Authors: Jessica Beck
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths, #Cozy, #Amateur Sleuth
Once I was outside, I said, “Hey, Jake. How’s your niece?”
“This bug’s a little nastier, but they think they have it whipped, too. She must have picked it up while she was in the hospital. What’s going on with you?”
“Nothing much,” I said. “Oh, there’s one thing. I solved Peg’s murder while you were gone.”
“Yeah? Are you going to work on world peace next?”
“I’m not joking,” I said. “I figured out who did it and caught her.” It might have been stretching things a little bit, but it was still within shouting distance of the truth.
There was a moment or two of hesitation, then Jake said, “Suzanne, you’re not joking, are you?”
“No, and you can talk to the chief when we’re through if you don’t believe me. Care to guess who did it?”
He said, “I don’t have to guess. I finally figured it out myself. It was either Burt or Heather.”
It was my turn to be surprised. “How on earth did you know that?”
“Heather and Burt both thought Peg was rich, and they needed money. Heather is in debt up to her eyeballs with loans, and Burt’s hardware store is losing money at an alarming rate. I would have proved one of them did it, but I needed more time.”
“Well, I just saved you the trouble,” I said.
He said, “I’m proud of you, even if you shouldn’t have been meddling in police business. What gave it away? Did you find the poison she used? Did you track a clue down that I missed? What was it? Don’t be shy, I’d really like to know.”
“I saw some candy in her purse, and as soon as I realized that her hair was freshly dyed in the exact same shade of her aunt’s, everything fell into place.”
“Good work, Suzanne,” Jake said softly.
I asked, “How long will you be staying in Raleigh?”
“Amy’s not out of the woods yet. The thing is, you wrapped up the case, so there’s no real reason for me to come back.”
“I can think of one or two,” I said.
“Really? What did you have in mind?”
“You’re the detective, you figure it out.”
He laughed, then said, “I’ll see what I can do. In the meantime, try to stay out of trouble, okay?”
It was my turn to laugh. “Now what fun would that be?”
After we hung up, I looked in through the porch window at Peg’s possessions boxed up and ready to
go, and I wondered if she had any idea what kind of legacy her life of lies would leave behind. She’d stolen more than money from some worthy charities that needed it. And she’d lied her way into her own murder.
This time, karma’s bite was strong, swift, and deadly.
I just wished Heather hadn’t used one of my donuts as a murder weapon.
A thought occurred to me, something that made me smile.
I hadn’t realized Chief Martin was standing outside with me until he asked, “What is it? If you can think of something funny, I’d love to hear it.”
“I just decided I’m going to send Heather a care package as soon as she’s tucked safely away in jail.”
The chief frowned. “She tried to kill you, and now you’re going to give her a treat?”
“Who said anything about her enjoying it?” I asked.
“What exactly did you have in mind?”
“If I brought a dozen lemon-filled donuts dusted with powdered sugar over to the jail, would you be sure she gets them?”
He nodded seriously, but I could see a slight smile on his face. “Suzanne, you can count on it.”
I normally hated making more than one batch of donuts in a day, but at the moment, I was willing to make an exception.
Heather was going to get her donuts as soon as I could make them, and they’d be ready for her before she spent her first night in jail.
With every bite she took, I hoped she thought
about her aunt, and about where her own greed had led her.
It was a taste of justice by lemon-filled donut, the best kind, in my opinion.
Here’s a look ahead at
the next Donut Shop mystery, coming soon from
Jessica Beck and St. Martin’s / Minotaur Paperbacks!
I heard the first scream just as I gave a warm apple-spice donut and change to Phyllis Higgins from the booth outside my shop, Donut Hearts, during the nineteenth annual April Springs Winter Carnival. There had been whoops of great merriment long before then coming from the crowd of folks out enjoying the displays and vendors’ offerings, but there was a quality to this particular shriek that chilled me to my toes, despite wearing two layers of thick woolen socks and my most sensible shoes. I wondered for a second if it had been some kind of aberration, but then there was another scream, and yet another.
When I heard someone in front of the courthouse shout, “Muriel Stevens has been murdered,” I knew the Winter Carnival—and Muriel—had come to a sudden and abrupt end.
