by Avery Aames
PRAISE FOR THE CHEESE SHOP MYSTERIES
“A mouthwatering mystery with characters as colorful as its autumn setting and a plot that twists and turns, keeping the reader guessing right up until the end. Enticing and intriguing, I was thoroughly engaged from the very first page.”
—Jenn McKinlay, New York Times bestselling author
“A delectable culinary mystery with a juicy plot and a tasty twist . . . will leave you hungry for more.”
—Kate Carlisle, New York Times bestselling author of the Bibliophile Mysteries
“[A] deliciously fast-paced, twisty mystery filled with lovable, quirky characters. . . . I guarantee you’ll be back for more.”
—Julie Hyzy, New York Times bestselling author of the White House Chef Mysteries and the Manor House Mysteries
“A lovely Tour de Fromage. It’s not just Gouda, it’s great!”
—Lorna Barrett, New York Times bestselling author
“Rich characters, decadent cheeses, and a scrumptious mystery . . . to be savored like a seductive Brie.”
—Krista Davis, New York Times bestselling author of the Domestic Diva Mysteries
“A delicious read.”
—Cleo Coyle, New York Times bestselling author of the Coffeehouse Mysteries
“Like a fine wine, this series just gets better with each new addition.”
—MyShelf.com
Berkley Prime Crime titles by Avery Aames
THE LONG QUICHE GOODBYE
LOST AND FONDUE
CLOBBERED BY CAMEMBERT
TO BRIE OR NOT TO BRIE
DAYS OF WINE AND ROQUEFORT
AS GOUDA AS DEAD
FOR CHEDDAR OR WORSE
An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC
375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014
FOR CHEDDAR OR WORSE
A Berkley Prime Crime Book / published by arrangement with the author
Copyright © 2016 by Penguin Group (USA) LLC.
Excerpt from Grilling the Subject by Daryl Wood Gerber copyright © 2016 by Daryl Wood Gerber.
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eBook ISBN: 978-0-698-15009-6
PUBLISHING HISTORY
Berkley Prime Crime mass-market edition / February 2016
Cover illustration by Teresa Fasdino.
Cover design by Jason Gill.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
PUBLISHER’S NOTE: The recipes contained in this book are to be followed exactly as written. The publisher is not responsible for your specific health or allergy needs that may require medical supervision. The publisher is not responsible for any adverse reactions to the recipes contained in this book.
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To Kate Seaver, thank you for guiding me through the wonderful world of publishing!
I treasure your input, expertise, and friendship.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
“Passion is one great force that unleashes creativity, because if you’re passionate about something, then you’re more willing to take risks.”
—YO-YO MA
I am blessed to have so many people in my life who love me and encourage me to follow my dreams and my passions. Thank you to my husband and my family for your love. Thank you to my talented author friends, Krista Davis, Janet Bolin, Kate Carlisle, and Hannah Dennison for your words of wisdom and calm. Thank you to my good friends who check in on me, especially when times have been rough. You know who you are!!
Thanks to all the author pals I’ve met over the past ten years, mainly via the Internet, who are in my life daily. I feel like we’ve been good friends our entire lives: my brainstormers at Plothatchers and my blog mates on Mystery Lovers Kitchen. Love you all!
Thanks to those who have helped make the Cheese Shop Mysteries a success: my fabulous editor Kate Seaver, as well as Katherine Pelz and Danielle Dill. Thanks to a terrific copy editor, Courtney Wilhelm, who has offered a critical eye to make this the best book possible. Thanks to my agent, John Talbot, for believing in every aspect of my work. Thank you, Sheridan Stancliff, for keeping me calm as I navigate the tricky world of social networking. Thank you, Kimberley Greene, for your support and your humor as I press onward. And thank you to a new member of my team, Madeira James.
Thank you to my cheese consultant, Marcella Wright. You have helped me more than you will ever know. This series is tastier because of you!
Thank you librarians, teachers, and readers for sharing the delicious world of a cheese shop owner in a quaint, fictional town in Ohio with your friends. Thank you to all who have posted such tasty, positive reviews!
And thank you Charlotte, Grandmère, Pépère, Delilah, Rebecca, Jordan, Urso, Meredith, Matthew, the twins, and the myriad other personalities who have populated A Cheese Shop Mystery series for coming alive in my mind and becoming a part of my life. You have enriched me with your personalities, your insights, and your love.
Savor the Mystery!
CONTENTS
Praise for the Cheese Shop mysteries
Berkley Prime Crime titles by Avery Aames
Title Page
Copyright
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
CHAPTER 32
CHAPTER 33
Recipes
Letter from the Author
Special Excerpt from Grilling the Subject
About the Author
CHAPTER
1
I stopped dead in my tracks and listened, on full alert: a leaf fluttering in the early morning breeze, a creature skittering across the pavement; footsteps. I whirled to my right, but I couldn’t see a thing. Dang. It was inky black out. The crescent moon had disappeared over an hour ago. It’s always darkest before the dawn, my grandfather would say.
