by K. J. Emrick
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
About the Author
COPYRIGHT
First published in Australia by South Coast Publishing, February 2014.
Copyright K.J. Emrick (2014)
This is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents and locations portrayed in this book and the names herein are fictitious. Any similarity to or identification
with the locations, names, characters or history of any person, product or entity is entirely coincidental and unintentional.
- From a Declaration of Principles jointly adopted by a Committee of the American Bar Association and a Committee of Publishers and Associations.
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Chapter One
Darcy Sweet folded another piece of tape against the back of the big red heart she had cut out of construction paper and decorated with scrapbooking lace. She positioned it just right on the end of one of the metal bookracks in her store, the Sweet Read Bookstore. It was the final touch among all the other Valentine’s Day hearts, cupids and roses. When it was in place she stood back to admire her work.
“I think it needs more streamers,” Sue teased her. Sue Fisher, Darcy’s young and enthusiastic assistant, tapped a finger against her lips. “Yes. And maybe some more roses. There has to be some left in Misty Hollow somewhere.”
“Very funny,” Darcy told her, sticking her tongue out. She did a slow circle in the middle of the store, checking out the decorations that hung from the ceiling or were propped up on the tables in the reading corner or just stuck on the walls and windows. “I think it looks good. Have you ever seen a better looking Valentine’s Day display?”
Sue raised her dark blonde eyebrows. “Nope. It’s the best I’ve ever seen,” she said, her tone flat.
Darcy wondered what was eating at Sue. Come to think of it the girl had been a bit distracted all morning. “Um, Sue? What’s up?”
At first she thought Sue wasn’t going to answer her. She kept her head down over the magazine she’d been leafing through half-heartedly all morning. Darcy was just about to let it go when Sue suddenly dropped her hands to her lap and smiled in a sheepish kind of way.
“I’ve met someone new,” she said.
“Well, that’s good isn’t it?” Darcy asked. Sue had finally broken up with her on again, off again boyfriend Randy just before Christmas. Darcy had never really cared for the guy anyway. Sue had never seemed happy with him. Now with a new guy, and at Valentine’s Day no less, maybe Sue could be happy again.
Sue’s smile got bigger. “Oh yes Darcy, he’s the most wonderful guy. It’s only been a few weeks and already I just can’t stop thinking about him. He could be, you know, the one,” she said, her fingers making air quotes to show how serious she was. “His name is Zachary Kendell. I met him at college. Same courses. Same taste in music. He even likes mustard on his hamburgers. Can you believe it?”
Darcy couldn’t help but smile back at her. “Yes. I can believe it. It’s the season of love after all.”
“Oh, well, now, I wouldn’t use the big L word just yet,” Sue said, but even as the words were coming out her cheeks were coloring red. “Anyway, with winter break and all, he promised to come visit me here. Maybe you’ll get a chance to meet him.”
Darcy could see Sue really had strong feelings for this Zach. Not that it surprised her. Darcy had fallen for her boyfriend, Jon Tinker, within days of meeting him. They’d taken the big step now of moving in together. She’d never been happier than she was waking up next to him each and every morning.
“So, yeah,” Sue continued. “Things are going really well with us. I’m just kind of worried, you know?”
“Worried? About what?”
Sue grimaced and then sighed. “I’m worried about Valentine’s Day.” As Darcy scrunched her face up in confusion, Sue quickly explained, “I’m worried that it’s going to put too much pressure on him. You know how guys are. I don’t want Zach trying to go over the top or stressing that I won’t be happy with whatever he does. I don’t want him to think I expect some big gesture.”
Darcy thought about it. “Can I give you some advice?”
Sue practically beamed at her. “Oh Darcy, I’ve been waiting all morning to ask you! You’re the perfect person to give me advice. You and Jon are like the most loving couple I know. Tell me. What are the two of you doing for Valentine’s Day?”
Darcy bit her lip and kind of rolled her eyes as she sat down in the chair next to Sue’s. “I have no idea. I keep trying to get hints from Jon but he won’t tell me anything.”
“Or maybe he doesn’t have anything yet,” Sue said.
Darcy giggled. “He better have something or I’ll make him sleep on the couch for a month!” The two girls laughed together. “No, really. I don’t care what he does. I just want it to be from the heart. Anything he does that he really means will be fine for me.”
“Is that your big advice?” Sue asked, a little disappointed.
“Yup, that’s it. That’s what you need to do with your new guy. Find something to give him from the heart, and let him know that’s all you want from him in return. Expensive doesn’t make something special. Love does.”
She felt foolish, talking like this about her and Jon and love and all. She chalked it up to Valentine’s Day being next week. Love was in the air. It was in her thoughts, too. Turning the antique ring around her finger like she did when she was nervous or distracted, she realized that Sue was still staring at her. She shrugged her shoulders. “I just wish I knew what I could get Jon.”
