for when she showed up on Patsy Sue’s front porch.”

“Calvin?” Joe asked. Then he shook his head. “No way. He’s as straightlaced as they come.”

“My aunt went to school with the both of them and says they’ve always fought over him, even all those years ago.”

“Still,” I said, not wanting to give credence to a rumor. Plenty of false ones had floated around about me. “That was a good twenty to twenty-five years ago. Surely they’ve gotten over it by now.”

“Aunt Theresa and her friend Valerie were in the cupcake shop last week talkin’ about it.”

Joe pulled up in front of my office a few minutes later, and I decided to make a quick escape. “Thanks for the ride, Joe.”

I got out, hauling the picnic basket with me as he rolled down his window. “If you see Neely Kate, tell her I’m looking forward to our painting party tomorrow night.”

Dena leaned forward, a frown wrinkling her forehead. “I thought we were going to Magnolia to see a movie with Henry and Tiffany tomorrow.”

Joe cringed. “Neely Kate and I made plans a while back. I completely forgot.”

“But Monday’s the only time they can go. Can’t you get together with Neely Kate another night?” She laughed. “I mean, come on. Who likes to paint?”

I was downright pissed. I squatted next to Joe’s door and held her gaze. “Joe does. And so does Neely Kate.” Before I could say something I’d regret even more, I stood and walked over to my truck and got inside.

I couldn’t bear to look at Joe as he drove away. I knew how I’d come across—the spiteful, jealous ex-girlfriend. But that wasn’t it at all . . . was it?

No. She had been gossiping about Patsy Sue Clydehopper. And then she’d made fun of Joe and Neely Kate’s bonding time. Still, once my anger had a few seconds to die down, I could acknowledge I’d probably overreacted. Most people actually didn’t like to paint, and she probably thought Neely Kate was doing Joe a favor, not spending quality time with him.

Which just proved how little she knew about both of them.

Neely Kate and Joe were so new to this brother and sister thing, but it was painfully clear how much they needed each other. I hated to see anything get in the way of their budding relationship. Shoot, even Jed respected those boundaries.

Halfway home, I started to feel a heaviness descend on my shoulders. I didn’t feel like being alone, but I knew Jed had taken Neely Kate to Little Rock, which meant she’d probably be gone the entire day. It made sense that they’d go somewhere else to be together. Little Rock was only two hours away, and no one knew them there. That meant no one could go after Neely Kate to get to Jed, who was trying to leave the criminal world after years of working with James. Still, I couldn’t help but wonder if it had something to do with Joe and Neely Kate’s sister, Kate, who was currently residing in a psychiatric hospital in that city.

Muffy was happy to see me when I walked in the house. After I put the food away, I tried to read a book, but I found myself reading the same paragraph five times.

Lately, I hated being alone. When I had too much time to think, my mind always drifted to the two people who’d changed my relationship with my visions—Jeanne Putnam, Scooter Malcolm’s now-deceased girlfriend, who was dead due to my negligence, and Merv Chapman, James Malcolm’s traitorous friend. Jeanne had been the sole witness in Scooter’s kidnapping but had kept what she’d seen to herself out of fear for her life. Neely Kate and I had convinced her to talk to us anyway, more than once, despite knowing the danger she was in. I’d believed my visions could save her—only they hadn’t. She’d been killed on account of us. Merv had died while I was forcing a vision of him, and the experience had very near killed me.

It hurt to think of either of them, but they had free rein in my dreams.

I’d had plenty of nightmares about Merv crushing me to the warehouse floor, his blood drenching my clothes, making me feel like I was drowning in it, while he growled, “I’m takin’ you with me.”

But the dreams about Jeanne haunted me the most.

I’d find myself standing over her dead body in the woods at the edge of Highway 82. She’d look up at me with vacant eyes, a bullet hole in her forehead, and say, “I trusted you, Rose Gardner, and you got me killed.”

She wasn’t wrong.

“Muffy, let’s go for a walk.”

