“I’m busy,” said that sprightly old lady. “What do you want?”
“I’ve got a problem with my plumbing,” she said.
“Ask Tex. He’s the expert. And wear adult diapers.”
“Not my plumbing, ma. The plumbing of the house.”
“In that case diapers won’t do you any good. And nor will Tex.”
“You don’t think Tex will be able to fix it?”
“Honey, that husband of yours can’t even change a lightbulb without taking down the entire grid. Why don’t you call Gwayn Partington? He’s a licensed plumber.”
“And an expensive one. What about Alec?”
“Forget about it. He’s in your husband’s league.”
“Chase?”
Mom was quiet for a moment. She might not be a great fan of Tex or even her own son Alec, but she had a soft spot for her granddaughter’s boyfriend. “Now I wouldn’t mind seeing that man in coveralls and a wrench in his hand. Or even without coveralls and a wrench in his hand. Though I’m sure he would do just fine without the wrench.”
Both women were silent as they contemplated the image of Chase Kingsley, dressed only in a wrench. Then Marge shook herself. It wasn’t right to think of her potential future son-in-law that way. “Is he any good at plumbing, that’s what I want to know.”
“No idea, honey. But he can always come and clean my pipes, if you know what I mean.”
Double ugh.
“Gotta go,” said Mom. “Some old coot is yanking my chain. No, the doctor won’t see you now, Cooper! You’ll have to wait your turn!” she cried, then promptly disconnected.
Next on Marge’s list of people to call in a case of an emergency was her daughter Odelia. Before she hired an expensive plumber and spent good money, she needed to exhaust all other—cheaper—possibilities, like any responsible homeowner would.
“Hey, Mom,” said Odelia. “What’s up?”
“Does Chase know anything about plumbing?”
“Does Chase know anything about plumbing? Well, he is pretty handy.”
“Yes, but can he fix the plumbing?”
“Honestly? That exact theme never cropped up in any of our conversations.”
“But what do you think?”
“I think you better ask Gwayn Partington. He’s a licensed plumber.”
A deep sigh. “Fine.”
What good was it to have three men in the family when none of them could fix the plumbing? Maybe Odelia should have dated a handyman, not a cop. But her daughter was right. Why postpone the inevitable? So she dialed Gwayn Partington’s number and was gratified when the man picked up on the first ring.
“Hi, Gwayn. Marge Poole. When do you have time to take a look at my plumbing?”
“I could come over right now, if you want. I had another job lined up but that fell through, so…”
At that moment, her phone warned her that Odelia was trying to reach her, so she said, “One moment please, Gwayn. It’s my daughter. Yes, honey?”
“I just called Chase and he says he doesn’t know the first thing about plumbing and you better ask an expert if you ever want to enjoy the blessings of running water ever again.”
“Thanks, honey,” she said, and switched back to Gwayn. “Harrington Street 46. Yes, I’m home.”
Ten minutes later Gwayn’s van pulled to a stop in front of the house and when she opened the door she felt she’d done the right thing. Gwayn Partington did look amazingly capable, with his blue coveralls and his metal toolkit. At fifty he was pudgy and balding and maybe not the image of male perfection Chase Kingsley was, but at least he would get her faucets all working again, even though he might charge a small fortune.
And as he got down to business in the kitchen, she watched with an admiring eye how he didn’t waste time. He fiddled with the tap, then disappeared underneath the sink for a moment, messed around there for a bit, and finally muttered something incomprehensible, took his toolkit and stomped down the stairs and into the basement.
Moments later he was stomping up again, went to grab something from his van and when he returned, soon the sounds of a hammer hitting a brick wall could be heard. Like a regular Thor fighting the demon that had messed up her plumbing, Gwayn swung a mean hammer.
No. This was not a problem Tex could have solved, or Alec, or even Chase.
And as she picked up a copy of Women’s World, a holler at the front door made her put it down again. “You’ve got mail, lady!” the new arrival shouted.
She smiled as she got up to meet the mailwoman in the hallway.
“Hey, Bambi,” she said as she joined her.
Bambi Wiggins had been their mailwoman for years, and was never too busy for a quick chat. And as she talked to Bambi about the new baby, and Bambi’s husband Randi, suddenly a scream rose from the basement. Marge exchanged a look of concern with Bambi, and then both women were hurrying down the stairs. And as they came upon the licensed plumber, who was holding his hammer and chisel and staring at a hole he’d apparently made in the far wall, she asked, “What’s wrong, Gwayn?”
The man looked a little greenish, and stood gnawing nervously at the end of his chisel. Already she knew what was going on here. He’d been a little hasty and had made a hole in the wrong place, possibly knocking out a load-bearing wall or a vital part of the house’s plumbing system with one ill-advised blow of his hammer. And now, unlike Thor, he was too stunned and embarrassed to admit it.
And as she went in for a closer look, she suddenly halted in her tracks when her gaze fell upon a sight that couldn’t possibly be real.
There, sitting and staring at her with its big sockets for eyes, was… a skeleton.
“Oh, my God,” Bambi cried. “Marge. You’ve got a frickin’ dead body in your wall!”
And so she had.
Chapter 1
We were holding a war meeting in our war room. Well, maybe not a room, per se, but at least a war bush. Dooley, myself, Harriet and Brutus, the four cats that are part of the Poole family feline household, sat ensconced behind the tulip tree at the back of Odelia’s backyard for this most important meeting. As befitting a war meeting of the war cabinet in the war bush, there was only one item on the agenda. A very important item.
Mice.
Yes, you read that right. I had called this most urgent and all-important meeting to discuss rodents. You may have seen them scurrying around in your basement or your attic, or even, for the more daring ones, in your kitchen, where they try to steal a piece of cheese, or, let’s not limit ourselves to the clichés, a piece of beef or a slice of apple pie. After all, mice will eat almost anything their little hearts desire. As long as it’s not too heavy they will carry it between their tiny rodent teeth and make off with it before you realize it’s missing.
“We have to do it,” said Brutus now, though he didn’t seem entirely happy, just like the rest of us.
“I don’t know, Brutus,” said Harriet. “I don’t like the idea of murder. And let’s face it, that’s what this is: pure and inexcusable homicide.”
“Not homicide, though,” I said. “Homicide means the murder of a person. A mouse is not a person. It’s a rodent, so technically we’re talking about rodenticide.”
“I don’t care what you call it, Max,” said Harriet. “It’s still a crime against humanity.”
“Again, not a crime against humanity. Rodentity, possibly, if that’s a word.”
“I don’t like this, Max,” said Dooley, using a favorite phrase. “I don’t want to kill mice. Mice are living creatures, just like the rest of us, and we should let them live in peace.”
“Look, I’m all for letting mice live in peace and harmony,” I said, “but the fact of the matter is that Odelia has given us an assignment, and we owe it to her to carry it out.”