Die Noon (Goodnight Mysteries--Book 1)

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Die Noon (Goodnight Mysteries--Book 1) Page 1

by Elise Sax




  Die

  Noon

  book one of the goodnight mysteries series

  elise sax

  Die Noon (Goodnight Mysteries– Book 1) is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2018 by Elise Sax

  All rights reserved.

  ISBN: 978-1724740700

  Published in the United States by 13 Lakes Publishing

  Cover design: Elizabeth Mackey

  Edited by: Novel Needs

  Formatted by: Jesse Kimmel-Freeman

  Printed in the United States of America

  elisesax.com

  [email protected]

  http://elisesax.com/mailing-list.php

  https://www.facebook.com/ei.sax.9

  @theelisesax

  For my cousin, Sareet, who went to New Mexico with me and carried my suitcase.

  Also by Elise Sax

  Matchmaker Mysteries Series

  Matchmaking Advice from Your Grandma Zelda

  Road to Matchmaker

  An Affair to Dismember

  Citizen Pain

  The Wizards of Saws

  Field of Screams

  From Fear to Eternity

  West Side Gory

  Scareplane

  It Happened One Fright

  The Big Kill

  It’s a Wonderful Knife

  Ship of Ghouls

  Goodnight Mysteries Series

  Die Noon

  Doom With A View

  Five Wishes Series

  Going Down

  Man Candy

  Hot Wired

  Just Sacked

  Wicked Ride

  Five Wishes Series

  Three More Wishes Series

  Blown Away

  Inn & Out

  Quick Bang

  Three More Wishes Series

  Forever Series

  Forever Now

  Bounty

  Switched

  Moving Violations

  Also by Elise Sax

  A Note from the Author

  Part I: Matilda Moves in and Finds a Few Surprises

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Part II: Matilda Helps Silas and Asks Questions

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Part III: Silas is Attacked by a Flying Saucer, and Matilda Wants Revenge

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Part IV: The Plot Thickens, and Chaos Ensues

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Part V: Goodnight Has Bad Giraffe Karma, and Matilda Tells It Like it is.

  Chapter 13

  Epilogue

  Also by Elise Sax

  About the Author

  A Note from the Author

  I’m so excited to share the Goodnight Mysteries with you. Die Noon is the first in this new series, featuring Matilda Dare, who appeared in Book 10 of the Matchmaker Mysteries. If you like a hilarious happy ending with a great mystery, romance, and a touch of what could be the paranormal (to be determined!), then you’ll love the world of Goodnight, New Mexico.

  Each book in the series will focus on Matilda, her attempts to run a small newspaper, the renovation of her old house, two possible love interests, and a murder mystery, all with laugh-out-loud adventures.

  A murder mystery will be resolved at the end of each book in the series, and there will be one overarching mystery, which will play out through the series and will be resolved in the last book.

  Goodnight, New Mexico is a crazy, dying town that was created out of my imagination. It’s trying to revitalize itself and become reborn…a lot like Matilda. But I’d like to thank the beautiful city of Santa Fe, New Mexico and many of its residents for inspiring me to locate my next series in their wonderful state.

  I would like to especially thank the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office, Dr. Spencer G. Lucas, the Director of Research and Collections at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History & Science, and Phill Casaus, Editor of the Santa Fe New Mexican newspaper. In addition, I would like to thank the Madeleine Inn and Café Pasqual’s.

  Finally, no giraffes were harmed in the writing of this book. The inspiration for the story of Daisy the giraffe came from a real live event in Tennessee in 1916 when a town hanged Mary the elephant, after she killed her trainer. Poor Mary.

  Thank you for reading. Enjoy!

  --Elise Sax

  Part I: Matilda Moves in and Finds a Few Surprises

  Goodnight Gazette Enters Uncertain Era

  By Silas Miller

  The new owner and publisher of the Goodnight Gazette, Matilda Dare, arrived in town today from California. She drove here in a beat-up Nissan Altima with no front bumper, a result of her running into a house back home. Ms. Dare has no experience in journalism and has never been to New Mexico before. She inherited the Gazette, along with its headquarters, which is housed in a prominent, historical compound home in the hills above the Goodnight UFOs shop and next to the Friends of Daisy the Giraffe Home for Abused Wildlife.

  The former owner and publisher of the Gazette, Chris Simmons, died two weeks ago from an allergic reaction to a hornet sting while walking his dogs in the forest behind the house. Ms. Dare also inherited the dogs.

  When asked if she would continue the newspaper or if she would shutter it, Ms. Dare responded: “What? I have a newspaper? What?”

  The Goodnight Gazette won the Southwest Watchdog award five years in a row. It’s a treasured fixture in the troubled town of Goodnight. Townspeople have been up in arms at the prospect of losing the Gazette. “If that woman shuts you down, I’ll tase her,” Patrolwoman Wendy Ackerman told this reporter at the Goodnight Diner. “No Californian can come here and tell us how to live.”

  Derek from Goodnight Fly Fishing Tours discussed his consternation about the newspaper’s new owner. “What am I going to do about my advertising? I’ll get a refund, right?” he asked over his breakfast of green chili eggs and sourdough toast.

