Murder Wears White
Page 1
WEDDING PRESENT
Whitney’s room in Keith and Becca’s house resembled Garrett’s office, but the perpetrator for this crime had used a knife instead of a blunt object. Everything was slashed. Whitney’s black luggage, the pillows, and the curtains had jagged rips running down their lengths. It had been decorated like a shiny peach bordello turned into a set for a slasher film. The downy apricot bedspread spewed feathers from a wide gash in the middle, as if a flock of geese had duked it out in this room.
But the worst of it was reserved for her wedding dress. The garment bag that had carefully preserved the gown she was to be married in was ripped diagonally from one shoulder to the ground, leaving the bag and the gown within it in tatters. I couldn’t touch the gown, but I could see it hanging open in front, a strip torn through the middle, right where Whitney’s stomach would have been had she been wearing it. The delicate stark white sheath, covered in silver beads and seed pearls, was beyond repair. And sticking out above the dress, where the wearer’s head would be, was a note cleaved to the door by a butcher’s knife. It was printed with the message:
GO BACK TO BALTIMORE
Books by Stephanie Blackmoore
ENGAGED IN DEATH
MURDER WEARS WHITE
Published by Kensington Publishing Corporation
Murder Wears White
Stephanie Blackmoore
KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.
http://www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Table of Contents
WEDDING PRESENT
Also by
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
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
Recipes
MURDER BORROWED, MURDER BLUE
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 © 2017 by Stephanie Hayes
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: 978-1-4967-0480-1
First Kensington Mass Market Edition: February 2017
eISBN-13: 978-1-4967-0481-8
eISBN-10: 1-4967-0481-9
First Kensington Electronic Edition: February 2017
For Jon
Chapter One
“So you’ll do it?” Whitney Scanlon stared at me with beseeching brown eyes and blinked back a fresh batch of tears. “He only has a couple months left.”
Could I do it? Could I move her wedding up eight months and finish renovating my mess of a mansion in time to host her wedding? I looked away from her penetrating gaze and glanced around the room. The furniture in the parlor, including the couch we sat on, was covered with grimy drop cloths. Cans of paint and piles of lumber littered the room. The hum of a buzz saw filled the air, and enough sawdust coated the floor to transform it into a sandy beach. My lead contractor, Jesse Flowers, had promised he’d finish the job by the end of October, and I’d taken his word on it.
I drew in a deep breath, coughed on some dust, and plunged in.
“Of course!”
Whitney enveloped me in a swift and fierce hug. “I knew it, I just knew it! My dad will be so happy to walk me down the aisle.” Her tears came freely, and I smiled as I returned her embrace.
Jesse ducked under the arched doorway and stuck his head in the room. He gave me an incredulous stare and mouthed, “You’re killing me.”
I stuck out my tongue over Whitney’s shoulder.
“We’ll make sure your dad sees you get married.” But my assurance faltered when I saw the disorder. It was one thing to promise the B and B would be ready in four weeks. Quite another thing to deliver. At least the weather would cooperate for Whitney. It was a picture-perfect October in Port Quincy, Pennsylvania. Leaves from ginkgo trees fluttered to the ground like golden fortune cookies, and each day the sun hung like a medallion in a brilliant cornflower-blue sky. Mellow smoke from wood-burning fireplaces perfumed the air, and geese practiced for their long flights south. Evenings were crisp and cool and clear, and if I could pull this wedding off, the grounds would be a gorgeous backdrop for a cozy and elegant party. If I could pull it off.
And I would pull it off. Whitney’s father was dying. His last wish was to walk his daughter down the aisle, and he wouldn’t be around for her original wedding date in June. Hers would be the first wedding held at my work-in-progress B and B, the official launch of my wedding-planning business.
What would have been the first wedding in December was for an exacting bridezilla who was already running me ragged. Just like when I was an attorney, I couldn’t cherry-pick my clients. I was delighted to kick off my new career working with a bride like Whitney. No matter that I’d broken out in a cold sweat when she called this morning. I had nowhere acceptable to meet her. In the end, I’d shaken some dust off the couch in the parlor and decided Whitney should know what she was getting into.
I felt dumpy in the makeshift outfit I’d thrown on for my impromptu meeting. I’d shed my dingy overalls and slipped into a wrinkled turquoise sheath dress mere minutes before Whitney’s arrival. I’d gained back all of the weight I’d lost for my canceled wedding, and then some, and the dress didn’t quite fit.
“I’ve never seen you in a dress,” Jesse had mused as I descended the stairs to meet Whitney. His lined face twisted into an amused smile, as if he’d caught me playing dress-up. The other workers stared at me like I was an alien as I twirled my curly sandy ponytail into a messy bun and jammed my feet into kitten heels. I’d worked alongside them since late summer, and they’d never seen me in anything but cargo pants or filthy denim, with my hair protected under a bandana or baseball cap. I smoothed out some wrinkles in the cotton fabric and vowed to look more presentable for clients.
