Hook, Line and Blinker (A Miss Fortune Mystery Book 10)
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Hook, Line and Blinker
Jana DeLeon
J&R Publishing
Copyright © 2017 by Jana DeLeon
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Created with Vellum
Contents
Introduction
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
Introduction
If you’ve never read a Miss Fortune mystery, you can start with LOUISIANA LONGSHOT, the first book in the series. If you prefer to start with this book, here are a few things you need to know.
Fortune Redding – a CIA assassin with a price on her head from one of the world’s most deadly arms dealers. Because her boss suspects that a leak at the CIA blew her cover, he sends her to hide out in Sinful, Louisiana, posing as his niece, a librarian and ex–beauty queen named Sandy-Sue Morrow.
Ida Belle and Gertie – served in the military in Vietnam as spies, but no one in the town is aware of that fact except Fortune and Deputy LeBlanc.
Sinful Ladies Society – local group founded by Ida Belle, Gertie, and deceased member Marge. In order to gain membership, women must never have married or if widowed, their husband must have been deceased for at least ten years.
Sinful Ladies Cough Syrup – sold as an herbal medicine in Sinful, which is dry, but it’s actually moonshine manufactured by the Sinful Ladies Society.
Chapter One
“I think it’s ready,” Gertie said, and dipped a ladle into the huge pot on her stove. The fumes alone had made my eyes water so badly that I’d finally put on the goggles Ida Belle gave me when I arrived twenty minutes ago.
Despite the potentially explosive fumes, the aroma was actually quite nice. “It has a sort of cinnamon smell to it,” I said.
This was the first time I’d been present for an official tasting of Sinful Ladies Cough Syrup. Ida Belle and Gertie had been working on a new flavor, and they claimed their taste buds were officially numb. They said that at this point, they wouldn’t be able to tell the difference between their brew and a real bottle of cough syrup. So I was the official taste tester. Payment was all the Sinful Ladies brew I could handle, a pot roast, and a container of freshly baked chocolate chip cookies. It was a darn fine gig if you could get it.
“It should have a bit of cinnamon taste to it as well,” Ida Belle said.
“We thought the cinnamon would make it festive,” Gertie said. “Maybe release it as a holiday offering.”
Gertie poured some of the liquid out of the ladle and into a glass, then handed it to me. “Give it a bit to cool. It will be better room temperature.”
“Or maybe even chilled,” Ida Belle said.
“Oh,” Gertie said. “I like that idea.”
They both watched me as I blew on the whiskey until the steam stopped coming off it.
“Go for it,” Ida Belle said.
“Not just a sip,” Gertie said. “You need enough to give us good feedback, but not so much that you get choked and it doesn’t go down smoothly.”
“Will you shut up and let the woman drink?” Ida Belle asked.
I held the glass up. “Here’s to the last four days in Sinful. No murders. No explosions. No undercover outfits.”
“Hear! Hear!” Gertie chanted.
I put the glass to my lips and took a big swig. Almost immediately, my eyes watered and then crossed, and I yanked off the goggles. I swallowed and thought my throat was going to explode. I opened my mouth to talk, but nothing would come out.
Ida Belle and Gertie watched me closely, and I wasn’t sure whether to feel comforted or worried that neither had flung me onto the floor and attempted CPR. It was probably only seconds, but felt like much longer, when my eyes went back into focus and I sucked in a breath. It burned coming in and smelled of cinnamon coming out. A flush swept through my entire body, and the soreness I’d had in my neck since I’d gotten out of bed vanished completely.
“Holy crap!” I said. “That was both frightening and awesome.”
Ida Belle grinned. “We’re calling it the Widow Maker.”
“Is Sinful Ladies membership down?” I asked.
“Well,” Gertie said, “there have been some deaths and several relocations the last couple years—”
I held up my hand. “I was joking.” And if Gertie thought the cough syrup would result in a potential membership increase for the Sinful Ladies Society, I didn’t want to know about it.
“So is it a thumbs-up?” Ida Belle asked.
I nodded. “As long as you put a warning on the bottle that it could cause loss of eyesight and limit lung capacity, then you’re good.”
“Excellent,” Ida Belle said. “We’ll work up a marketing plan and start moving it through our network.”
“Just how much of this stuff do you make?” I asked.
“We have five active stills among the membership,” Ida Belle said. “A group is assigned to each one. Every summer, each group submits a new brew for testing at a group meeting and we decide if we’ll add something new to the line.”
“But I only know of one flavor,” I said.
“That’s because we’ve never liked any of the others,” Gertie said. “But I think this one is a winner.”
“There has been a lot of call lately for something with more punch,” Ida Belle explained. “A lot of women in town are worried about the calories.”