  This reporter will update our readers on the future of our paper, if Ms. Dare doesn’t close it before he gets the chance. As for rumors that Matilda Dare is insane, calls to her hometown refuted them.

  “No, she’s not crazy,” Gladys Burger, Ms. Dare’s friend, insisted. “I mean, yes, she was locked up in a rubber room and shackled to a bed, but it was a mistake. She’s as sane as I am.”

  In addition to being the town’s matchmaker, Ms. Burger once found a severed head in a lobster tank, and she claims that she can predict the weather.

  Chapter 1

  My name’s Matilda Dare, and I might see dead people. I mean, after they’re buried and gone. I also have a problem with encountering more than my fair share of killers.

  I didn’t know any of that when I started my new life in Goodnight, New Mexico. I had only had one up close and personal killer up until that point, and I may or may not have brought a dead woman back to life. But boy, was that about to change.

  I had left my old life behind two weeks ago, and I was now the owner of a large house, which included the headquarters of the Goodnight Gazette, two ancient dogs, and enough money to fix the plumbing and electricity and keep the paper running for three months. After that, I was going to have to sell pencils in town to survive.

  But, I’m an optimist. So, after I arrived in town and was greeted by the four-person staff of the Goodnight Gazette like I was goose-stepping down the Champs Élysées
and they were the French resistance, they informed me that I now owned the place, which was headquartered in my house, I heard myself say, “I plan on making a go of the paper,” which surprised the hell out of me. The newspaper was totally unexpected, but it answered the question of what I was going to do in New Mexico. It’s always good to know what one is going to do when starting a new life.

  “Yeah? You’re going to make a go?” Silas Miller, the head reporter, challenged me, while I still held the handle of my suitcase in my hand. “Do you know that the Gazette has never made a profit?”

  “Nothing in Goodnight makes a profit,” Klee Johnson, the managing editor, added.

  “The diner does pretty well,” Jack the paperboy said.

  “That’s true,” Klee said. “I do love their smoked trout hash.”

  “Best green chili in town,” Silas agreed. “But nothing else makes money here.”

  “How does the paper stay in business?” I asked. Klee shrugged, and it set off a wave of shoulders rising. “Well, that doesn’t matter,” I announced and broke out into panic-induced hives. “I believe in the importance of a free press in a democracy. So, this will be a go.”

  I made a silent prayer that there would be a major earthquake, which would create a large crevice that would open in the earth to swallow me up. But then I remembered that I wasn’t in California anymore. So, I prayed for a fire. But God wasn’t cooperating. Instead of sending me a natural disaster, he sent me a financial disaster.

  Luckily, just then the paper got a call about a possible UFO sighting over the fracking fields west of town, and the focus moved from me to Martians. Then, I found my room, left to me from a dead relative I never knew I had, and took four Xanax while I scrubbed and cleaned and organized before I went to bed with a couple tiny bottles of booze, which I had taken from the mini fridge at a motel in Phoenix on my way to Goodnight.

  But, of course, I didn’t sleep. I hadn’t slept since I was a teenager. I was hoping that the fresh, mountain air would help, but it didn’t. Instead, in addition to not being able to sleep, I couldn’t seem to get a lungful of air, no matter how much I tried.

  Later, Klee told me that I had altitude sickness and that it would go away in a couple of months. “If you last that long,” she added, like she wasn’t at all convinced.

  She had warmed up since then. In my experience, neat freak insomniacs are hard to love, but we’re great landlords. In two weeks, I had scrubbed the living quarters from the floors up to the ceilings and planted flowers in the courtyard. Klee approved. She also liked that I left the Gazette in her hands. It was her territory, and I knew better than to invade.

  Little did she know that I planned on victory by attrition, earning my ownership with tiny, imperceptible steps. I was an all or nothing kind of person, but I always seemed to choose all instead of nothing.

  In my zeal and tendency to lean toward the extremes, I usually failed in my efforts. But not this time. This time, I was determined to live happily ever after. Especially after what I had gone through back in California.

  That’s why I sat in on the morning editorial meeting for the first time that Monday, and that’s how it all started. My new life. And love, too. If I had been satisfied to leave well enough alone and leave journalism for the journalists, it might have all turned out differently. There would have been no adventures. I would never have found my place. And the rest. Well, the rest would have happened, but I would have never known about it.

  The house was made of mud plaster, one-story cut into a square of four wings with a courtyard in the middle. The Gazette’s offices were in the front section of the house. I walked in past Klee’s desk and sat by the wall, next to two desks that were pushed together. Those belonged to Silas and the junior reporter, Jimmy Sanchez, a thin young man who was convinced that he was better than all this and was destined to make it to The Washington Post. The paperboy was in school and so wasn’t at the meeting.

  “What’re you doing here?” Silas demanded. “Figuring out what to do with this space when you shut us down?”

