envelope in the drawer with my bras and slips and now they’re gone.“
“Now, as you know, the carnival is our primary source of revenue for the purchase of an annual gift. Ladies? In the back! Could I please have your attention?”
Jane and Shelley pretended interest for a few moments, and when the speaker had lost interest in policing them, Jane whispered out of the side of her mouth, “Why is this a secret? Have you told VanDyne?“
“No. I don’t want Paul to know.“
“But, Shelley, the police have to know. It surely has a bearing on the motive for the murder.“
“Maybe...“
“How many of you ladies have worked the annual carnival before?“ the speaker was asking.
Jane obediently put her arm up and went on whispering to Shelley. “So why are you telling me this before you’ve told them?“
“I just can’t have Paul knowing. It might be a mistake. I mean, maybe I did put them in the box at the bank and just forgot.“
“You now better! Have you ever had amnesia before?“
“I can’t remember,“ Shelley said, smiling feebly.
“I’m serious. You have to tell VanDyne, no matter how upset Paul might get. What’s the worst he can do?“
“He won’t do anything except be terribly hurt that I was so neglectful of something that meant so much to his whole family. Jane, I think you should—“
“Thank you, Mrs. Jeffry. I knew we could count on you.”
“-put your arm down.“
“Count on me?“ Jane asked, fearing the worst. “I think you just volunteered to run the cotton candy machine again.“
“Shit!”
After this, in self-defense, she gave her full attention to the meeting in progress. It broke up moments before the final bell, and she and Shelley fled. No self-respecting adult would set themselves up for being in the building at the final bell on a Friday afternoon. “Jane, I want you to talk to the police for me,“ S helley said, once they were breathing fresh, free air again.
“Shelley, I can’t do that. For one thing, Van-Dyne already thinks I’m half-crazy and wouldn’t believe me. He’d run straight to Paul to confirm the story and get a description of the pearls—or bread pellets or whatever they are.“
“Then they just aren’t going to know.“
“The police have to know. It’s important to their investigation.“
“I’m not so sure. Jane, hasn’t it struck you as odd? The whole thing? I mean, nobody knew I even had the damned things except Paul’s family, and none of them live anywhere near. So why would some random thief come in my house, ignore the silver, the home computer, the stereo, the other jewelry—all that stuff they usually steal—and go straight to my underwear drawer to steal a string of highly questionable pearls?“
“Of course it’s odd. But what do you think it means?“
“I have no idea.”
Further discussion was cut short by the clanging of the final bell. Within seconds they were buffeted by kids escaping the building. “There’s Paul, parked up the street. I’ve got to go.“
“But we haven’t settled anything.“ Jane raised her voice over the sounds of chaos around her.
“No, but I’ll figure out what to do. Don’t worry,“ Shelley said. “See you later.”
Jane went back to the relative safety of her car to wait for Katie to emerge from school. She lit a cigarette and sat staring sightlessly at the crowd of kids swarming past. The whole situation was very strange. Why would someone ignore all the other obviously valuable things in Shelley’s home and go straight to the possibly fake string of pearls? She had said Paul’s family all lived somewhere else, but suppose one of them had slipped into town and taken the necklace? Still, even if that were true, how would anybody know where she kept them? Shelley certainly hadn’t sat around after the funeral and said to Paul’s family that she thought she’d just take the pearls home and put them in with her slips and bras.
The house hadn’t shown any overt