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Миранда Джеймс: Digging Up The Dirt

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Миранда Джеймс Digging Up The Dirt

Digging Up The Dirt: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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The New York Times bestselling author of Dead with the Wind and Bless Her Dead Little Heart is back with more of those sleuthing Southern belles, the Ducote sisters... An’gel and Dickce Ducote, busy with plans for the Athena Garden Club’s spring tour of grand old homes, are having trouble getting the other club members to help. The rest of the group is all a-flutter now that dashing and still-eligible Hadley Partridge is back to restore his family mansion. But the idle chatter soon turns deadly serious when a body turns up on the Partridge estate after a storm... The remains might belong to Hadley’s long-lost sister-in-law, Callie, who everyone thought ran off with Hadley years ago. And if it’s not Callie, who could it be? As the Ducotes begin uncovering secrets, they discover that more than one person in Athena would kill to be Mrs. Partridge. Now An’gel and Dickce will need to get their hands dirty if they hope to reveal a killer’s deep-buried motives before someone else’s name is mud...

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“Yes, leave her alone,” Lottie said. “You’d think she was a teenager sometimes, the way she has these little fits of hers.”

“I’ll go get her,” Arliss said. “Leaving her alone just encourages her to be a martyr.” She left the room, glass in hand.

Arliss returned moments later. “She’s gone. I guess she’s having a bigger snit than we realized. I’ll call her later and make sure she’s okay.”

“This is odd, even for Sarinda.” Dickce frowned.

“Yes, it is,” An’gel said. “She doesn’t usually disappear like this, even when she’s having a good sulk.”

“She was pretty fey about the whole Callie thing,” Reba said. “Do you think she knows more than she’s letting on about what happened to Callie forty years ago?”

CHAPTER 4

An’gel felt another frisson at Reba’s words. Had Sarinda been hinting that she actually knew what happened to Callie? If she did know, why hadn’t she spoken up before now?

An’gel decided that it might be a good idea for her and Dickce to pay Sarinda a visit soon. With coaxing, Sarinda might tell them what lay behind these cryptic questions. It might be nothing other than a bid for attention, but An’gel thought it would be better to know for sure. Perhaps they might go tomorrow.

“I thought Hadley seemed eager to leave.” Barbie frowned. “After all these years you’d think he’d at least stay and visit with us a few minutes.”

“Maybe Sarinda spooked him,” Lottie said.

Arliss snorted. “Don’t be ridiculous, Lottie. Hadley probably wanted to avoid more questions about what he’s been doing the past forty years.”

“And whether he has been married and might still be.” Dickce grinned. “You notice he never mentioned anything about a wife or a girlfriend.”

“He’d hardly pop that into the conversation without some sort of prompting,” An’gel said. “Frankly, I don’t think he’s married. I never have thought he was the marrying kind. Variety is his stock-in-trade when it comes to women.” She glanced around at her fellow board members, all of whom except her own sister seemed suddenly fascinated by the contents of their glasses. “You can set your caps at him all you want, but Hadley will outrun you all.”

“Fine words coming from you , An’gel.” Reba plunked her glass on the counter none too gently. “He sure did seem interested in you, or didn’t you notice?”

“Yes, he gave you pretty marked attention.” Arliss stared hard at her.

An’gel kept a tight rein on her temper, although she had halfway been expecting such a scene. “That was simply Hadley showing off. He has always liked to tease, and he knew it would annoy me.”

“Call it what you like,” Barbie said. “He paid more attention to you than he did to anyone else.”

An’gel spoke sharply. “I wasn’t aware it was a competition.” She regretted the tone immediately. Barbie and Arliss smirked at her while Reba glared. Lottie and Dickce giggled.

An’gel would have a few words for her sister as soon as they were on the way home. She was furious that Dickce had shared in their mirth.

“Thank you for hosting the meeting, Barbie,” An’gel said. “We must be going now, so many things to do at home.”

Dickce set her glass in the sink after a quick look at An’gel. “Yes, lots to do, always. See you later, ladies.”

