Copy Cap Murder

Read Copy Cap Murder Online

Authors: Jenn McKinlay

Praise for
New York Times
bestselling author Jenn McKinlay's Hat Shop Mysteries

“A delicious romp through my favorite part of London with a delightful new heroine.”

—Deborah Crombie,
New York Times
bestselling author

“Fancy hats and British aristocrats make this my sort of delicious cozy read.”

—Rhys Bowen,
New York Times
bestselling author of the Royal Spyness Mysteries

“Brimming with McKinlay's trademark wit and snappy one-liners, Anglophiles will love this thoroughly entertaining new murder mystery series. A hat trick of love, laughter, and suspense, and another feather in [Jenn McKinlay's] cap.”

—Hannah Dennison, author of the Vicky Hill Exclusive! Mysteries

“Delightful.”

—
Publishers Weekly

“Always entertaining.”

—Kings River Life Magazine

“The mystery itself was captivating, with plenty of red herrings to keep the reader guessing. The resolution was clever and made perfect sense in the end . . . I highly recommend this to those who enjoy all things English and appreciate a strong protagonist.”

—Open Book Society

“McKinlay has another winner on her hands.”

—Fresh Fiction

Berkley Prime Crime titles by Jenn McKinlay

Cupcake Bakery Mysteries

SPRINKLE WITH MURDER

BUTTERCREAM BUMP OFF

DEATH BY THE DOZEN

RED VELVET REVENGE

GOING, GOING, GANACHE

SUGAR AND ICED

DARK CHOCOLATE DEMISE

Library Lover's Mysteries

BOOKS CAN BE DECEIVING

DUE OR DIE

BOOK, LINE, AND SINKER

READ IT AND WEEP

ON BORROWED TIME

A LIKELY STORY

Hat Shop Mysteries

CLOCHE AND DAGGER

DEATH OF A MAD HATTER

AT THE DROP OF A HAT

COPY CAP MURDER

An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC

375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014

COPY CAP MURDER

A Berkley Prime Crime Book / published by arrangement with the author

Copyright © 2016 by Jennifer McKinlay Orf.

Excerpt from
Vanilla Beaned
by Jennifer McKinlay copyright © 2016 by Jennifer McKinlay Orf.

Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

BERKLEY® PRIME CRIME and the PRIME CRIME design are trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

For more information, visit
penguin.com
.

eBook ISBN: 978-0-698-18779-5

PUBLISHING HISTORY

Berkley Prime Crime mass-market edition / January 2016

Cover illustration by Robert Steele.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

Version_1

For my son, Beckett Orf.
With your quick wit and compassionate heart, you are one of my very favorite people. I am so proud of the fine man you are becoming and I look forward to watching you pursue your own happiness as you go forth in life. Love you forever.

Acknowledgments

Setting a mystery series in a London hat shop was such a leap of faith for me. I didn't know if I could write a book in a foreign setting, about a business of which I know nothing and in first person no less. I have come to love this series, and I am so tickled by all of the readers who have told me that they love it as well. Thank you all so much!

I want to thank my editor, Kate Seaver, for never doubting me and Katherine Pelz for keeping track of the details. Special kudos to the art department for the amazing watercolor covers that capture the setting so well.

I also want to raise a glass to my travel buddies Beckett and Wyatt Orf and Susan McKinlay for hiking all over London to help me with my research. Lastly, special thanks to the Hub, Chris Hansen Orf, for encouraging me to go wherever the stories take me. I love you all.

Chapter 1

There was a sneaky draft taunting me while I worked the front counter at Mim's Whims, the hat shop I co-own with my cousin Vivian Tremont. It slipped through the cracks of our old building and snuck up on me; sliding beneath the collar of my shirt with its cold fingers and making me shiver.

Well, two could play this game. I had stopped by the Tool Shop in Marylebone over by Regents Park and picked myself up a caulking gun and the junk you put in it. I felt like one of Charlie's Angels with my caulk gun on my hip, filling in any gap that allowed November to blow its wintery breath across my skin.

I had already filled four cracks when I felt another gust of chilly air. I pulled my caulk gun out of my tool belt and whirled around, ready to fire goop into the offending orifice.

“Blimey, don't shoot, Scarlett. I just had this suit pressed.” The handsome man who entered the shop slowly raised his hands in the air as if this would make me less likely to blast him.

