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Sleight Of Paw Part 9

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"Thank you," I said. "But I have to check in at the library. How is Everett?" I asked, trying not to grin.

Rebecca and Everett had been a couple when they were very young, but had broken up and gone on with their lives. They'd gotten back together during the summer, with a little indirect help from the cats and me. I liked them both and I felt a bit like a fairy G.o.dmother invested in the romance. And sometimes they acted like a couple of love-struck teenagers, so it was easy to get caught up in what looked like a happily-ever-after.

"Everett's fine," she said, but she couldn't help smiling that huge smile she got when she said his name.

I couldn't hold back my own grin. "Glad to hear it." I waggled my eyebrows at her.

She shook her finger in a mock reprimand. "Don't start getting ideas. We're taking it nice and slow."



I was actually happy they could take it slowly. Rebecca had needed surgery to remove a small growth back in the fall. Luckily it had turned out not to be serious.

The downstairs door opened and Everett Henderson himself started up the stairs. He looked like the actor, Sean Connery, strong and charming with just a touch of ruthlessness. Rebecca's cheeks flushed pink at the sight of him.

I leaned over and spoke softly in her ear. "Rebecca, if I had a man in my life who made me blush the way you do when you see Everett, I wouldn't take it nice and slow. I'd wrap him in duct tape, stick him on a sled and take him home."

She looked at me, shocked. "Kathleen!" she said, shaking her head.

I tried to look innocent as Everett joined us. "h.e.l.lo, Kathleen," he said.

I smiled. "h.e.l.lo, Everett."

"Thank you for the information on the library renovations," he continued. "Lita said you sent it over. She'll call you Monday about a meeting."

I nodded.

He looked at Rebecca. "Ready to go?" he asked, reaching for her hand.

"I am," she said.

"Kathleen, do you need a ride?" Everett asked, turning back to me.

"No, thank you," I said.

They started down the stairs. Rebecca paused on the second step to look back at me. "Give the cats a scratch for me," she said. "I miss them coming across the backyard to say h.e.l.lo."

"I will." I reached for my boots.

"Oh, and Kathleen, I don't need to use duct tape." She winked and disappeared down the steps.

I laughed, pulling on my coat and hat and winding the scarf my sister, Sara, had made for me around my neck.

Mary, wearing a blue sweater with a snowflake design, was at the front desk when I got to the library. She hadn't minded working a split s.h.i.+ft. She smiled as I came in through the doors.

"How's your evening?" I asked.

"Surprisingly busy. A gaggle of twelve-year-olds came in to do research for a school history project. Their teacher said they had to use an actual book for the research instead of the Internet." She chuckled and shook her head, her gray curls bouncing. "I introduced them to the mysteries of the online catalogs and then just for fun told them that when I was their age the card catalog was actually on cards."

"And they looked at you like you were a dinosaur."

"One of them actually used the words 'olden days.' " She gave me a wry smile. "But two of them went home with books that weren't on the research list. They just wanted to read."

"I love to hear that," I said.

Mary had the knack for making the library seem like a treasure trove of adventure. She'd tell the story of how she began her compet.i.tive kickboxing career by borrowing a book on the subject by mistake. She'd been looking for craft books on making boxes and hadn't been wearing her reading gla.s.ses.

"Would you like me to stay?" I offered.

"No." She waved away the idea. "Kate is here. We have it under control. But before I forget . . ." She looked around the checkout desk. "Ah, there it is." She picked up a piece of blue paper. "Detective Gordon called to remind you about Wisteria Hill in the morning."

"Thanks," I said. "I hadn't forgotten."

"How are the cats?" she asked.

Over time, Roma had managed to catch and neuter all the feral cats out at Wisteria Hill, but they were too wild to ever be anyone's pets. A collection of volunteers made sure they had food and water and care when they needed it.

Everett never talked about the abandoned estate. He had to know what was going on, but he didn't say a word about it, and, strangely, neither did anyone else.

"The cats are doing well. Harry's managed to keep the driveway clear and they all seem to be healthy."

