Dirty Little Secrets (Romantic Mystery) Book 1 in the J.J. Graves Series

 

DIRTY LITTLE SECRETS

By Liliana Hart

Copyright 2011 by Liliana Hart

Amazon
Edition

 

 

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Chapter One

 

Fourth generation mortician. That’s a lot of dead bodies. 

I thought I’d be proud to carry on the family legacy, but that was before I knew the job would be hell on my social life. I mean, who wanted to date a woman who drained blood on a regular basis and whose scent of choice was embalming fluid?

Sure, I got a little lonely sometimes. It
mostly
happened when I was preparing a body in the middle of the night instead of snuggled up next to someone warm with a pulse. But dead bodies were my business. And I hated every fucking minute of it. I never wanted to take over the family funeral parlor. I wanted to be a doctor. Well, technically, I was a doctor, but I preferred to be one for the living.

My parents died early last year, and the gossip and scandal involved would have broken someone with a lesser constitution, but I’d managed to hold my head up. Mostly. It was because of my parents that I’d had an impromptu career change. The only thing I had left of them was the crumbling old Victorian I grew up in and Graves Funeral Home—believe me, it was a hell of a legacy.

I had little choice but to resign my job at the hospital, pack my bags and move back to Bloody Mary, Virginia—population 2,902. The good thing about owning a funeral home in Bloody Mary was that hardly anyone ever died, despite the rather macabre name. The bad thing about it was I had a shitload of student loans to pay back and not a lot of income.

Did I mention the budget cuts?

Ahh, my life was simple before the budget cuts. The mayor’s decision to be more fiscally conservative left King George County without a coroner. So, I, J.J. Graves, in a moment of temporary insanity, volunteered for the job. In all actuality, I was strong-armed into taking the position out of a sense of duty to the community and the guilt of tarnishing my family’s good name. Well, tarnishing it any more than it already was.

Which brought me here. Alone in my bed in the middle of the night. My bedroom so cold white puffs of breath clouded above my face every time I exhaled because I couldn’t afford to crank the heater above 65 degrees. My toes wiggled and fought for release beneath the nubby covers I’d tucked under the mattress too tightly, and goosebumps spread across the top of my skull and tightened the skin so much that it felt as if the follicles might snap off.

I’d been wide awake for more than an hour, thinking of my family, what was left of my legacy, and how much my life in general sucked. Not for the first time, the thought entered my mind that it wouldn’t be so terrible if I just packed a bag and left everything behind me without a word to anyone. I didn’t have any family to worry over my disappearance. No children to leave belongings to. Sure my friends would miss me for awhile. But eventually the people who’d watched me grow up would only have passing thoughts about that Grave’s girl whose parents killed themselves. All the while I would be starting a new life. Hopefully someplace warm.

But like I always did, I immediately dismissed the thought. It took more courage than I had to start over and leave everything familiar behind. I needed something in my life besides a half-assed career and a mountain of debt. A man would be nice. A man who’d be willing to have sex would be even better. But chances of that happening were somewhere between negative four and zero. Not because Bloody Mary didn’t have its fair share of men, but because I was just picky. Bloody Mary wasn’t exactly teeming with single males under the age of forty who had health insurance and all their own teeth.

I huffed out another white puff of breath and rolled over, punching my pillow and clearing my mind of all thoughts that didn’t involve counting sheep. I’d had trouble sleeping since I’d moved home. Maybe it was because the house was empty and made weird noises and my imagination assumed the cold blasts of air and the rattling pipes were the haints of all my ancestors shaking their heads in pity. Or maybe it was because the mattress was old and lumpy. Who the hell knew? But I’d learned to function on just a few hours of sleep when I was in medical school, so I was used to having bags under my eyes and skin that looked like it never saw the light of day.

The silence of the house smothered me—a heap of decaying wood and rotting shingles that crushed me with the weight of neglect and responsibility—so I burrowed under the covers, searching for peace of mind and the comfortable spot on the mattress that always seemed to elude me. I’d almost talked myself into getting up and starting a pot of coffee when the phone warbled on the bedside table.

I cursed out a mumbled, “shit” in surprise and flailed under the covers so my sheets resembled something along the lines of a straight jacket. My pulse jumped and throbbed in the side of my neck, and each pounding beat marched through the synapses of my brain until I became lightheaded with something I recognized as fear. I closed my eyes and let out a slow breath.

The only time I got calls in the middle of the night was when someone died. I hated death. I hated that my parents had left such a massive responsibility on my shoulders. And most of all I hated that I was the only one the dead could turn to. I missed the living. The dead made me think of too many things I wasn’t quite ready to face.

Against my better judgment, I answered the phone.

“Who died?”

“Very professional, Doctor Graves,” said Sheriff Jack Lawson. “You always assume the worst. What if I was calling to invite you to poker tonight at my place?”

“At five o’clock in the morning? Who died?” I asked again. Jack had been my best friend since we’d been in diapers, and I knew without a doubt he’d be the one person who’d search for me if I just disappeared one day. I squeezed the phone in a white knuckled grasp as silence reigned on the other end of the line. I prepared myself for the worst.

“It’s Fiona Murphy,” he finally said.

“Oh, damn,” I whispered, untangling the covers and sitting up on the side of the bed. The wood floor felt like a sheet of ice under my feet, and I drew them up quickly so they were back under the covers.

