Read A Basket of Trouble Online
Authors: Beth Groundwater
Tags: #Mystery, #a river ranger. When a whitewater rafting accident occurs, #it was poison. Tom King was a rich land developer with bitter business rivals, #The Arkansas River is the heart and soul of Salida, #including her beloved Uncle Bill—the respected owner of an outfitting business, #and infuriated environmentalists.Mandy cooperates with the local sheriff's department to solve the murder. But little does she know how greatly the case will affect those she loves, #who cheated on his wife, #refused to support his kayak-obsessed son, #but a man dies anyway. But it wasn't the river rapids that killed him, #Colorado. It fuels the small town's economy and thrums in the blood of twenty-seven-year-old Mandy Tanner, #she deftly executes a rescue, #out of whose raft Tom King fell. She goes on an emotionally turbulent quest for the truth—and ends up in dangerous waters.
Vince straightened and grinned. “Well howdy, Brittany.” He
kicked his horse forward until he was next to her. “Didn’t expect to see you out on the trail today. No therapy sessions?”
She smiled up at him. “I have some this afternoon, but we’re
short-handed after Kyle, you know …” She gave a sigh. “So, I’m
helping out this morning.”
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Vince’s smile disappeared. “Yeah, sorry to hear about his death.
Not a good way for any man to go. Can’t say as I’m sorry my com-
petition is gone, though.” His grin returned and he tipped his hat at Brittany.
Brittany looked up at him through her lashes and swiveled her
hips, but before she could reply, Hank called, “Brittany, help me move these folks away so I can take a quick shot of the Johnsons.”
Brittany went to work helping him maneuver horses until the
older couple in their group was positioned in front of the forma-
tions.
Looking harried, Hank glanced at Vince. “Not too much lon-
ger.”
Vince stood in his saddle to look back over his shoulder at his
column. The horses were blowing and shuffling their feet now,
too, as annoyed with standing still as his customers.
He faced Hank. “This has got to be your last photo. We’re all
tired of waiting. And we should have priority. My group’s bigger
than yours and we were here first.”
The young male honeymooner looked confused. “But we were
here first.”
“I meant our stable was here first,” Vince said, his face darken-
ing. “Gardner’s Stables just started running trail rides in the park this season. They should show a little more
consideration
to their betters.”
Claire saw that this confrontation could easily escalate, and
she didn’t want Charley’s stable to get into any more trouble. “The four of us don’t need our photos taken,” she said to Hank. “We’re locals and already have lots of photos of the Garden of the Gods.”
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Disappointment showed on Ellen’s face. “But, not on horse-
back—”
“That’s okay.” Claire flashed her a ‘give it up’ look. “Let’s just get out of these folks’ way.”
“Now you’re talking.” Vince gave her an approving nod.
Looking relieved, Hank handed the older couple their camera
and quickly mounted his horse. Brittany did the same and moved
to the south end of their group, while Hank moved to the north.
With a forward sweep of hand, he said, “All right, we’re head-
ing back. Turn your horses and follow me.”
“Finally,” the man on horseback behind Vince said.
Vince turned back to him. “Don’t worry, Mr. Englewood. We
won’t see them again today. And when you come back next season,
I’m sure this fly-by-night outfit won’t be in business anymore. You stick with us, the
established
trail riding outfit in these parts, and we’ll take real good care of you.”
Being the second to last rider in their group, Claire heard him.
She looked at Brittany, who from her furrowed brow must have
heard him, too. Claire wondered how many of these confronta-
tions with Peak View Stables Charley could manage before the re-
lationship between the two businesses got really ugly—or was it
already that bad?
———
Three hours later, Claire sat with Roger, Ellen, Dave, Jessica, and Charley on the shaded porch of the Gardner’s Stables trailer. They had just finished eating a delicious surprise picnic lunch that Ellen provided. After their return from the trail ride, she had told Dave to fetch a large cooler out of the trunk of their car and invited Jes-57
sica and Charley to join them. She laid out a gourmet repast of
oozing brie cheese, hard salami slices, baguettes, marinated olives and peppers, and large black grapes.
Dave had opened a magnum bottle of crisp white Riesling and
poured it into clear plastic glasses. Sated and glowing from the
wine and enjoying the company of friends and family, Claire felt at peace, for the moment. Charley and Jessica had skipped the wine,
since they both had to return to work, but they had eaten heartily, too, and seemed equally relaxed.