“Thanks for coming through for me.” Whitney beamed, seemingly impervious to the chaos. She dabbed at her mascara with a tissue she’d extracted from her tiny plum purse. Everything about her was diminutive. She was my height, five foot nothing, but much tinier and bird-like. She had delicate features and loose, strawberry-blond curls. She radiated strength, despite her apparent fragility.
“Excuse me, Mallory?” Jesse loomed over me and shattered my reverie. “There’s a problem with the bathroom in the green bedroom. I thought you’d like to know. Right now.” He must
want to grill me for promising this place would be wedding-ready in four weeks.
I shrugged in apology to Whitney.
“It’s okay. I’d better get going. I’m so thrilled you can move up the wedding. It means the world to me that my father will be there. You’re a lifesaver, Mallory.” She rose to her feet and carefully navigated her way around the flotsam and jetsam of hardware in her path to the front hall.
“Let’s meet later next week. We’ll have a lot to do to plan your wedding in such a short amount of time.” I crossed my fingers behind my back and made a wish to magically fix up a professional space amid the mess for meeting with her next time.
Whitney turned back to look at me. Her eyes sparkled, immune to the reality of renovation hell. She turned to leave as the massive front door swung open ahead of her. It was Garrett Davies, the delectable man I’d been seeing. His face brightened when he saw me over Whitney’s shoulder, and his warm hazel eyes crinkled at the corners. He held a large brown bag bursting with lunch for me and the contractors. The gentle autumn sun backlit his tall frame, creating a pleasing silhouette. I was about to introduce him to Whitney, but she froze. Then she took a panicked step back and faltered on her high heels. She collided with me, and Garrett dropped the bag, moving forward to steady her. Sandwiches and soup spilled onto the floor. A pumpkin pie wobbled, flipped, and landed with a resounding splat.
“Ouch!” Whitney yelped as a splash of hot liquid marred her suede boots. She stifled a cry and scrambled away from Garrett. “You! What are you doing here?” Her voice was brittle and shrill and threatened to smash into a thousand pieces. She blanched as if she’d seen a ghost and blinked at Garrett in disbelief.
My breath caught in my chest as I saw her initial look of fear turn to pure, white-hot contempt. All of her effervescent happiness was gone, replaced with a deep look of dismay.
Whitney murmured an apology and slipped out the door. Once she’d put some distance between her and Garrett, she seemed to recover enough to feign politeness and call over her shoulder, “Thanks again, Mallory! We’ll talk soon.” She nearly ran down the drive to her Jetta and didn’t look back.
The unfinished B and B hadn’t rattled her, but seeing my new beau nearly drove her apoplectic.
“I don’t blame her.” Garrett tried to salvage what was left of lunch. He crouched down in the hallway in his three-piece suit and mopped up steaming, fragrant puddles of potato and chive soup.
He was one of the few people who could manage to look sexy cleaning up remnants of lunch, and I would’ve enjoyed the view if I hadn’t been so rattled by Whitney’s reaction. I wiped the wax-paper-wrapped sandwiches and distributed them to the contractors. My stomach growled as I mourned the loss of half of lunch. Garrett and I settled on the top step of the front porch to dig in. It was a cool day, but the sun warmed our faces and the wind was still.
I couldn’t enjoy the weather, remembering Whitney’s bizarre behavior. “She nearly fainted when she saw you. I wasn’t sure if she was going to deck you or run away.”
Garrett put down his turkey on rye and turned to face me. “Ten years ago I defended the man convicted of murdering Whitney’s mother.” He winced at the word “convicted,” no doubt wishing, even now, that there had been a different outcome. Ever the defense attorney, he didn’t say the man who murdered Whitney’s mother.
“It was my very first homicide case. If I could go back in time, I’d do it all differently. But I knew then, and I know now, that Eugene Newton is innocent. Someone else killed Vanessa Scanlon, and they’re probably still at large.” He shivered.
“If you believe your client is innocent, then he is.” I gently laid my hand on his arm and winced at the toll my attempts at construction had taken. My left thumb was blackened by an ill-aimed hammer, and the skin was rough and raw. I was clumsy, and many hours of working on the house hadn’t made me more handy. Mine were hardly the hands of a professional wedding planner.
“But I understand Whit’s reaction.”
Garrett was still beating himself up about the trial from years ago. Not for the first time, I wished we could spend more time together. I had been busy with the renovation, and Garrett had his own commitments to his cases and his young daughter, Summer. We had yet to go out on an official date, and I doubted we’d spend much time together now that I’d promised to deliver a wedding to Whitney in mere weeks.
