“In The Cantaloupe Thief Deb Richardson-Moore spices her perfectly paced story with just enough detail to let us see, hear, know, and feel exactly what we need and no more. And she does it with writing that’s vibrant, crisp, and real — we’re treated to a master storyteller showing us how it’s done. Murder may be the plot that drives Richardson-Moore’s yank-you-in-from-the-first-sentence yarn, but it’s her supple and admirable talent that’s to die for.”
John Jeter, author of The Plunder Room
“Prepare to read Deb Richardson-Moore’s The Cantaloupe Thief like you’re getting ready for a southern snowstorm. Run out and buy your bread and milk, stock the pantry to the brim, and cross everything off your calendar, because once reporter Branigan Powers draws you into her mystery, you’ll stick fast to the couch until you turn the last page. Bravo to Deb for creating a captivating novel so full of heart, humour, and suspense. I simply loved it.”
Becky Ramsey, author of French by Heart
“Fantastically entertaining, this beautifully written, intelligent page-turner gets at both the prejudice and promise of the New South. Our curious heroine, Branigan Powers, has guts and heart. Deb has concocted a winner in this first installment of a great mystery series.”
Matt Matthews, author of Mercy Creek
“Deb brings the authenticity of her own work with the homeless and extensive background in newspapers to this terrific debut with a twist ending you’ll never see coming. I can’t wait to see what Branigan Powers takes on next.”
Susan Simmons, Executive Editor, Greenville Journal
Deb Richardson-Moore is a former journalist, and the pastor of the Triune Mercy Center in Greenville, South Carolina. Her first book, The Weight of Mercy, is a memoir about her work as a pastor among the homeless. She and her husband, Vince, are the parents of three grown children. To find out more about Deb, you can go to her website: www.debrichardsonmoore.com.
Text copyright © 2016 Deb Richardson-Moore
This edition copyright © 2016 Lion Hudson
The right of Deb Richardson-Moore to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
All the characters in this book are fictitious and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
Published by Lion Fiction
an imprint of
Lion Hudson plc
Wilkinson House, Jordan Hill Road
Oxford OX2 8DR, England
www.lionhudson.com/fiction
ISBN 978 1 78264 192 6
e-ISBN 978 1 78264 193 3
First edition 2016
Acknowledgments
Scripture quotations taken from The New Revised Standard Version of the Bible copyright © 1989 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of Churches in the USA. Used by permission. All Rights Reserved.
Cover illustration © Daniel Haskett
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
To the late Vina and Durey Powers,
Georgia farmers.
And to Rick,
Ronald and Lori,
fellow cantaloupe eaters.
CONTENTS
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Chapter Thirty-Nine
Chapter Forty
Chapter Forty-One
Chapter Forty-Two
Chapter Forty-Three
Chapter Forty-Four
Chapter Forty-Five
Chapter Forty-Six
Chapter Forty-Seven
Chapter Forty-Eight
Chapter Forty-Nine
Chapter Fifty
Chapter Fifty-One
Chapter Fifty-Two
Chapter Fifty-Three
Chapter Fifty-Four
Chapter Fifty-Five
Chapter Fifty-Six
Chapter Fifty-Seven
Chapter Fifty-Eight
Chapter Fifty-Nine
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Thanks to my writers’ group: Susan Clary Simmons, Wanda Owings, Jeanne Brooks and Allison Greene, who demanded more tension, more menace. If it’s not there, it’s my fault, not theirs.
Thanks to later readers Elaine Nocks, Michelle McClendon, Lori Bradley, Taylor Moore, Lynne Lucas, Lynn Cusick, Doris Richardson, Rick and Candace Richardson, Madison Moore and Susan Stall.
Thanks to the Triune Mercy Center board and staff for allowing me a writing sabbatical to wrap things up. And a special thank you to the worshipers at Triune, who taught me that there are as many kinds of homeless people as there are housed people.
I appreciate Tony Collins, Jessica Tinker, Jessica Scott and their team at Lion Hudson in England, and their counterparts at Kregel Publications in the USA, including Noelle Pederson and Lori Alberda.
As always, thanks to Vince — for a quiet writing time in Crail and Edinburgh, and for everything else. And to Dustin, Taylor and Madison, who make it all worthwhile.
PROLOGUE
JULY 5, TEN YEARS AGO
Alberta felt every one of her eighty years, felt them deep in the rigid muscles that supported her slender neck. Her Fourth of July party last night was exhausting in a way it hadn’t been in previous years. This morning’s pancake breakfast with her teenage granddaughters was raucous, at least by her standards. She loved the girls, God knew — loved them with a ferocity that surprised her. Still, their exuberance was wearing.
She eased onto the sagging den sofa, solicitous of her aching hip, and kicked off her ecru pumps. Her chihuahua Dollie hopped up beside her, head cocked, waiting for a pinch of bread crust.