“Anybody there?” I whispered.
As if, I thought. As if someone wishing me harm would cry out, Yes!
Breathe, Charlott
e. Doing my shallow best, I glanced at Rags, my adorable Ragdoll cat. I could make out the white of his dappled fur. He wasn’t acting antsy, which meant I shouldn’t, either, but sometimes the dark scared the bejeebers out of me. Why was I so jumpy? I couldn’t put my finger on it. The month of May was a lovely time of year. The temperatures were growing warmer. Birds were building nests and feeding newborns. Tourists were flocking to our fair town, which meant sales at Fromagerie Bessette—what many in town call The Cheese Shop—were good. No, not just good . . . booming.
“Let’s go,” I said to Rags and tugged on his leash. He was one of the few cats I knew that had taken to one. I think a leash made him feel safer.
If only some big, strong person had hold of my leash.
A breeze kicked up behind me. A chill shimmied down my spine. I spun again but didn’t see any sign of danger.
“Think lovely thoughts,” I muttered. “Raindrops on roses.” We were on our way to the shop, walking instead of driving, as we often did. What could go wrong? Maybe I should have put on something warmer than a lacy sweater and trousers. Ah, who was I kidding? A jacket, mittens, and an ear-flapped snowcap wouldn’t have been enough to warm me right now. Something was getting to me. What?
Then it dawned on me. It was the date my parents died. My shoulders tensed, my body flushed. Every year it happened. The memory of their deaths slammed into me like a thunderbolt. More than thirty years had passed, and yet that fleeting moment when the car went out of control and we crashed had changed my entire world.
A sudden death or two will do that, I thought wryly and mentally kicked myself. Buck up!
I forced the sound of screeching brakes and my parents’ shouts from my mind and hurried ahead. I unlocked the front door of the shop and allowed Rags to cross the threshold first. “Let’s switch on all these lights,” I said to him. “We’ll drum up good vibes. No wallowing.”
I roamed the shop, drinking in the luscious aroma of cheese, drawing strength from what I, thanks to my grandparents, was able to call my own. Though the two darling people who raised me were both alive and in fine health, when my grandfather decided to retire, he turned over Fromagerie Bessette—Bessette being the family name—to my cousin and me. Ever since I moved in with my grandparents, under my grandfather’s tutelage, I had learned to relish all things cheese. Prior to joining me in this venture, my cousin was a well-respected sommelier. He manages the wine annex portion of our shop.
“Not much to do, is there?” I said to Rags. Before leaving last night, I had straightened the boxes of crackers and jars of jam on the shelves, and I’d rearranged the displays on each of the slatted wine barrels. Decorative cheese knives and colorful plates nestled among the crystal wineglasses. Funky and traditional cheese graters stood beside chalkboard-style cheese markers, all set atop a huge wheel of Grafton Clothbound Cheddar, one of my favorite cheeses when paired with a dark chocolate, like Olive and Sinclair Southern Artisan Chocolate.
Rags meowed. I was pretty sure he thought his plea was packed with meaning that I, his human, could interpret. I couldn’t, of course. I wasn’t even good at sign language.
“Hungry?” I asked. I took him to the office—his home away from home—and freshened his water and treats.
Rags circled on his plush pillow in the corner and settled into a ball. Not hungry.
“What should I make for today’s special quiche?” I asked as I nestled into the desk chair and wakened the computer. Rags offered no inspiration. “Maybe I’ll add some secret item or spice that no one can figure out. Ooh, I know! I’ll make it with peanut butter and apples and a dash of nutmeg. I’ll use a simple Havarti.” Havarti is a semi-soft Danish cow’s-milk cheese, good for melting. “That combo will throw Pépère for a loop.” My grandfather loves trying to guess ingredients. “Don’t you think?”
Rags couldn’t be bothered. He was already snoring.
Every day at The Cheese Shop, in addition to the vast array of cheeses we peddled, we offered slices of quiche or specialty sandwiches. When the items sold out, we didn’t make more. We weren’t trying to compete with The Country Kitchen diner across the street. We just wanted our customers to feel they had plenty of time to browse the shop. If they cared to, they could slip into the wine annex and eat their items at one of the mosaic-inlaid café tables.
I clicked on the email icon and reviewed all the entries. A couple of orders topped the list. There was also an email from Jordan, my husband of three months. Subject: I adore you. He sent the note a half hour after I left home. Our home. Or rather, we were in the process of making it ours. We were revamping some of the bedrooms by repainting and switching out the window coverings. We were also upgrading the kitchen. We had ordered new appliances. Jordan loves to cook. So do I.
I typed a quick response: Love you, too, and I headed to the kitchen at the back of the shop.
An hour later, as I was removing the quiches from the oven, the aroma of baked apples, peanut butter, and cheese filling my senses, Rebecca, my twenty-something assistant, entered the shop.
