She shifted slightly and winced as pain shot up her back. Aunt Beth gave Mavis a long look.
"We don't need to solve this tonight,” Mavis said.
"I had a thought about our quilting deception,” Aunt Beth said, changing the subject. “We need to make up a couple of ugly dog-bone quilt blocks and make sure anyone who might encounter a Small Stitch member has one. As awful as that block looks, they might become suspicious if Sarah is the only one working on them. We need to sell them on the idea we're all making blocks for that quilt."
"Harriet for sure will need one, since she'll probably be asked to quilt a few of theirs before the auction,” Mavis said.
"Don't even think about how you're going to keep your quilting schedule. My shoulder is doing much better since it's had time to rest,” Aunt Beth told Harriet, referring to the reason she'd retired from long-arm quilting. “I can run the machine while you recover. You just focus on getting better."
Harriet felt her eyelids beginning to droop under the influence of the drugs the doctors had finally given her. The next thing she knew, her aunt and Mavis were gone, and Aiden was sitting in the chair beside her bed, in her darkened room, holding her hand.
"How are you feeling?” he asked softly when he realized she'd awakened.
"Like I've been trampled by a herd of wild horses.” She tried to smile.
"What am I going to do with you? Putting yourself in harm's way-again."
"I wasn't trying. Somehow, it didn't occur to me going to Joseph Marston's house was putting me in harm's way."
"Yeah, but you did know he'd been acting weird lately."
"Yeah, and hindsight is twenty-twenty,” she said. “Can we not talk about this right now? Do you know what's wrong with my back?"
"The doctor told your aunt you have a renal contusion as a result of blunt-force trauma."
"In English, please."
"Your kidney is bruised, but thankfully not broken. And you have a sprained ankle. You can expect a full recovery if you rest until your injuries are healed."
"It sure hurts more than just a bruise."
"The tissue of your back is also bruised, and they think you have a cracked rib. And by the way, a bruised kidney is nothing to be taken lightly. You're lucky you're not in the operating room having that kidney removed."
"Did anyone say what I was hit with?"
"Not that I've heard,” he said. “But then, I was gone for a while."
"Is your dog okay now?"
"I'm sorry I had to leave, but I'm the only one in our clinic trained to handle the skin grafting. It still could go either way, but we've done everything we can. Like a lot of them, he has an infection. He had large sores on his back, and he's just a little fellow. It's just sick. These hoarders are so delusional, they can't see how horrible their animals’ conditions are."
"I'm sorry,” Harriet said.
"No, I'm sorry. I shouldn't be talking about this when you've got your own problems."
"It helps, actually. I mean, I'm sad about your dogs, but thinking about them keeps me from thinking about Rodney and Neelie and Joseph."
"Do you think Joseph did this to you?"
"I don't know what to think. I was at his house. But why would he want to hurt me?"
"I doubt whoever did this was trying to hurt you. They just wanted to keep you from seeing what was going on in the basement."
"Which leads us back to Joseph. It's his basement. Assuming his mother and stepfather are still out of the country, he's the person who has access to the space. I suppose it's possible someone else was using it, but that still means he at least had knowledge of what was going on there."
"Here's a wild idea,” Aiden said. “How about we just let the police figure it out?"
"That's fine with me. I'll leave them alone if they leave me alone."
"It doesn't work that way, I'm afraid. But let's take one thing at a time. Let's you and me concentrate on getting you better."
Chapter 30
Harriet felt better when she woke up the next morning. In spite of near-constant interruptions by the nurses, the pain medication had allowed her to fall back to sleep easily.
Sunlight streamed into her room, illuminating the falling dust particles in the air. Aiden was gone, and her guest chair was empty. She reached for the glass of water on her bedside table and found a folded piece of paper standing like a tent in front of her glass.
"Aiden is checking on his dogs and Mavis and I are in the cafeteria having breakfast. Call us when you're awake,” the note read. It was signed by Aunt Beth. Harriet glanced at the clock and was surprised to see that it read nine-thirty.
"Oh, good, you're awake,” a red-headed nurse said as she came into the room. “I'm Heather, and I'm your day nurse. How are you feeling?"
"I've been better, but all things considered, I'm not too bad."
"We aim to please,” Heather said in a cheery voice. “I'll call for your breakfast and see if the doctor okayed shower privileges."
"I thought I'd do that at home later when you let me out."
"Nice try,” Heather said without missing a beat. “The doctor wants to keep you for at least a full twenty-four hours. You checked in just after midnight, but we don't check people out in the middle of the night, so your clock started at seven this morning. You might as well settle in and enjoy the room service. The doctor will be by later today to check your injuries and answer any questions you have."
"Great,” Harriet mumbled.
"What was that?"
"Thanks,” she said in a louder voice. “I said thanks."
Heather gave her a genuine smile and left the room.
"Well, the dead have arisen,” Mavis said to Aunt Beth as the pair came back into Harriet's room.
Harriet had just finished her hospital breakfast. The scrambled eggs were soft and fluffy, and the toast was crisp and warm. The orange juice tasted like it was fresh-squeezed, or at least was pure juice.
She was lying with her sprained ankle propped up on pillows and her head only slightly raised. She tried to scoot into a more upright position, but the pain in her side stopped her efforts.
"Is my sweatshirt here somewhere?” she asked.
Mavis and Beth looked around the room, and then Mavis got up and went to the tiny closet in the wall opposite the bed.
"Here it is,” she said and brought over Harriet's gray hoodie.
"What are we looking for?” Aunt Beth asked.
"Check the pockets,” Harriet said.
Aunt Beth did as directed and, after one false start, retrieved Rodney's small black notebook.
"What have we here?” she said and riffled the pages before handing the book to Harriet.
"I'm not sure, but I found it in Rodney's pocket. I think it's the same book he had out when we saw him in Tico's making phone calls. Hopefully, it's going to tell us something about why he and Neelie were in Foggy Point.” She opened the book and scanned the first few pages before flipping quickly through the rest. “Well, it isn't exactly a memoir,” she said. “It's names and phone numbers and a very few cryptic notes."
"Did you really think he was going to carry his ‘dear diary’ around in his breast pocket?” Mavis asked.
"A girl can hope.” She paged through the book again, more slowly this time. She stopped and pointed to a name and its corresponding phone number, tapping the page. “Jasmine. I'm pretty sure that's the person Neelie supposedly was staying with after she left Rodney and before she came here."
"One way to find out,” Aunt Beth said.
"My purse,” Harriet groaned. “My purse is or was in my car in front of Joseph's house before…all this.” She gestured to encompass the room.
"Don't worry,” Mavis said before she could get too worked up. “Your aunt and I went by Joseph's early this morning and brought your car here. We'll take it home when we leave tonight."