Garrett took my hand and shook his head. “That poor girl insisted on attending the whole trial. She was fifteen. Her mother’s murder was particularly brutal, and she heard every detail. I couldn’t imagine if Summer had to go through something like that. I’ll never forget Whitney’s face, and I bet she’ll never forget mine.”
My heart ached for Whitney. But I was still having trouble processing her reaction to Garrett. Did everyone in Port Quincy know about Whitney’s mother?
“I don’t really know much about this town, do I?” I blurted out. Just once I’d like to know what’s going on.
“Give it time. Most people remember Vanessa Scanlon’s murder. She disappeared when Whitney was five. Half the town thought she’d run off. The other half thought her husband had killed her and had hidden the body. She wasn’t found until ten years later. But there’s no way you could’ve known about it. And maybe Whitney prefers it that way, working with you. It couldn’t have been easy growing up here, with everyone thinking her mother had abandoned her, then knowing she was kidnapped and murdered.”
“Maybe that’s why she lives in Baltimore.” I wouldn’t have guessed such a sad history for the strong, solid woman I’d met with.
“I hope she’ll come back.” Garrett resumed his lunch with a frown. “I’d hate to scuttle your first wedding.”
“Of course she will! Won’t she?” Selfish, selfish, selfish! I mentally chastised myself for thinking of the bottom line instead of Whitney’s feelings. But creeping concerns about money eddied through my brain. Fixing up the old ruined mansion had blown my budget out of the water, despite Jesse’s skill and frugality. I had a business to run. I needed this wedding. I could host it if the stars aligned and the B and B was finished in time.
“That’s not even the biggest problem.” I stirred half-and-half into my coffee. “I applied to the Planning Commission to have this property rezoned as commercial from residential, and I haven’t heard back yet.”
“The Planning Commission?” Garrett rubbed his forehead. “Most people give them several months to get their act together.”
I raised my eyebrows. “Their website said they respond to requests in a month.”
Garrett shook his head, his eyes incredulous. “That’s not how they operate. I’m sure Jesse will back me up on this.”
I recalled Jesse’s displeasure back in the parlor. “Have you seen Jesse?”
He hadn’t viewed the lunch cleanup performance, and I wondered why he’d shaken his head at me.
As if summoned by my thoughts, Jesse burst onto the porch. His six-foot, eight-inch frame would have intimidated me if he wasn’t such a softie.
“What were you thinking, Mallory? Are you nuts? There’s no way this place will be finished in four weeks!” He took off his Pittsburgh Penguins hat and rolled the brim between his hands. His voice was a surprisingly high tenor for such a bear of a man.
I shimmied around on the top step to face him calmly. “That’s not what you said last week. We’re right on schedule. Aren’t we?” I was used to Jesse’s hyperbolic way of speaking. Everything was an emergency, but they were crises that could be fixed immediately.
He defied the stereotype of a contractor, and so far, he’d finished everything on schedule. He had an uncanny knack for anticipating problems and coming up with creative, cost-effective solutions to fix them. I’d been able to hire him after his big fall project had fallen through. I was lucky to have him.
I counted down in my head, three, two, one . . . like clockwork, a motorized scooter rolled out the front door and glided up behind the contractor. A tiny w
oman dressed in a paisley-patterned brown peasant blouse and too-tight tan polyester pants, and wearing large gold hoop earrings, perched imperiously on the scooter’s plush red-velvet seat. She sniffed with disapproval.
“You should’ve checked with Jesse first, before you made that promise.” She squinted at me through the bifocals on the tip of her nose. “I knew today would be trouble, I drew the tower card.” She sat back with a humph.
“Mother, stay out of it.” Jesse rolled his eyes and stuck his large hands into his jeans pockets, instantly transformed from a lumberjack into a sheepish little boy.
I stifled a smile. I’d done a double take when Jesse brought his mother to our initial meeting. I’d wrongly assumed it was a one-time thing. The woman accompanied him everywhere and had spent the last month and a half riding around the house, calling out suggestions and getting underfoot. She fancied herself a fortune teller and read tarot cards for the contractors all day long, in return for them carrying her and her scooter up and down the stairs. She had a cackle like a bag of broken glass, she terrorized my cats, and she made eerie pronouncements that I’d learned to ignore. My sister had come up with an affectionate moniker for Delilah Flowers: the Witch on Wheels.
“I told you to not take on this job. I had a bad feeling about this, but you never listen!” Delilah crooked her finger with its heavy onyx ring and jabbed it at her son. She couldn’t be more than ninety pounds soaking wet, and I wondered, not for the first time, how she had produced giant Jesse. But they had the same wiry gray hair, close-set amber eyes, and aquiline nose. She paused and scrutinized me from head to toe. “You should wear dresses more often, Mallory.”