Christmas is my favorite time of year. I love the way my neighbors decorate their homes with icicles of light and erect trees overloaded with ornaments and tinsel inside. It’s no accident that my attitude is reflected in the selection of donuts at my shop, offering treats adorned with red and green icing and glistening
sprinkles that overload the display cases in honor of the holidays.
Our Winter Carnival—balanced precariously around Thanksgiving, Hanukkah, and Christmas—offers the residents of my small town in the North Carolina foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains the opportunity, even the excuse, to go outside and enjoy the brisk weather. During most years of the festival, we haven’t experienced our first snow of the season yet, but at the moment, the streets of our quaint little town were covered in a glistening layer of white. It was like everything was topped with icy frosting, a place nearly everybody in the world would visit if they could.
But now all that was ruined.
Phyllis dropped her donut in the snow when she heard Muriel’s name.
“Suzanne, is it true?” she asked me.
“I was standing right here beside you when we heard the first scream,” I said. “Let me get you another donut, and then we’ll go see what’s going on.”
“Don’t bother,” she said. “I couldn’t bear to eat it now. Poor Muriel.” I knew Phyllis was shaken. She’d never passed up the chance at a donut in her life.
As she waddled away toward the courthouse, I turned around and rushed into Donut Hearts. It was handy having my booth right in front of my business, and I’d asked my friend and the carnival coordinator, Trish Granger—owner of the Boxcar Grill just across the street from my donut shop—for the favor, which she’d gladly granted me. There had been some grumbling from a few of the other vendors when they
learned of my coup, so to be fair, Trish decided to scrap the previous year’s plan and start completely over. Business owners in April Springs got their first choice of spots, and vendors from out of town had to make do with what was left. It made sense, especially for me. If I was going to supply my customers with fresh, hot donuts, I needed to be as close to the source as I could manage. I had my assistant, Emma Blake, inside, ready to add hot glaze to some of the extra donuts we’d made that morning as we needed fresh supplies. I would have loved to make the donuts themselves as they were needed, but the process didn’t lend itself to sudden orders, and the warm glaze still managed to give the donuts an air of instant creation.
“What’s going on?” Emma asked as she peered outside at the people hurrying by the shop window. Barely out of her teens, Emma had a petite figure I envied, though I didn’t covet her flaming red hair. If it meant hanging onto my twenty extra pounds to keep my chestnut-colored hair, I was willing to make that trade.
At least we could watch what was going on outside from where we stood. My donut shop was housed in an old railroad depot, and it afforded plenty of views of the abandoned tracks beside us, as well as Springs Drive through the front windows, the main road in our little town.
“I need you to watch the booth,” I said. “Somebody just screamed that Muriel Stevens is dead, and I need to check it out.”
Emma reached for the telephone. “Should I call 911?”
“No, from the sound of it, it came from in front of city hall. I’m sure Chief Martin is already there.”
Emma frowned at me as she asked, “Suzanne, you’re not investigating another murder, are you?”
I shook my head. “No way. I’ve had my fill of that. I just want to go check on poor Muriel.”
“Fine, but come back as soon as you hear anything. Promise?”
“I’ll get back as fast as I can,” I said as I left the shop again.
The snow was falling again, picking up in intensity, and I wondered if that would affect the crime scene. I’d been thrown into an investigation or two in the past, and I’d been forced to learn a little about police techniques, if for no other reason than to keep myself out of jail as I dug around the edges of cases that impacted my life.
Muriel’s murder wasn’t going to be one of them, though. She was a regular customer of mine, but nearly every other business owner in April Springs could make that claim as well. Muriel Stevens was the grandmother-figure everyone loved, and I couldn’t imagine what would drive anyone to kill her.
As I started toward the courthouse, I felt a hand grab my shoulder from behind, and I wondered for a split-second if I was next on the killer’s list.
Then I heard Gabby Williams speak, and almost found myself wishing it was the murderer instead. At least then I could be openly hostile, something that I could never afford to do with Gabby. She was the town wag, spreading stories and rumors at a speed that put satellite relays to shame, and worse yet, her used clothing shop was right next to mine.
Getting on her bad side was a form of character suicide, and I always tried to tread on her good side, though at times it was a tough line to toe.
“Suzanne, where are you going in such a hurry?”
I tried to brush her hand loose, but she had the grip of a longshoreman, despite her prim and petite appearance. It would be easy to underestimate the woman, but I’d made that mistake before, and wasn’t about to make it again.
