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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and who was the hysterical woman in church?” Rhona whispered.

      Bending close to Rhona, Day murmured, “Denise Nielsen and Sally Staynor.” Before she could say anything else, an ascetic looking man with a monk’s fringe of dark hair and a willowy blue-eyed blonde joined them.

      “Jim, Detective Simpson is interested in Paul’s life,” Day said. “You’re precisely the person to describe Paul’s activities here at St. Mark’s, as well as his and your work with refugees.” She explained, “Jim Brown has belonged to this congregation all his life. He’s worked for non-governmental agencies involved in the third world. He’s familiar from first-hand experience with the situations from which our refugees have escaped. His wife Yolanda . . .” Here she included the woman next to him, “is our fundraiser ‘par excellence’.”

      Jim Brown examined Rhona as if he was running a photo ID. “Didn’t you come here when we had trouble a couple of years ago?”

      Rhona smiled. “Great memory. I did. Tell me what you do for refugees?”

      “We’ve sponsored six families in the last four years and more before them. We care for them in every way for the first year. Because we haven’t had a family recently, I haven’t seen much of Paul.” His eyes didn’t meet hers.

      “Any other reason?”

      Yolanda Brown broke the lengthening silence. “Jim, everybody here knows what you think of gay ordination.” With her chin high, she said, “Jim isn’t alone. Many of us hated it when Paul made the ordination issue such a sideshow. And I, for one, don’t mind admitting it.” She relaxed a bit. “Sorry, but I’m tired of being made to feel unchristian because I don’t believe gays belong in the pulpit. I’m sorry, it doesn’t matter now. We’ll do everything we can to help.”

      Day’s skill at moving Rhona smoothly from group to group led Rhona to wonder if they gave lessons at theological school in working the crowd. Seasoned politicians would envy Day her style. By one o’clock, they’d circled the room, and it was time for Rhona to drive to the university.

      On her way out, she stuck her head in the kitchen where the couple who’d left the church early, the Porters, along with a coterie of helpers, washed the dishes.

      “I’m Detective Simpson. Sorry not to talk to everyone. I understand a number of you worked closely with Reverend Robertson on various projects. If you think of anything about him or his work that might help us in the investigation, please contact me. I’ll leave my card.” She stacked a pile neatly on the counter.

      Knox Porter, distinguished from other middle-aged men by the scraped rawness of his face, shoved a flowered plate into an overhead cupboard, shut the cupboard door and stuck out his right hand. “Knox Porter. Any information I can give you, you can reach me at the Museum of Natural History or at home.” He waved his left hand to include his wife, a study in brown dowdiness, hunched elbow deep in suds at the sink. “We’ll be glad to do what we can.”

      Rhona walked to the car mulling over her impressions of the St. Mark’s congregation. What sort of relationship had Denise Nielsen had with Reverend Robertson, and did she have a husband who ran? Did the hysterical Sally Staynor have a husband, and did he run?

      Three

      After Detective Simpson left the medical tent, Kas rejoined Hollis. “In my professional opinion, you’re fit to drive home if you drive slowly. Take extra care; shock affects your reflexes. I’ll follow.” At the manse, an ugly pile of red brick next to St. Mark’s, Hollis disarmed the security system on the wall inside the back door. It had amused Paul to use chapter twenty, verse fifteen of the book of Exodus, the commandment, “Thou shalt not steal”, for the four digit code number.

      MacTee, Hollis’s golden retriever, noted for his beauty, not his brains, welcomed them to the cheery yellow kitchen, an oasis in a dismal house. Hollis had defied the church manse committee and their choice of institutional green for the kitchen and repainted it. Besides hanging ferns and blooming cyclamen, two of her own large acrylic paintings of masses of exuberant oversized flowers added colour and joy to the room.

      The rest of the house, with the exception of two rooms—her study, where she’d supplied her own white wicker furniture and glowing paintings, and Paul’s private bedroom and office—had been furnished and decorated by the manse property committee. The first time she’d been in the manse, a quick look around the house with its yellow oak floors, dark woodwork, cast-off religious pictures in heavy black frames and ugly furniture had confirmed Hollis’s impression that this group, no matter its membership, specialized in collecting cast-off mismatched furniture and always chose institutional beige or bilious green paint.

      MacTee behaved as if he’d been deserted for days. He moaned, whined, rolled on the floor and gladdened her heart with the totally fatuous pleasure he took in her return. After they’d patted him and rewarded him with a biscuit, he lay on the kitchen floor, eyes open and body alert to any possibility of treats coming his way. The house settled into its customary morning quiet.

      Standing in the middle of the kitchen, Hollis tried to think what to do. “I can’t twist my mind around what happened—it’s unimaginable.” She shivered and pushed her shaking hands into her pockets. “But I realize I’ll have decisions to make.” Kas leaned against a counter, nodding sympathetically.

      She waved her hand at the empty kitchen counters. “One thing for sure—once Marguerite Day informs the congregation, these will fill with food. I’ll need boxes of aluminum foil to make packages of food for the freezer.” She shrugged. “But not yet. Right now I know I have things to attend to, but I can’t think what they are or where to start.”

      “A list is always good. If you like, I’ll give you a hand.” Kas rubbed his hands together. “This house is chilly. Look at you. You’re frozen.”

      Hollis stood in the middle of the room. Her teeth chattered, and she was still shivering.

      “Go and change. You don’t like tea, do you? I’ll make coffee.”

      Hollis made an effort. “Help and coffee sound great. The coffee and the milk foamer are in the cupboard above the coffee maker. You’re right. I am cold. I’ll change.”

      Before she was out of the kitchen, Kas had reached for the can of Tim Hortons fine grind.

      Upstairs, Hollis slid a periwinkle blue mohair turtleneck over her head and pulled on her favourite black leather pants. Comfort, she needed comfort. She wobbled back to the kitchen and collapsed at the table.

      “I’m warm, but I’m feeling disoriented—like I’m floating above my body. My thoughts agitate and whirl but go nowhere.”

      “It’s shock. A hot coffee loaded with sugar will help.” Kas filled two large mugs and laced one with three teaspoons of sugar.

      Hollis drank quickly. Almost immediately she felt the effect of the heavily sugared liquid. Kas reheated the milk in the microwave, removed the glass container and energetically pumped the foamer’s plunger up and down. She watched him and thought back over the years.

      Kas had married her friend, Tessa, while both were medical residents. She’d liked him then and liked him now. One of the reasons she’d accepted a teaching position in Ottawa had been their presence in the city. Kas worked as a psychiatrist at the Royal Ottawa Hospital and Tessa as a thoracic surgeon at the Municipal hospital.

      When she’d

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