it can be used as evidence.”
“So who does that big van belong to in front of Mrs. Savage’s?” Kitty asked. “It’s been there for three months.”
Old Mrs. Savage lived half a mile away down Middle Street, and even though she was a deeply unpleasant woman, Patricia loved her house. The wooden clapboard sides were painted Easter egg yellow with bright white trim, and a glider hung on her front porch. Whenever she drove past, no matter how horrible Miss Mary was being, or how detached she felt from Korey as she got older, Patricia always looked at that perfectly proportioned little house and imagined herself curled up on a chair inside, reading her way through a stack of mysteries. But she hadn’t noticed any van.
“What van?” she asked.
“It’s a white van with tinted windows,” Maryellen said. “It looks like something a child snatcher would drive.”
“I noticed it because of Ragtag,” Grace said. “He adores it.”
“What?” Patricia asked, overcome by a sinking feeling that one of her shortcomings was about to be exposed.
“He was doing his business on Mrs. Savage’s front yard when I drove by tonight,” Kitty said, and started laughing.
“He’s gotten in her garbage cans,” Grace said. “More than once.”
“I saw him raising his leg on that van’s tires once, too,” Maryellen added. “When he’s not sleeping under it.”
Everyone started to laugh and Patricia felt a hot flush creeping up her neck.
“Y’all, that’s not funny,” she said.
“You need to put Ragtag on a leash,” Slick said.
“But we never used to have to,” Patricia said. “No one in the Old Village ever put their dogs on a leash.”
“It’s the nineties,” Maryellen said. “The new people sue you if your dog so much as barks at them. The Van Dorstens had to put Lady to sleep because she barked at that judge.”
“The Old Village is changing, Patricia,” Grace said. “I know of at least three animals Ann Savage called the dogcatcher on.”
“Putting Ragtag on a leash seems”—Patricia looked for the right word—“cruel. He’s used to running free.”
“The van belongs to her nephew,” Grace said. “Apparently Ann is too sick to get out of bed and the family sent him down to look after her.”
“Of course,” Maryellen said. “What’d you take over? Pecan pie? Key lime?”
Grace didn’t dignify that with an answer.
“Should I go down there and say something about Ragtag?” Patricia asked.
Kitty picked up another cheese straw and snapped it in half.
“Don’t sweat it,” she said. “If Ann Savage has a problem, she’ll come to you.”
CHAPTER 4
Two hours later they bubbled out of Grace’s house, still talking about hidden messages in Beatles albums, and whether Joel Pugh’s suicide in London was an unsolved Manson murder, and blood spatter patterns at the Tate crime scene. As the other women walked across the front yard to their cars, Patricia stopped on Grace’s moss-covered brick steps and inhaled the scent of her camellia bushes, lying in perfect rows on either side of the front door.
“It’s so hard to go home and pack tomorrow’s lunches after all that excitement,” Patricia said.
Grace stepped outside, pulling her front door partially closed behind her in a halfhearted attempt to keep the air conditioning in. Which reminded Patricia. She made a mental note to call the air-conditioning man.
“All that chaos and mess,” Grace said, shaking her head sadly. “I can’t wait to return to my housekeeping.”
“But don’t you wish that something exciting would happen around here?” Patricia asked. “Just once?”
Grace raised her eyebrows at Patricia.
“You wish that a gang of unwashed hippies would break into your house and murder your family and write death to pigs in human blood on your walls because you don’t want to pack bag lunches anymore?”
“Well, not when you put it like that,” Patricia said. “Your camellias look wonderful.”
“I spent this week planting my annuals,” Grace said. “Those vincas, and the marigolds, and I have some azalea bushes around the side that are already blooming. When it’s light I’ll show you