Mary gave me a sheepish smile. "Detective Gordon also said to remind you to wear your snow pants."

"Snow pants, parka, wool hat, scarf, insulated mittens, and Sorels. And two pair of socks and long underwear," I recited, ticking them off on my fingers.

She nodded approvingly. "This is not your first rodeo."

"Or my first trip to Wisteria Hill in the winter," I said. Even though I wasn't born and raised in Minnesota, I did know how to dress for winter, though apparently Marcus Gordon didn't think I did.

Mary's expression grew serious. "Kathleen, have you seen Ruby? I heard she found Agatha."

"She was at cla.s.s," I said, picking clumps of snow off my mittens. "She's all right for the most part. Sad."

She shook her head. "Doesn't seem fair that Agatha would just get home and then . . ." She didn't finish the sentence.

A s.h.i.+ver slid up the back of my neck, like a finger slowly creeping across my skin. Agatha's death had left me unsettled, and I didn't even know her.

"And there are already rumors going," Mary continued, making a neat stack of the book-request printouts by her left elbow. She liked to get things organized almost as much as she liked kickboxing.

"What kind of rumors?"

She made a face and smoothed her gray hair with one hand. "Most common one is that Agatha had a secret fortune."

"I doubt it," I said. "You don't generally get rich being a teacher." I flashed to Eric giving Agatha the bag of take-out food and cup of coffee. "How do these rumors get started?"

"Probably people with too much time on their hands," Mary said tartly. "My grandma always told us kids, 'If you don't have anything to do, go get the pail and scrub brush and I'll find you something to do.' "

"A drop-dead practical woman, from the sound of it," I said.

"Very," Mary said. "She couldn't abide gossip." The smile turned to a grin. "But since Gran is gone, tell me if there's any truth to what I heard about Roma."

"What did you hear about Roma?"

Mary looked around and leaned toward me. "I heard from more than one person that she's seeing someone."

"Someone? You mean a man?"

"No, I mean a grizzly bear," she shot back with exasperation. "Yes, a man."

"Nope."

"You sure?"

"Positive."

Mary looked disappointed.

I tugged my hat down over my ears and pulled on my mittens again. "Since you don't need me, I'm heading home. I'll see you tomorrow."

"Good night," Mary said. The phone rang then and she reached for it.

I put the strap of my bag over my shoulder and headed out. Peter Lundgren was just coming across the parking lot, a couple of library books under his arm. I'd always found him a little imposing when we'd talked in the library. He was a large man who seemed to fill whatever s.p.a.ce he was in. But I remembered how carefully he'd walked Agatha over to the counter at Eric's, and I smiled at him as we both got to the bottom of the steps. He nodded and started to move past me. I reached over and touched his arm.

"Excuse me, Peter," I said. "Could you tell me if there are any plans yet for a service for Agatha Shepherd?"

He brushed a few flakes of snow off the top of his sandy hair. He wore it long, almost to his shoulders, a kind of rebel-lawyer look. "I can tell you that there will be some sort of memorial service once her son is back in the country. David wants to plan that himself."

I nodded.

"There should be something in the paper next week."

"Thank you," I said. He was already halfway up the stairs, so I wasn't sure he'd even heard me.

It was snowing lightly, tiny flakes reflected in the pinkish glow of the streetlights like little stars. I started up Mountain Road. The street looked more like a stage set, a picture-perfect town in a picture-perfect scene. Perfect always made me a little antsy.

I couldn't help it. Because of my parents' acting, I'd spent a lot of time in theaters big and not so big. I knew about subterfuge and illusion. I knew things are rarely as they appear on the surface. Other kids had parents that taught them how to ride a bike, manage money or do long division. Not mine.

What I got from my mother and father was the ability to separate fakery from reality, to spot the truth in a sea of fallacy. And that was why I felt so unsettled. No matter what everyone thought and no matter what Marcus Gordon wasn't saying, Agatha Shepherd hadn't died from natural causes.

Something bad had happened.

I just knew it.

8.