“Give me one good reason why I shouldn't,” I said. I did not lower the gun; instead I squinted at Harrison Wentworth over the top of it as if I were adjusting my aim while I tried to ignore the ridiculous fluttery feeling that filled my chest at the sight of him.

“Rough day, Ginger?” he asked. His voice was kind when he used my nickname but his eyes were laughing at me and it looked like his lips weren't far behind as he pressed them together as if to keep the guffaws in.

“Yuck it up, Harry,” I said. I liked to use his nickname, too, the one he'd gone by when we were kids. The one he didn't care for now. I holstered the caulk shooter. “You're not the one freezing to death in this drafty old building.”

“It's Harrison,” he corrected me. “And I think it's actually quite toasty in here.”

He shrugged off his overcoat and draped it over his arm. “Maybe you should wear more layers.”

I glanced down at my outfit. I had on a cashmere heather gray turtleneck, a black wool cardigan and a black corduroy miniskirt over thick gray tights paired with my favorite black riding boots.

“I'm pretty sure the only people wearing more clothes than me this early in November live in the polar regions,” I said.

This time he did laugh. “Scarlett Parker, your Florida is showing.”

“It is, isn't it?” I asked. “What I wouldn't give for a martini on the beach right now.”

“I can't offer you that, but I can give you a mulled wine and a bonfire in Kensington,” he said.

“No palm trees?” I asked.

“No, 'fraid not.”

“No sand between my toes?”

“No.”

“No bikini?”

“No, damn shame,” he said.

“Actually, that's a high point,” I said. “With this ghostly complexion I've got going I'd scare even the sharks away.”

“I don't think anyone in their right mind would notice your complexion if you went trotting by them in a swimsuit,” he said. The look he gave me scorched.

And that right there was the trouble with Harry. He gets me so flustered I can't even think. Yes, it could be his charming British accent or his wavy brown hair, his broad shoulders and his bright green eyes, but I think it was more than that. Honestly, I liked Harry for more than the swanky packaging. I liked him for himself.

I liked the way he was unfailingly polite to everyone from waiters to bus drivers to elderly ladies in the street. I loved the sound of his laugh and how he always seemed delighted to find himself laughing and it made him laugh even harder. I enjoyed the way he whistled when he made tea, even though he was not the most gifted person in the whistling arts. And I loved how gentle he was with the young children and pets we frequently ran into on walks in Hyde Park. Even his own particular scent, a manly bay rum sort of smell, had worked
its way into my head and I found any man who didn't smell like Harry was lacking.

“Well, what do you say?” he asked.

“I don't know,” I hesitated.

First, I needed to be clear that this was not a date. Yeah, I know he was the perfect male but that didn't mean I was ready to date. My mother, bless her heart, had convinced me to go one whole year without dating anyone at all. This may not sound significant but I had never gone more than two weeks between boyfriends before, so yeah, kind of a big deal.

Why did I agree to my mother's crazy suggestion? Good question. True story, funny story, okay, it isn't funny to me yet, but I've been assured that it will be someday. In a nut, my last boyfriend and I had a breakup of epic proportions, the kind that found a video of me, aka the party crasher, throwing fistfuls of wedding anniversary cake at him.

Yes, you read that right. My boyfriend was married, not to me, and I didn't take the news very well. It went viral on the Internet and I pretty much had to flee the state of Florida and, well, the continent of North America to save face. Talk about your walk of shame.

Needless to say when my cousin Viv sent me a one-way ticket to London encouraging me to take up my half of the millinery business we had inherited from our grandmother Mim, I was all in. It's been eight months now and it's almost begun to feel like home.

I love my cousin and our friends, dearly, but as the holiday season approached, and the cold air took up permanent residence in our abode, I was surprised to find I was feeling more homesick than I had expected. And I did not want to throw myself at Harrison in a weak moment
of pitiful loneliness, so I needed to be very clear on the boundaries of his suggested mulled wine and bonfire.

“How does one dress for a bonfire?” I asked.

Yes, this was my pitiful attempt to get more information. Harry knew I wasn't dating and he'd said he was willing to wait, which I hadn't believed, but it had been months and as far as I knew he wasn't dating anyone else. Another point in his favor, unless this was his sly way of getting me to go on a date without actually asking me on a date; boys can be sneaky like that, you know.

“Bonfire?” Viv asked as she entered the store front from the workroom in back. “Who's dressing for a bonfire?”