“Charlotte,” she called. “You’ll never guess what I did!” Rebecca, who was relentlessly perky, bopped into the kitchen while tying the strings of her gold apron around her bright pink dress. “Mmm. Smells fantastic. Nutty.” She had a great sense of smell. “See?” She did a twirl.
“You cut your hair.”
Usually Rebecca wore her long blonde hair in a ponytail. Not anymore. A swath of bangs swooped across her forehead. She swiveled a second time to reveal the back of her head, fringed in an A-line at the nape of the neck, not all that different from the style I wore.
“It’s darling,” I said. “Who made you so bold?” I remember her saying that she would never cut her hair. Ever. “The deputy?”
“No.” Rebecca and Deputy O’Shea had been dating for a few months. They had performed in a play a few months ago and had been inseparable ever since, other than for work. I don’t think they had gone past first base, to coin a phrase, which was so sweet and refreshing. “I won’t let a man dictate how I wear my hair.”
“My, my. Aren’t you sassy today?”
Rebecca grinned. “I cut it because I saw this blog online—”
“You said you weren’t going online anymore.”
“To shop. I’m not going online to shop. And I haven’t. But I like to read. Blogs especially.” She flapped a hand. “Anyway, this blogger wrote that a woman should make a change to her look every few years, to keep life fresh and fun. I even added highlights. Can you tell? My hair is now officially multicolored.”
I couldn’t tell—the hairstylist had done a nice, subtle job—but I wouldn’t burst Rebecca’s bubble. When I hired her, she was an innocent right off an Amish farm, ready to spread her wings and taste all life had to offer. Within a month, she fell in love with the vastness of the Internet. She discovered clothing websites, home decorating sites, and more. Then she found TV reruns and became a mystery junkie. After that, she discovered books—everything from thrillers to classics—and movies. She was like an empty vessel ready to be filled. She had seen all the films starring Barbara Stanwyck, Meryl Streep, and Reese Witherspoon. Now she was lapping up movies featuring foreign-born actresses. I think Kate Winslet was her latest favorite, which might explain the inspiration for her haircut. Kate had cut off her curly tresses a month ago. Pictures of her with her new highlighted hairdo were popping up on covers of all the current magazines.
While I wrapped slices of quiche, Rebecca selected a wedge of Bleu Mont Dairy Bandaged Cheddar, an absolutely divine aged cheddar with caramel sweetness and a hint of mossy-grass flavor near the rind. She set it on the cutting board and carved off small morsels, which she placed on a pretty china platter. She set the platter on the Madura gold granite counter next to the display case. We offered a tasting of cheese to our customers daily. It was one of the best ways to sell our wares. Most people couldn’t resist b
uying a wedge of cheese if they sampled it and liked it.
“Are you excited about the big event?” Rebecca asked.
“The brain trust? Absolutely.”
“All packed?”
“Yep.”
“Rags, too?”
I nodded. He was going to stay with my cousin Matthew and his family. Rags’s canine buddy Rocket, a French Briard that Matthew’s ex-wife had given their twin daughters, would welcome Rags with open paws.
“Is Erin ready?” Rebecca asked.
“I’m sure she is.”
Erin Emerald owned a spread at the north end of town called Emerald Pastures Farm, a local farmstead that had won awards for its goat cheese and now its Cheddar cheese. Erin and I had attended school together. I remembered the two of us, in fourth grade, spending a lot of time creating a historical diorama of Ohio; it involved glue and sugar cubes and giggles. Starting tomorrow, Friday, with the help of an event coordinator, Erin was putting on what was called a brain trust for cheese makers. About twenty people, including a few cheese makers, distributors, journalists, Jordan, and I, had been invited to participate. Jordan was invited because he knows the art of affinage, which is the careful practice of ripening cheese, and I was tagging along because I understood the marketing side of cheese. The inn on the property could house half of us. In a few hours, we were going to check in. The other attendees would stay at Lavender and Lace, the bed-and-breakfast next door to my . . . our . . . Victorian. During the two-day affair, Erin wanted us to immerse ourselves in the world of cheese. We would talk shop and compare techniques while we stirred, cut, drained, and milled curd.
“The better question is,” I said, “are you ready?” I was turning the shop over to Rebecca to manage through Sunday. “It will get busy in here.”
Rebecca toyed with her hair. “Of course.”
The brain trust idea had come to fruition because my grandmother, the town’s mayor, had declared that, starting this year, our annual Cheese Festival Week would occur during the first days in May. The festival would start tonight and run until next Friday. Never one to shy away from setting up too many activities, Grandmère had enticed a number of local restaurants to offer cooking classes or specialty dinners. She had encouraged the farmers to hold creamery tours and wine tastings. Erin came to her with the brain trust idea, and Grandmère pounced on it. She had also dreamed up what she was calling the Street Scene.