“Dollie, you’re my best girl,” she said, giving the cinnamon-colored dog a small bite. “Though I don’t think poor Amanda wants to compete.”
The tête-à-tête earlier with her only daughter had been as difficult as she’d imagined, disclosing the long-held secret about her younger son, the family rogue. Alberta could tell that Amanda was shocked.
“At least that shut her up about my so-called dementia,” she told Dollie.
Then the doctor’s visit with her older son, the st
alwart one, the one she trusted. She’d given him a hard time over the years, she knew. But he’d remained steadfast.
Now all she wanted was to curl up on the end of this worn sofa with her sandwich and potato chips and a glass of Tabitha’s sweet iced tea. Her maid brewed tea better than the maids of anyone in her bridge club. Everyone said so.
This den off the kitchen was a sanctuary of shabbiness and warmth, unlike the high-gloss rooms with their hardwoods and brocade draperies and gleaming piano. She enjoyed those rooms, of course, enjoyed their cool elegance. That’s where she entertained her book club and bridge club and music club. Though she’d had about enough of those music club biddies tut-tutting over the homeless man who’d shambled into her parlor last month and sat down at the piano.
“My lands, Alberta!” she mimicked in a high-pitched voice for Dollie’s enjoyment. “That man could have killed you for yoah wedding silvah.”
Alberta had no use for fear or flightiness.
She fed Dollie a broken chip, then punched the remote control for her soap opera, sighing at the simple pleasure of this break in her day. She took a bite of sandwich — banana and crunchy peanut butter on white bread, a combination she’d enjoyed since girlhood yet hid from those same music club friends. With them, she’d choose chicken salad. “Or cucumber, God forbid,” she said aloud. “Dollie, whoever invented the cucumber sandwich should be shot. Now banana — I understand that’s what Elvis ate. So don’t tell anyone.”
She savored the combination of peanut crunch and firm banana. She was reaching for a chip when she heard a knock on the kitchen door. Her heart sank. Probably Amanda, early for their trip to the lawyer’s office. She wasn’t ready to see her daughter yet.
No, wait, Amanda had a key. It wouldn’t be her. The knock came again.
Sighing, Alberta rose and slipped her pumps back on. A Southern lady never answered the door, even the back door, without shoes.
Dollie followed, nails click-clicking on the linoleum. Alberta opened the door, puzzled, surprised, though not entirely displeased to see her visitor. After a few words, though, she was more than displeased. She was outraged. Dollie picked up on her fury and yapped ferociously, threatening to trip Alberta by skittering around her feet. Alberta slammed the door.
She pivoted to return to the den, to her lunch, shaken, but certain she’d settled things. That’s how she lived her life: always certain, always settling things properly.
Only now she heard a crash, and turned in disbelief to see a rock land on the kitchen floor, accompanied by a rain of shattered glass. She cried out in anger — red-hot, shocked anger that turned to fear only in the last moment of her life.
CHAPTER ONE
PRESENT DAY
Branigan Powers rushed into the newsroom, its silence still disconcerting though the layoffs had been steady for years now. It was 9 a.m. and the remaining Metro and Style writers were filing into the conference room for their weekly meeting, led by Julie in a hot pink sheath, pink-tinted hose, and shoes of improbably colored pink leather.
Branigan grabbed her battered construction worker’s Thermos and Christmas coffee cup, and followed. Christmas was seven months away, and the mug with its sinister elves was truly ugly to boot. But because she had a habit of breaking ceramic mugs, she carried the one she’d miss least.
Julie was already seated at the head of the table when Branigan slid into one of the many empty seats. Settling back with a steaming cup of coffee, she squeezed her eyes into a squint and let Julie’s monochromatic attire blend into a Spandex bodysuit.
It always worked. With her blond ponytail, twenty-six-year-old complexion and unremitting color coordination, Julie Ames metamorphosed into the aerobics instructor from Helstrom — Helstrom being the chain that was gobbling up newspapers from Virginia to Florida and remaking them in the relentlessly cheery style favored by the attention-deficit crowd. The chain didn’t have The Grambling Rambler yet, but its reporters knew enough about the state of the industry to know it wouldn’t be long.
They were the dance band on the Titanic, playing feverishly to keep from thinking about the freezing water just inches away. Chirpy Julie was the publisher’s way of lowering a lifeboat to see if the chain’s methods had anything to offer before abandoning ship.
“I’ve been talking to Tan,” Julie began with a bright smile, “and we read some interesting statistics in Sunday’s paper. The story on mobile home safety said that Georgia is one of the four leading states in manufactured housing.”
She looked around as if waiting for the reporters to acknowledge this fact as ground-shaking.
“Along with Texas, Florida and Alabama.” Her smile lost a shade of its luster. “Sooooo... we want to incorporate those people into Living!”
