business when an employee passed along hepatitis. Contagious diseases can kill a successful catering business. This new one is giving me an outrageous bid and the event is in two weeks. I don't have time to interview others. I'll just have to beat this one into submission.'
'Shelley, sometimes you amaze me with the specialized information you have at your fingertips. I know absolutely nothing about catering and you seem to know everything about it. This is fascinating.'
'Not really. It's simply that Paul insists on these dinners three or four times a year and I agree it's good for his business. A nice perk. And we couldn't possibly serve them the Greek fast food that they're up to their elbows in every day. He used to have an employee plan the dinners until I butted in and comparison-shopped and realized she was taking us to the cleaners and getting big kickbacks. That's how I got stuck with the job.'
'But there's nothing you enjoy more than butting heads with people trying to rip you off, and you know it,' Jane said.
Shelley grinned. 'It's one of my best skills. So are you working on your book today, since we're not getting anywhere with Bitsy and her elusive attorney?'
'Yes. I've thought of a new twist for the plot I'm really excited about. Want to hear about it?'
'No. I'll wait until the book is in the stores. You don't want to drain away a good idea recounting it to someone else.'
Jane had awakened in a rage the previous night when the cats decided to sharpen their claws on her bedspread. Before drifting off to sleep, she'd realized why she'd dawdled on getting the novel finished. Priscilla had gone soft and comfy. She'd gotten boring. Her life was going too well.
The essence of fiction, Jane thought, was conflict, the more the better.
So how about if a previously unknown older, illegitimate half-brother showed up with documentation claiming to prove Priscilla's beloved home was really his?
She loved the idea. Priscilla would have something dear to her to fight for. Priscilla loved her house on the cliff overlooking a surly sea more than she'd ever loved anything else.
Supposing the documents were true but the person presenting them wasn't who he said he was? A real illegitimate brother had once existed and this man had seized his papers.
Maybe it was a bit trite, but Jane was fired up.
What would Priscilla do? Would she find out the man was a fraud? If so, would she feel compelled to find her real half-brother? Not if she had any sense. Maybe she could find out about him without his knowing.
Priscilla could hire someone to hunt him down. An honorable and necessarily devilishly good-looking man she imagines for a while she might have fallen in love with but later finds out that he's in on the fraud. Or maybe not. Maybe he's already married. Maybe he's not married, but has a terminal disease and… Or maybe Priscilla's doctor has mistakenly told her she's the one with the terminal condition?
So many intriguing avenues of busy plot to whip into shape.
And a lot more fun than trying to pry the truth out of the workers at the renovation. In her novel, she herself was in control. She'd know the truth, even if Priscilla didn't.
But who could guess which, in real life, if any of the workers or their ex-relatives was responsible for the vandalism and very probably Sandra's death?
Twenty-seven
It was four days before Shelley came over to Jane's house at lunchtime to tell her what Paul had found out. Jane had practically forgotten what Shelley was talking about. She'd been completely immersed in her novel all weekend and Monday, and hadn't even taken the time to shower or comb her hair on Tuesday morning.
'Here's the deal,' Shelley said. 'There may be more, but I wanted to share what Paul's attorney's assistant has already dragged up. Budley is first. He's had lots of lawsuits and small-claims-court records. But most of them, the assistant says, are just nutcases trying to get out of paying him.'
'Oh?' Jane said, once she'd recognized what Shelley was all het up about.
'I don't smell coffee,' Shelley said. 'You're going to need it to pay attention.'
Jane started a big pot of coffee, and Shelley graciously waited until Jane had knocked back half a cup.
'As an example' — Shelley took up her story— 'Budley was doing a big job putting in a basement media room and had it almost done. There was a horrific storm that sent water gushing through where the basement windows had been sealed. He had to redo the base woodwork and carpets and didn't meet his deadline. Are you listening, Jane?'
'I am.'
'Budley invoked the Acts of God clause and got his money. Apparently he'd had the sealed windows inspected by the city code guy who approved Dudley's work.'
'Did the city code guy get in trouble in turn?'
'Nope, the clients tried to go after him but failed to get a judgment. The code guy had made extensive notes of his visit. He'd told the people they had to fill in around the foundation where water collected to get approval. They didn't do it.
'Another lawsuit the assistant cited was when some artsy-fartsy client had six old French doors he'd picked up at a garage sale that he wanted installed so his guests and family could look out over the patio and garden. As soon as it turned cold, the doors shrank and the glass in them shattered. Budley had apparently learned a lesson on keeping paperwork from the media room fiasco and was able to produce copies of letters that he'd by sent registered mail, telling the man the doors weren't the right size and wouldn't survive a cold Chicago winter. The man hadn't agreed to shave
them down to size because he said they'd be out of proportion. Budley kept that letter from the client as well.'
'Clearly not his fault.'
'Right. I remember the time Paul had two inches of mirror put in around the ceiling of our study to reflect the lights. When it got cold, the molding and walls shrank and the mirrors all cracked.'
'You never told me about that. I guess you replaced them? I've always admired the way the light bounces around in the study.'
'Now you know how to do that. Leave a bit of room.'
Shelley returned to the subject she'd started first. 'The assistant still had other suits to examine and we'll see what turns up. My own opinion, for what it's worth, is that Budley's probably competent but is so offensive and tactless that he annoys people into finding fault with his work.'
'You'd feel that way, too. I've never seen you as mad as when he called us 'girls.' I was afraid you were having a stroke.'
'No, I save strokes for dealing with the IRS,' Shelley said with a laugh.
'Anything on Neville Burnside yet?'
'Do you have any more of those icky granola bars?'
'I bought two more boxes of them. Don't pretend you don't like them.'
Shelley munched down two of them while Jane, who was sick of them, made two ham sandwiches.
Shelley looked at her watch. 'It is way past time for lunch. Thanks. Anyway, the attorney's assistant hasn't even gotten to him yet,' she said while slathering mustard on the sandwich. 'She's still following up on Joe Budley.'
'Is this costing Paul wads of money?'
Shelley laughed. 'Considering the size of the annual retainer Paul pays this attorney and the fact that he admitted he didn't have anything for his legal assistant to do this week, he's glad to do it gratis. Or so he says. He told Paul all the material will go in a file and someday when someone else asks about Budley, he'll just dig out the file and impress the hell out of them with his quick work.'
'Good thinking.'
'Paul is often stunned by the speed of his research into property. Now we know how he does it. He keeps files on everybody he's ever checked out. Are you going to tell Mel we're doing this?'
'Hmm. I hadn't thought of that. I think it would be best if we waited until we have all the information.'
'That's a good idea. Paul's attorney might already have a file on Neville Burnside and will knock our socks off again with his promptness.'
'The one time we met him, I thought he was a very nasty man. Most of the people I know who
are divorced, no matter what kind of settlement is imposed on them, get over it and go on with their