Read Letter to Belinda Online

Authors: Tim Tingle

Letter to Belinda (8 page)

BOOK: Letter to Belinda
12.53Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“Please don’t put it that way.”

“I can tell you’re a little touchy about that. So, since our trip to Greece, you haven’t found
anyone
who is a likely candidate for ‘Mr. Right?”

“Let’s not go there.”

“So that’s a definite ‘no’?”

“Considering the situation I am presently caught up in, you should know the answer to that!”

“You’re right. I guess it’s hard to find Mr. Right when you are rich. The gold-diggers just come out of the woodwork.”

“God! Don’t they, though?”

“What you need to do, after you get rid of the Judge, is to relocate. Go to another region of the country, buy a modest house, get a modest job, just for appearances, of course. Give all your new neighbors the impression that you are just a working girl, trying to make ends meet. And you might want to dress down a bit. Try not to look so glamorous.”

“Glamorous? Look at me! You call this glamorous? I’m wearing a denim shirt and blue jeans! How can I dress down any more?”

“Well you’re right. No matter how badly you dress, you are still a beautiful woman, and it shows, no matter what you wear.”

“Thanks for that compliment, but to me, it’s more of a burden. I don’t expect you to understand that though, you being a man.”

“I think I do. You are looking for a man with a heart of gold, but you can’t, because your looks keep getting in the way.”

“You’re right. And the only men who have a heart of gold are all married!”

“Just keep looking. You’ll find one.”

“No chance of Janice divorcing you any time soon?”

“I hope not. I kind of like my life the way it is. Even with the complications that come with kids, and sometimes with friends.”

“I know.”

“Miranda, you know the shit is going to hit the fan, when the Judge comes up missing. And because you are his closest neighbor, you know the police are going to question you.”

“I know.”

“Are you sure you can hold up to the questions and interrogations without cracking? If they see you sweat, they will concentrate on you, as a suspect. Think you can handle that?”

“I think so. After all, I didn’t kill him! But even if I do crack, you can rest assured that I will not incriminate you in any way.”

“That’s not what I was thinking, but I appreciate it.”

“This is my mess, and if something goes wrong, I will take full blame for it. But I thank you for your help.”

“We were about to call the pool contractor?”

“Yes, I have the number right here. So if he says he can’t get to it right away, to offer him cash incentives?”

“Yeah, money talks, and you seem to have plenty of it, so use it! Even if he’s in the middle of another job, if you make it worth his while, he’ll drop the other job and come put yours in. That’s the way contractors work.”

“You said you would call him for me.”

“Yes I did. I guess I have time before I go to work.”

“Here’s the number.”

Travis called the contractor, reaching him at a job site. He identified himself as ‘Ms. Monroe’s financial advisor’, and laid out the bonus schedule for him. The contractor was so eager to get started, that he said he would be there with a back-hoe to get started later that evening. Travis thanked him and hung up.

“You made it sound easy!”

“Yeah, now the basic price is $14,000. You owe him $5,000 for dropping his present job, and coming to yours. The 10
th
of August is the deadline. It will be finished, and landscaped by the 10
th
. If he gets through on the 9
th
, you owe him an extra thousand. Or if he gets through on the 8
th
, two thousand, and so on. But make sure everything is right, and the pool is filled before you pay him. He said he might have to work around the clock, in getting it dug out, but I told him that was okay. But you keep an eye on them. When they get to the stage where they are ready to pour the concrete, find an excuse for them to stop. You need time to bury the body in the bottom of the site, before they start pouring. In preparing to pour, they will most likely put a layer of gravel, covered with plastic, in the very bottom. You need to fold back the plastic, remove the gravel, put the body in, cover back with gravel, so that it is completely concealed, then put the plastic back over it. You may not have room to put all the gravel back, so get rid of it by returning it to their gravel pile. Watch them as they pour the concrete, so you will be sure in your own mind, that the body is really covered. Any questions?”

“No, I’ve got it. I just wish you were going to be here, to make sure it goes smoothly! You are good at escaping cannibals, and drug cartels, and killing sorcerers. I need you to help me deal with this too.”

“Sorry, I’ll be in England by then. And I am about to run late for work, so good luck.”

