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“True, but we could count on our fingers and toes the number of insufferable people we know. We don’t kill them.”

“I know that,” Harry snapped, irritated at Susan’s moralizing. “And I know something else. If Jerome was killed he must have found out something about Barry’s death or about this rabies stuff. If Jerome had uncovered the link concerning the rabies infection, why would anyone kill him over that? You’d think the whole county would thank him. No, he dug up something out at a farm call or poring over paperwork. God, if only I had an idea, even a shadow of an idea.”

“The sheriff and Cooper no doubt feel the same way. On the surface of it, it’s crazy.”

“Most things appear that way until you find the connection. There has to be a connection between Barry’s murder and Jerome’s.”

“What crossed my mind is, what if Jerome had rabies, too.”

“Susan, don’t say that. Really.”

“I know.” And Susan did understand the potential for panic. “Are you all right?”

“Sure. Why wouldn’t I be?”

“You’re not on your way to work, that’s why.”

“Oh. I forgot about that. The news.” She rapped the eraser end of the pencil against the tablet. “I suppose if I think about it, I’ll—oh, I don’t know. It doesn’t seem real yet.”

“Did you know that Miranda already has seventy-two signatures on the petition Ned drew up concerning Mrs. Murphy, Tucker, and Pewter?”

“No.”

“Miranda gets things done. Of course, it doesn’t matter now. Her goal was five hundred signatures.”

Harry laughed. “We don’t have that many postboxes in the post office.”

“She was ready to walk the streets.” Susan sighed. “Harry, I wish I knew what was going on. It’s a bad time.”

“You’re safe.”

“How do I know?”

“Because I told you so.”

“Do you know something I don’t?” Susan asked, a note of suspicion in her voice.

“No, but it’s logical. You aren’t involved in outdoor work, breeding horses, animal control. You’re not in danger from silver-haired bats—if any of us is—and I don’t think you’re in danger of knowing whatever Jerome knew or someone thought he knew.”

“You’re right, but I still feel terrible.”

“I do, too.” Harry glanced down at Mary Pat’s ring on her right pinky. The Episcopal shield, inscription underneath, glowed. “It’s funny. I’m staring at Mary Pat’s ring, and I feel like it’s bringing me luck even though right now doesn’t seem a propitious time.”

“I hope so.”

After Harry hung up the phone it rang again almost immediately.

“Harry, this is Pug Harper.”

Mrs. Murphy and Pewter, now on the desk, strained to listen.

“Good morning, Pug.”

“I don’t know if you’ve heard of the terrible circumstances of Jerome Stoltfus’s death. It was on the early-edition news.”

“Susan Tucker just told me. I don’t know the details.”

“Nor do I. But this does change things. I will look the other way if you want to come back to work.”

“Pug, that’s very kind of you.” She took a deep breath, then plunged ahead. “And it might work for a while. But who’s to say the next animal-control officer won’t barge into the post office and order me to remove the cats and dog? And really, Pug, when that new building goes up, everything changes. I know that Amy Wade can handle it. She’s the best of the temps, and now that her kids are in school, I bet she’d be happy for the job.”

“Why don’t you take the weekend to think it over?” He hoped she’d change her mind.

“I made up my mind. For the record, you’re a good postmaster, and I’ve enjoyed all my years on the job.”

“Thank you.” Pug hated to lose Mary Minor Haristeen. “Look, if you do have a change of heart, you call me.”

“I will.”

As she placed the phone back in its cradle, the cats cheered, “Hooray!”

“You’ll find something better. You might even make more money,” Tucker, ever the optimist, prophesied.

She smiled at the animals, then frowned slightly. “Gang, Jerome Stoltfus is deader than a doornail.”

“Goody.” Pewter licked her lips, her pink tongue in sharp contrast to her luxurious dark gray fur.

“Pewter, that’s not very Christian.” Tucker didn’t like Jerome one bit but thought it better not to cheer his demise.

“And you ate communion wafers.” Mrs. Murphy referred to an episode where, together with the Rev. Jones’s cats, Cazenovia and Elocution, they had opened the closet containing the communion wafers. The four cats and dog demolished boxes of the round, white, thin wafers.

Harry dialed Miranda, who said she was just getting ready to call Harry.

“What in the world is going on?” Miranda fretted.

“I guess if we knew that, someone would be behind bars,” Harry replied. “Did Pug Harper call you?”

“No. He’d call you first.”

“Well, he did, but I declined to return. He even said I could bring the kids, but, you know, in the long run it wouldn’t have worked out, so why not just get on with it, whatever it is.”

“You’re right. But it’s going to seem awfully strange not walking across the alley in the morning. How will you live without my orange-glazed cinnamon buns?”

“Drive into town.”

“Or I’ll drive out there,” Miranda offered.

“Thanks for getting so many signatures so fast. Susan told me.”

“You’ll be happy to know that everyone is on your side.”

“Really?”

“People think highly of you and, of course, they adore Mrs. Murphy, Pewter, and Tucker.”

“That makes me feel good. I”—Harry, about to get emotional, stopped herself—“I’m grateful. By the way, I told Pug that Amy Wade would do a great job. I think everyone will work out at the post office. What I’m worried about is rabies. Or whatever is going on.”

“Me, too. When I heard about Jerome I thought of First Peter, Chapter Four, Verse Fifteen; ‘But let none of you suffer as a murderer, or a thief, or a wrongdoer, or a mischief-maker.’ And Jerome suffered being none of those things. He let a little power go to his head, but he wasn’t a murderer or a thief. And really, all he was trying to do, apart from be important for the first time in his life, was protect the public good.”

“You’re right. Maybe I’ll drive down to the sheriff’s office and—”

Miranda interrupted her. “Harry, you’ll give Rick a fit. He’ll think you’re criticizing the way he’s handling this.”

“Yeah, you’re right.” Harry paused. “I didn’t think of that.”

“Why don’t you call Cooper? If you have an idea or whatever, call her. I would imagine right now that Rick is under a lot of pressure.”

“You bet he is.”

Later that morning, as Harry scrubbed out the large outdoor water troughs, the soft breeze rustled the early green leaves, the light color beautiful against the robin’s egg blue sky. As her wet hand caught the sunlight, the ring glistened intensely.

“That’s it, you know?” Harry spoke to Tucker, at her heels. “Someone is shielded by money, power, or position. If only I knew what was at stake.”

36

The deep golden rays of the late-afternoon sun drenched the racing barns at St. James Farm. All the outbuildings on the property were painted crisp white. The eaves, the doors, and the window frames all shone bright white. On the middle of each post of the shed row barns, Mary Pat’s racing colors gleamed.

Alicia Palmer, Aunt Tally, and Harry stood at the training track, the racing barns behind them.

Harry had called Cooper, who suggested if she wanted to help, she should go over to St. James and go through the barns one more time and look around. Since Harry was a horsewoman and Cooper wasn’t, Cooper was sincere in her request.