I changed out of my shorts and into a pair of jeans; then we headed out the back door. We spent the next couple hours wandering the north end of my property—purposely staying away from the southern edge that bordered the land where Joe lived. Muffy had fun running loose, but by the end of it, she was dirty and I was a sweaty mess. I couldn’t avoid the empty house forever. I went back inside reluctantly, and after giving us both a shower, headed downstairs to look for something to eat.

I started to get out the leftover meatloaf and mashed potatoes from a couple of nights ago, but tears welled in my eyes again.

Violet was dying and soon I was going to be alone.

A wave of loneliness washed through me, and I ached with the need to call James. I’d been fighting the urge all afternoon . . . who was I kidding? I’d missed him for the past week. James had told me to call if I needed him, but I didn’t have an answer for him yet, and I had a feeling seeing him would only confuse things.

There was more to consider than just my feelings for him. He was a known criminal, and while he had a moral code most criminals didn’t possess, there was no denying he operated on the wrong side of the law. I would ruin my reputation as a business owner if I openly dated him, and I had multiple employees scattered over two businesses to think about. Not to mention it would be dangerous. People would be able to use me to get to him . . . heck, they already had. And then, of course, there was the issue with Mike.

In my heart, I knew what my answer should be, so why couldn’t I just say no?

James had already told me he wasn’t a white-picket-fence kind of guy. Marriage and babies would never be in the cards for him, and while I didn’t want either of those things yet, I did want them eventually, which meant whatever relationship we established would be short term. Could I live with that?

Could I live without it?

Neely Kate’s worried voice interrupted my thoughts. “Rose?”

I turned to face her, realizing I was standing at the kitchen counter with an empty plate, staring out the windows with tears streaming down my face. I wiped my cheeks with the back of my hand. “Hey,” I said in a cheery tone. “How was your day? Did Jed come in with you?”

She studied me with a frown. “No. He had something he needed to do. What’s wrong? How did the picnic go?”

My eyebrows shot up in mock excitement. “Well, you really should have gone. You could have seen Patsy Sue Clydehopper and her cousin Carol Ann take out Reverend Baker.”

What?

I fixed us each a plate of the meatloaf leftovers while I told her about the cousins’ showdown over the chicken and how Joe had finally put a stop to it.

“Joe was there?” she asked in surprise. “He didn’t mention he was going, but I haven’t talked to him since Friday.”

I carried both plates to the table. “He brought Dena.”

“Oh.” She grabbed some silverware for us and sat down.

Something about the way she said it reminded me of the awkward moment before I parted from Joe and Dena that afternoon.

“What do you think about Dena?” I asked carefully as I took the seat across from her.

She watched me for a moment. “She’s nice. And she makes great cupcakes.”

“But what do you think about her with Joe?”

She scooped a forkful of mashed potatoes. “He seems happier.”

“But what about her?”

Her mouth twisted to the side. “I’m trying not to meddle.”

“Because you don’t like her?” I asked, trying to contain my excitement, then feeling guilty.

She purposely avoided eye contact. “I didn’t say that.”

“But you didn’t say you did, either.”

She glanced up, frustration in her eyes. “She’s just so . . .”

“Pushy.”

Her eyes flew wide. “Yes! She’s pushy! And bossy! And she’s trying to control him already! They’ve only been sleepin’ together for two weeks!”

“You mean seein’ each other.”

She made a face. Sex had been a touchy issue with Neely Kate over the last few weeks.

“Have you and Jed . . . ?”

“No,” she said in a curt tone that let me know the subject of her and Jed sleeping together or, in their case, not sleeping together was still off the table. Then she added, “And this isn’t about me and Jed. He doesn’t try to control my life, just like I can’t control his.”

Jed had quit working for James, but that was before Merv, who’d been next in line, had kidnapped me and James’ brother in an attempted coup. James had been left with no one. I’d heard that Jed was still helping him, but he’d sworn to Neely Kate that he still intended to get out.

“Has Jed decided what he’s going to do yet?”

