Books by G.A. McKevett
Savannah Reid Mysteries
JUST DESSERTS
BITTER SWEETS
KILLER CALORIES
COOKED GOOSE
SUGAR AND SPITE
SOUR GRAPES
PEACHES AND SCREAMS
DEATH BY CHOCOLATE
CEREAL KILLER
MURDER A‘ LA MODE
CORPSE SUZETTE
FAT FREE AND FATAL
POISONED TARTS
A BODY TO DIE FOR
WICKED CRAVING
A DECADENT WAY TO DIE
BURIED IN BUTTERCREAM
KILLER HONEYMOON
KILLER PHYSIQUE
KILLER GOURMET
KILLER REUNION
EVERY BODY ON DECK
HIDE AND SNEAK
BITTER BREW
AND THE KILLER IS . . .
A FEW DROPS OF BITTERS
Granny Reid Mysteries
MURDER IN HER STOCKING
MURDER IN THE CORN MAZE
MURDER AT MABEL’S MOTEL
Published by Kensington Publishing Corp.
G.A. MCKEVETT
A FEW DROPS of BITTERS
www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Table of Contents
Also by
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
To the extent that the image or images on the cover of this book depict a person or persons, such person or persons are merely models, and are not intended to portray any character or characters featured in the book.
KENSINGTON BOOKS are published by
Kensington Publishing Corp.
119 West 40th Street
New York, NY 10018
Copyright © 2021 by Sonja Massie
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.
Library of Congress Card Catalogue Number: 2021931990
The K logo is a trademark of Kensington Publishing Corp.
ISBN: 978-1-4967-2016-0
First Kensington Hardcover Edition: August 2021
ISBN-13: 978-1-4967-2018-4 (e-book)
ISBN-10: 1-4967-2018-0 (e-book)
For my grandangels,
Antonette,
Michael,
Eve,
Kris,
and Lillyan
When I look into your eyes,
I bless every road I’ve traveled,
rocky and smooth,
that led to you.
Acknowledgments
I’d like to extend a very special thank-you to a lovely lady, dear friend, and chef extraordinaire, Dany Foster, for “catering” the wedding dinner. As a private chef to the rich, famous, and vacationing visitors in the beautiful area of Tahoe, Incline Village, and Truckee, Dany is a gifted magician, conjuring amazing food and wonderful memories for those fortunate enough to sit at her table. https://www.chefdanyfoster.com/
Thank you, Leslie Connell, my faithful copy editor, whose friendship and contributions to this series will never, never be forgotten.
I wish to thank all the fans who write to me, sharing their thoughts and offering endless encouragement. Your stories touch my heart, and I enjoy your letters more than you know. I can be reached at:
[email protected]
and
facebook.com/gwendolynnarden.mckevett
Chapter 1
“You better live in fear, Savannah girl. Look over your shoulder in the daytime and sleep with one eye open ever’ night,” Granny Reid called out as she watched the shenanigans in the backyard through her granddaughter’s laundry room window. “That boy you’ve taken in . . . he’s a handful and a half!”
“You’re telling me?” Savannah Reid called from the adjacent kitchen, where she stood at the stove, preparing breakfast for her household, which seemed to be growing by the day. “I found a spider nearly the size of my hand in my lingerie drawer two mornings ago. Fortunately, it was fake. But before I realized that, I nearly had myself a heart attack.”
Savannah chuckled at the memory as she removed the sizzling, crispy strips of bacon from her cast iron skillet and turned off the heat. Her grandmother had given her that beloved utensil, which had been used by Granny, her mother before her, and no one was sure how many generations before that. It had seen a lot of bacon, fried eggs, and cream gravy in its day and had even been pressed into service as a weapon on more than one occasion.
The Reid gals were renowned, originally in Georgia and now in Southern California, for their ability and willingness to administer a serious skillet smackin’ when sufficiently roused.
Leaving the bacon to drain on a platter covered by paper towels, Savannah stepped out into the laundry room to join her grandmother and see what her newly acquired foster son, “Mr. Brody Greyson,” as he liked to call himself, was doing at the moment.
Trying to find a frog for her shower? Earthworms for the cats’ dishes?
No, she thought. He’d never play a trick, even a harmless one, on a pet.
Brody loved animals fiercely. It was people he liked to mess with, not innocent “critters,” as he liked to call them with his Southern drawl that was as thick as Savannah’s and Granny’s.
Savannah walked over to stand next to Gran and slipped her arm around the older woman’s shoulders. “What’s the little rug rat up to now?” she asked, peering out the window into her backyard.
“I’m not sure,” Granny replied, “but it appears to me he might be playin’ hide-’n’-seek with the Colonel.”
