Rocky Road (20 page)

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Authors: Josi S. Kilpack

Tags: #Cozy Mystery

BOOK: Rocky Road
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“Like the boutique misrepresenting itself as a charity?”

He glanced at her, and then he nodded and took another bite.

“That was her idea?”

“I didn’t even know about it until six months ago.”

“Forgive me for being so direct, but how could you not know? You’re listed as the vice president of the LLC.”

“Aye, there’s the rub.” He nodded slowly and thoughtfully, stirring his salad. “Ever since Anita took over the management of the clinic and the foundation, I sign whatever she puts in front of me. I know I’m an idiot for doing it, but I didn’t think I had any reason to question her—she was my wife and so much better at the business side of things than I was.”

“So you’re saying she tricked you into signing the papers?”

“She tricked me into a lot of things.”

“Like what?” Sadie asked. She was growing weary of the cryptic comments, but she sensed it was Dr. Hendricks’s way of warming up to disclosing more information.

He snorted at her question and then sat up and put his salad on the ground. Sadie bit back a warning about dirt or bugs—he could at least put it on the table rock. Maybe she should hand him one of the cardboard lids. But the intent expression on his face kept her silent—the salad was the least of his worries.

He fixed her with a piercing look. “Obviously, you already know a lot. How much do you know?”

He was testing her to see if she trusted him enough to share what she knew. Surprisingly, she did. “I know about the boutique misrepresenting itself. I know that there’s something between Dr. Waters and Anita, although I’m not sure what, and I’m hesitant to jump to any conclusions. I know you called Lori yesterday, and she ran for Vegas as soon as she could because of it. I know she called Kyle Edger after she called you, and now I know that Kyle Edger was helping you with, as you put it, keeping you out of prison.” She paused, and then she continued. “And apparently he’s letting you stay at the cabin.”

He looked confused.

“What?” Sadie hated the fact that she didn’t know something he expected her to know.

“Kyle died of a brain aneurysm a few days before I left.”

Sadie couldn’t hide the shock on her face, and Dr. Hendricks continued before she could manage a response. “I thought it was strange that he didn’t reply to my last e-mail—I sent it the day before we were supposed to meet. When I got up here, I still had no idea what had happened to him.”

Sadie waited for him to continue and then gave him a prompt. “Why did Lori call him, then?”

“I asked her to try to get my file from his office or his wife or something—some way to prove that I’d been meeting with him. I thought maybe he kept notes on what we talked about, even though I asked him to keep it on the down low.”

Sadie looked at him for a few seconds. “I don’t understand. You didn’t know he was dead when you left, but you stayed here anyway? For two months? Why not find proof of your meetings right after you learned about his death?”

“I just ... I couldn’t go back.” He stirred his salad. “I was supposed to meet him here, and he didn’t show up. When I learned what happened, I ... I just couldn’t go back to that life. It was the last straw, and it broke me.”

“Maybe you could start at the beginning for me,” Sadie said when she realized that the bits and pieces weren’t adding up the way she needed them to.

Dr. Hendricks was quiet for a moment, and then he reached into the pocket of his T-shirt. Sadie tensed, immediately thinking of the Taser in her own pocket, but then she relaxed when she saw that the piece of paper he took out was a well-worn picture of his kids. He propped it on the ground so he could look at it while he explained what had caused him to run away from a life that, on the surface, looked nearly perfect.

 

 

4 lb. pork roast (picnic roast works best)

2 tablespoons brown sugar

1 1/2 teaspoons cayenne pepper

2 teaspoons cumin

1 teaspoon salt

1 (12-ounce) can Coca-Cola (not diet)

1 cup chicken broth

2 cloves garlic, minced

1 onion, chopped

1 cup brown sugar (more to taste, if desired)

 

The night before, in a small bowl combine 2 tablespoons brown sugar, cayenne pepper, cumin, and salt. Mix with a fork until blended well. Rub mixture over pork roast. Spray slow cooker with cooking spray, or line with a liner; add rubbed roast. Cook overnight on low heat setting.

The next morning, pour Coke, chicken broth, garlic, and onion into slow cooker with pork. Continue to cook on low. One hour before serving, shred roast, and remove any pieces of fat. Add 1 cup brown sugar. Mix well.

Use tongs to remove shredded pork from cooker. Serve over salad or rice, or serve burrito-style with toppings, such as lettuce, tomatoes, rice, sour cream, cheese,
etc.