“He says he has several irons in the fire, but he won’t tell me what they are.” Her scowl confirmed that she was hurt by it.

“Maybe he doesn’t want to get your hopes up.”

She shrugged, pretending not to care. “We’ve only been seeing each other a few weeks. It’s too early for me to be so involved in his life.” Her gaze jerked up and she jabbed her fork in my direction. “Which is exactly why Dena has no right bein’ all up in Joe’s business. Who does she think she is, changing his plans like they’ve been married for twenty years?”

I let out a breath. “Joe called you about canceling tomorrow night.”

What?” She got up and walked into the other room and came back about thirty seconds later, holding out her phone so I could see the screen.

Sure enough, there was a text that said, Hey, NK. I need to reschedule tomorrow night. It was time stamped about ten minutes earlier.

Neely Kate practically slammed her phone on the table. “When and how did you find out?”

I cringed, sorry to have brought up what was so obviously a sore subject. How many times had Joe changed his plans with Neely Kate on Dena’s account? “The two of them drove me back to my truck on the square. When I was gettin’ out, Joe said to tell you he was lookin’ forward to your paintin’ party, but then Dena told him he’d already agreed to go to the movies in Magnolia with their friends. Tomorrow night was the only night they could go. I was hoping he’d tell her no.”

Fire danced in her eyes, but thankfully she’d set down the fork. “That chickenshit didn’t even have the guts to call this time. He texted. And hours after he’d told you!”

I offered her a sympathetic glance. “I’m sorry, Neely Kate. He really does care about you. He seemed excited about painting.”

“Not excited enough to tell her no. Again.

“If it’s any consolation, I stood up for you.”

Her face froze. “What’s that mean?”

Oh crap. I’d stirred up a hornet’s nest. “Nothin’ . . . it’s just that when Dena realized Joe was double-booked, she argued she was doin’ you a favor, sayin’ no one liked to paint. I told her that you and Joe did and it was your bonding time.”

Her jaw hardened. “And he still canceled on me?”

I stared at her, speechless. I’d made things worse.

She picked up her phone. “I’m gonna call him and give him a piece of my mind!”

I reached for her hand, trying to stop her before she did something she would regret, but my own cell phone started to ring. I would have let it go, but I was worried it might be Violet. So I snatched up both phones and ran out into the living room.

Neely Kate ran after me. “Give that back!”

I waved her off, terrified when I didn’t recognize the number on my screen. “Hello?”

“Is this Rose Gardner?” a woman asked.

Was it someone from the hospital calling to tell me Violet had relapsed? That she’d be taken from us even sooner than we thought? Heart in my throat, I nodded, only to realize the woman on the other end of the line couldn’t see me. “Yes.”

Seeing the fear on my face, Neely Kate froze. She understood. She’d been with me when I’d gotten the call over a week ago telling me that Violet had collapsed.

“I need to hire you and your friend,” the woman said. Her voice sounded familiar, but I couldn’t quite place it.

The rush of relief made me light-headed. My knees gave out and I sat on the sofa, nodding to Neely Kate with a soft smile, letting her know that everything was okay. “Neely Kate and I would love to help you with your landscaping needs. What do you have in mind?”

Neely Kate pushed out a loud sigh and sat next to me.

“Not your landscaping business,” the woman said. “I need you to clear me of murder.”

I sat up straighter. “Murder?”

“Are you deaf? Murder. My cousin Carol Ann’s been murdered.”

Suddenly, I realized how I knew the voice. I was talking to Patsy Sue Clydehopper. “Carol Ann’s been murdered?”

“Oh my God, girl. Are you deaf? Maybe I should hire someone else.”

Patsy was talking loud enough for Neely Kate to hear our conversation. She snagged the phone from my hand and put it on speaker. “This is Neely Kate, and we’ll be happy to help you.”

“Then I need you to meet me at the Broken Branch Motel. Room twenty-five. Like five minutes ago.” Then the call cut off.

Neely Kate’s face beamed. “Looks like we got our first official murder investigation.”