Рита Браун - Out Of Hounds

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"Sister" Jane Arnold and her hounds must sniff out a thief with expensive taste when a string of missing paintings leads to murder in this exciting foxhunting mystery from New York Times bestselling author Rita Mae Brown.
Spring is peeking through the frost in Virginia, and though the hunting season is coming to a close, the foxes seem determined to put the members of the Jefferson Hunt Club through their paces. Sister and her friends are enjoying some of the best chases they've had all season when the fun is cut short by the theft of Crawford Howard's treasured Sir Alfred Munnings painting of a woman in hunting attire riding sidesaddle. When another painting goes missing five days later--also a Munnings, also of a woman hunting sidesaddle--Sister Jane knows it's no coincidence. Someone is stealing paintings of foxhunters from foxhunters. But why?
Perhaps it's a form of protest against their sport. For the hunt club isn't just under attack from the thief. Mysterious signs have started to appear outside their homes, decrying their way of life. stop foxhunting: a cruel sport reads one that appears outside Crawford's house, not long after his painting goes missing. no hounds barking shows up on the telephone pole outside Sister's driveway. Annoying, but relatively harmless.
Then Delores Buckingham, retired now but once a formidable foxhunter, is strangled to death after her own Munnings sidesaddle painting is stolen. Now Sister's not just up against a thief and a few obnoxious signs--she's on the hunt for a killer.

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There were no ravines to dip into. You were exposed to the elements. Maybe this was the trade-off for that impossibly rich limestone soil. O.J. thought Mother Nature had a sense of humor.

Much of what a master has to do depends on how the duties are divided up if there is more than one master. O.J. shared managing hunt staff with the other masters. As for the hounds, she loved them, so sitting on a hill, walking to another hill to watch, did not seem troublesome to her. Prudently, she kept her thoughts to herself. Any staff, whether hunting or not, wishes to put their best foot forward when observed. People can and do lie. Not everyone, for which any master is grateful, but as the old adage tells you, one bad apple can spoil the whole bunch. No one wants to carry a difficult person. Cohesion frays. O.J. made sure it wasn’t going to get to that point. Her whippers-in were honorary. Long Run formerly had a professional…good, too…but she had retired to have a baby. Still, O.J. liked how the whippers-in moved forward, negotiated terrain, supported the huntsman.

Once back at the trailers, her longtime friend and former Second Flight field master, Louise Kelly, untacked Blossom.

“Can you feel your fingers?” Louise asked.

“Not very much.” O.J. smiled. “My feet stayed warm. I finally did what Sister Jane has been telling me to do. I wore three thin pair of silk socks. My toes are a little cold. If we’d been out there much longer I’d feel it more. What’s funny is poor Sister. Nothing really works for her feet. She says the longest she can keep them warm is an hour.”

“How was it today?”

O.J. looked around then spoke. “Good. I was glad the huntsman hunted back when he did. Long, hard run. Thank God for Barry. He was at the crossroad just as the coyote was due to cross but, smart fellow, the coyote dropped into the creekbed, ran in the creek. By the time he got out he had fouled his scent for a good hundred yards. The wind took care of the rest. Staff did good. We do need another professional whip but our budget is stretched to the max. Our whippers-in are good but they can’t always show up. It’s a problem. Sister and I were talking about it. Most hunts are in the same boat.”

“Do you need to check in with anyone?”

“No. Everyone is ready to go home.” O.J. smiled.

“Okay.” Louise loaded up Blossom, closed the door, and the two old friends headed back to the barn.

“Sounds like we both had good days but I usually get good runs at Cindy Chandler’s Foxglove Farm.” Sister spoke to O.J., it now being about seven o’clock.

“Any word on the stolen painting?”