As An’gel and Dickce let themselves out the front door, An’gel could hear loud laughter coming from the kitchen. She resisted the urge to slam the door. When they reached the car, she held out her hand for the keys. Dickce handed them over right away.

An’gel focused her attention on driving. Unlike her sister, she preferred a more sedate pace, although to her that simply meant driving only a few miles over the speed limit, rather than ten or fifteen.

She spent the first five minutes of the drive with a critique of Dickce’s behavior, during which Dickce remained silent. When An’gel finished, Dickce said, “I don’t care what you say, Sister, it was funny. If only you could have seen your face when Hadley paid such attention to you. You looked like you didn’t know whether to crawl under the rug or grab Hadley and kiss him.”

An’gel did not find that amusing. “I suppose you would have kissed him, then? I wanted to slap his face.”

“Then you should have.” Dickce appeared unperturbed by An’gel’s fit of pique. “Hadley knew, of course, that you would respond exactly as you did. That’s why he singled you out. With any of the others, well, they would have taken it as a sign that Hadley was madly in love with them. He knew you wouldn’t believe any such thing.”

An’gel considered that for a moment and felt her irritation begin to fade. “It pains me to admit it, but I think you’re right. They’re all man-hungry, and there aren’t that many good-looking, well-off men in our age group in Athena for them to choose from.”

“It’s going to be interesting having Hadley back,” Dickce said. “No telling what some of them will get up to trying to entice him into either an affair or marriage.”

“Let’s hope it doesn’t destroy the garden club,” An’gel said as she turned into the driveway at Riverhill. “If they’re all spitting and scratching at one another over Hadley all the time, we’ll have nothing but trouble.”

Benjy stared at the disarray in the flower bed, aghast, then turned to Peanut and Endora, sitting on the lawn nearby. He eyed the dirty paws of both animals and shook his head.

“Miss An’gel is going to be furious with you. You’ll be lucky if she doesn’t send you both back to the shelter, and me along with you.”

He knelt on the ground in front of the two miscreants, who stared at him as if they had no idea what he meant. Benjy pointed to the flower bed and the five azaleas the two had dug up. “Miss An’gel planted those today, and I can’t figure out what the heck possessed you to do this.” He shook his head. “I guess I should have kept you inside with me and not let you run loose. You’ve both been really bad.”

Peanut hung his head and whimpered. Endora looked at Benjy and meowed, as if she were apologizing. She moved closer to Peanut and rubbed her head against his. The Labradoodle whimpered again.

Benjy had to suppress a laugh at these examples of contrite behavior. He couldn’t be angry for long with Peanut and Endora. They were behaving the way animals do, and animals got into mischief. But he also knew Peanut was smart, and that if he scolded the dog, Peanut would remember and not dig in the flower bed again.

“Listen, here, Peanut.” Benjy waited until the dog raised his head to look at him. Benjy pointed to the azaleas and the holes in the bed. “This is a bad thing. Don’t do this again. Bad, bad, bad.”

Peanut whined, and Benjy scratched the dog’s head. “I know you’re sorry, and now you know better.” Peanut barked.

Benjy turned his attention to the Abyssinian. “Now, Miss Endora, I figure you were the ringleader in this little escapade. I’m not sure it does any good telling you not to get Peanut in trouble again, but at least don’t get him in trouble digging up the flower beds, okay?”

Endora gazed up at him a moment, uttered one quick meow, and rubbed against the dog again.

“Okay, you two.” Benjy stood. “I’m going to try to get these back in the ground before Miss An’gel and Miss Dickce get home. I don’t want them to get upset seeing the mess you made. But I am going to have to tell them what you did. Understand?” He waited a moment while the two animals stared at him, then he patted each one on the head. “You can sit and watch me undo your bad work.”

He turned to the flower bed and examined it for a moment. There were distinct holes where each azalea had stood, and if he worked quickly enough he ought to be able to get them replanted before the sisters returned from the garden club board meeting. They had been gone only about an hour, he reckoned. He knelt in the bed and set to work while the two responsible for the mess watched quietly.

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