Dear readers: I wrote a short story featuring some of the main characters from my hilarious new mystery novel, A BOX OF PANDORAS, and thought I'd share it here on my blog. Part II will appear tomorrow.
HOTHOUSE FLOWERS
My first thought
when I saw the purloined orchid was that I'd finally found a way to wipe the
rodeo-queen smile off Mitzi Tyner's face.
I've labored in
Mitzi's shadow my whole life. We were in the same grade through school, and
raven-haired Mitzi was Miss Everything-All-the-Time. Homecoming queen. Class
president. Head cheerleader for the Pandora Boxers (dogs, not underwear).
Editor of the school newspaper, though she can barely write her own name.
I never got to be
any of those things. All my ambitions were thwarted by the blinding charisma of
Mitzi Tyner. My yearbook caption might as well have read: "Loretta
Kimball: Most Likely to Come in Second."
I thought it would
end after school, but Mitzi follows me through middle age, thwarting me. If I
join a civic organization such as the Association to Beautify Pandora Creek,
she joins, too, and is inevitably elected president within weeks. She's
president of everything in town. Not that she ever does any work, mind
you. That's left to drones like me. Mitzi believes her role is to stand around
and be admired, and the people of Pandora just eat that up with a spoon.
I try to avoid all
contact with her, but that's not possible in a town of two thousand souls
surrounded by hundreds of miles of empty prairie. I suppose I could go stand
out in the desert by myself, but I'm social by nature. I want to help people,
to be involved in our community, but every time I turn around, I bump
into the surgically enhanced bosom of Mitzi Tyner.
The worst is when
my civic duty requires me to visit her home, which is just as overdecorated as
she is. Oh, Mitzi has many lovely furnishings in that mausoleum she and Long
John Tyner built on the outskirts of town, but the decor is so thrown together,
it's got all the charm of a flea market. The Chinese vases and Southwestern
landscapes and ceramic elephants might as well have price tags hanging on them.
All of Mitzi's taste is in her mouth.
She often hosts
civic events out there at the Taj U-Haul, so I'm sometimes forced to actually
cross her threshold. On this day, it was a meeting of the Save Old Route 66
Committee. I'm secretary of the committee, which used to be headed up by my
husband, Harley. (Of course, as soon as Mitzi joined, the downtown businessmen elected
her president, but Harley didn't mind. He's got enough to do at the
hardware-and-feed store that's been in his family for three generations.)
I was first to
arrive for our monthly meeting, and Mitzi greeted me wearing a puffy blue frock
and dangly earrings and a white apron decorated with black cows. She can't wear
jeans like everyone else in Pandora. She dresses as if she expects a TV crew to
stop by any minute.
"Loretta!"
She always acts pleased to see me, but I know better. "Come in this
house!"
I was carrying a
sack full of plastic bottles of soda pop for the meeting, and it was like
holding an armload of slithery babies. I followed her to the kitchen to dump my
burden, and that's when I saw the orchid.
She hadn't even
bothered to hide it! The orchid sat on a mahogany sideboard in her dining room,
bold as you please, its drooping flowers so yellow they seemed made of
sunshine. Oh, the blue ceramic pot was new, and she'd clearly pruned a couple
of the leathery leaves, but that was a Yellow Lantern hybrid, and it most
definitely was the one stolen from Betty Sue Lybrand.
I'd seen that rare
orchid once before. I happened to stop by Betty Sue's place right after she
brought it home from a flower show in Albuquerque. Just the most precious
orchid you've ever seen. Must've cost hundreds of dollars, and I'm sure that
didn't sit well with her husband, Archie, a shade-tree mechanic known for being
tighter than new boots. Betty Sue had planned to show the orchid off at the
next meeting of the Pandora Garden Society, but a sneak thief took it from her
home a week ago.
Now there it was,
in plain sight, with half the town's bigwigs on their way to Mitzi's house. Did
she think no one would notice? Did she think we were fools?
"What a
beautiful orchid!" I said as I crossed the room to examine it closer.
Definitely Betty Sue's missing hybrid. "Where did you get it?"
"Isn't it
pretty?" Mitzi was at the kitchen sink, opening a bottle of cheap
champagne. "Nannette gave me that the other day."
Nannette Hoch is
Mitzi's sidekick. She's a dried-up lemon of a woman, bitter and nasty, with
only three passions in life: devotion to her church, loyalty to Mitzi and
loathing of me. The feeling is mutual.
"Since when
does Nannette know anything about orchids?"
"Somebody
gave it to her, and she knew she'd just kill it," Mitzi said. "You
know how she is with plants, bless her heart."
I nodded. Nannette
was quietly banned from Garden Society meetings years ago because she could
wipe out a roomful of healthy houseplants with a single jinxed exhalation.
Had Nannette
stolen the orchid? I couldn't imagine that. First of all, Nannette hadn't
broken one of the Ten Commandments in decades, if ever. Secondly, her bad plant
karma would've killed such a delicate hybrid right away. I was surprised it
survived the car ride to Mitzi's house. Nannette must've kept the windows
rolled down the whole way.
The cork popped.
Mitzi beamed at this accomplishment, her capped teeth shiny as truck mirrors.
She poured herself a healthy fluteful, though it was barely two o'clock in the
afternoon, and joined me in the dining room.
"This is a
rare orchid," I said.
"Really?"
As if she didn't
know. Betty Sue's tightwad husband had moaned to anyone who'd listen about the
loss of that valuable plant.
"Why would
someone sentence it to death by giving it to Nannette?"
Mitzi's smile
waned while she concentrated on one of her periodic thoughts, then she flashed
the high-beams again.
"You can ask
her yourself," she said brightly. "I saw her out the kitchen window a
minute ago. Her car was just pulling up."
My pulse
quickened. Nannette wasn't a member of the Save Old Route 66 Committee, so I
hadn't expected her here. Did I dare confront her? The town fathers would be
arriving any second. Did I want them to find three middle-aged women in the middle of a
hair-tearing fight?
(To be continued . . .)
1 comment:
Any woman can identify with Loretta and Mitzi and their lifelong competition. What fun to read about it!
Now bring on Part 2. I want to know how the great orchid theft is resolved.
Pat Browning
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