by J. C. Eaton
“What’s this about a cursed book?”
I tried to ignore Detective Nate Williams’s grin.
“No curse. Unless you consider wacky mothers a special variety. My mother is convinced that she and her book club are going to drop dead from reading some ridiculous novel. She started in with me last night and wouldn’t quit. Now she’s calling me at work.”
“I’m listening.”
“There are about fifteen or so members in my mother’s book club, and every year they give the librarian at Sun City West a list of their choices for murder-mystery reading.”
“Okay, fine. So this book came as one of the suggestions from a book club member?”
“Uh-huh. It was part of the original list for the year.”
Nate rubbed the bottom of his chin and leaned in. “What makes your mother so sure the book has anything to do with these deaths? From what I overheard, and believe me, I wasn’t trying to snoop, it sounded like they were all unrelated.”
“Three of the women died within days of each other and, according to my mother, each received a cryptic e-mail a few days before.”
“What kind of e-mail? What did it say?”
“‘Death lurks between the lines.’”
Booked 4 Murder
J.C. Eaton
KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.
http://www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Table of Contents
“What’s this about a cursed book?”
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
Teaser chapter
KENSINGTON BOOKS are published by
Kensington Publishing Corp.
119 West 40th Street
New York, NY 10018
Copyright © 2017 by J.C. Eaton
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.
If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the publisher, and neither the Author nor the Publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”
Kensington and the K logo Reg. U.S. Pat & TM Off.
ISBN: 978-1-4967-0855-7
First Kensington Mass Market Edition: July 2017
eISBN-13: 978-1-4967-0856-4
eISBN-10: 1-4967-0856-3
First Kensington Electronic Edition: July 2017
Dedication
To all of our friends at the Sun City West dog parks,
You kept bugging us to write a murder mystery about the dog parks, big and small. Well, we didn’t stop at one book. You gave us so much “fodder” we had to do a series. Enjoy! And please remember—This is a work of fiction!
Acknowledgments
The Sophie Kimball Mysteries would never have seen the light of day if it wasn’t for the folks behind the scenes who believed in us and supported us every step of the way. Our agent, Dawn Dowdle, at Blue Ridge Literary Agency and our Kensington editor, Tara Gavin, gave us those first breaks with Booked 4 Murder. We are, and will be, forever grateful to them for making J.C. Eaton a reality.
We are fortunate to have a topnotch team of “first responders” who review our drafts, catch our blunders and keep us on track. Thank you Ellen Lynes, Susan Morrow, Suzanne Scher and Susan Schwartz. Your eagle eyes are amazing. And to our “technical responders” Beth Cornell, Larry Finkelstein and Gale Leach, we could not have managed without your expertise.
Finally, to the original book club ladies in Sun City West who make solving domestic murders an everyday thing, we thank you for getting us hooked on cozies. Kenlyn Boyd, Polly Cameron, Audrey Ellis, Judie Ives, Ellen Janicki, Geri Lahti, Janet McNamara, Arlene Peterson, Louise Rossignol, Liz Walter and Gêne Stickles, keep up the sleuthing.
And to the entire Sun City West Community, thanks for giving us the inspiration. We love calling this place home.
Ann I. Goldfarb and James E. Clapp, writing as J. C. Eaton
Chapter 1
Office of Sophie Kimball, Mankato Police Department
“I’m telling you, Phee, they were all murdered. Murdered by reading that book.”
I tried to keep my voice low, even though I felt like screaming. I had gotten the full story last night, but apparently that wasn’t enough.
“That’s insane, Mother. No one drops dead from reading a book. Look, can we talk about this later? I’m at work.”
“Then you shouldn’t have answered your cell phone.”
She was right. It was a bad habit. One I had gotten used to when my daughter was in college and had all sorts of would-be emergencies. Now it was my mother in Arizona who seemed to have a never-ending supply of issues—the plumbing in her bathroom, a squeaky garage door, the arthritis in her right hand, a bridge player from her group who was cheating, and trouble keeping her succulents alive. Today it was some bizarre story about her book club. I glanced at the bottom of my computer screen for the time and decided to let her speak for another minute or so.
“Like I was saying, all of us in Booked 4 Murder are going to die from reading that book. There’s a curse on it or something.”
“Honestly, Mother, you can’t be serious. We went through this last night. Minnie Bendelson was eighty-seven, overweight, diabetic, and had a heart condition! Not to mention the fact she was a chain-smoker. A chain-smoker! Edna Mae Langford fell, broke her hip, and died from complications of pneumonia. And she was in her eighties.”
“What about Marilyn Scutt? She was only seventy.”
“Her golf cart was hit by a car going in the wrong direction!”
