Gayle Roper - Caught In The Act

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Caught In The Act: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Who would want to kill ordinary guy Arnie Meister? Reporter and small-town sleuth Merry Kramer was on the trail of the supposed killer when she uncovered more murder suspects than she ever thought possible–an ex-wife, an ex-girlfriend and suspicious business associates. Nothing added up.But with Merry embroiled in the story, danger wasn't far behind. And those she thought trustworthy–even charming Curt Carlyle–might not be who they seem….

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Mac’s policy was the same as our former editor’s: ignore the greenery and maybe it would die.

“Have I got an assignment for you, Beautiful,” Mac said when I stood before his cluttered desk. “You’ll love it!”

“Yeah?” Whenever Mac told me I’d love something, I got nervous. We were so different that most things he thought were great, I thought were vulgar, profane, and/or without redeeming social value.

“And if you don’t love it,” he said, “the penalty is dinner with me. Alone. At my place.”

“I can tell already that I’m going to like this assignment a lot.” I smiled to let him know I knew he was joking about the dinner, though I wasn’t certain he was. He asked me out with great regularity, and I refused with equal regularity. The last thing I wanted or needed was an office romance with a guy like Mac. Besides, a third guy would definitely be more than I could handle.

“I already assigned you Longwood Gardens at Christmas, right?”

I nodded. Longwood Gardens was a local wonder that I was to do a piece on for the December 26 issue, something I could write ahead, an informative filler that wouldn’t change, unless, of course, the conservatory decided to burn down or something.

“Good.” He nodded. “Don’t forget.”

I scowled at him. Like I’d forget an assignment.

He fumbled through one of his multiple stacks of papers. He grunted with satisfaction as he pulled a sheet free. “You know about His House?”

“Whose house?”

“His House.”

I looked at him blankly.

“You know. Like in God.”

“God’s house? Like church?”

“What’s church got to do with anything?” Mac looked as confused as I felt.

“Church is God’s house.”

“Oh, yeah. I guess it is. But I’m not talking about church. I’m talking about His House.”

We were back where we started.

“His House is a place for girls in trouble.”

“Ah,” I said. “In trouble with the law? With pregnancies? With their parents?”

“Probably all the above, but mostly with pregnancies. I want a tearjerker story on some of those girls. I want to wring the readers’ hearts.”

I nodded. I could do that.

“I want your story to be so compelling that our readers will admire these girls, no, will love these girls for their courage to carry their babies instead of terminating their pregnancies. I want heartbreaking stories of desperation and blossoming maternal love, of perseverance in the face of abandonment by families and, most terribly, by the babies’ fathers.” He rose from his seat, carried away by his own rhetoric. “I want the readers to cry!”

I stared at him in astonishment. Where had all this emotion come from?

He grinned sheepishly as he noticed not only me but Edie Whatley, the family page editor, staring at him.

“Lapsed Italian-Catholic guilt,” he explained as he sank into his new chair. “I’m conflicted over abortion. I’m conflicted over the Church. And Christmas always makes it all worse. I mean, what if Mary had aborted Jesus? Did you ever think of that?”

“Mac!”

“And then there’s all the other seasonal questions. Should I go to midnight Mass on Christmas Eve? It sort of makes me feel good to go, you know? But isn’t that hypocritical if I never go any other time? And shouldn’t you go to church to talk to God, not to get a warm seasonal buzz? But it’d make my mother happy. The question is: would it make God happy? And why would he want to see me after the way I’ve acted the rest of the year? If there is a God.”

I couldn’t help laughing at his expression, but I realized he was asking some very serious questions.

“Come to church with me on Christmas Eve,” I said.

“Are you asking me for a date?” He looked much too eager.

“Absolutely not, but you could sit with me.”

His eyes lit up.

“I wouldn’t want you to feel awkward in strange surroundings,” I said primly.

“Too kind, kid. Here.” He handed me the sheet of paper.

I read Dawn Trauber, Director, His House, followed by a phone number.

“Call her,” he instructed. “Set up an interview.”

I nodded. “Thanks. I agree with you. This will be a great story.”

“It better be, Schweetheart,” he said in his best Humphrey Bogart. “I may not go to Mass, but consider me the Little Drummer Boy bringing my gift of the story to the manger. You’re the drum I’m beating on, pa-rum-pa-pum-pum.”

I went to the file cabinet along the wall, slid the gigantic jade plant—now festooned with an equally gigantic red bow and white fairy lights—to the rear of the cabinet, and dived into the H drawer. Certainly the clipping service had something for me on His House. I pulled the information out.

I carried the file back to my desk by way of the soda machine. As I walked past, I tossed my head. Just that quickly I was attacked by the great grape ivy. Its tentacles reached out and wrapped themselves about my spiky hair, twisting and twining themselves until I was imprisoned against the dollar slot.

My file fluttered to the floor. I gurgled in outrage and began struggling, though I didn’t want to be too rough because I was more afraid of Jolene, the mad gardener, than I was of the plant. But I didn’t want to be dinner for a carnivorous organism, either. So I pulled and twisted, and no sooner did I get one spike free than another fell prey to the shoots.

I could just see the headline: “Reporter Vined to Death. ‘But it seemed such a nice plant,’ friends say.”

As I struggled, a tendril reached down the back of my collar and wound itself around my neck. I felt it begin to choke me.

“No!” I lashed out wildly. I felt my feet slip on some downed leaves just as Jolene and Mac reached me. I grabbed for them to keep from slamming to the floor, but they calmly sidestepped me and grabbed the falling grape ivy instead. I hit the floor with a great thud, but all I heard was, “Thank goodness! We caught it just in time.” That was Mac.

“Merry! What were you thinking? You might have harmed it.” That was Jolene.

As I sat there with my skirt around my ears and my hip announcing its fury at my inconsiderate treatment, Mac and Jolene patiently unwound the vines from my hair and with a great show of concern put the plant back on the soda machine.

“Poor thing,” Jolene murmured as she patted the villainous tendrils of green.

Snarling, I grabbed my fallen file, pulled myself to my feet and limped back to my desk.

A minute later a laughing Mac stood beside me offering a peace Coke. The absurdity of the whole thing struck me just as I took my first swallow. Mac had to swat me on the back several times to prevent me from choking.

“You made my day, Merry,” he said as he walked away. “You made my day.”

In the work situation, all I ever wanted was to be a consummate professional. Well, professionals are people who please their bosses, right? I perked up a bit.

I went into our e-files to supplement the His House paper file, which wasn’t exactly fat, and between the two sources found several news articles, many of them about local church women’s groups who had showers and in-gatherings to benefit the House. There were several pictures of smiling women sitting behind stacks of hand-knit baby sweaters and blankets while boxes of diapers rose like block towers beside them. There was a picture of the House itself, a huge, old Victorian just east of town.

I looked carefully at a picture of the director, Dawn Trauber, woman around thirty who reminded me of Katie Couric. Same nice face. Same warm smile.

According to the article that chronicled her coming to His House, Dawn had wonderful credentials. She had a degree in social work from Philadelphia Biblical University and an MSW from Temple University in Philadelphia. She had worked for several years as a houseparent at a children’s home near Lancaster. According to the article, she had now been in Amhearst three years.

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