“Ah,” I said, “so if they can get the same effect with less…uh, dosage, then that would keep them in the market.”
Gertie shook her head. “It’s a ridiculous thing to worry about. How many calories can possibly be in a swig of that stuff?”
“Ridiculous or not,” Ida Belle said, “it’s something people are starting to think about more often. In choir practice last week, Maisey Jackson’s breath was so bad I thought she’d swallowed a skunk, so I passed her a breath mint. She Googled the calories on her phone before she’d eat it.”
“Wow,” I said.
“But that’s not even the most ridiculous part,” Ida Belle said. “Pastor Don’s mother insisted we bless the mint before she put it in her mouth, claiming it was food.”
“I saw her open a protein shake in the General Store last week,” I said, “and she didn’t pray before she took a drink.”
“If you’re not chewing, it’s not food,” Gertie said.
“Where does it say that in the Bible?” I asked. “I’m a little sketchy on the passage concerning breath mints as well.”
Ida Belle waved her hand in dismissal. “People have been making up religious rules forever, and Sinful has the market cornered on it. No matter what you do, there’s someone in this world that has a problem with it.”
“Maybe if Maisey started wearing clothes while she was boating,” I said, “she wouldn’t have to worry so much about her weight.”
“
Got that right,” Gertie said.
My phone rang and I checked the display. “It’s Carter.”
“What did you do?” Gertie asked.
“Why do you always think I’ve done something?” I asked. “Never mind.”
It was true that over half of my past interactions with Carter had been over my less-than-legal transgressions that put me smack in the middle of police matters, but now that we were in an official relationship, things were strictly personal more often.
“She’s blushing again,” Gertie said. “And she still won’t tell us about those nights she won’t answer her phone.”
“I don’t think she needs to tell us,” Ida Belle said. “It doesn’t take a detective to know what’s going on there.”
Gertie sighed. “I’d still like details. I really miss the details.”
“Stop!” I said, and answered the call.
“Are you still at Gertie’s house?” Carter asked.
“Yeah, why?” His voice sounded tense, and that was never a good thing. As far as I knew, none of us had meddled in police business since the poacher case, but with Gertie, you never could be certain what else might have transpired when Ida Belle and I weren’t around to reel her in.
“The auditors have finalized the election count,” he said. “They’re announcing the results in thirty minutes.”
I clenched my phone. “Where?”
“Downtown in front of the sheriff’s department. A camera crew will be here. Marie and Celia have already been notified.”
“Holy crap, that’s huge.”
“I would tell you to make those two stay put because things could get ugly, but without handcuffing them, I know you can’t.”
“No way. We want to be there.”
“Please try to keep things under control.”
“Yeah, control depends on how this turns out.”
I hung up the phone. Ida Belle and Gertie had ceased all conversation and were staring at me, worried expressions on their faces. They knew my serious voice, so they knew something was up. Of all the things they might expect to hear, the election results were probably low on the list.
During the last mayoral election, Ida Belle’s nemesis and the first lady of horrible, Celia Arceneaux, ran against Ida Belle and Gertie’s friend Marie. Celia won, but Marie asked for a recount based on rumors of ballot tampering. The audit had started weeks ago, and at the rate they were moving, we’d decided it would be time for a new election before they announced the results. In the meantime, Celia held Sinful hostage, making Carter’s life miserable and using her position to bully everyone else into doing her bidding. If Celia maintained her position as mayor, I predicted an exodus from Sinful equivalent to that of Moses leading his people out of Egypt.
“The election results are in,” I said. “They’re making the announcement downtown in front of the sheriff’s department in thirty minutes.”
“Holy crap.”
“Mother of God.”
They both spoke at once, and Gertie reached over and grabbed Ida Belle’s arm.
“Well,” Ida Belle said, “this is it. I guess we best get down there and see what the future holds.”
She didn’t have to spell it out. So much was riding on this election. Ida Belle and Gertie had already said they’d seriously consider moving if Celia stayed in office, and even if Carter was allowed to keep his position, he had already stated that he didn’t feel he could work for Celia. I was Celia’s number one target for takedown, so my plans for future residency definitely depended on what everyone else decided. I really liked Sinful, but without Carter, Ida Belle, and Gertie, it would just be another small town. I could find one of those anywhere.
Gertie let go of Ida Belle, took my hand in hers, and squeezed. “Don’t worry. I have a good feeling about this.”
I hoped she was right. “Maybe we should take a bottle of the new stuff…just in case.”
The scene downtown looked like geriatric Woodstock. Women milled around the street in random states of dress, some without shoes, many with rollers in their hair, one wearing a green paste on her face, and one still stirring something in a mixing bowl. Some of the men wore muddy boots and were holding rifles, which would be alarming anywhere but Sinful, but here was quite common. Other men stood beside coolers that reeked of fish, and as we approached the crowd, one man ran from behind the buildings where the bayou was located, clutching a rod with a fish still on the line. Apparently, everyone was anxious to be front and center for the big announcement.