“We all are,” Harrison said. “My company is having a huge Guy Fawkes party and you're all invited.”

“Me, too, yeah?” Fiona Felton, Viv's apprentice, asked as she followed Viv into the room.

“Absolutely,” Harrison said.

Now I was irritated that it had not been a covert way to ask me out. I'm impossible to please, yes, I know.

“Who is Guy Fawkes?” I asked.

All three of them turned to look at me. This was another one of those moments where I just felt utterly, boorishly, ignorantly American.

“Ginger, really?” Harrison asked.

“Do you know who Bigfoot Wallace is?” I countered.

“Basketball player,” he guessed.

“No.” I laughed. “He's an American folk hero, so don't be judgy just because I don't know who Guy Fawkes is.”

“Was,” Fee said. She blew an orange corkscrew curl out of her eyes and smiled. “He failed to blow up Parliament in 1605.”

“Oh, he does have Bigfoot Wallace beat then,” I said. “Wallace was a Texas Ranger, one of the good guys actually.”

“Guy Fawkes night is bonfire night,” Viv said. She looked delighted as she looped her arm through mine. “You've never been here for bonfire night before, this will be so much fun.”

For Viv alone I would freeze my tail feathers off and go to the bonfire. Things had been strained between us for the past several weeks. You see, Viv is the eccentric artist in our business while I am more the people person. She and Fee create amazing hats for people and I charm them into buying them. It's a system that works for us.

Unfortunately, Viv takes after our grandmother in more than just her creativity. She is impulsive, rash, scatterbrained, impetuous and reckless, especially when chasing down some crazy artistic whim or another. Most recently, she had leveled me with the news that she is married. Yes, married.

Shocking, right? It wouldn't be so bad but so far she has refused to give me any details. I don't know his name, where he's from, how they met, how long they've been married, or where he is right now. I badgered, cajoled, begged, pleaded, whined, stomped my feet and bellowed, but Viv could not be moved. She has refused to tell me absolutely anything about her husband. Not one darn thing. It has sort of festered between us like a hot boil because, yeah, we can be like that sometimes.

What's worse is the fact that Harry knew about her marriage and he never, not once, even hinted to me about it. I was still sore at him for that, which was another reason I had been keeping him at arm's length. I was still a bit miffed
at him, even though he had assured me that he knew no particulars about the marriage, just that it had happened.

“Where's the party?” Viv asked.

“My boss's house in Kensington,” Harrison said. “He's hoping to make a splash in the society pages.”

“We can wear some hats from the shop,” Fee said. “It'll be a nice opportunity to advertise our creations amongst Harrison's posh clients.”

“I thought
we
were his posh clients,” I teased.

“Well, there's certainly no one quite like you . . . three,” Harrison said.

His gaze moved away from me to include the others and again I was charmed stupid by his ability to make me feel that I alone had his attention while I admired his sensitivity in including the others, who were actually much more attractive than me.

I glanced at Viv, with her long blond curls, big blue eyes and curvy figure; she was a woman who turned heads everywhere she went. And then Fee, with her West Indies heritage, boasted a lovely dark brown complexion and a model's figure, tall and thin, that she topped off with her amazing hair, which she wore in a curly bob that she liked to streak with unusual colors; currently it was orange. I'd seen men literally walk into walls when she passed by. Then there was me, medium height, average figure, too many freckles to count and shoulder-length auburn hair that was on the thin side. I most definitely got by on my personality.

Still, Harrison was right. We made a threesome that was hard to ignore, mostly because Viv made us wear her most outrageous hats whenever we went anywhere together. I wondered if that was why he had invited us.

“Aren't we a bit small scale to be invited to your boss's shindig?” I asked.

“Ginger, you're overthinking it,” Harry said. “It's a bonfire with music, mulled wine and a view of the city's fireworks.”

Both Fee and Viv nodded in agreement as if I was being silly for thinking that a bunch of milliners at an investment broker's party was weird. But they didn't see what I saw, which was that Harry wasn't meeting my eyes.

Perhaps because I hadn't dated him and gotten bored with him just yet, I spent an inordinate amount of time thinking about Harrison Wentworth and covertly studying the man who took up entirely too much of my head space. In any case, I knew him and I knew he was hiding something. I was sure of it. And now, no matter what crazy creation Viv wanted to slap onto my head, nothing could keep me from attending the party.

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