“He probably is. Brody’s been working on teaching him that. Dr. Carolyn told him it was a good way to bond with his new buddy.”
“Dr. Carolyn?”
“His veterinarian friend.”
“Oh, right. I remember him sayin’ somethin’ about her. Seems to think highly of her.”
“He does, and so do I. She’s scary smart, funny, and down-to-earth.”
Granny looked up at Savannah, a loving grin on her face. “Sounds a lot like somebody else I know and love. I’m not surprised you two get along so good.”
Savannah gave her grandmother a sideways hug, then turned her attention to her backyard. She spotted the small boy with tousled blond hair and a pixie face, which was flushed from the exertion of play on a warm, Southern California day, running
from one potential hiding spot to another.
Bare feet and tanned skinny legs flying, he darted behind the garage, then out again, over to the gazebo and through her flower garden.
She winced when he came perilously close to her prized Lady in Red peonies, but he deftly maneuvered past them and leapt over a bed of Martha Washington geraniums, landing squarely on one of her mosaic-adorned stepping-stones.
“He’s a spry one,” Granny remarked. “Thank goodness, or those pretty blooms of yours would be lyin’, flat as a flitter, on the ground.”
“I know. I told him once how much my garden means to me, and he’s been careful ever since. Though he does visit the strawberries more often than I’d like. I don’t think I’ll have enough left to make jam this year.”
Granny chuckled. “Somethin’ tells me you’d rather see strawberries on that youngster’s face than in a jar any day.”
“That’s true. I don’t think there was a lot of fresh food available where he came from, judging from the way he gobbles up every bite he gets his hands on. Obviously, his little body needs it. I’m just happy I can provide it.”
“You and Dirk have done wonders with him already. He’s blessed to be with the likes of you two. Good people who care about him. Really care.”
“We’re the ones who’re blessed. Other than a fake spider and some short sheeting, and the occasional and unexpected, cold and refreshing squirt from a water pistol, he’s a joy.”
Savannah grinned as she watched the boy head for the utility shed near the back of the property and the alley. “This particular round of the game is about to come to a happy ending,” she said.
“Yeah, I believe you’re right. Do you see what I see?”
“I do. A long, copper-colored tail sticking out from behind that shed, wagging up a storm.”
“The Colonel’s never been worth a hoot at hiding. He always forgets about his backside.”
They watched as Brody raced toward the shed and the waving appendage that wagged even faster as the boy approached.
“I see you! I see you, Mr. Colonel Beauregard!” Brody shouted as he, too, disappeared momentarily behind the shed.
“Here comes the tussle,” Granny said.
“The tussle’s what it’s all about.” Savannah laughed as, true to her grandmother’s prophecy, Brody and his quarry reappeared, the child dragging the 100-pound bloodhound from his hiding place.
As the boy, who was less than half the dog’s size, tackled the Colonel and forced him to the grass, the hound’s loud, plaintive baying suggested he was suffering greatly. But he always sounded the same, whether he had just received the bite of steak he had been begging for from the barbecue grill or was being denied the opportunity to chase Savannah’s cats.
Savannah could swear she saw something akin to a grin on the droopy, sad-sack face as Brody and the dog grabbed each other in an eyeball-to-eyeball wrestling embrace, then rolled together across the yard.
Brody squealed with delight, and the Colonel howled with equal joy.
“I’m so glad there’s a boy around to keep that mangy mutt occupied,” Granny said, laughing. “I’m too old to roughhouse with ’im that way. When he’s been over here for the day, he goes home and sleeps like he’s a hibernating grizzly.”
“Brody tends to wear everybody around him to a frazzle,” Savannah agreed, “including Dirk and me. But we wouldn’t have it any other way,” she added as she saw her rough-and-tumble foster son plant a quick kiss on the hound’s wrinkle-furrowed brow.
Savannah glanced at her watch. “I’m going to have to call a halt to the wrestling match out there if he’s going to get to school on time.”
“I’ll walk him to school, if you want me to. I don’t mind one bit,” Granny offered so sweetly that Savannah was sorry to have to decline.
“Dirk already said he wants to take him, so I reckon he’s got dibs. You have to get your reservation for Brody time in early.”
“I could pick him up when he gets outta school,” Granny was quick to suggest. “The Colonel and me, we could walk over together, then the three of us could stop at the drugstore and get ice cream cones on the way back. The Colonel loves it when I give him the last bite of my cone. I’d get him one of his own, but it gives him so much gas, he ain’t fit to be around man nor beast.”
Savannah leaned over and kissed the top of her grandmother’s hair, noticing how it glistened silver bright in the morning sunlight coming through the window. “That sounds nice. Brody’ll love it. You share the Colonel with us, it’s only fair we share the boy with you.”