Good,
Claire thought,
they need a break from their worries
.
Charley leaned back, groaned and patted his stomach. “Thank
you, Ellen. That was delicious.”
His lazy smile disappeared, however, when a dark blue pick-up
truck drove into the parking lot. The logo of Peak View Stables
was emblazoned on its side. When two men got out, slammed
their doors, and marched up the walk, Charley rose to his feet.
“This doesn’t look good,” he said with a frown.
Worry furrowing her brow, Jessica stood, too.
As the two men approached, Claire realized one was Vince, the
wrangler who had tangled with Hank on the trail. The other man
looked much older, probably in his sixties, with receding gray hair, bowed legs, and leathery skin from a life lived outdoors.
“I’ve got a bone to pick with you, Charley,” the older man said.
“Maybe we should talk in private, away from your customers.”
“These are family and friends, Tom,” Charley said. He intro-
duced them all and introduced the older man as Tom Lindall,
General Manager of Peak View Stables. Tom introduced Vince as
Vince Donahue.
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While the introductions were being made, Ellen cleared up the
picnic leavings. She closed the cooler and signaled Dave to pick it up.
“We’ve got to get going,” she said. “I have an afternoon ap-
pointment.” The two of them said their goodbyes and left.
Roger raised an eyebrow at Claire, an implicit question
whether they should leave, too, but she shook her head. The two
of them were witnesses to what had occurred on the trail. Their
viewpoints might help, if that’s why the men from Peak View Sta-
bles were there.
Charley came down off the porch to stand in front of Tom and
Vince. “What can I do for you?”
Tom Lindall waved a hand at Vince. “Vince here tells me your
group held them up on the trail for almost twenty minutes this
morning. That caused him to return late with his riders and upset our whole day’s routine. You know damn well we have so many
groups going out that we have to time them like clockwork. I had
to scramble to get the afternoon rides out on schedule. That kind of thing can’t continue.”
Charley looked at Claire and Roger. “That right?”
“I don’t think it was twenty minutes,” Roger said. “It was more
like ten.”
Hands stuffed in his pockets, Vince looked down and dug the
toe of his boot in the dirt.
“And it wasn’t Hank’s fault,” Claire said. “The honeymoon cou-
ple kept asking for more photos. Hank couldn’t very well refuse
without pissing them off.”
“So he pissed off a whole column of my customers instead!”
Tom’s face grew red.
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Claire put her hands on her hips. “But—”
“I’ll handle this.” Charley frowned at Claire then turned to-
ward Lindall. “I’m sorry, Tom. It won’t happen again. I’ll talk to my wranglers, give them some advice on how to limit the photos.”
“That’s not enough,” Tom replied. “We can’t have these con-
frontations on the trail at all. What if some of your horses and
some of mine got into an altercation, bucking off tourists and injuring them in the process?”
Charley looked confused. “The two columns were kept sepa-
rate, weren’t they?”
Claire and Roger nodded, and Vince, after seeing them, reluc-
tantly joined in.
When Claire opened her mouth to say more, Roger put a hand
on her arm and shook his head. She realized he was right. This was Charley’s fight, and he didn’t need his big sister butting in.
“This time they were,” Tom said. “Who’s to say it won’t happen
next time, while the two groups are milling around at the same
spot taking photos?” He slapped his hand against his thigh. “This just isn’t working. The city should never have allowed another
commercial trail-riding business in the park. I’m going to call my good buddy Councilman Harvey and follow-up with a written
complaint.”
Jessica gasped. Her wide-eyed gaze darted between Tom and
Charley.
Charley put out his hands in a ‘calm down’ motion. “Now wait
just a minute. There’s no need to go that far. I’m sure we can work out a solution.”
Tom pursed his lips. “You willing to stay off Palmer Trail?”
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“You know that won’t work for me,” Charley replied. “My cus-
tomers have just as much right to see all of the park formations as yours. Why don’t we compare our ride schedules and routes? I’m
sure we can make modifications in timing that will prevent con-
frontations and keep everyone safe.”
“I’m not making any modifications.” Tom crossed his arms and
pushed out his chin. “We’ve been following the same routine for
nigh on twenty years now. It runs like a well-oiled machine. When there aren’t hold-ups like today, that is.”