Makes 8 servings.

Note: May be made on serving day: Follow directions as indicated but cook 3 hours on high heat setting before adding cola, broth, garlic, and onion. Cook 2 additional hours on high. Shred pork, and add additional brown sugar. If there are a lot of juices after first cooking segment, chicken broth may be omitted.

 

 

1 cup uncooked long-grain rice

1 teaspoon butter or margarine

2 cloves garlic, minced

1 teaspoon freshly squeezed lime juice*

1 (15-ounce) can chicken broth

 

Sauce:

1 tablespoon freshly squeezed lime juice

2 teaspoons sugar

3 tablespoons fresh chopped cilantro

 

In saucepan, combine rice, butter, garlic, 1 teaspoon lime juice, and chicken broth. Bring to a boil over high heat. Cover, reduce heat to low, and cook 15 to 20 minutes over low heat, until rice is tender. Remove from heat. In small bowl, combine 1 tablespoon lime juice, sugar, and cilantro to make sauce. Pour over hot cooked rice, mixing as rice is fluffed.

Makes 2 cups.

*Though fresh limes are always best, bottled lime juice works if it’s what you have on hand.

Note: This recipe works well in a rice cooker.

 

 

3 medium tomatillos, husked and washed, but not peeled (leave whole or cut in quarters)

1 1/2 tablespoons (1/2 packet) buttermilk ranch dressing

1/4 bunch cilantro, chopped

2 cloves garlic, minced or pressed

1/8 to 1/4 cup lime juice, or to taste*

3/4 cup buttermilk

1/2 cup mayonnaise

1 teaspoon sugar

1/2 teaspoon seasoned salt

1/2 teaspoon cumin

 

Mix all ingredients in blender until well blended. Chill and serve over salad. Store leftovers in refrigerator.

Makes 2 1/2 cups.

*Fresh lime juice is always best, but bottled lime juice will work in a pinch.

Chapter 28

 

Dr. Hendricks took a breath before he spoke. “When I met Anita, Jake and I were looking for someone to take over the foundation—we’d started it as a community service thing, but it had gotten so big and was taking so much of our time. We both had families, and our practice was growing. We just didn’t feel like we had time for it, and so we wanted to merge it with a bigger organization or bring on someone to run it for us, but that meant growing it to be able to pay for that kind of overhead. It was kind of a ‘fish or cut bait’ situation, and we were leaning toward cutting bait. Anita was what made us decide to keep fishing.”

Sadie remembered from her research that Anita had begun work for the foundation as an assistant director, but he’d just said he “met” her before that, which didn’t seem to fit. Sadie filed that question away, not wanting to interrupt his flow. “I’ve looked into Anita’s history,” she said. “She has an impressive track record with other charity organizations.”

“Yes, she does,” Dr. Hendricks agreed. He picked his salad up again and continued eating as if it hadn’t just been on the ground. Sadie forced herself not to think about it. “Her dream was to be the director of a nonprofit, and, at the time, my dream was not to be the director any longer. We hired her as an assistant director, but it didn’t take long for her to take on the director position. She was a force to be reckoned with, and she turned everything around. I was able to focus on my work, and she was doing exactly what she’d always wanted to do.”

“Did she become the director before the two of you got married?”

“Just a few months before. She’d been working for us almost a year and a half when she got the promotion.”

“And when did the two of you become romantically involved?”

“After she’d been working there for a while. I’d been divorced for a year by that point, and—”

Sadie couldn’t let him lie to her. “You already told me you ‘met’ her somewhere, and she mentioned a conference in her tribute at the memorial service, so I’m assuming there’s more to the story than you simply choosing her resumé out of all the other applicants and her just turning out to be such a rock star—which seems to be the story everyone believes.”

His shoulders slumped slightly, and Sadie prepared herself to hear something she’d find disappointing. But at least it would be the truth. “Okay, we met at a conference about a year before she came to work for the foundation.”

Their initial meeting, then, was somehow scandalous enough that they had hidden it—which meant it wasn’t a purely professional interaction. This change fit easily into the basic timeline Sadie had developed Tuesday night.

“You were still married when the two of you met.”

“It’s not something I’m proud of.”

“And it’s something you worked hard to keep quiet,” Sadie said, recalling what Lori had told her Tuesday night about Dr. Hendricks’s unquestionable fidelity. It was hard to keep her judgments to herself, but it was imperative that she do so. “Lori doesn’t even suspect anything.” At least Sadie didn’t think she did. She remembered Lori’s expression as she watched Anita give her comments at the memorial service. Had she figured it out?