  As far as I could tell, Silas only had one suit, which he wore every day. It was a greenish brown with a stain on the lapel. He had two button-down shirts, both short-sleeved. I figured they used to be white, but that ship sailed a long time ago. His tie was pulled loose so that his top shirt button could rest undone. He was sitting with his legs outstretched, resting on his desk, crossed at the ankle, giving me a good look at the bottoms of his shoes. He wore old-fashioned, brown Hush Puppies slip-ons, and the soles were nearly worn through. His desk was piled high with paper with a narrow tunnel for him and his computer.

  Jimmy’s desk was bare, with just a computer and not a scrap of paper. On his skinny frame, he wore a tight black suit, which was a couple of inches too short. Klee looked fabulous in flowy slacks and a hand-painted tunic, chunky jewelry, and a handwoven scarf that wound around her neck three times. She was a beautiful older woman with thick, long black hair. Her desk was covered in organization boxes, plastic shelves, and a large phone with a shoulder rest attached to the handset.

  “I’m not going to shut you down,” I told Silas for the millionth time. I so wanted to shut them down. The paper was like an albatross around my neck. I had no idea about how to run a newspaper or journalism in general, and I had even less of an idea how to make it profitable. “I’m here to learn. And I’m here to help.”

  Silas’s mouth dropped open before it turned into a smile. “You want to help? Hear that Klee? I think we can get some work for the boss. What do you think?”

  “I’ve got the reopening of the Goodnight Community Pool at nine,” Klee said, handing me a press release. “How about three hundred words?”

  “What? You want me to write?” I asked.

  “I heard that you have three PnDs,” she said. I did. They were in Floral Management, Bowling Industry Technology, and Leisure Studies. None of them required writing. And three hundred words? How long was that? Twenty pages? I had no idea. But I did know I couldn’t write twenty pages.

  “Three hundred words. No problem,” I said, skimming the one-paragraph announcement about the pool.

  “Jimmy, get the woman a glass of water,” Silas ordered. “The boss looks like she’s going to pass out or have a stroke. One or the other.”

  Jimmy scowled and went to the water cooler. “I’m fine,” I lied.

  “Don’t worry. I’ll walk you through it,” Silas said, surprising me. “If we leave soon, we’ll have an hour at the diner before you have to be at the pool, and I’ll give you the rundown on how to be a reporter.”

  Klee handed out the assignments. Jimmy was going to take the “if it bleeds, it leads” beat, and Silas had a list of about ten stories to cover, including a big investigative piece on a petroleum company and water rights.

  We headed out at about a quarter to eight, and I followed Silas to the diner in my Altima. I was both nervous and excited about my assignment. I enjoyed tackling something new, but I wished I had more time to learn how to do it.

  The diner was a centerpiece in town, but since I had been stuck cleaning at home, I had never eaten there. It was located in the plaza, wedged in between the Goodnight Hat Shop and the Goodnight Porcelain Cat Shop.

  I parked behind Silas’s old, gold, four-door Cavalier on the street in front of the diner and walked in with him. He opened the door, which made a ringing sound, and walked in, not bothering to hold it open for me. The diner had booths all along the walls and about five round tables in the center. The kitchen was at the back of the diner with a long open cutout where the cook put the finished meals to be picked up. Everything was clean, but dingy.

  The diner was packed with working men, and they all turned to look at me when I entered. Silas waved at a woman about my age and took a seat in a booth by the window. “Adele, get the boss a menu. She’ll probably want one.”

  I sat down and took the menu from Adele. “It’s about time you came in,” she said to me. “Nearly eve
ryone in this town is a regular. What’re you doing up in that house? Eating cereal? Nobody can survive on cereal. You’re in Goodnight, now, sweetie. You need eggs. You need tortillas. I know what you need.” She took the menu from me before I had a chance to look at it. “I’m Adele. I know everything that goes on in Goodnight. I know all about your husband in San Quentin, for example. So, you come to me if you need anything. We don’t get a lot of people moving into Goodnight, you know. Not with our bad giraffe karma. And then there’s the nuclear waste. And the fracking’s not fabulous.” She said the last bit in a whisper, eyeing the two tables full of men wearing uniforms with a petroleum company’s logo on them.

  “I’m glad a single woman moved in. Not many of us single gals around these parts,” she continued, touching her hair. “I’m a widow, myself.”

  “I’m sorry for your loss. That’s tough,” I said. I was in the middle of a divorce to a man who put me away in a rubber room and later tried to kill me, but I thwarted his plans and conked him over the head and turned him in to the police.

  Marriage is complicated.

  “Doubly tough since I killed him,” Adele said, wiping some lipstick off of her front teeth.

  “Excuse me?”

  “It’s not what you think. It wasn’t my fault.”

  “So, you what? Fed him too much saturated fat?”

  “Oh, no. The man ate chicken fried steak every day of his life and had arteries you could drive a truck through. I shot him through the head. That’s how he died. But it wasn’t my fault.”

  “Are you done?” Silas asked, irritated. “Are you going to branch off into period talk? Waxing? Natural mineral cosmetics? All day with women it’s yap, yap, yap.”

  “All that meanness is going to eat you from the inside out,” Adele spat at Silas. “You’re a mean, mean man. I should have shot you in the head. Don’t worry, you’ll get your food soon enough. Not that you couldn’t survive skipping a few breakfasts.”

 

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