A Midsummer Night's Scream
realized to her surprise that she’d spent several hours on it so far today. She also knew she had nothing to feed the kids or herself that evening. Even if she and Mel ended up going out for the good dinner they’d planned, she’d still have to leave something for the kids to eat. Or hand out a wad of money for Mike or Katie to get take-out. She hated going to the closest grocery store over the noon hour. There was a breakfast and lunch place next to it and parking places were at a premium.
Parking turned out not to be quite as horrible as she’d expected, and she came home loaded down with bread, sliced ham, premade tuna salad, several boxes of frozen mac and cheese, salad, and a really good, gummy iced chocolate fudge cake. That would last them for at least a couple of days.
She was on a countdown to school’s starting. Katie would be in her first year of college, albeit close to home at the junior college for the first year. She had chosen it because it had several culinary classes. She’d still be living at home, but she could practice making dinners. Mike would go back for his third year of college, out of town, and Todd would become a sophomore in high school.
She loved her kids. She’d done a good job of raising them herself after her husband was killed on an icy overpass while leaving her to marry someone else. She seldom even thought about him anymore. After the first horrible months of grief and fury, she realized he’d freed her to live her own life, however inadvertently.
His life insurance included a rider that had paid off the mortgage on the house she loved. And due to her having given his family’s pharmacy her small inheritance from a spinster great-aunt early in their marriage, he’d written in his will that she would forever earn his one-third share of the pharmacy profits. His widowed mother and his younger brother Ted received the other shares.
She realized much later that he’d been smart and canny about financial matters. It was morals that took him away.
The pharmacy had thrived and now had branches all over Chicago and far into the suburbs. Her share had allowed her to be a stay-at-home mom. This could have changed if he’d lived to marry the other woman. With years of parsimony and good investment advice, she’d put away enough to be able to get all three kids through college and finally, a year or two ago, had become financially secure enough to pamper herself a bit.
She was, she had to admit, proud of herself. And now that she believed that she’d eventually be published, she was prouder still.
Struggling inside with the groceries, then disposing of a few things that were past their prime in order to make room in the freezer, fridge, and pantry, she managed to clear the decks and go back to her needlepoint as a nice break. She realized, as she was getting out her threads to do the next section of her sampler, that she hadn’t really thought about her deceased husband for years, and wondered why he’d come to mind today. She probably wouldn’t think of him again for a good long time.
With luck, perhaps never.
Fourteen
As Mel was looking around Sven’s room, which he wasn’t surprised to find extremely clean, Officer Jones was conversing with Sven’s sister. Mel couldn’t hear what they were saying, except that Hilda was doing most of the talking.
The bedroom, besides being tidy, was revealing in other ways, too. It must have been his room when he was a boy. The wallpaper still had faded cowboys and horses. Even the single bed looked vaguely bunkhouse. It was probably the house both Sven and Hilda grew up in. Long ago paid off.
Sven was a serious jigsaw puzzle fan. There was a card table set up near the window with a half-done thousand-piece picture of a cathedral. The entire bottom of his closet was triple stacked with puzzle boxes, leaving only enough room for his shirts and trousers to hang above. His shoes were on a rack on the back of the closet door. They all looked as clean as if they were brand new.
So much for Jane’s theory of blackmail, which he had briefly considered himself. This was a shy, retiring, compulsively neat man with a shoe and jigsaw puzzle obsession. And he didn’t like working with people watching him. Mel simply couldn’t imagine such a timid man repeatedly approaching strangers and firmly demanding that they pay him for what he knew they’d done that was worth keeping secret. From what little Mel knew of him, Sven would be
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