Joan Hess - Arly Hanks 06

Joan Hess - Arly Hanks 06 Read Online Free PDF

Book: Joan Hess - Arly Hanks 06 Read Online Free PDF
Author: Maggody in Manhattan
presume you’re here for the contest? Catherine is thrilled to be selected as a finalist, but we were led to believe we would be staying in a decent hotel, and this won’t do. Catherine has a terrible time with allergies. At the first hint of dust, her eyes water and she cannot breathe.”
    Ruby Bee looked at the woman, who seemed pleasant enough despite her inclination to talk faster than a trout goin’ after a mosquito. She had blond hair that was a little too brassy, but nobody ever said there was anything wrong with helping Mother Nature every now and then. Maybe a little too much makeup, and maybe dressed more like a teenager than the mother of one.
    The hemline was far from flattering, to put it kindly, and the bright pink of the dress called attention to her thick waist and unfortunate hips.
    The daughter, Catherine-with-allergies, was slender to the point of resembling a beanpole. She had a cloud of frizzy auburn hair and no makeup to speak of, except a hint of blusher beneath dramatically pronounced cheekbones. Her posture was erect to the point of rigidity, as was pretty much everything about her. She looked awfully humorless for someone her age, what with her sulky expression, but Ruby Bee could understand how a ride from the airport could do that to a body.
    “So you’re a contestant, too?” she asked the girl, giving her a friendly smile.
    The girl turned to her mother. “I hope you’re satisfied.”
    “It’s going to be fine,” Frannie said coolly. She repeated her name to Durmond Pilverman and Estelle, and after a few minutes of conversation, all the adults were on a first-name basis and feeling better about the immediate future. Catherine stared out the glass doors.
    The woman in the green suit reappeared. “I’m Geri Gebhearn, the contest coordinator from Prodding, Polk and Fleecum,” she told them. “There’s been a small problem concerning communication with the hotel, but let’s all hope it’s under control—at least for the time being. Mr. Belaire has arranged for rooms on the second floor for you, and of course we’ll be using the kitchen when the big moment arrives.”
    “The sawdust,” Frannie said, glancing at Catherine’s glacial face. “It’s going to make it ever so difficult for Catherine. She’s had allergies since she was—”
    “The saw will be removed,” Miss Gebhearn said firmly. “Mr. Belaire says the remodeling will be confined to the upper floors until the end of the week. This means we’ll have to tolerate a certain amount of noise and disruption, but there are union contracts involved that cannot be breached. In any case, there are enough rooms on the second floor to house you, and the lobby and dining room will be cleared and straightened for our use.” She flipped to a page on the clipboard and scanned it. “Let’s see who we’ve got, shall we?”
    Despite lingering uneasiness on several people’s parts, they gathered around her.
     
    I was in the back room of the PD, trying to decide how vile day-old coffee could be, when I heard the door open. The clickety-click of high heels gave me an idea who the visitor was, and I took malicious satisfaction in calling, “Would you like a cup of coffee?”
    “Is this a café or a police department?”
    “Beats me,” I said under my breath, then went to the doorway to regard Mrs. Jim Bob, who was not only the mayor’s wife, but also the president of the Missionary Society, the self-proclaimed Miss Manners of Maggody, and a royal pain in the neck (and other locales farther south). Physically speaking, she was not altogether unattractive, but her perpetual expression of grim, selfrighteous disapproval was enough to put even the most generous of us in a fractious mood. She and I were not the best of friends, possibly because I had been known to be less than deferential on occasion. Any old occasion suited me just fine.
    “I wish to file a complaint,” she began ominously.
    “Anything in particular, or shall
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