“Well, then, I’ll see if I can make some changes,” Charley said
evenly. “I looked at your schedule and routes when I first planned mine, but I can make some tweaks, I’m sure. Give me a chance to
make this right.”
Tom uncrossed his arms and exhaled. “I guess I can give it one
more go. But if this happens again, I’m going to the city.”
Charley turned toward the trailer and held out a hand toward
the steps. “Why don’t we go inside the trailer? I’ve got a map with my routes on it on the wall, and a ride schedule there. We can have a drink while we talk it over. Jessica’s got a pot of coffee on, and we’ve got sodas in the fridge.”
Tom gave a begrudging harrumph and a nod. He turned to
Vince. “Can you amuse yourself for a few minutes?”
Vince looked at Charley and Jessica. “Is Brittany still here?”
“She’s up at the barn getting some horses ready for this after-
noon’s hippotherapy,” Jessica said.
Vince grinned. “I’ll give her a hand.” He headed up for the barn
while Charley and Tom went in the trailer.
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“I should go inside,” Jessica said. “I don’t know how Charley
managed to defuse that situation, and I’d better make sure they all stay on friendly terms.”
Claire thought Charley had done a damn good job of keeping
his cool and preventing a blow-up, but before she could say so to Jessica, Roger said, “What happens if two trail rides meet up again in the park?”
Jessica nibbled her lower lip. “I don’t know. Hopefully Charley
can find a way to prevent that from occurring.”
“I’m sure he’ll figure something out,” Claire said.
But she didn’t really feel that hopeful. Horses and tourists
didn’t follow precise schedules, and there were bound to be de-
lays on trail rides. How could Charley keep Tom Lindall from
complaining to the city, and maybe getting Charley’s agreement
voided?
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five:
a bad feeling
The next morning, Claire fingered the green ‘Gardner’s Hip-
potherapy’ T-shirt that lay in her lap after trying it on. “It’s not only a great fit,” she said to Jessica, “I love the color, too.”
She was sitting on the reception sofa in the trailer at Gardner’s Stables and Jessica was perched on the arm of the matching leather loveseat. Behind the reception desk across from Claire, a short
hallway led to a back office with two desks. The hall also led to a storage room, a bathroom, and a small kitchenette where Jessica
had made the cinnamon-laced Mexican coffee they were sipping.
“I’m glad. I thought green was good for a horse-based charity.”
Jessica put down her coffee cup and arranged her face in a bright smile. “So, what’s our shopping itinerary?”
Jessica hadn’t scheduled any hippotherapy clients that day, so
Claire could finally show Jessica her favorite Colorado Springs
clothing stores and boutiques for a ‘Ladies Day Out.’ Neither one of them felt particularly cheerful. But Claire thought some shop-63
ping therapy might give Jessica some much-needed relief from her
troubles.
“After I deliver a couple of my ‘Welcome to Colorado Springs’
baskets to a realtor downtown,” Claire said, “we’ll start at Silent Woman. It’s Ellen’s favorite home decor boutique and a really cute shop. Then we’ll look at the ritzy clothes at Drama. We probably
won’t be able to afford much, but we’ll have fun window-shop-
ping.”
Jessica clapped her hands together, trying oh so hard to look
excited. “I’ll be exhausted after all that!”
Claire forced a smile, too. “We’ll rest and eat lunch at Rico’s
Café in the Poor Richard’s complex, with its fun bookstore and
children’s store. That’ll fortify us for an afternoon at The Prom-enade Shops at the Briargate.”
“What fun. We’ve got to remember to pick up the invitations
to my fundraiser event from the engravers, too.” Jessica stood and took their coffee cups to the sink. “Planning the fundraiser and
getting the stable up and running was a lot harder than I thought it would be. Double-checking everything Charley did took a lot of time. I’ve needed this break for ages, even before Kyle’s death.”
“Why do you have to double-check everything Charley does?”
Jessica waved a hand. “You know men. They don’t have the eye
for detail we women do. Especially Charley.”
“Charley was pretty thorough about homework and stuff when
we were kids.”
When Jessica just shrugged, Claire worried her lip. Even if
Charley realized where Jessica’s constant little digs came from,
wouldn’t they eventually chip away at his self confidence? Claire 64