I was dressed and ready with my thermos of hot chocolate when Marcus pulled into my driveway in the morning. It was a clear morning, sharp and biting cold, and the sun seemed far away in the cloudless sky. Hercules sat on the bench, looking out the porch window.

I picked up the stainless-steel thermos sitting on the bench beside him and gave him a quick scratch just above his nose. "Stay out of trouble," I told him. "I won't be long."

He turned back to the window. He liked winter as long as he was only looking at it. It was almost as cold in the porch as it was outside, but I knew Hercules had his own way to get in the house again when he got cold.

I locked the door and headed around the house to the driveway. Marcus was just getting out of his SUV. He wore a blue parka with the hood thrown back, black snow pants, and lace-up boots. His cheeks were red from the cold. Okay, so Maggie was right. He was cute. His blue eyes flicked over my old brown quilted coat and insulated pants, and for a second I had the ridiculously childish urge to strike a model's pose, hands on my hips and feet apart, with a vaguely haughty look on my face. But I didn't. I kept the fantasy to myself and smiled at him instead.

"Good morning."

He smiled back. "Good morning."

I walked around the front of the car and got in the pa.s.senger's side. As I fastened my seat belt, I took the opportunity to quickly check out the SUV. It was clean. Not no-cardboard-coffee-cups-on-the-floor-or-junk-on-the-backseat clean. It was how-the-heck-can-he-be-so-clean-in-the-middle-of-winter? clean. The only thing on the backseat was an old gray blanket. The dashboard in front of me was s.h.i.+ning-no smudges, no dust, no fingerprints. There was no mug of half-finished coffee in the cup holder.

I clicked my seat belt into place and then set the thermos at my feet. The floor mats looked like they'd just come from the dealer. Okay, so it seemed as though Marcus Gordon was a bit of a clean freak, at least with respect to his personal vehicle. Being a fairly tidy person myself, I couldn't exactly see that as a flaw. I wasn't going to tell Maggie about this. She'd see the clean-car thing as another karmic sign that Marcus and I were soul mates.

He backed out of the driveway and started up the hill. The overnight snow had been plowed and there was sand on the road. As we drove past the road to Oren's place, I made a mental note to talk to him about which pieces of his father's artwork I wanted to display in the library for the centennial celebrations. I still had to figure out how to get the ma.s.sive metal sculptures from his workshop to the library. I was hoping Harry Taylor would have some ideas on that.

"You're somewhere else," Marcus said.

I turned from the window to look at him. "Excuse me?"

"You were thinking about something else," he said, shooting me a quick glance.

"The library centennial."

"End of May?" he asked, putting on his left turn signal to pull onto the road to Wisteria Hill.

"Close," I said. "End of June. That's the one hundredth anniversary of the original construction being completed."

There was a break in the line of pa.s.sing cars, and we pulled onto the road. The rear wheels spun for a second on an icy patch and then found traction.

"Are you staying?" Marcus asked.

I'd forgotten that the conversation could take some quick detours with him. I had the feeling sometimes that his mind was three steps ahead of everyone else's. Thank goodness he didn't drive the way he talked.

"I have another year on my contract."

The car in front of us slowed and so did we. Marcus took the opportunity to look directly at me for a moment. "No, I meant are you going to stay beyond that, or are you going back to Boston when your contract is up?"

"I don't know." I adjusted the shoulder belt so it wasn't pus.h.i.+ng the hood of my coat against my neck.

That was the truth. I didn't know if I wanted to stay in Mayville or even in Minnesota. I also didn't know if I'd be offered the chance. There was always the possibility that the library board would smile politely, shake my hand, thank me for my service and send me on my way.

And did I want to stay? The decision to apply for the two-year job supervising the upgrade of the library and organizing its centennial had been an impulsive one. Probably the most impulsive choice of my life.

Except it wasn't spontaneous; it was mostly running away, from Andrew-him marrying that waitress had pretty much ended our relations.h.i.+p-and from my wildly unpredictable family, who'd come to expect I'd always be the dependable, responsible one.

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