Mudlark, p.1
Mudlark, page 1
part #3 of Lark Dodge Mysteries Series

Mudlark
By
Sheila Simonson
Uncial Press Aloha, Oregon
2012
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and events described herein are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locations, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
ISBN 13: 978-1-60174-141-7
ISBN 10: 1-60174-141-3
Mudlark
Copyright © 1993, 2012 by Sheila Simonson
Cover design
Copyright © 2012 by Judith B. Glad
All rights reserved. Except for use in review, the reproduction or utilization of this work in whole or in part in any form by any electronic, mechanical or other means now known or hereafter invented, is forbidden without the written permission of the publisher.
Warning: The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal. Criminal copyright infringement, including infringement without monetary gain, is investigated by the FBI and is punishable by up to five (5) years in federal prison and a fine of $250,000.
Published by Uncial Press,
an imprint of GCT, Inc.
Visit us at http://www.uncialpress.com
This one is for Eric.
A Note on Geography
The Shoalwater Peninsula is my gift to the state of Washington. In Larkspur, I inserted a fictional county on the northern California border. Nobody objected, so I have felt free, in this book, to edit Washington, too.
Residents of the Long Beach Peninsula will recognize some features of their own corner of the state. However, I made the long needle of land stubbier, with a little hook of expensive real estate at the northern end, where the peninsula terminates in the Leadbetter Point wildlife sanctuary. I subtracted all six towns and replaced them with two purely imaginary ones--Kayport and Shoalwater. The demography of my fictional peninsula, including ethnic composition, is deliberately different from that of the Long Beach area. The Nekana are an imaginary tribe. Shoalwater Bay is the old name of Willapa Bay.
None of the people or communities in this book is real, though the issues facing the Shoalwater towns bear a resemblance to problems common to all beach communities from the Canadian border to Brookings, Oregon, on the California border.
Chapter 1
It was still early when I came back from my run on Shoalwater Beach. The sun had not yet burned off the mist. Jay had already left for work and Freddy wasn't up. I showered, dressed in jeans and a long-sleeved T shirt, and dawdled around the kitchen. I was wondering whether I ought to start in on the living room wallpaper and reward myself with breakfast afterward, or fortify myself with breakfast first, when the doorbell jangled.
I kept my eyes averted from the U-Haul cartons still stacked in the dining room and opened the front door. "Hello."
A woman I had never seen before stood on the porch. She was short, with blond-streaked hair and wide gray eyes behind businesslike black-rimmed glasses. I thought she was about my age--thirty something. She didn't smile at me.
She waved a vague arm seaward. "I live over there."
"In the summer cottage? Come on in. I'm Lark Dodge." I stood aside to let her enter. She had moved in the previous week. I had meant to call on her.
She hesitated, mouth trembling. Then she lifted the bag she was holding in her left hand. "Do you know anything about this?"
I stared at the squidgy thing. It was made of heavy brown plush with a dim pattern and smeared with what looked like grease. "What is it?"
"A carpetbag. It's full of dead seagulls."
"Ugh." I recoiled. I had noticed a faint fishy odor, but faint fishy odors are common around beaches. So are dead seagulls.
"You don't know about it." She expelled a sigh that fluffed her bangs. "I apologize for being so abrupt but I'm scared."
"Scared?"
"There was a note with it. It was rather--" She cleared her throat. "I thought it was pretty hostile. I'm alone over there, and I don't know anybody except the real estate agent."
"Jim Knight?"
"Yes. Nice man."
Knight had sold us our house, too, and taken us home to dinner to meet his wife, who turned out to be a high school biology teacher. I liked the Knights. They were coming over for a Labor Day barbecue the following week.
I shoved the door wider. "Leave the bag on the porch and come in. I can give you coffee."
"Please." Tears filled her eyes. "I'm sorry. I'm not usually so gauche."
I ushered her past the shambles of the living room into my state-of-the-art kitchen.
