Part 7 (2/2)
”We were out there looking for antiques and Mother went down to the bas.e.m.e.nt to search for old tools. When she came back up, she told us she'd found a body. Norman and I checked it out, and she was right.”
LEMON MERINGUE PIE MURDER 71.
”Hold on a second,” Mike interrupted her. ”Let me get Bill in on this, and we'll take your statement right now. We'll catch your mother later, after she calms down a little.”
”Good idea,” Hannah said, settling down for a lengthy session. These things always took time and there was no rus.h.i.+ng it. She knew that from prior experience.
By the time Hannah got back to The Cookie Jar, it was almost four in the afternoon. Jed and Freddy had finished work for the day, the customers had thinned out, and almost all of their cookies had been sold. Hannah joined Lisa behind the counter to tell her what had happened, but she didn't say anything about the ident.i.ty of the body. That could wait for official confirmation.
”Well, at least your mother was first on the scene,” Lisa said, speaking in an undertone so their customers couldn't hear her. ”This time she can't accuse you of trying to embarra.s.s her by finding dead bodies.”
”Oh yes she can. I'm not sure how, but I know this'll wind up being all my fault.”
”You could be right,” Lisa conceded, grabbing a towel and wiping an already spotless counter. ”You're going to look into it, aren't you?”
”No way. We've got a lot to do to get ready for the Fourth of July party, and Mike and Bill were pretty bent out of shape the last time I interfered in one of their cases. I am curious about one thing, though. When we got out to the Voelker place, there was one of our Lemon Meringue pies on the kitchen table. I was wondering how it got there.”
Lisa looked thoroughly stumped. ”I know Norman didn't buy a pie, and Rhonda didn't, either. Do you want me to check my customer list?”
”What list?”
”I keep a record of everyone who buys our pies. I call them up if you're going to bake their favorite.”
Hannah was impressed. ”That's smart marketing.”
72.
”It works,” Lisa said, smiling broadly. ”Most of them want me to save one for them and a couple have standing orders. Mrs. Jessup told me to put her down for two pies every time you bake apple.”
”And you have a record from last Friday?”
”It's at home, but I'll call you tonight and read off the names. It'll probably be after ten. I'm going out to dinner with Herb.”
”That's fine. I really want to know who bought a whole pie and only ate one piece. It's practically an insult”
”I know, especially when it's your Lemon Meringue.” Lisa looked up to see a customer holding his coffee mug aloft. ”Mayor Bas...o...b..wants a refill. Do you want to get it while I mix up a batch of Walnuttoes for tomorrow? Donna Lempke called and ordered six dozen for her cousin's birthday party.”
”I'll do the Walnuttoes. You do the coffee.”
”But are you sure? They're chocolate and you're on a diet.”
Hannah gave an ironic grin. ”That's okay. Seeing that body took my appet.i.te away.”
”The Dead Body Diet?” Lisa started to grin as she picked up the carafe. ”I'm surprised someone hasn't thought of it before. What do you want me to say if anyone asks me about what you saw in the bas.e.m.e.nt?”
”n.o.body will. Bill and Mike won't release any information until they confirm the ident.i.ty, and Norman won't say anything because they asked him not to.”
”But how about your mother?”
”Oh-oh,” Hannah groaned. It was a sure bet that Delores had told someone by now. Actually, the odds were good that she'd told hundreds of someones. ”Just say that Mike and Bill are handling it and I'm not involved.”
Lisa snorted. ”They'll never swallow that.”
”Maybe not, but it's true. Wild horses couldn't drag me into this one. As of right now, I'm officially retired from the murder business.”
”Then you think it was murder?” Lisa's eyes grew round.
”All I know is someone's dead. It's up to Doc Knight to determine who, when, and how.”
LEMON MERINGUE PIE MURDER 73.
Hannah turned and headed back to the kitchen before Lisa could ask more questions. She was convinced that the body they'd found was Rhonda Scharf, and as she got out her recipe book, Hannah swallowed past the lump in her throat. Rhonda had never been one of her close friends, but she hadn't disliked her. And no one should have to die in a gloomy, moldy bas.e.m.e.nt only hours before leaving on the best vacation of her life. Of course Rhonda had been murdered. The fact that someone had tried to bury her confirmed that. If Rhonda had died accidentally, the person who'd found her would have called the sheriff's department to report it.
It didn't take long to mix up the dough for the Walnuttoes. Hannah had baked them twice a week for the past two years, but she still took the precaution of checking off the ingredients on the laminated surface of her recipe. She was preoccupied with Rhonda's death and preoccupation led to mistakes.
Once she'd finished, Hannah covered the bowl with plastic wrap and carried it to a shelf in her walk-in cooler. She was just emerging from the chilly interior when the back door opened and Mike stepped in.
”Hi, Hannah. We took your mother's statement and I need to check a few facts with you.”
”Sure.” Hannah motioned to a stool at the stainless-steel workstation. ”Coffee?”
”That'd be great.” Mike waited until Hannah had brought him a mug of coffee before he opened his notebook. ”Did your mother go down to the bas.e.m.e.nt alone?”
”Yes. Norman and I didn't know anything was wrong until she told us what she'd seen.”
”Where were you while she was in the bas.e.m.e.nt?”
”We were sitting at the kitchen table. We told her to call out if she needed us and the bas.e.m.e.nt door was wide open.”
Mike began to frown as he referred to his notes. ”You didn't run down there when you heard her screams?”
”Mother didn't scream. There wasn't a peep out of her. That's why we got worried and went to the stairwell to check
74.
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