Hollis Grant Mysteries 4-Book Bundle. Joan Boswell

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Hollis Grant Mysteries 4-Book Bundle - Joan Boswell A Hollis Grant Mystery

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Day gained two inches when she took a deep breath and straightened her spine. “This is Detective Simpson. It’s unbelievable, but she’s here because Paul was murdered earlier this morning.” She looked as if she wanted to soften the blow but hadn’t quite figured out what words to use.

      Barbara searched their faces, probably for a sign she was hearing a macabre joke. Finding none, her body sagged, her arms swung limply, and her mouth hung slightly open.

      Day stepped forward and hugged Barbara.

      “Dead.” Barbara pronounced the word as if it came from an unfamiliar foreign language. “Dead. How can he be dead?” She spoke slowly. “Not—just—dead—murdered. Who would do such a thing?”

      Day grasped Barbara’s hands. “Barbara, it’s terrible, but we have to cope. The congregation will be upset. After church, everyone will want to talk. We’ll drink gallons of coffee. Who’s in charge of the coffee hour?”

      Barbara concentrated. “The Porters. Linda brought oatmeal cookies and butterscotch squares. Knox has nipped out to buy milk and cream. I’ll make sure there’s a full coffee urn and fill the kettles with water for the tea. This morning Linda was terribly flustered, because she was almost late. She said it was the first time she can remember them sleeping in until ten fifteen. Wait till you see Knox. He’s shaved off his beard.” A flush mottled her neck as she realized the irrelevance of her last remark.

      “I’m glad coffee hour’s under control,” Day said. “Now, I’ll tell Zena.”

      In the hall, she turned to Rhona. “Give me a moment before we go downstairs.”

      She left the door of her office ajar, dashed inside, plucked a surplice and embroidered stole from the coat tree inside the door and shrugged them on. Then, together they descended to the choir lounge, a mouldy smelling basement room, where the choir, more than thirty strong, chattered as they donned their powder blue choir gowns. The buzz of conversation died away as the visitors entered the lounge.

      “Hello, everyone,” Day said. “I’m sorry I don’t have time to lead up to what I have to say. I wish I could soften the blow. Reverend Robertson died this morning.” She paused. “He was murdered. This is Detective Simpson—she requires a surplice because she’s going to join you in the choir.”

      The choir goggled at them like fish in oxygen-deficient water. Mouths moved, but no one said anything.

      “I hope my presence won’t upset you. After the service, I’ll have questions for you,” Rhona said.

      Day addressed a frail woman whose faded transparency reminded Rhona of a coloured photo left too long in the sun. “Zena, are the hymns appropriate?”

      Zena clutched her music to her concave chest and thought for a minute before she spoke in a whispering voice matching her ephemeral appearance. “We’re singing ‘Now the Green Blade Rises’, ‘How Firm a Foundation’, ‘Hail the Day That Sees Him Rise’ and ‘Lord of the Dance’.” Her lips moved as if she was running the words of each hymn through her mind as she nodded three times and then shook her head. “ ‘Lord of the Dance’ isn’t appropriate. We won’t sing it this morning.”

      Day pulled the file cards from her pocket and made a note.

      “Detective Simpson, you’re welcome to join us,” Zena said. A frown creased her forehead into even deeper furrows. “Has anyone told Hollis?”

      “Yes, and a friend is with her,” Rhona said.

      Zena nodded. “It’s good to hear that.” She gripped her music like a life raft in a stormy sea.

      “Thanks, Zena.” Day radiated warmth and understanding. “I realize this is particularly hard for those of you who had a lot to do with Paul. It’s perfectly understandable if anyone feels he or she can’t manage the service.”

      In the choir loft, during the prelude of quiet organ music, Rhona considered the choir’s reaction. With one exception, a pretty dark-haired woman who had wept uncontrollably and excused herself, the news had appeared to shock but not leave them grief-stricken.

      The music’s tempo changed. A woman in the front row of the choir rose, lifted a trumpet and produced a stunning volley of sound. While the trumpet’s sounding magnificence summoned the faithful, Reverend Day settled behind the pulpit. When the music ended, the church grew quiet.

      Day rose. She didn’t say anything.

      Her silence was more effective than speech. Those who hadn’t been paying attention—who’d been quieting children, removing their coats, or reading the announcements in the Bulletin—stopped. Every eye fastened on Day’s face: services did not start this way.

      “I’m sorry to tell you Reverend Robertson is dead.”

      The multitude rustled and murmured.

      A keening “No-o-o-o” drowned out their muted distress and drew everyone’s eyes from Marguerite to a red-haired woman sitting near the front. Her choking sobs shocked them into silence. The teenage boy next to her gripped her arm and whispered in her ear. Seconds later, the two got to their feet and the woman, weeping noisily, allowed the boy to lead her out of the church. The tense rigidity of the boy’s shoulders told the congregation the young man was living out every adolescent’s nightmare; being part of a parent’s publicly humiliating performance.

      After they’d gone, the parishioners, whose attention had focussed on this mini drama, turned again to the pulpit. Rhona witnessed reflections of shock, sorrow and greedy curiosity. Death was reaching close: no one was immune to its morbid appeal.

      “I have nothing else to tell you, except it was a violent death, and the police are investigating.” She paused for a moment. “Let us pray.”

      The hour-long service proceeded. Faces sagged, eyes glazed and a restless wave of coughs betrayed a collective urge to get on with the after-church coffee and share their feelings about the shocking news.

      During the last hymn, Rhona’s eyes followed a woman in a too long, too large brown dress and a man of nondescript middle-age leave through the door leading to the annex which contained the kitchen and the church hall. They must be the Porters, slipping out to turn on the coffee, boil the kettles for tea and set out plates of cookies and squares. Rhona hoped they were ready for a busy session. In her experience, proximity to disaster always stimulated appetites.

      At five past twelve, after the congregation had meandered through the last hymn, Day had pronounced the benediction, and Zena Adams had launched the choir into a Bach postlude, people turned to one another. The agitated buzz of dozens of conversations filled the air.

      Rhona returned with the choir to the choir lounge, where she said, “Thank you for your cooperation. I’m familiarizing myself with the many facets of Reverend Robertson’s life. If you worked with him on committees, or knew him in any other capacity, please share the information with me. Anything you can tell me, and I do mean anything, may be helpful. If you’re doubtful, let me be the judge of the importance of what you have to say. At this moment, it may be hard for you to sort through your thoughts, but please call me when you do.” She placed a handful of business cards on the piano.

      Before she’d taken five steps into the adjoining room, where dedicated Sunday school teachers cleaned up the messy aftermath of Christian learning, a babble of voices rose behind her. Rhona made her way to the hall crowded with

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