Living! — the exclamation mark was an official part of the name — was the weekend arts/dining/recreation/decorating tabloid that had replaced the old Trends! section, that had replaced the old Home! section, that had replaced the old Georgia Homes section, back when two less excited words were allowed. All reporters had to contribute to the section, regardless of what actual news they might be covering.
There was a sound of choking as someone’s coffee got caught mid-slurp. Marjorie, sixty-ish, raspy-voiced and very un-Helstrom, was the first to speak. “Tanenbaum Grambling IV wants us to write about trailer decor? Like he’s ever been inside one!”
“Well, that’s not exactly the point,” said Julie, who got a little flustered when confronted by Marjorie. “The point is we’ve been doing a lot of rich people’s homes and historic homes and renovated farmhouses. And that’s fine. But those people already take the paper. We’re trying to reach non-subscribers and we may find them in our... um... mobile home... ah... subdivisions.
“Now, I don’t mean go out and find just any trai... mobile home,” she continued hastily. “We’ll want to find just the right one to show what can be done with the proper décor and color sense.”
She was nodding now, trying to get agreement through sheer motion.
Lou Ann turned a saccharine smile Julie’s way. “Oh, like a doublewide.”
“Yes!” Julie pounced on Lou Ann with relief. “A nice spacious one that’s done in lake cottage or minimalist or something else real cute. Now, who wants to do the first one?”
Six pairs of eyes studied the conference table. Hard.
“Harley, what about you?”
Harley, the only one at the table even close to Julie’s age, looked up, startled.
“Me? Well, I wouldn’t mind, but um... I’m working on that lake house and the Main Street apartment.” He was rolling now. “And I figured you would want me to finish up that teen dating story.”
A faint crease appeared between Julie’s impeccably plucked brows. “I guess you’re right.”
Branigan looked at Harley in admiration. She caught his eye and raised an eyebrow in salute. He tried not to smile.
Undaunted, Julie pressed on. “Branigan, how about you?”
“Gee, decorating trends in trailers,” she answered. “Good as that sounds, I’m up to my ears in a story Tan asked me to look into.”
An overworked excuse, but safe. The rest of the newsroom was a black hole to Julie, and the evocation of publisher Tan’s name was a bona fide “Get Out of Jail Free” card. Marjorie and Lou Ann rolled their eyes.
Julie glanced briefly at police/court/political reporter Jody Manson, then thought better of it: he was apt to get called to something more urgent at any time. Her eyes flicked to arts writer Gerald Dubois, engrossed in his latest Art in America magazine. Few people on the staff remembered when Gerald was Jerry Dubert from neighboring South Carolina, the unhappy oldest son of a clan of hunters and fishermen. Here, in northeast Georgia, within driving distance of Atlanta, Jerry had bloomed into an imaginative if overbearing arts critic. And if, as Gerald Dubois, he had reinvented his identity, few people knew. Or cared.
Certainly not Julie, brought in eight months before by Tan-4, as the staff called
him behind his back, to see if a shake-up in the newsroom might staunch the bleeding in his family-owned newspaper. It was a route traveled by all the chains as they squeezed American papers for profits. Readers had neither the time nor the attention spans for long, in-depth articles, or so the reasoning went. Give them short. Give them lively. Give them perky.
It was enough to make Branigan wish she were sixty-five and at the end of her career. Instead, she was forty-one, and had some decisions to make.
Julie started to talk trailers to the perfectly coiffed Gerald, then retreated. She clamped her lips into a hot pink line.
“Very well,” she said tightly. “You all think it over and I’ll expect a volunteer by next Monday.”
Marjorie caught Branigan in the bathroom moments later, her heavy-lidded eyes meeting Branigan’s vivid green ones in the mirror. Without a word, the women burst into laughter.
“Friggin’ trailers!” Marjorie growled. “Maybe we’ll start with mine!
Branigan laughed harder. Marjorie’s mobile home was a firetrap. Books and papers and magazines were piled from the tiny kitchenette at one end to the single bedroom at the other. Her nod to decorating was one poster of Tommy Lee Jones and another of Harrison Ford, a kind of geriatric dorm motif.
Marjorie was not the kind of writer newspaper chains would hire today. She was decidedly un-perky, rude to callers, and downright contemptuous of editors. But she could ferret out information and she could write — two skills that even a management fighting for its life had to respect. She represented the best of old-time newspapering. Marjorie and reporters like her were the reason the folks of Grambling had fought the trends and stuck with their Rambler when every other newspaper in the country was in freefall. To a point, at least. Young readers were not signing on, of course. Delivery men could bring them a newspaper and coffee in bed, and they wouldn’t read it. They got their news from TV or the internet like their counterparts nationwide.
But older readers hadn’t deserted The Rambler as they had many other papers in the South. The Grambling family, for whom the town was named, knew those readers would die out eventually. But they clung to a vision of integrity and purpose — with the occasional toe in the water that was behind Julie’s hiring.
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