I made a note of where live fish guy was standing in case I needed to borrow the fish and slap anyone with it. I’d done it accidentally once, and I’d been itching to do it on purpose ever since.
We weaved in and out of the crowd and finally spotted Marie near the front of the sheriff’s department. She wore a pretty blue dress and looked kinda pale. We pushed our way through the crowd and managed to squeeze in beside her.
Gertie took her hand. “Are you all right? You look a little peaked.”
“I think I’m going to pass out,” Marie said. “It feels like we’ve been waiting on this forever and now that it’s here, I’m afraid. What if the recount is still in Celia’s favor?”
“A lot of homes will go on the market,” Ida Belle said. “If we had a revote, you can bet things would be a lot different. A lot of people who voted for Celia have her number now.”
“If only they’d had a lick of sense before,” Gertie said. “Maybe there should be an IQ test to vote.”
“There should be an IQ test for a lot of things,” Ida Belle grumbled.
The door to the sheriff’s department opened and Carter walked out, followed by three men and one woman all wearing black suits and white shirts. It was either the Secret Service, the men in black, or the auditors. I was going with auditors, but I reserved the right to change my selection. This was Sinful.
Carter scanned the crowd and locked in on me. I started to do the ole raised eyebrow thing or a slight hands up, but the strained look on his face told me everything I needed to know. Either Celia was still in charge or he didn’t know yet and was as worried as the rest of us. He raised his hands and waved at the crowd of people.
“Can I have your attention please?” he yelled. “We don’t have audio equipment, so I need everyone to be quiet.”
The noise level dropped, but only by half, as people continued to move about and talk in low voices. Ida Belle stuck her fingers in the sides of her mouth and whistled. An ear-shattering, glass-breaking whistle. My hands flew involuntarily over my ears and as I glared at her, I noticed Gertie pulling some cotton out of her ears.
“She does it every time,” Gertie said.
“A little warning would have been nice,” I said.
Gertie gave me an apologetic shrug, and I turned back around to see Carter waving at one of the suits.
“This is Bryant Wilkinson,” Carter said. “He is the audit manager and will announce the findings.”
I watched as the suit moved closer to the crowd.
Midfifties. A hundred and eighty pounds, twenty of it potbelly. Skin that hadn’t seen the sun in years. Delicate hands. Only dangerous if he was auditing you and you were a tax evader.
Wilkinson cleared his throat and said, “Before I announce the results, I’d like to introduce my team, who worked diligently to conduct this audit.”
“Nobody cares!” a man shouted.
“You got paid!” a woman threw in. “You’re supposed to work diligently.”
“Get on with it!” another man shouted. “I’m holding a live bass and it’s not going to keep in this heat.”
Given that his skin was almost glowing white, I didn’t think it was possible, but Wilkinson scanned the crowd and appeared to pale a little. He’d probably finally clued in to the array of firearms.
“Uh, okay,” Wilkinson stammered. “Our findings show that the winner of the mayoral election is Marie Chicoron.”
A huge cheer went up in the crowd, s
o loud that I couldn’t even hear when he said Marie’s last name. Gertie screamed and hugged me so hard I would probably bruise. Ida Belle was grinning so big, I was afraid her face might break, as it rarely worked out that hard. Almost everyone was cheering and bouncing and hugging.
And then Celia walked up to Marie and started yelling.
“Who did you pay off?” Celia yelled. “No way you beat me.”
“Look around,” Ida Belle said. “No one wants you.”
“There’s plenty of people that want me,” Celia said. “This is all some setup job. I know how you operate, Ida Belle, and you’ve gotten a million times worse since the Yankee whore showed up. Don’t think you’re fooling anyone.”
“Why am I always the whore?” I asked Gertie.
Gertie shrugged. “Just lucky, I guess. I never get to be the whore.”
“This isn’t the end,” Celia said. “I’m going to crawl up your butts with a microscope.”
“Are you going to buy me dinner first?” I asked. “Because even whores have standards.”
Celia’s face turned red and I swear, for a moment, I thought she was going to attempt to hit me. But then she must have had a burst of reality check, and she just glared. “There’s something off about you,” Celia said to me. “I’ve known it from the beginning and I’m going to get to the bottom of it. Nothing bad ever happened in this town until you showed up.”
“That’s enough,” Carter said. “The auditors have completed their job. Marie is the new mayor of Sinful. I want everyone to clear out of here and go on with your lives. Including you, Celia.”
“I want another audit!” Celia yelled at Carter. “And this time, I want a firm from another state. One that can’t be bought.”