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Authors: Holly Jacobs

Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Amateur Sleuths, #Cozy, #Women Sleuths

Dusted (17 page)

BOOK: Dusted
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Epilogue

“…and Miriam’s worked out a deal with the prosecutors. She gave them the name of the person she sold the paintings to in exchange for a lighter sentence.” I sat at my desk in the office and looked at the wall. In addition to the pictures that Peri gave me, I’d hung my painting. I’d boldly signed
Quincy Mac
to the bottom. It might not be high art, but I kind of liked it. It wasn’t quite up to the same level as Summer’s painting, which I’d proudly hung in the front of the office, but still, looking at mine, I remembered that I saved my business…a business I treasured.

“So you solved another mystery,” my mother said and I thought I heard a touch of pride in her voice.

“I did.” Dick was seriously beyond excited. He was hounding me to hurry up and finish the script for
Steamed
, so I could start the next one. He’d decided we’d call this one
Dusted
, since Theresa dusting a painting is what started everything.

“And you almost got shot,” my mother said softly. This time it wasn’t pride but worry.

“I’m fine, Mom. Miriam didn’t want to shoot me. She was going to lock me in the closet is all.”

I heard her sigh over the telephone line. “Please don’t make getting shot and beat up a habit.”

“Don’t forget saving Cal and solving the mystery. I’m not sure I’ll ever need to do either of them again, but I’m proud of them.”
“You should be,” she said. “I’m proud of you. And it’s not that you solved a mystery, it’s everything Quincy. You run a successful business. You’ve raised three wonderful boys. And now you’re writing a script with Dick. How is Dick?”

“Convinced I’m going to be Hollywood’s new
‘it’
writer. He wants me to thank him when I win my Mortie. You know, I’d thank you, right? You taught me to be strong. To be independent. To not wait for someone else to solve my problems—that I should just solve them myself.”

“Oh, Quincy, I don’t deserve your praise, but thank you.” She paused a moment and I thought I heard something that sounded suspiciously like sniffling. Then added, “Not to change the subject, but how would you feel about your father and I coming to LA for Thanksgiving?”

Here’s the thing, if you’d asked me a couple months ago, I’d have groaned at the thought a holiday of my mother’s complaining about my not living up to my potential.

I didn’t worry about that any more so I found myself saying with genuine enthusiasm. “I’d love it, Mom.”

“And this is Jerome’s Christmas with the boys, right?”

“Right.”

“Well, why don’t you think about coming home to Erie for the Christmas? It’s been years since you’ve spent a Christmas with us.”

Home to Erie. A holiday with my family? I was excited at the thought.

I found myself nodding, even though my mother couldn’t see me. So I verbalized. “I’d love to come home, Mom.”

It looked like I was heading Erie, Pennsylvania for my first white Christmas in a decade and believe it or not, I couldn’t wait.

***

Thank you for reading Dust
ed: A Maid in LA Mystery! I hope you enjoyed it. If you did, please help other readers find this book:

1. This book is lendable, so send it to a friend who you think might like it so they can discover
Quincy and her friends, too.

2. Help other people find this book by writing a review.

3. Sign up for my new releases e-mail by contacting me at [email protected], so you can find out about the next book as soon as it's available.

 

Did you miss Quincy’s first adventure,
Steamed: A Maid in LA Mystery
?
Here’s an excerpt:

 

When I moved to LA, I was an eighteen year old with stars in my eyes. Well, not exactly in my eyes, but rather
on
my eyes. My high school best friend bought me sunglasses with lenses shaped like stars for when I
Made It.
Lottie always said the words in such a way you just knew they were capitalized.

Made It.

Yes, I graduated from high school and moved to LA. I planned to be a famous actress. Lottie made me promise I’d wear my star-shaped glasses on my first Oscar red carpet walk. My goal was to take Hollywood by storm.

These days, those glasses are in a drawer in my bedroom and I have two much smaller goals. One is that I want to wear my jeans without a muffin-top. After three kids, I’d developed a bit of a baby-pooch that wants to creep out above the waistband of my jeans. I longed for the days when pants had waistbands that were higher. Back then you could tuck your baby-pooch in. These days your options are exercise, wear Spanx, or learn to suck it in.

I tend to suck it in…when I remember.

My second goal is an empty nest.

It’s not that I don’t love my boys. I do. I have three sons—Hunter, Miles and Eli. They are eighteen, seventeen and sixteen. I’ve been a parent practically my entire adult life. I’m ready for a time when I simply have to worry about me and no one else.

This summer is my trial empty-nest.

The boys left last night to spend four weeks in the Bahamas with their father and his most recent wife, Peri.

Now, my place isn’t exactly a dump, but compared to their dad’s house, my three bedroom bungalow in the out-of-the-way neighborhood of Van George is a cardboard box in some alley.

And while thirty-eight isn’t exactly over-the-hill, next to Peri, the twenty-year-old, I am ancient.

I miss my boys (and I realize the irony in longing for an empty nest, but missing them when they’re on vacation). I try not to mind when my ex takes the boys on fabulous vacations—and most of the time I don’t mind—but getting ready for work in a quiet house, I minded.