“Colonel Beauregard’s as fine a pooch as ever there was, but I’m still gettin’ the best of that deal.”
“You are,” Savannah told her. “You might have to sweeten the pot with one of your carrot cakes sometime soon.”
“Be glad to.”
“One thing about the ice cream business, though. He promised Dr. Carolyn he’d go to her clinic at four and help her clean some kennels for an hour or so. Seems she’s got a busy day today and needs some help.”
“‘Help’ her exercise some kittens or puppies is more like it. We both know it ain’t the kennel cleanin’ he’s interested in.”
“Can’t blame him much. I’d love to have a job playing with kittens and puppies. It’d beat what I do for a living anytime . . . or don’t do at the moment,” Savannah added when she recalled that she hadn’t had any sort of private detecting for profit in a long while.
Even Dirk’s cases had been quite mundane. A break-in here. A drug bust there.
All in all, the sleepy little coastal town of San Carmelita, California, had been quiet—even on weekends when their beaches were inundated with hordes of visitors from Los Angeles.
Savannah was happy for her fellow townsfolk that they hadn’t been committing any serious crimes against each other lately. But she held the strong opinion that “quiet” was a second cousin to “boring.”
As boring as a house could get with a six-year-old boy, a bloodhound, frequent visits from a feisty grandmother, and Savannah’s little sister, Alma, planning an extravagant wedding to a world-renowned movie star.
There was plenty of activity at all times in the household, but lately, none of it had anything to do with catching bad guys or gals, and that translated to yawns for Savannah.
With all of her newly acquired parental responsibilities and her determination to help Alma have her dream wedding, Savannah had a lot to do. But not anything that got her blood pumping and her brain spinning, and she missed the “action.”
Granny nodded toward the kitchen. “I hear your man up and about in there. He’ll be hollerin’ for his breakfast in a minute.”
“Van?” a deep voice called out from the kitchen. “Where are you, darlin’?”
“Out here with Granny.”
“I smell bacon and coffee.”
Savannah chuckled. “Gran, it’s scary how accurately you can predict human nature.”
“You do somethin’ over eighty years, you’re bound to git good at it,” she replied with a sly grin. “I’ll go start the eggs, while you round up that young’un.”
“Thank you, Gran. Be sure to throw a bunch in the skillet while you’re at it. Don’t hold back. The boy eats as much as Dirk, and I never thought I’d say that about anybody.”
As Granny retreated to the kitchen, Savannah stepped to the back door and opened it. “Yoo-hoo,” she called out. “Brody boy, stop that wallowing around on the ground, getting mud and dog slobber all over you, and come wash up for breakfast.”
Brody froze in midwrestle, then with a great effort, rolled his opponent off him. Even the hound looked surprised at the sudden change of events.
“Sure!” the boy yelled back. “Be right there!”
With exceptional speed and enthusiasm, even for one as vivacious as Mr. Brody Greyson, the child raced inside, the dog at his heels. Savannah had to step aside to keep from being knocked over like a spare bowling pin.
�
��Wow! You must be plumb starved!” Savannah declared as he streaked by, followed by the baying Colonel.
“Yep” was the curt reply as he ducked into the half bath, gave his hands a quick rinse, then took off for the kitchen.
But it wasn’t hunger on the kid’s face that gave Savannah cause for concern.
No, it was the smirk.
Savannah had been raised with six sisters and two brothers, one named Waycross. He spent much of his childhood time and energy playing various pranks on his family, his schoolmates, and the tiny, rural town of McGill, Georgia, where Granny had raised them.
Much to his family’s embarrassment, the community’s general opinion of the child was: That Reid kid’s got a lotta nerve just bein’ a redhead, let alone a hooligan on top of it.
So, Savannah knew more than her share about mischievous boys and what a sneaky grin and a twinkle in the eye meant, when worn by a male six-year-old.
Something was up. As Granny had predicted, she would have to look over her shoulder and sleep with one eye open until she knew what.
Chapter 2
Detective Sergeant Dirk Coulter had worked late the night before on a fruitless drug house stakeout. He had arrived home after midnight, cranky and too tired to eat much more than a sandwich. So, Savannah wasn’t surprised when her husband asked if he could have a bowl of cereal while the eggs were frying and the biscuits baking.
Brody jumped up from the table and raced to the cupboard where the boxes of assorted flakes, crisps, and crunches were stored. He returned almost immediately with a box of granola in one hand and the toothsome grin even broader across his face.
There it is again, Savannah thought. Something wicked this way comes for sure.
Fetching cereal might be helpful, but the task seldom caused a child to smile, and Brody was grinning like a kid who’d just been asked if he wanted to go to Disneyland for the day.
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