"May I wash my hands? That bag was filthy."
I showed her the soap dispenser at the sink, and she scrubbed away while I poured two mugs of coffee.
"Cream and sugar?"
"I take it black." She dried her hands on my dishtowel.
We sat in the breakfast nook with its view of the pines behind the house and its sunny southern exposure. I had done the room in pale yellow with off-white tiles and soft yellow curtains appropriate for rainy weather but very bright in the unaccustomed sunlight. Everything except my faithful Boston fern looked a bit too new.
The woman glanced around. "This is nice. A fixer-upper?"
"The house? Yes. We came up from California in June and it was cheaper to buy than to rent."
"California? Oh!" She began to cry.
I stared then went into the kitchen for Kleenex. When she had stopped sobbing and was mopping her face and glasses, I said carefully, "California?"
"The note said 'California Carpetbagger Go Home.'"
I sat down again. "Not nice."
"No." She sniffed and replaced her glasses. "I'm from the L.A. area--Santa Monica. I'm used to living alone but not way out in the country like this. I keep hearing noises in the night."
"And imagining rapists and ax murderers--I know the feeling." I've never met a woman who doesn't know the feeling.
She took a gulp of coffee. "So I was edgy anyway and then this morning, when I let the cat out, I found the damned bag on my porch."
"Nasty. Did you buy the cottage or just rent it?"
"Bought it. I paid cash--$35,000. Can you believe it?"
I nodded. Having lived through the California real estate boom, I understood her astonishment at Washington prices. We had purchased the bungalow--four bedrooms up, one down, two bathrooms, kitchen, dining room, a huge living room, and an ocean view, for $85,000. I said, "You got a bargain--it's a nice little place."
"A steal. Thirty-five thousand wouldn't buy a doghouse in L.A." She was staring out the window at a crow cawing in the pines. "I'm an only child. When my folks retired to Arizona they deeded their house in Santa Monica to me. It's small--two bedrooms. I grew up there. I sold it this spring for two hundred thousand. I bought this place after one viewing, just made out a check. Maybe I should've shopped around, but it seemed ideal. Naturally, I handed over extortionate taxes on the rest before I came north."
"Naturally."
"Right. But I have almost half of the money left. I can live on that until I finish The Novel." She said the words with capitals.
"You're a writer?"
She gave a smile that was half grimace and wrinkled her nose. "Trying to be. I was an English major, but I've been working as a secretary for ten years. I was in a rut at the office, a relationship didn't pan out, and I've always wanted to write, so when these newlyweds made me an offer for the house I grabbed the money and ran."
"I don't blame you, but why here?"
"A friend spent a month up here a couple of years ago. He said it was quiet and unspoiled--and he couldn't believe the real estate prices." She swallowed coffee. "I was so happy, so excited. And now this."
"It's probably just some teenager acting up. We haven't had any trouble with our neighbors. Everybody we've met has been pleasant." I pointed in the direction of the mobile home south of our house. "The Cramers live there. He's a retired civil servant--something to do with the Washington State Fisheries Department. His wife's in a wheelchair. Lottie had a stroke last year, and Matt takes care of her. She's shy--the stroke affected her speech--but she appreciates visitors. She likes to sit there and look out at the ocean."
"Poor thing."
"Yes. Matt's a talker, though, so watch out. A big developer has bought the land beyond your house. Matt's afraid the resort they're going to build will block his wife's view. He was circulating a petition when we first moved in, trying to get the county to stop construction." I paused. "Do you know, you haven't told me your name."
"Bonnie." She blushed. "Bonnie Bell--sounds like a romance writer."
"Is that what you write?"
"No. Gosh, I'd die of embarrassment. I was an English major." She grinned. "Though I have been known to read a romance now and then."
"I like science fiction," I volunteered. "And fantasy, but not horror. I used to run a bookstore." I missed Larkspur Books. I had sold the store in May.