“That wouldn’t have happened if she wasn’t engrossed in that book. That’s what I’m telling you. She died from that darn book. And now I’m petrified. Of course, I’ve only read up until page twenty-four. I was in the middle of a paragraph when I got the call about Edna Mae. That’s when I stopped reading the book.”
“Good. Read something else.”
“I’m serious, Phee. You need to fly out here and find out how that curse works.”
“How on earth would I know? And once and for all, there is no curse.”
“You can’t say that for sure. You need to investigate. With your background, that shouldn’t be too hard.”
“My background? What background?”
“Well, you work for the police department, don’t you?”
“In accounting and payroll! I have a civil service job. I’m not a detective.”
As if to verify, I picked up the placard in front of my computer. It read, SOPHIE KIMBALL, ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE.
“You come in contact with those investigators every day. Something must have rubbed off by now. You’ve had that job for years.”
“Look, Mother, I promise
I’ll call the minute I get home from work, but I can’t stay on the phone. Do me a favor. Stop reading those books for a few days. Turn on the TV, listen to the radio, or find something other than murder mysteries to read. Maybe a good cookbook.”
“Who cooks in Sun City West? This is a retirement community. I’m going out with friends for dinner. Call me after seven your time.”
“Fine. And stop thinking about a cursed book.”
My finger slid to the red End button just as Nate Williams approached my desk. He had been a detective in this small Minnesota city for close to two decades and was counting the days till his retirement. At sixty-five, he still looked youthful, even with his graying hair. Maybe it was his height or the way he sauntered about as if he didn’t have a care in the world.
“What’s this about a cursed book? Some new case and they called your department by mistake?”
I tried to ignore his grin.
“No curse. Unless you consider wacky mothers a special variety. Come on, hand over your receipts for processing. I’ll make a quick copy for you. The machine’s right here.”
“So, what’s with the cursed book? Sounds more interesting than the stuff I’ve got on my docket.”
“Well, if you must know, my mother is convinced that she and her book club are going to drop dead from reading some ridiculous novel. She started in with me last night and wouldn’t quit. Now she’s calling me at work.”
Nate took the receipt copies and let out a slow breath. “And you don’t believe her?”
“Of course not. It’s just her overactive imagination. When my father was alive, he kept her in check, but he passed away when they moved out west years ago. Now it seems she and her friends have nothing better to do than speculate on all sorts of stuff—the government, health care, economics, immigration.. . . You know, the usual things that retired people talk about.”
“Hey, I haven’t even turned in my retirement letter, so no, I’m not part of the geezer gossip group yet.”
“Oh my gosh. I wasn’t referring to you.”
My face started to flush, and I quickly turned toward my desk to hide my reaction.
“Take it easy. I’m only kidding. So, what gives? What’s this book club death threat all about?”
“Gee, Nate, you sound more and more like a detective each day. Quick, pull up a chair and I’ll fill you in. I’ve got a break coming in a few minutes. Might as well put it to good use.”
Working in this department for so many years, one of the perks was having my own office. Granted, it was tiny, just a desk, computer, and copier, but it was fairly private if you weren’t bothered by the hallway traffic and constant interruptions. Nate had stopped by at a good time. Most of the workers were already making their way to the coffee machine for a fifteen-minute respite.
“Want me to run and get you a cup of coffee before we start?” he asked.
“Nah, I’m fine. You’re the one who’s going to need a cup of coffee or something stronger when you hear this lunacy.”
“I’m listening.”
“There are about fifteen or so members in my mother’s book club, and every year they give the librarian at Sun City West a list of their choices for murder-mystery reading. To avoid arguments, the librarian selects a different book from the list for each month and makes it a point to acquire some copies for the library.”
“Hmm . . . he or she isn’t in the club, I presume?”
“Correct. It’s a she, but that’s all I know.”
“Okay, fine. So this book came as one of the suggestions from a book club member?”
“Uh-huh. It was part of the original list for the year.”
Nate rubbed the bottom of his chin and leaned in. “What makes your mother so sure the book has anything to do with these deaths? From what I overheard, and believe me, I wasn’t trying to snoop, it sounded like they were all unrelated.”
“Three of the women died within days of each other and, according to my mother, each received a cryptic e-mail a few days before.”
“What kind of e-mail? What did it say?”
“‘Death lurks between the lines.’” I couldn’t tell if Nate was trying to stifle a laugh or clear his throat.
“Astounding. Sounds like a take on those old nineteen eighties urban legends where someone gets a mysterious videotape, they watch it, and within days they die.”
“You think someone is trying to scare a bunch of old ladies?”
“I don’t know what to think. But you were right. Your mother should stick to reading a cookbook or something.”