My ex, movie producer Jerome Smith, is a nice guy...a nice guy with a taste for younger women. Specifically women between the ages of twenty and twenty-five. The exact ages I married, then divorced him. Or rather, he divorced me.

Jerome had two marriages before me, and three marriages since, all within those same parameters. His current wife’s my favorite. I really like Peri despite the way her breasts perk and mine just sort of...well, hang loosely if they’re not strapped down. I think Peri sort of appeals to my maternal instincts. I don’t have a daughter.

Maybe I’ll adopt her when Jerome divorces her.

TGIF, I told myself. I’m thirty-eight, and until the boys come home from their summer visit with their father, I’m footloose and fancy-free.

Maybe it isn’t exactly the life I’d dreamed of when I moved to LA, but it’s a good life.

Oh, sometimes I still wish that I was starring in some movie of the week instead of heading into Mac’Cleaners.

Yes, that’s right—I no longer have stars in or on my eyes. Rather than achieving stardom, I have three sons and clean houses for a living. It’s honest work, and it’s flexible enough that when I was younger I could take time off and go on auditions. Now that I’m part owner and thirty-eight, I don’t go to many auditions.

Okay, so I haven’t been on an audition in five years—I’ve discovered that I’m a size twelve girl in a size two world.

I missed the fame and fortune boat.

Okay, so I could live without fame or fortune, if only I could figure out what I wanted to do with my life sometime before menopause hit. Owning a business keeps the boys and me afloat financially but lately, I’d had a feeling that it was time for a change. The kids weren’t such kids anymore. Hunter would start college in the fall.

That empty nest is just around the bend. Soon I’ll be able to live my own life.

And I know I want something more.

I’d said I wanted to act since I was six. I never gave any thought to doing something else. But it’s clear that acting isn’t going to be my ultimate career.

So while I wait to figure out what I want to do, I clean houses. I need to figure out soon because I’ll be turning forty in a couple years. Forty sounds so very grown up, and grown-ups should have some idea about the direction they want their lives to take.

But I wasn’t going to think about direction today.

Today, I was going to get my work done and then go do something decadent.

I’d like to say I was planning to go to a bar and pick up guys—well at least pick up a guy—but I’ll probably end up going to the store and picking up Ben and Jerry’s, then head home and try and catch up on all the chick-flicks the boys make me miss.

Feeling a bit better, I walked into the small brick storefront that was only a mile from my house. It proudly proclaimed Mac’Cleaners on the plate glass window with a tartan weaving through the letters. I walked through the small reception room and back to my partner, Tiny’s office.

Big mistake.

There’s nothing worse than starting the day as a single, directionless, mother of three and then walking into the middle of the wonderful world of weddings.

Tiny’s marrying Salvador Mardones in September. September 30
th
to be exact. And she’s going slightly insane...a bit further over the brink each day.

“Tiny?” I called, hoping she was somewhere in the sea of tulle and satin.

“I’m here, Quincy,” she said from the back corner.

Tiny’s not very...tiny that is. She’s five eight and looks like a model. Skin the color of strong tea and dark hair with a tendency to curl. She’s gorgeous and simply a beautiful soul. We make an interesting pair, what with me having Irish fair skin, a light sprinkling of freckles that might have been cute when I was in my teens, but aren’t as much when at thirty-eight. And my hair...well, it was blond when I moved to LA thanks to Lottie and Miss Clairol. These days, it has gone back to its brownish roots...literally.

Tiny smiled as I walked in, and I couldn’t muster up true annoyance that her smile was messing with my grouchy mood because she radiated happiness. The kind of happiness I knew she deserved.

“It’s getting worse, isn’t it?” she asked, gesturing at her office.

I surveyed the room. “Yeah.”

“I just can’t help myself. I want this wedding to be perfect because Sal’s perfect.”

Truth is, Sal is perfect. He’s my five five height, balding and has a beer belly that makes my small baby-pooched stomach look like washboard abs.

But he’s truly one of the nicest guys in the world.

Tiny had a history of dating losers. But that was over because Sal...well, he’s a winner.

“The wedding will be perfect,” I promised.

I’d see to it, even though I’d rather have wisdom teeth pulled than plan a wedding this elegant.

Me, if I ever get married again, I’m eloping. Something fast and simple. Someone saying the official words, then me and my new husband back at some hotel having sex. Lots and lots of sex.

It had been a while, which might explain why my mind skipped right over finding Mr. Right and a wedding and went right to the sex.

“Speaking of help,” Tiny said slowly, “we need some today. Theresa’s out.”

Rats.

“It’s my turn, isn’t it?” I asked, though I knew the answer.

She nodded.

When one of our employees calls in sick, we take turns filling in.

Today it was my turn to fill in.

I should have just gone back to bed this morning.

Grumbling to myself, I left Tiny to hold down the fort and took Theresa’s folder for the day. The nice thing about working outside the office is that the day always went fast.

Today was no exception. By three in the afternoon, I was on my way to the last job.

As soon as I finished Mr. Banning’s, I’d decided that I was going shopping for a new pair of shoes rather than Ben and Jerry’s.

BOOK: Dusted
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