"Wow! That's wonderful." Bonnie was warming up. "I love book people. You can tell me all the facts of life on the business side. I'm probably hopelessly uncommercial."
"What are you writing?"
"Just your basic mother/daughter conflict." The gray eyes gleamed. "Plus your basic rowing-up-in-California saga."
"Serious or comic?"
She pondered. "Seriously comic, I guess. Confessions of a Mall Rat. That sort of thing. I'm having fun with the writing."
"If you enjoy it, your read
"You are so kind." We exchanged grins.
A thumping on the stairs suggested either an ax murderer or Freddy was descending. "My brother-in-law," I murmured as he entered the kitchen. "Good morning, Freddy. We have company." I performed introductions, adding, "Bonnie just moved into that house across the street."
He blinked. He was wearing rumpled sweats and his red hair stood on end. "Coffee?"
"It's made."
"Nnng. Thanks." He poured a cup and wandered vaguely off.
I smiled at Bonnie. "Freddy's not a self-starter."
"He looks about thirteen."
"He's twenty-one." I hesitated. "Twenty years younger than my husband."
"No lie. Half-brother?"
"Yes. Freddy just flunked himself out of Stanford. That's a sore point."
She considered. "Flunked himself?"
I sighed. "He's very bright, so he had to work at it. Don't feel too sorry for him. His father died a year and a half ago and left Freddy pretty well fixed. He won't have to pump gas. The dirty Trans Am in the drive is his. Freddy's been a computer addict since junior high with all the social disabilities that implies, and he fell in love for the first time this spring. It addled his brain."
Bonnie laughed. "Poor kid."
"I make him steam wallpaper off. Takes his mind off Darla."
"Darla is the girlfriend?"
"Darla Sweet. Sweet by name and peppery by nature. Darla lives in Kayport. She thinks Freddy's just a friend. She graduated with honors and is going to law school next month. Maybe Freddy will follow her to Portland."
"You hope."
I cocked my head. "Shower's running. He should be human in half an hour."
Bonnie had gone back to brooding. "Who else lives around here?"
"A lot of retired people on the crest." The crest was a ridge of sandstone that ran the length of the peninsula like a spine. "The mobile homes on the flat between the crest and the dunes are a mixed bag--summer homes for families from Portland and Seattle, and some year-round residents. Fishermen and farm workers. More retirees."
"Loggers?"
"Not here. They tend to live in Kayport." Kayport was the metropolis--about six thousand loggers, fishermen, and retired couples living on pensions. Shoalwater C.C., where Jay was working, lay outside Kayport, a drive of about fifteen miles. The town also contained the hospital, the high school, and the public library. The village of Shoalwater, at the north end of the long finger of land that formed the Shoalwater Peninsula, was really just a post office, a grade school, two taverns, and a couple of grocery and dry goods stores. There were ephemeral restaurants, boutiques, and souvenir shops. To the east lay Shoalwater Bay, to the west the Pacific Ocean. We lived three miles beyond the village, on the Pacific side of things.
"Who has the house north of me?" Bonnie was asking.
"I'm not sure. Jim Knight called it the old McKay place."
"As in the shipwreck?" The remains of the Mollie McKay, a small coastal freighter, provided the only permanent obstruction on the long featureless beach.
"There's probably a connection," I said. "A man lives there alone. We haven't met him yet, though I've seen him pottering in his garden. He keeps to himself."
"Sinister." Bonnie's face darkened. She was only half kidding.
I offered to heat up her coffee, poured a refill, and finished off the pot in my cup. "I'd better brew more. Freddy's blood flows slowly before noon."
She watched me fiddle with the big fifteen-cup coffeemaker, the kind that turns itself off if you haven't poured a cup in two hours and leaves you with quarts of cold coffee. "What does your husband do?"
The coffeepot burped. "Jay runs a training program at Monte Junior College. Did you drive up on Interstate 5? Monte's just north of Mt. Shasta."
She nodded. "Pretty country. Practically in Oregon."