“Is that the best you can do?”

He gave her a big hug before he left, because she needed one.

6
 

T
ravis was up the next morning at 7 a.m., signing books, and working on his computer. The boys had loaded up their truck and gone camping and fishing for two days, trying desperately to squeeze more fun out of their summer before going back to school in three weeks. Rebecca was gone on a Church Retreat to Mentone for a few days. Jenny was on her own, with her dead-beat husband. It looked like he and Janice were in for a couple days of quiet relaxation, before he and Drew left for England. They were planning to catch up on a little work, and then try to catch a little glimpse of what it was going to be like after all their kids were grown up and gone from the nest. They were planning to later go out for a leisurely lunch, just the two of them, before he went.

But their plans changed when the phone rang at about 9 AM. Janice answered it in the other room, and talked for a couple of minutes, then came to inform him that she was going to town.

“Why? Mama needs something from the store?”

“No, that was actually a strange call. Do you remember Penelope Jones?”

“The wife of Herbert Jones, who lives down the road?”

“Well, yeah, Herbert Jones’ ex-wife. They have been divorced for a couple of years now.”

“I didn’t know that.”

“Yeah well, you work all the time, and don’t keep up with the gossip. Anyway, that was her on the phone. She is living with a boyfriend over in Arlington for the past two years, since Herbert threw her out. She was addicted to prescription drugs and alcohol. Well, now she wants to go back to Herbert, but she is afraid that her boyfriend will be mad. She doesn’t have a car, so she called me to see if I would come get her and take her back to Herbert, while her boyfriend is still asleep.”

Travis stopped typing. That didn’t sound quite right. “Why doesn’t she call Herbert to come get her?”

“Because she hasn’t talked to Herbert lately, and doesn’t know how he will react. And besides, Herbert and her boyfriend don’t get along very well.”

“I guess not. So she has asked you to do what, exactly?”

“She just wants me to come to Arlington and pick her up out in front of her boyfriend’s house. She said he usually sleeps until about ten, so there is no danger of trouble from him.”

“She can’t just call a cab?”

“I guess she doesn’t have any money. She doesn’t have a job, and she hates her boyfriend.”

“It sounds like a personal problem. I try not to get involved in our neighbors’ personal lives, Janice. It always leads to trouble.”

“But she doesn’t know who else to turn to. She needs help, and people don’t ask me for help very often. When they do, I try to help them. I’m just going to pick her up and take her to Herbert’s house. Thirty minutes at most.”

“But there could be trouble, if her boyfriend wakes up. Want me to go with you, in case there’s trouble?”

“No Travis, you have plenty to do here. Trust me. I can handle this on my own.”

“Okay, but take your cell phone, just in case.”

“I will.”

She left, and Travis didn’t give much more thought to it, because he got busy with other things. At 10:30 he heard the truck coming back down the driveway, and he wondered why it had taken her so long. He looked out the window and saw that Janice was not alone. There was a woman in the truck with her, a rather good looking lady that he recognized as being Penelope Jones. They both got out and came to the porch. Penelope had a gin bottle in one hand, yet seemed to be somewhat sober, though with a ‘spent’ look. Travis went to the living room to meet them, just as Janice brought Penelope in the front door.

“Hello, Penelope!”

“Hello, Travis.”

“Janice says you are going back to Herbert?”

“Yes, if he will have me. I don’t blame him if he doesn’t. We went by there already, but he wasn’t home. I will try to see him when he gets home this evening.”

“So are you guys separated, or actually divorced?”

“We have been divorced for almost two years now.”

“I didn’t know that.”

“I have been living with a boyfriend in Arlington, but I just couldn’t continue to put up with his ‘ways’. Thank you for letting Janice come pick me up. I don’t know who else I could have turned to. When your life goes to crap, sometimes your friends and family turn their backs on you, and you don’t know where to turn. That’s when good Christian people like you can really make a difference.”

“Well, I don’t know about the ‘good Christian’ part, but we’re glad to help you out. So what will you do if Herbert won’t let you come back?”

“Honestly, I don’t know. I’m counting on him to take me back. He might have to think about it a few days, but I think he’ll take me back eventually.”