Dr. Hendricks continued. “We worked hard to make sure no one found out—it would have ruined me. But I was very vulnerable when we met, and she took advantage of that.”

“Is that truly a fair reflection of what happened?” Sadie couldn’t keep herself from saying it—as much as she wanted to remain neutral.

He looked back at the dirt, and Sadie hoped she hadn’t pushed him back behind his wall of reserve. “No, I should have been a better man, a better husband.”

Sadie accepted his comment and moved the conversation forward. “It sounds like you and Anita had a good marriage, though, for quite a while. What changed six months ago?”

He stirred his salad. “Last November, I agreed to be interviewed for a research paper one of my patients was doing on cancer foundations for a college course. I knew so little about how the foundation was operating that I decided to familiarize myself with the details so I wouldn’t sound like an idiot.

“In the process of the research, I discovered that the boutique wasn’t part of the nonprofit and that in the previous two years, the foundation had donated less than ten cents of every dollar to actual research. The dollar amounts we donated were going up, but our percentages were going down. The other ninety percent had gone to salaries and overhead.” He met Sadie’s eyes. “I didn’t even know I was making a salary from the foundation—I thought the time I spent on it was a donation, but apparently I’d made just under a hundred thousand dollars a year, and Anita and Dr. Waters had made the same amount. I also learned the boutique was making money—good money—none of which was going to research as claimed.”

Sadie lifted her eyebrows. “You didn’t know any of that?”

He shook his head. “Doctors aren’t particularly known for their business sense. Anita has run the clinic, our household, and the foundation for the last four years. I sign whatever papers she asks me to sign. I was just relieved that I didn’t have to worry about it. But when I tried to talk to her about my concerns last fall, she patted me on the head and explained it away. But I was nervous about what I’d learned. I did some more digging and learned things I didn’t know I didn’t know—for instance, if members of the board of a nonprofit make less than a hundred thousand dollars a year, it doesn’t need to be reported—each of us made $96,000, and we’d been making that amount for three years.”

Sadie did the math. Three years with three salaries of almost a hundred grand was nearly a million dollars. In salaries. Not research.

“That didn’t count what we paid Anita’s assistant, the receptionist, building expenses, printing, marketing, and a dozen other expenses that were approved for nonprofits but seemed extremely inflated beyond our needs. I learned that the foundation had loaned Anita the start-up capital for the boutique—and that the profits were substantial but were not paying back the loan. She’s funneled nearly three and a half million dollars away from the foundation in one way or another over the last four years.”

“Where did it go?”

“I didn’t figure that part out before Anita discovered what I was doing. She tried to explain it away, but when she realized she couldn’t, she reminded me that it was my name on everything. She said that if I really wanted to make a big deal about this, it would take me down, and she would do everything in her power to help me sink.”

Sadie raised her eyebrows, imagining what it would feel like to hear your spouse issue that kind of threat. Dr. Hendricks continued. “Remember how I said that her dream was to be the director of a nonprofit?”

Sadie nodded.

“I had no idea that my role in her life had everything to do with that goal and nothing to do with me.”

“Why was being a director her ultimate goal?” Sadie asked. It was a question she’d asked before and found no answer for. “Why a nonprofit foundation?”

“Everyone loves a philanthropist. Everyone admires someone who’s making the world a better place, and all her work on other foundations had taught her how to get rich doing it. She got power, admiration, fame, respect, and money. Who doesn’t want that?”

Sadie didn’t, but she knew there were plenty of people who did. “So after the two of you had it out, then what? You said you wanted a divorce?”

He nodded. “She threatened to destroy me if I pursued it—divorce was not in her ten-year plan for the foundation. She threatened to charge me with abuse, which would destroy my professional reputation, and then she’d take me for everything I had. She’d tell Lori the truth about how we met, which would threaten my relationship with her and, ultimately, my kids—Lori has a heightened sense of morality that, even though we were split up, would—”

“I’m not sure expecting fidelity is ‘a heightened sense of morality,’” Sadie cut in. “I think most spouses expect it—you said yourself that Anita’s flirting with Dr. Waters put you over the edge.”

“I didn’t mean it like that,” he hurried to correct himself. “I just mean that even with us being divorced, she wouldn’t take it well, and I couldn’t afford to put anything else in the way of my relationship with the kids.”