“She never went near one when I was growing up, and she’s not going to start now. Frankly, the only thing that’s going to stop my mother from dwelling on this is if I fly out there and make a fool of myself investigating.”
“Listen, kiddo, you’d never make a fool of yourself, no matter what.”
“I don’t know the first thing about investigating. I’m no detective.”
“The heck you’re not! The way you track down and verify receipts, hold everyone accountable for monies spent, and triple-check every bit of documentation that comes across your desk? If that’s not detective work, then what is?”
“You know what I mean. What does my mother expect me to do even if I fly out there? Take out a pencil and paper and start acting like Sherlock Holmes?”
“Nah, he’d use an iPad by now.”
“You do think this is absurd, don’t you?”
“Yes and no. Coincidental deaths maybe, but not that e-mail. Keep me posted, Phee. By the way, what’s the name of that book?”
“It had a strange title. The Twelfth Arrondissement. Whatever that means.”
“It’s a neighborhood in Paris.”
“How on earth do you know that?”
“You’d be surprised at all the irrelevant facts I know. But this one is firsthand. I lived in Paris for a year when I graduated from college. Couldn’t figure out what to do with the rest of my life and thought I’d take a crack at studying art. Needless to say, that dream evaporated and here I am.”
“Yes, here you are!” came an unmistakable voice that bellowed down the hallway. “I was looking all over for you, Williams.”
“Be right there, Boss. Gotta run. Remember, Phee, if anything turns up, give a holler.”
“Sure thing.”
I clicked the Refresh button on my computer and waited for the screen to adjust. Of all the crazy things. Why would the book club be reading about some neighborhood in Paris? It didn’t sound like their usual cozy mystery. Then again, there was nothing cozy about this.
As hard as I tried, I couldn’t stop thinking about that bizarre book and my mother’s irrational fears. They plagued me the entire afternoon. I mean, who in the twenty-first century, other than my mother, her book club friends, and my mother’s sister, Aunt Ina, would believe in curses? The only saving grace was that my aunt wasn’t in the book club. She lived in the East Valley, miles from Sun City West. Compared to her, my mother was the epitome of rational thinking.
Once when my cousin Kirk and I were ten or eleven, we were having lunch with our mothers at some restaurant after a horrid morning of clothes shopping for school. Kirk accidently spilled the salt shaker and my aunt went berserk.
“Quick! Kirk! Take a pinch of salt and throw it over your left shoulder.”
“I’m not gonna do that. I don’t want salt all over my neck. It’ll itch.”
“If you don’t throw it over your shoulder, you’ll be cursed with bad luck. Pinch that salt and throw it.”
Kirk refused, forcing my aunt to lean over the table and throw the salt for him. Unfortunately, she knocked over two water glasses in the process, both of them landing in Kirk’s lap. What followed next was one of those memorable family moments they tell you you’ll be laughing at ten or twenty years later.
In a rush to stand up, Kirk toppled backward, knocked the chair over, and landed on the floor.
“See, I told you,” my aunt said. “Nex
t time you’ll listen to me.”
Was The Twelfth Arrondissement my mother’s spilled salt shaker? I tried dismissing it from my mind till the moment the workday ended and I set foot in my house.
Chapter 2
I barely had time to put my bag on the counter and kick off my shoes when my phone rang. The voice in my head screamed, LET THE ANSWERING MACHINE GET IT, but I didn’t listen. I grew up in a household without an answering machine and you had to race to the phone or forever wonder what you missed. Old habits die hard.
“Phee, thank goodness you’re home.”
“We agreed I’d call you later this evening, Mom. I just got in.”
“Thelmalee Kirkson is dead. Dead. This afternoon at the rec center pool. It was awful.”
“Oh my gosh. Did she drown?”
“Drown, no. She doesn’t even swim. I mean, didn’t even swim. Just sunbathed and read.”
“Heart attack?”
“No, bee sting. Out of nowhere. She got stung and died from anaphylactic shock before the paramedics could get there.”
“That’s awful, Mom. I’m so sorry. She was in your bridge group, wasn’t she?”
“No, that’s Thelma Morrison. Thelmalee was in my book club. When the fire department finally removed her body from the lounge chair, do you know what they found?”
Before I could catch a breath, my mother continued. “They found that book. The Twelfth Arrondissement. Facedown on the small table near her chair. She only had a few pages left. So you see, it was that book. It’s put a curse on us!”
“For the last time, Mother. There is no curse. No book curse. This was a horrible accident. A fluke.”
“Four perfectly fine book-club members dead in such a short time is not a fluke or a coincidence. Sophie Vera Kimball, you need to fly out here and investigate. I don’t want you to get a phone call from my friends, or worse yet, the Sun City West Sheriff’s Posse telling you that your mother is number five.”