“Well, I’m about to go to England on business in a couple of days. If you need a temporary refuge to sort of hang out, while Herbert is thinking about it, maybe you could stay here? In fact, we just happen to have a vacant back bedroom.” (He assumed that Janice would mirror his sentiment, but he saw Janice standing behind Penelope, using crude sign language to convey
NO,
NO,
NO!
to him. He assumed that Janice knew something he didn’t.) Penelope’s eyes lit up when she heard this offer.

“Do you really mean that? You are such a saint, Travis Lee! I have always liked you and Janice! You have always been my favorite neighbors! I want you to know that I really, really appreciate you letting me stay here, even if it is just for a little while!”

(Janice was silently blowing a fuse over her stupid husband’s naïve offer, so he tried to scale it back a bit.)

“Of course, it will just be temporary, . . . really brief, actually. I’m sure Herbert will allow you to come back this evening, after you talk with him. So by tonight you will probably be moving on.”

“Janice graciously offered to let me shower and clean up here a little, before I go to see Herbert. I guess I look a little rough right now.”

Janice cut in. “The shower is this way, Penelope. Come on and I’ll show you where everything is.” She shot Travis a daggered look, as she led Penelope away.

“I’m really grateful to you both. You are good Christian people! God will bless you for this!”

That sounded strange, coming from a woman with a big bottle of gin in one hand. Janice took her down the hall to the bathroom, and closed the door. She went to the hall closet and got extra towels to take to her. Travis heard the shower come on, as Janice came and found him in his study.

“Travis, we’ve got a slight problem.”

“We do?”

“Yes, we do. I went and picked up Penelope, and the first place she wanted to go was the State Store to get some gin.”

“Of course. And I see you told her no!”

“Actually, I agreed to take her there, because she said she
needed
it, to get her through the day.”

“So she had money to buy gin, but no money to call a cab?”

“Actually, I bought her the gin, because I thought I would help her out a little.”

“You don’t help an alcoholic by buying her gin!”

“Don’t get on my case, Travis! I have had a very stressful morning already! She has told me some things that are just . . . unbelievable!”

“Such as?”

“I’ll get to that. After I bought her the gin, I took her to Herbert’s house, thinking I was going to just drop her off. Herbert was gone to work already, but her daughter, Jessica was there. But Jessica locked the door, and wouldn’t let her in!”

“How old is Jessica now?”

“The same age as Jenny, about 18. She said she was going to call the police if we didn’t leave, so we left. I didn’t know what to do. I suggested that I could take her to her Dad’s house, and she went crazy, she was so scared! She said she would rather be dead, than go back to his house!”

“Why?”

“She said that her Dad used to rape her all the time, when she was a teenager!”

“Bob used to do that?”

“That’s just one of the shocking bombshells she dropped on me this morning. Another one is that her Dad is also Jessica’s father! He got her pregnant one of those times he raped her! She said even Herbert doesn’t know about that. Jessica was almost three when she met Herbert, and she never told him who the real father was.”

“Wow, that would mean that Jessica and her mother are also sisters?”

“That’s right. And the reason she wants to go back to Herbert is because for years, Bob has been trying to get Herbert to let Jessica come stay with him, and Penelope knows the reason he’s doing that is to try to get at Jessica, so he can rape her too.”

“And Herbert doesn’t know about this?”

“Penelope tried to tell him about her Dad’s deeds, but he refuses to believe it. He and Bob are good friends. Bob gave him and Penelope several acres of land when they got married, so it’s like, Herbert just looks the other way. He thinks that Penelope is lying about it all. Apparently she has told him quite a few lies after her addiction started, and he thought this was just another one.”

“So what do you think? Do you think she could be lying to you?”

“I think she’s telling the truth. Know why? When I suggested that she go live with her Dad, she was so upset that she peed all over your truck seat!”

BOOK: Letter to Belinda
12.53Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Lady Drusilla's Road to Ruin by Christine Merrill
Destiny by Jason A. Cheek
8 Gone is the Witch by Dana E. Donovan
Falling Over by James Everington
South Wind by Theodore A. Tinsley
Mad River by John Sandford
A Trick of the Moon by Melinda Barron
When the War Was Over by Elizabeth Becker