Part 19 (1/2)
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Gretchen overslept and almost missed her workout group at Curves. She rushed through the house, throwing on exercise garb as she went. ”I fed Wobbles and Nimrod,” her mother said, ready to go and holding out Gretchen's purse and a cup of coffee. ”You needed the extra sleep.”
When Gretchen and her mother arrived at Curves, most of the doll club members were in full throttle on the machines. ”He's missing,” Bonnie said in a stage whisper when Gretchen jumped onto the abductor. ”Born to Be Wild”
boomed from an overhead speaker.
”Who's missing?” Gretchen asked.
”Ryan Maize, that's who.” Bonnie's feet did a tiny tap dance on the platform. Her red wig had extra starch today, every hair sh.e.l.lacked into place. ”Matty knows Charlie's son tried to blow up you girls. Witnesses identified Ryan from pictures, but the police can't find him. He's not at that drug house.”
”The do-rag did him in,” April said, stomping up and down on the stepper. ”He should have disguised himself better if he was going to pull a stunt like that. He could have killed us. Then it would have been murder one instead of attempted murder.”
”Matty will get him; don't you worry.”
”That poor drugged-out kid,” Gretchen said, shaking her head.
April grunted. ”First he knocks you out,” she gasped, sweating profusely. ”Then he tries to blow us up. And you feel sorry for him? I don't. If I get my hands on that little punk, I'll squeeze his scrawny neck until his eyes pop. He made me ruin my best dress.”
”Change stations now,” a preprogrammed voice announced. The circle of flab fighters moved to the left.
”You're lucky that's all he ruined,” Caroline said. ”It could have been so much worse.”
”He demolished Charlie's shop,” April said. ”It's a mess.”
Gretchen decided to pursue the idea she had explored with Matt. That's not all we explored, That's not all we explored, she thought with a hidden grin before saying, ”The walls of one of the room boxes were covered with wallpaper. If I describe the design to you, maybe one of you will know who it belongs to.” she thought with a hidden grin before saying, ”The walls of one of the room boxes were covered with wallpaper. If I describe the design to you, maybe one of you will know who it belongs to.”
”Is this a clue to the killer?” Rita, the Barbie collector, asked.
”Maybe.” Gretchen ran in place while she considered how much to share with the group.
”Tell us, tell us,” Bonnie said, licking her lips in antic.i.p.ation.
”The wallpaper was tan, and it had an apple and teapot border.”
Bonnie looked thoughtful. Her penciled brows edged closer together, and her red lips puckered.
As she often did when spending time with Bonnie, Gretchen tried hard to find any family resemblance between the woman next to her and the hunky police detective, but she couldn't find a trace of physical evidence that established their genome connection.
”I don't know anyone with wallpaper like that,” Rita said.
”We'll keep an eye out,” Bonnie said with a crafty expression. The doll club president was a woman on a new mission.
Gretchen would take any help she could get. She was determined to find that kitchen. Someone had tried to hurt her and her friends. What was that person planning next?
Gretchen's life, or someone's close to her, might depend on moving quickly.
”Where's Nina?” Gretchen asked after watching the door for her aunt's arrival.
”She came in early and left already,” Ora, the manager, called out. ”Something about breakfast with a new friend.”
”Britt,” Gretchen and April said simultaneously.
”She thinks you are crowding her out,” Rita said to Gretchen.
”Out of what?” April asked.
”Change stations now.” Everyone moved in unison.
”The threesome,” Bonnie said. ”Threes don't work. Everybody knows that.”
Gretchen didn't have to pretend to be confused.
”What?”
”I get it,” April said, looking at Gretchen. ”She thought of you as her best friend. Then I came along. She feels displaced.”
”That's ridiculous,” Gretchen said. ”She's my aunt, and I love her.”
”Maybe you should tell her that,” Susie of the Madame Alexander collection said.
”I will. But I thought everything was back to normal.”
”Apparently not in Nina's eyes,” Caroline said. ”I haven't been around much to give her attention. She counts on you.”
”Change stations now.”
”How's your submarine sandwich diet going?” Rita asked April from the abductor.
April beamed. ”I was measured this morning, and I lost three inches.”
Ora piped up, ”That diet will kill you.”
April twisted from side to side on a platform, swinging her arms like clubs. ”To tell you the truth, I can't stand the thought of eating another sub.”
”See,” Ora scolded. ”Next you'll starve to death. What kind of a diet is that! You should get into my diet cla.s.s. Curves teaches you to eat small portions of a lot of different things.”
”We'll see,” April said, but Gretchen thought her resolve was slipping. Ora might win.
”Tell us about that one room box,” Bonnie said. ”April said it was the Lizzie Borden murders.”
”I researched the murders on the Internet this morning,”
Caroline said. ”It's called parricide when parents are murdered by a child. Except Lizzie was tried and acquitted. Her father was sleeping on a sofa, and her mother was found on the floor in the guest bedroom. Each had sustained multiple blows to the head with a hatchetlike instrument. After viewing photographs on multiple Web sites, I can tell you that Charlie replicated the scene right down to the color of the mohair sofa.”