"Yes. Jay's on sabbatical this year writing a book." He was writing a book on physical evidence in the era of DNA fingerprinting.
Bonnie laughed. "The place is lousy with writers."
I said, "It's a textbook. Jay's working part time at the college in Kayport, setting up a similar training program for them. That's where he is right now."
"And you're taking a vacation from the retail trade."
Actually I was spending the year trying to get pregnant, but that seemed a somewhat libidinous revelation to make to a stranger, so I just smiled and sipped my coffee.
I was a little indignant that I hadn't conceived immediately. My body was cooperative, as a rule, but I--or rather we--had been trying now for three months without result. I had even read a book on infertility.
By way of changing the subject, I asked what Bonnie had done with the note.
"Huh? Oh, the note about carpetbaggers. Dropped it on the porch, I guess. Should I go get it?"
"You probably ought to save it. Handle it by the edges and put it in an envelope." Cop's wife speaking. Preserve the evidence.
She grinned. "You've been reading Agatha Christie."
I hadn't. I rarely read mysteries, and when I do my taste runs to K.C. Constantine and Eric Wright. I let her assumption ride, though, and we discussed whether she ought to report the incident.
She decided to toss the gulls in the garbage, put the bag in her garden shed, and save the note if it hadn't blown away, but not to bother the police. Although Shoalwater was an incorporated town, it was so small the mayor contracted with the sheriff's office for police protection. We were outside the city limits anyway. The deputy in charge covered a lot of territory.
I invited Bonnie to dinner, and she said she'd take a rain check. That provoked the usual comments about the Pacific Northwest climate, though the sun was shining bravely at that moment and the temperature was probably eighty degrees. Bonnie left, and I dragged out the rented steamer.
Freddy and I spent the day removing ghastly red-flocked wallpaper, vintage 1965, from the living room. We got it all off by the time Jay came home. Early, around four-thirty, looking pleased with himself. He allowed that we'd done well by the wallpaper, which lay in nasty pink curls all over the wretched pink shag carpet.
"At least the living room no longer looks like a San Francisco bordello." I wiped my face on the sleeve of my shirt.
Freddy gathered up an armload of wallpaper. He was red from exertion and the stifling eighty-two degree heat. He'd been with us for two months. Long enough to acclimatize. "Lark wants to remove the rug," he said gloomily.
I laughed. "Not today, cowboy. Thanks for wielding the steamer."
Freddy beamed. "I'll take it back for you, Lark." He was rather like a plump Irish setter--he responded well to praise.
"I got it at the U-Haul place in Kayport."
"No problem. I have to shower first, though. I'm taking Darla out to dinner."
Jay took off his jacket and helped me dispose of the wallpaper while Freddy showered. As we drooped over the burning barrel I told Jay about Bonnie Bell and her beastly bag. It sounded like a Nancy Drew story.
He agreed that the trick was unpleasant but didn't seem to think it was serious enough to warrant investigation. That relieved my conscience. Jay sounded preoccupied, so I asked him how the day had gone. He had got his way with the college administration and was going to set up two tracks of courses--a certificate for people just starting out in police work and an associate's degree for professionals who were serious about careers in law enforcement.
Like most state governments, Washington's was strapped for funds, though, thanks to Boeing and common sense, it was not as near bankruptcy as California. Jay had persuaded the college authorities that many courses the degree students would need were already in the curriculum--sociology and history and report writing, that sort of thing. The dean of instruction wouldn't have to hire new professors.
"I told the dean I'd teach the civil rights course myself," he admitted.
"Hot dog."
He grinned. "I'll have your mother give a guest lecture."
My mother is a poet of note and a civil rights activist. I thought she could probably handle a classful of cops.
We spent the evening in amiable anticipation of another attempt at parenthood. Freddy returned around 2:00 a.m., squirreling gravel in the drive. Jay roused briefly. "Lark?"