“And so you did nothing about the fraud you’d discovered?”

“I prayed,” he said with a soft smile and an even softer tone. “For the first time in years. I begged for help to know how to get out of this. I stopped signing the paperwork she gave me—that’s when I noticed her laughing more at Jake’s jokes, touching his arm a little longer than usual, asking for his help with things. I tried to learn more about the intricacies she’d built into the foundation, but she limited my access. She changed passwords on all our accounts, on the foundation’s computers—even the alarm system for the foundation suites. I was effectively locked out of my own life, and I couldn’t figure out how to get back in without exposing her and, in the process, myself.”

“And then she was diagnosed with cancer?” Sadie wanted to make sure he didn’t jump too far ahead on the timeline. From what Sadie had read, Anita was diagnosed at the start of the year.

He shook his head. “She didn’t have cancer, what she had was a really great marketing tool and one more way to own me. How would the community react to my leaving my wife right after her diagnosis?”

Once again, Sadie’s eyebrows went up. “How could she fake cancer?”

“She’s smart. She handles all the billing and records at our clinic. She went to an oncologist in Vegas that I’ve never heard of—or at least she said she did. She said she didn’t want to use the local doctors because of conflict of interest. Who, other than me, is going to investigate and make sure she’s telling the truth? And if I can prove she’s making it up, then what? I expose her, and me, and risk everything all over again?” He shook his head. “And, from what I understand, the foundation took in as much in donations in the first quarter of this year as we did in the first three quarters of last year—due to her campaign to use her own situation as proof of how important early detection is. The woman’s a genius.”

“And you didn’t tell anyone the truth?” She tried to keep the censure out of her voice, but knew she wasn’t very good at that. What about the ethics of his medical practice? How could he not expose Anita for what she was? Surely some agency somewhere could help him. There had to be more options than just to stay or to leave.

“I alerted different watch groups. I notified the Better Business Bureau—I did everything I could do anonymously to try to get some attention on the foundation. I never heard back from anyone. I fell into a depression—I was barely getting through the work day, and I could feel myself slipping in my work, in my ability to focus, in everything. Which I think was also part of her plan.”

“How so?” Sadie asked, wondering why, if he’d sent these alerts, nothing had shown online.

“In March, she made me a proposal.”

“For divorce?”

“Eventually, yes. In the meantime, I was to remain as the head of the foundation, but I had to guarantee a personal loan to build a stand-alone cancer facility that she would run. I was to bankroll the enterprise, support her publicly, and endorse the growing services that this facility would offer. In exchange, she agreed that after the facility was up and running and financially stable, she would grant me a divorce based on ‘irreconcilable differences.’ She would not slander me or interfere with my medical license in any way. She would agree to a reasonable divorce settlement and do everything in her power to keep my relationship with Lori and the kids intact. She couched it as an offer I couldn’t refuse.”

“So you refused it by leaving?” When Sadie had first met Dr. Hendricks a few hours earlier, he’d said he should have killed himself when he had the chance. But he’d thought he was meeting Kyle Edger at that point. When had suicide felt like a reasonable way out?

“After Anita’s proposal, I contacted Kyle Edger. I couldn’t retain him because Anita had tight reins on the finances, and she couldn’t know what I was doing. But Kyle was willing to help me figure out what my options were. He told me he would do some searching to verify my information. When I realized Anita was tracking my phone calls, I started communicating with him via a new e-mail address I used only on public computers, like at the library or Internet cafés.

“A few days before I went on that backpacking trip, I got an e-mail about meeting him at the cabin. He’d found something he wanted me to see—and he felt we needed to talk in person. I left Friday and came here—well, to the cabin. I waited all night and then all day Saturday for him to join me. By Sunday morning I didn’t know what to think, but I went to the motel and used their computer to check my e-mail. There were no new messages, so I called his home and found out about the aneurysm and that his funeral would be held on Monday. When the woman on the phone asked me who I was, I hung up.”

Sadie wanted to ask more questions, but she was worried about interrupting him. Twenty seconds later, she was rewarded for her patience.

“Mentally and emotionally, I just crumbled when I heard what had happened to Kyle—I couldn’t live in my life for another day. I couldn’t endorse Anita when I knew what she was doing, and I couldn’t stop her on my own without being pulled down with her. And now the one person who could help me was out of the picture.”

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