“You should take Jon to the dance in the square on Valentine’s Day,” Sue suggested with a smile. “You know. A man, a woman, music, dancing. And…whatever.” She winked at Darcy when she said it.
Darcy knew Jon was something special in her life. They had gone through a lot together, what with his being a police officer and her special gift. It had taken a little while but he accepted who she was now, all of her, and she loved him all the more for it.
Of course, there were the mysteries
and murders that had swirled through their quiet little town over the last year or so, too. Hard to forget those.
To Sue, she said, “Dancing? That sounds like fun. Jon is not such a great dancer when you put him on the spot, but at home, every once in a while he’ll take me by my hand when we’re alone and the radio is playing some silly song, and we’ll just dance around the kitchen forever.”
“See? That’s what I’m talking about. That’s the kind of romance I want to find with someone. Guys are just jerks, that’s what I think.”
Darcy looked at her out of the corner of her eye. “What about Zach? Is your new guy a jerk?”
Sue’s face melted into a dreamy smile. “No. No, he’s not.”
Darcy got up and went to fiddle with straightening the books in their stacks. “Well, I already volunteered to help plan and decorate the town square for the dance. I’ll ask Jon if he wants to take me there for Valentine’s Day.”
“Shouldn’t he ask you?” Sue suggested.
“Sure. But here’s my other bit of advice. Don’t wait for the guy to ask you to do things, if there’s something you really want to do. We aren’t kids anymore, and love takes two people.”
Sue nodded, looking for all the world like she was taking notes in her head from everything Darcy was saying.
Pulling back her long dark hair from her shoulders, Darcy looked around the empty store. Business had dropped off during the last two weeks, but it was sure to pick up for Valentine’s Day. Either people were buying books for loved ones or people buying books about how to meet people. Or even the older ladies coming in to buy romance novels, who like to live vicariously through the dashing deeds of fictional men and women living in perfect worlds.
Darcy’s life had been anything but perfect, but she wouldn’t trade it for anything. She wouldn’t give up her friends here in Misty Hollow or her incredible boyfriend Jon or even being the owner of her Great Aunt Millie’s bookstore.
Just as she was thinking that, all of the streamers hanging from the ceiling fluttered to the floor in a messy heap.
Darcy shook her head, hearing faint musical laughter that seemed to come from all around her. Departed, but not forgotten, Great Aunt Millie could be a real handful when she wanted to. Sometimes, she wished she could be the owner of a store that wasn’t haunted by the former owner. “Oh for Pete’s sake, settle down, Millie,” she whispered.
The laughing faded away. Sue sighed heavily and pushed her magazine aside. “I’ll get more tape,” she said.
Chapter Two
Darcy turned the sign on the door from “OPEN a good book today” to “CLOSED, THE END” and pulled the door tightly shut behind her. She’d had a few sales today and tomorrow a shipment of books was due in for their Valentine’s Day display, and even Great Aunt Millie had settled down after her one act of mischief. All in all, it had been a good day.
As she was locking up, she thought about how she would soon be able to ride her bike to work once again. Small patches of snow still spotted the streets and lawns around her from the freak storm they’d had just three days ago, but the weather looked like it was starting to fine up a bit. February and March were traditionally mild months in Misty Hollow. No reason to think this year would be any different.
It was still really cold right now, though, and as she headed over to the Bean There Bakery and Café on foot she huddled deep into her warm winter coat, the white one with the fake fur ruff around the hood. Jon had given it to her as a belated Christmas gift. Or, so he said. Sometimes she thought he just liked to spend money on her. Not that she minded. As long as he didn’t go overboard. She was just a simple country girl, after all.
She laughed at her joke, knowing full well there was nothing simple about her life. “Darcy Sweet,” she thought to herself, “you are a complicated woman with a full life. Just accept it.”
She pushed the door to the café open and could see her friend Helen Nelson working behind the counter. Helen was the owner of the café but she had also become the mayor of Misty Hollow after the previous mayor, her husband, had been arrested. That had been when Darcy and Jon had first met. What a way to start a relationship.
The place was almost empty at this time of the day, closing time, when most everyone in town was either headed home or going to work in the next town over for a night shift.
“Hi Helen,” Darcy called out as she approached the counter. The warmth in the place was penetrating through her coat and into her body. She shrugged off her coat and laid it over the back of a chair. She’d always liked the cozy, comfortable place Helen had created here. Everyone in town came through here at least once a week. Helen was as much of a mainstay in the town as the persistent mists that gave their town its name.
