school donât mean you can lollygag around here in your birthday suit!â
Thor galloped off toward the house. His sister seemed unmoved by the incident, standing pigeon-toed and staring at the cousins. The childrenâs father wiped his dirty hands off on a greasy rag.
âDang these kidsâif they ainât squabblinâ, theyâre pesterinâ the livestock. Want to buy a chicken? The Little Woman can wring a neck for you in less time than it takes to say cock-a-doodle-doo.â
âNo, thanks,â Judith replied, feeling a little dazed. âWe came over to use your pay phone. And to call on Mr. Dixon.â Seeing Mortonâs blank expression, she gestured at the white Mercedes. âThatâs his car. He spent the night here.â
âOh, him.â Kennedy Morton grimaced. âFancy fella, puttinâ on airs. Why canât people be real?â He started for the second cabin, while his daughter scuffed at the gravel and wandered off. âYou go use the phone. Iâll fetch Mr. Dixon,â Morton called to the cousins over his shoulder.
After the initial wrestling with the antiquated telephone, Judith finally reached the sheriffâs office. Her explanation about the ladder and the broken window was taken by a woman with a monotone voice who sounded bored to tears. The second call, to Directory Assistance, yielded Iris Takisakiâs number in the city. Judith dialed, but got no answer.
âMaybe sheâs making funeral arrangements,â Renie suggested after Judith had gotten out of the booth.
Kennedy Morton returned alone. He waved the greasy rag at Judith and chuckled in an apologetic manner. âSorry, I forgot Mr. Dixon was going up the road to have breakfast at the Green Mountain Inn. He walked.â
So did the cousins, covering the distance in just over five minutes. The Green Mountain Inn was of the same vintage as the Woodchuck Auto Court, but it had been built with more imagination and a bigger budget. The faux thatched roof was an Irish green. The second story, which housed the guest rooms, was gabled with dormer windows and shutters that matched the roof. The stucco exterior was whitewashed at least every other year. A quaint sign printed in Olde English style stood at the edge of the road. Half of the first floor was a grocery; the other half, a restaurant.
Judith and Renie had known the original owners quite well. But the business had changed hands twice since the early sixties. The cousins were only nodding acquaintances with Dee and Gary Johanson, who had owned the property since 1989.
Dee was working in the restaurant as both hostess and waitress. A rangy woman in her late thirties, she wore her blond hair in a Dutch bob and disdained cosmetics.
âTwo for breakfast? Or lunch?â
It was not quite ten-thirty; the cousins had eaten only a little more than an hour ago. âCoffee,â said Judith.
âWith pie,â put in Renie.
Dee led them to a place by the window. Flowered oilskin covered the tables, providing a cheery note. Otherwise, the decor was kept to a minimumâa copper warming pan on one wall, a mounted rainbow trout on another, and a montage of old photographs depicting loggers, miners, and railroad men from the early part of the century. An impressive rack of antlers loomed over the entrance to the bar.
It being midmorning in the off-season, the restaurant was virtually deserted. Except, Judith noted with satisfaction, for the two men who sat at a table across the room: Dewitt Dixon and Clive Silvanus were deep in conversation.
Dee Johanson proffered menus, but Judith held up a hand. âJust coffee for me. Really.â
Renie ordered coffee and blackberry pie with whipped cream. Dee started to move away, then turned back. âYou look familiar. Are you up from Glacier Falls?â
Judith and Renie identified themselves. Dee visibly relaxed. She had the common Pacific Northwestern rural suspicion
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