“To say the least.” Sirens and muted voices came across the line, and I knew Jack must be at the crime scene.

My teeth chattered—I couldn’t tell if it was from the news or the cold—and I gritted them in determination so my words came out clearly. “Where’s George?” I asked.

George was Fiona’s husband. He was the meanest son of a bitch I’d ever met, and Fiona had a new bruise every time I saw her. George was a gifted mechanic and owned the only garage in town, so despite people disapproving of the way he treated his wife, he had a hell of a customer base and enough money to build a house that was one of the nicest in the county. He also had big hands and a wicked temper, and there wasn’t a doubt in my mind he was the reason Fiona was dead at age thirty.

“George has already been picked up and booked on a first degree murder charge. We need you down at the site. The crime scene guys are almost finished. I’m warning you, Jaye, she doesn’t look good. Johnny Duggan found her in the ditch just off Canterbury Street on his way to work.”

I swallowed the lump in my throat and prayed to a God I’d stopped believing in for strength. “I can handle it, Jack. I’m all she’s got.” It was the least I could do for a dead friend.

 

Bloody Mary—Population 2,901.

 

Chapter Two

 

I shoved myself into long johns and a pair of grey sweats, pulled a black ski cap over my head and buttoned the black down parka I’d gotten on sale at Eddie Bauer a couple of years ago up to my chin. I put on two pairs of thick socks and my all-weather boots. It was fucking freezing outside, and I hated being cold. Only the dead were cold.

I grabbed my medical bag and the expensive digital camera I’d bought when I still had a well paying job, glanced longingly at the coffeepot, and slammed the front door behind me without locking it.

My Suburban was parked on the graveled driveway, the dull sheen of the black paint making it look a little worse for the wear. Not to mention the huge dent over the back left wheel where a deer had decided it wanted to commit suicide.

Suburban
, you’re probably thinking? I’d put my foot down about the hearse my parents had kept in the garage. It had worked for them, but I was satisfied with hauling bodies in a Suburban. I was a twenty-first century mortician, and despite what the gossipers had said, I very seriously doubted my parents were rolling in their graves because I’d had the audacity to sell their hearse on
EBay
. They were too busy hauling coal in hell to worry about what I was doing.

It took a few minutes to scrape ice off the windows and let the defroster work. Despite the fur lining my gloves, I couldn’t feel my fingers. I looked for any sign of life as I backed out of the drive, but the yellow glow of my headlights touched on nothing but solitude. The trees were naked and brittle—the limbs twisted, as if they were hugging for their own warmth—and the sky was a dark navy spackled with the fading light of stars as it edged closer to daylight.

I lived at the end of a county lane called Heresy Road—where rocky land sloped until it met nothing but the frigid water of the Potomac. The road was a mixture of gravel and potholes, it was private, dreary and I hardly ever got trick-or-treaters, vacuum cleaner salesmen, or Jehovah’s Witnesses. My closest neighbor was a mile down the road.

The town was still tucked into sleep for the most part, and I maneuvered the roads quickly—my headlights glancing off quaint houses, a red-bricked schoolhouse, and a library with a clock tower that drove me batshit crazy because it always struck the hour seven minutes too late.

There hadn’t been enough moisture left over from the rain the day before to cause the roads to ice over, so I pressed harder on the accelerator. I turned onto Queen Mary and noticed the lights were on in St. Paul’s Cathedral, which meant Reverend Thomas had already been notified of Fiona’s death. A smattering of people would be in throughout the morning to pray for Fiona’s departed soul.

When I got to Canterbury Street, it was crowded with vehicles and people, some curious, some weeping, but all had the glassy eyed stare of shock. Things like this never happened in Bloody Mary. I beeped my horn to get through and parked by Jack’s cruiser. His lights flashed a disorienting red and blue.

“Nice outfit,” he said by way of greeting.
I wasn’t normally a vain person, so Jack’s comment didn’t really bother me all that much. He’d seen me at my worst—hangovers, cramps, bleached hair that turned orange, and crying jags—and he was still my best friend, so I wasn’t really worried about trying to impress him.

I caught sight of myself in the reflection of the tinted windows of his car and grimaced. Just because Jack was used to seeing me at my worst didn’t mean others were. It wasn’t a pretty sight. On the positive side, I was relatively tall and had an athletic build, which was just good genes because I hated doing anything remotely athletic and I loved carbohydrates. My eyes were gray, my hair was black and swung just below my jaw line, and if you looked really close before I got a chance to buy a box of Clairol, you’d see the occasional strand of silver. The women in my family had a tendency to go gray early. They also had a tendency to die young and tragically, but I was keeping my fingers crossed on that end of things.

All in all, I was pretty average, despite my sarcastic wit and inventive use of the English language, which I had to admit, was pretty exceptional. But dressed from head to toe in my winter paraphernalia, with no makeup and the dead-eyed stare of someone who’d had a very small amount of sleep, I looked more along the lines of Sporty Spice does the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man. I was hell on morning wood.

Jack grew up the rich and privileged son of a tobacco farmer, and now he was the youngest elected official in the whole county. He skimmed just over six feet tall and he kept his dark hair cut close to the scalp. A thin slash above his right eyebrow gave him a piratical look, and I’d told him more than once he should thank me for giving his face a little extra character, considering it was my cleat that collided with his face during a baseball game when we were kids. (He was blocking the plate, I swear).

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