“Oh, why hello Darcy,” Helen greeted her with a warm smile. “Would you like a coffee?” She had been busy rolling dough for some sweet confection, but when she saw Darcy she set that aside and wiped her floured hands off on a cloth and then tidied her graying hair.
“A coffee sounds wonderful, Helen,” Darcy told her as she stood at the low glass counter. “It’s very chilly out. Mind if I stay here for a while and chat?”
“You know you’re always welcome in my store. Take a seat. Anywhere will do. I’ll bring you that coffee. And maybe a blueberry muffin?”
Darcy said yes to the muffin—she would have been a fool not to say yes to Helen’s baking—and then sat down at a nearby table and sighed. The day hadn’t been any longer than most, but it sure felt like it had. Rubbing a hand over her face she tried to stifle a yawn just as Helen set a cup of fragrant coffee in front of her along with a huge muffin on a little plate. Darcy smiled at her friend as Helen sat down across from her.
“You look really tired, Darcy,” Helen said to her, holding a ceramic coffee cup of her own between her hands. It was one of those oversized ones, glossed in a riot of colors. Helen didn’t bring them out much because people kept walking off with them. “Now, you aren’t working too hard, I hope?”
“Look who’s talking,” Darcy said back to her with a teasing smile. “I’m not the one working two jobs.”
“Bah. Running a town like this doesn’t take a whole lot of time when you’ve got good people working for you. And the bakery is just fun. Oh, did I tell you I’m going to hire another worker?”
Darcy started to say something about the last few workers Helen had hired, but thought better of it. No sense dragging up bad memories. “Someone from in town?” she asked instead.
“Um, no. No. I met him on that trip I took a few weeks back. The cooking convention? He really enjoys cooking.”
Helen realized she was rambling and stopped herself by taking a sip of her coffee. Darcy noticed the way the older woman’s eyes grew distant. She suspected that there was more to Helen wanting to hire this man than just his being a good cook. Good for her, Darcy thought to herself. She and her husband had divorced already, and Darcy knew Helen had been lonely. Apparently not any more.
“Oh, by the way, Helen. That reminds me. I’m not going to be able to work the dance on Valentine’s night. I’ll still help you guys decorate for it, of course, but I really want to go with Jon to the dance itself. I hope that’s okay?”
Helen laughed. “That’s totally fine, I understand.”
They chatted for a while about mundane things while they drank their coffee. Darcy left a little later and headed over to the police station to see Jon.
Chapter Three
As Darcy entered the police station she dropped a brown paper bag onto the counter in front of Sergeant Fitzwallis, one of the front desk sergeants of the Misty Hollow police department. Darcy had gotten to know most of the men and women who worked here on a first name basis. That was what happened when you were dating a police officer.
The gray-haired man’s eyes looked eagerly at the bag. “What’s this, then?”
Darcy smiled at him. “Oh it’s just a little gift from me to you, Sean. You work too hard.”
“Muf
fins, is it?” He opened the bag and inhaled deeply. “Ah, I’d recognize the smell of Helen’s baking anywhere. Thanks, Darcy. You know you don’t have to bribe me, right?”
“I’d never dream of bribing a police officer. That’s illegal.”
They shared a little laugh as Sergeant Fitzwallis buzzed the connecting door open between the station’s lobby and the inner areas where the officers did their work. “You bring anything for Jon, did you?”
“Just me,” she answered him.
Darcy found Jon and her sister Grace both at their separate desks bent over case files, busily scribbling notes or turning papers. Grace lifted her head as she heard Darcy come in. She was dressed in a button-up white shirt and her short dark hair was perfectly in place, as usual. She smiled at Darcy, but in a distracted way.
“Hi sis,” Grace said. “What’s up?”
“Nothing. I just came to see Jon for a few minutes before I head home.” He stood up as she got closer, her ruggedly handsome dark haired man, and their kiss was gentle and loving. She caught her sister’s carefully schooled expression. Grace was happy for them. For the longest time, Darcy had been sour on the whole prospect of love, after her husband had divorced her and become a jerk.
She caught herself. Best not to talk that way about the dead. Not even Jeff. Not when the dead had a habit of talking back to her.
“I thought you’d be on your way home by now,” Jon said to her as he touched her forehead quickly with his and then sat down again. His slacks and dark blue dress shirt were wrinkled, his tie loosened at his neck. His blue eyes lit up, though, as he looked at her. “We weren’t supposed to go anywhere tonight, were we?”
“No, no,” she told him. Sometimes he got so caught up in his work that he forgot dinners or other small things he’d promised to take care of, like how he was constantly forgetting to pick up milk. “I wouldn’t mind a ride home, though. It’s cold out there!”
Grace laughed from her desk as she closed one folder and opened another. “You only live just outside of town, Darcy. You always used to walk without complaint before you met Jon.”