“It’s Muriel Stevens,” I said.
Gabby’s face went ashen. “What about her?”
“I heard someone say she was dead. Murdered,” I added softly.
Gabby frowned. “Why are we standing here, then? Let’s go.”
Her grip barely eased as we hurried up the sidewalk toward the courthouse. There was a crowd gathered around the town clock mounted on an ancient cast-iron pole, but it was clear no one was all that interested in the time. As Gabby and I fought our way through the mass of people to get a better look, her grip on my shoulder finally eased, and I broke away from her before she could reattach it.
I saw George Morris, a loyal customer and retired cop who helped me with inquiries from time to time, so I pushed through the crowd toward him.
“What’s going on?” I asked as I finally reached him.
“Hey, Suzanne,” George said. “At this point it’s still too hard to tell, but someone shouted that Muriel Stevens had been murdered, so of course everybody in town rushed right over here. I tried to help with crowd control, but the chief sent me over here.”
He looked miffed by the thought of his dismissal, and I didn’t blame him. “I thought I might be of some use is all.”
“It’s tough being a retired cop, isn’t it?” I said as I patted his shoulder.
“I admit it, ‘Serve and Protect’ kind of gets in your blood.” As George spoke, his gaze stayed firmly on the body in the snow. When folks nearby shifted from foot to foot, I caught a glimpse or two of Muriel’s coat, and I knew that there’d been no mistaking her, even from that distance. The jacket was a patchwork whirlwind of reds, yellows, oranges, and blues, something as distinctive as the woman herself had been.
Then I saw a touch of gray in the murder victim’s hair—which made me look closer—and said softly, “That’s not Muriel.”
“What are you talking about, Suzanne?” George asked. “No one else in the world has a coat like that.”
“I’m telling you, it’s not her,” I repeated, staring again at what had to be a wig. The black and gray hair had skewed a little—maybe in the attack—and I could see blonde hair beneath it, pinned down. If there was thing Muriel was prouder of than her coat, it had to be her lustrous black hair. Whenever a gray hair dared to appear, it was quickly either plucked or dyed out of existence.
Before he could ask me more, we were interrupted by a voice behind me.
“There you are,” Gabby said as she joined us. I moved instinctively away from her, but if she noticed, she kept it to herself.
After a moment, Gabby said flatly, “That’s not Muriel,” leaving no room for debate.
For once, and maybe the first time in my life, I was startled to realize that I agreed with her. “That’s what I’ve been trying to tell George. It’s the hair, isn’t it?”
Gabby didn’t even look back at the body as she spoke. “No, that’s not it. She brought a bag of clothes into the shop yesterday, and three hours later she was pounding on my door, a good thirty minutes after I was closed for the day. It seemed that she was under the impression that she had put her favorite coat,” she paused and glanced briefly at the body, “that coat, in the bag by mistake. She wanted it back, and I mean instantly. The problem was, though, when we went through the bag, the coat wasn’t there. She claimed someone stole it from my backroom, but I’ve never had anyone ever take any of my merchandise.”
“At least not that you’re aware of,” George said.
She put her ferret-eyed gaze on him. “Sir, I know my business, and I know my inventory. If I say something about my shop, you can believe it.”
George was suppressing a smile, though I could see it, but he somehow managed to keep her from noticing. “My apologies, ma’am.” I swear, if he’d had a hat, he would have tipped it to her.
“Can you even be sure the coat was there in the first place? Did you go through the bag the second it arrived?” I asked.
“Suzanne, I don’t have time to evaluate the things I’m offered immediately,” Gabby said. “I categorize and price the items at my leisure, not my clients’.”
“So you can’t be sure the coat ever made it to ReNewed,” I said.
Gabby frowned. “I just told you, it was never there.” She paused, then added, “Though Muriel was absolutely certain of it. She accused me of keeping it for myself, as if I’d ever wear something as garish as that, much less display it in my store.” Gabby Williams made a nice living reselling some of the nicer clothing items in our part of North Carolina. I’d bought a dress there once myself, and with our shops next door to each other, I saw her inventory more often than I liked. She was right, too. I couldn’t imagine Gabby ever selling something as, well, for lack of a better word, colorful as Muriel’s coat in her shop.