“No. I talked to the curator at the Sporting Museum, called my friends at the Museum of Hounds and Hunting. All knew the painting but no one had any ideas where it might be now. Sometimes these thefts run in cycles, kind of like the old days when silver would be stolen from houses in the same area by teams. There is an odd twist. When I drove home Saturday a sign on the telephone pole before you turn into my driveway blared ‘Stop Hounds Barking.’ A crank. Well, yesterday another sign went up. ‘Stop Foxhunting: A Cruel Sport.’ This appeared on the stone pillars, the gates into Crawford Howard’s Beasley Hall. He’s livid and believes he’s been singled out for abuse by the same people who stole his painting. I don’t see how the two can be connected. I told him I had a similar sign here, too. He brushed it off.” Sister thought a moment. “I begin to think we live in a time when no one can enjoy themselves without others passing judgment, dressed up in terms of great moral offense.”

“True,” O.J. replied. “Then again, think how even in Ancient Rome, moral judgment was used to attack others. Maybe it’s human nature. If you haven’t the brains or the resources to succeed, you rip apart others who have.”

“So why do people run for president? It’s a blood sport.”

“I have no idea.” O.J. shook her head. “I wouldn’t even run for the lowest elected position in Lexington.”

Sister laughed. “Are there any low elected positions?”

“Well, there’s head of the police department. And he takes nonstop abuse. One shooting. The police should have had a crystal ball, seen into it, and stopped the violence. It really is crazy, but back to the painting, it seems to me the only way it could leave the country is in a private plane with security paid off and customs in the other country paid off, or it could be smuggled in. If the thief or thieves aren’t the best at what they do, something or someone will make a mistake.”

“We can hope. Yet it could still be in our country. No one has a clue.” Sister listened to the old wall clock tick in the kitchen. “As you know I have had my struggles with Crawford, whose ego is inextinguishable, like JFK’s flame, but I don’t wish this on him. In his defense, he is generous in good causes. His biggest mistake is bullying and bragging. He could have looked at that gorgeous Munnings daily. He didn’t need to brag about it. Too many people knew. It’s even crossed my mind that this is a revengeful act.”

“Sister, you and I come from secure backgrounds. We knew who we were and who our people were. We never had a reason to publicly promote ourselves. We see it as vulgar.”

“It is,” Sister said with unusual vehemence.

“Millions would disagree as they hustle to rise. Look at this another way. You and I don’t mind a man putting his hand on our shoulder even if we don’t know him well. We don’t mind a man opening a door for us. We expect it as a courtesy. Many women, some even our age, would experience this as a form of diminishment. They would feel belittled.”

A long pause followed this. “Okay. I get your point. But the underlying emotion is fear. Fear you won’t make the grade. Fear someone is subtracting from your worth. Fear, fear, fear, and it’s sold daily like cars and underarm deodorant.”

O.J. laughed. “You know, you’d never be allowed to teach.”

“Funny you say that. I really liked teaching geology at the college level. It’s wonderful to watch someone grasp concepts, to become excited.” A long intake of breath followed. “Do you ever feel like this isn’t your country anymore?”

“All the time,” came the sad answer. “I love that young people are passionate about the environment. They are sensitive about other people’s backgrounds and feelings. But I know they don’t understand country life and they don’t really care. They will buy Brussel sprouts for way too much money at one of these so-called organic food stores but they don’t know how to grow them.”

Such a long pause followed this that O.J. said, “Are you there?”

“Am. You got me thinking. That Munnings painting. Could this have provoked some anger? You know, like she is promoting woman oppression?”

“What?”

“Sidesaddle. Men expected women, until really the 1920s and 1930s when we rebelled, to ride sidesaddle. Could it be a reminder of oppression, of the patriarchy? Hence the theft.”

“Well, Sister, you’d think the radical who stole it would be making her case. Or his case? I can’t believe a man would do that.”

“What about a woman who started life as a man? If anyone has clarity of vision about the crap women still live with, it seems to me it would be a transgender woman.”

“I don’t doubt that but I would think she has better things to do than steal a Munnings. This is about money. Has to be.”

“O.J., you’re probably right. You usually are. Do you think we will live to see the end of foxhunting?”

“We might live to see the end of the First Amendment.”

Sister gasped. “Dear God, don’t say that.”

After they concluded their talk, which ended on a happier note about the difference between fox scent and coyote scent, coyote being stronger, Sister sat in the library absentmindedly stroking Golly.

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