Kiss & Makeup: Beauty Secrets Mystery Book 2

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Kiss & Makeup: Beauty Secrets Mystery Book 2 Page 1

by Stephanie Damore




  Kiss & Makeup

  Beauty Secrets Mystery 2

  Stephanie Damore

  Pink Sapphire Press

  Stephanie Damore

  Copyright © Stephanie Damore 2017

  The mortal right of the author has been asserted. All rights reserved in all media. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form by any means, electronic or mechanical (including but not limited to: the Internet, photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system), without prior permission in writing from the author.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, brands, media, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. The author acknowledges the trademark status and trademark owners of various products referenced in this work of fiction, which have been used without permission. The publication/use of these trademarks is not authorized, associated with, or sponsored by the trademark owners.

  To Jimmy Johns,

  For feeding my kids so I could write.

  Thank you.

  Contents

  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

  Eyeliner & Alibis

  A Ring to Die For

  About the Author

  1

  “But is it too white?” Aria stared at herself in the floor-length mirror.

  I glanced up from my phone, totally over this whole wedding-dress business. What was supposed to be a thirty-minute dress fitting had turned into a three-hour ordeal. Never mind the fact that it was also my birthday and Aria had completely forgotten it. Add that to the fact that she had tried on dozens of gowns before settling on this one two months ago; and now at her final fitting, she was having second thoughts? You could see my annoyance.

  The seamstress, Aria’s cousin, and the other bridesmaid—Christina—were all doing their best to reassure her. “Too white? Impossible. You look gorgeous,” Christina said. She walked around Aria, fluffing and primping the dress. Christina was a perfectionist and she liked everything just so, including her nude-colored manicure and her intricate hair braids. I tried to ignore her, which was my general MO when it came to Christina. She always thought she was right. Always has.

  “Simply beautiful,” the seamstress said.

  I sided with Aria. One: she hated wearing white. In fact, Aria gravitated toward brighter colors. Red was more her style. And two: the fit was all wrong. Don’t get me wrong, the high-necked beaded lace gown was gorgeous, but it just wasn’t Aria. I would’ve told her all this the first time around but, well, I wasn’t there. I had been so busy expanding my beauty business that I hadn’t had much time to help Aria plan her wedding. No matter. It seemed Christina was stepping up and filling that role, even if she was only a bridesmaid again. A fact that I think she mentioned just twice today. An improvement.

  “Girl, what do you think?” Aria looked over at me for approval.

  Crud. She knew I couldn’t lie to her, but her wedding was only a week away. As in, she had exactly six days until she’d become Mrs. Vincent Delgado. She didn’t have much time to order a new custom gown.

  “Sorry.” I put down my phone. “I was just texting Mrs. DeVine. I told her about that rental space. Remember the one I told you about on Main? I think it’s perfect, and she agrees. Gotta talk a few more business details with her later in the week.”

  Mrs. DeVine was the investment backer for my new beauty business. I had managed to fund the initial research and product run, but that was about as far as my ex’s engagement ring had gotten me. Without Mrs. DeVine’s support, my business would’ve been operated out of my apartment for the foreseeable future. I was incredibly lucky to have her on board, but that also meant needing to run things by her and stay in her good graces, which also meant attending the social events she hosted once a month. These gatherings were basically a giant cocktail party for the rich and famous of Savannah, with a little business networking thrown in. The next one was this upcoming Wednesday and I promised her I’d be there, even if I’d rather be at home binge watching Netflix.

  “Is that a hive?” I took a closer look at my bestie’s face. Her usual warm skin tone was turning into a blotchy mess. “Girl, you gotta calm down. You know you could wear a trash bag and Vince would still marry you.” True story. The man adored her. Plus, he was filthy rich, which somehow made it even more exciting. He bought islands and fancy cars the way some people bought shoes or scratch-off lottery tickets. (Hey, don’t judge.)

  “You’re right.” Aria took a deep breath.

  I stood up from the cream-colored couch. “Listen, I’d love to continue our little party, but I have a hot date and a cake with my name on it waiting for me.”

  It was Seaside Days. The annual kick-off-the-summer festival Port Haven was known for. Finn was going to meet me there to celebrate my birthday and watch the bake-off action. Mrs. Birdie Jackson, aka Mrs. J., the town gossip queen and my surrogate nana, was after the championship title and the competition was fierce. I wouldn’t miss it for the world, even if she didn’t also have a birthday cake waiting for me. Not to mention the fact there were plenty of free samples to go around too. If I was lucky, maybe even a corn dog. Carnival eats should be their own food group.

  “But, we’re not done yet,” Christina insisted, referencing the list on her ever-present clipboard.

  “Oh, but you know me and cake,” I said with a devilish smile.

  “Oh, girl, I’m so sorry.” Aria turned awkwardly to step down from the carpeted pedestal. The fabric twisted around her feet. I went to her instead. “I can’t believe I totally forgot. Happy birthday!”

  “It’s okay, girl. You’re a bit of a hot mess right now, but I still love you. I do have to go, though. Mrs. J. made my favorite.” No need to elaborate. Everyone knew my favorite was Mrs. J.’s famous chocolate cake with its ooey-gooey filling and warm chocolate sauce on top. My mouth tingled in anticipation of the sugar. I may have even drooled.

  “Mind if I come with?” Christina asked.

  “Wha-? Uh, I guess not.” What happened to not being done yet? I guess cake had the same effect on Christina.

  “She’s baking the wedding cake, right?” Christina asked. That she was. Aria had wanted to go with some vegan confection, but I talked her out of that nonsense. “Well, as Aria’s unofficial wedding planner, I think I should taste it, to make sure it’s good enough for our bride-to-be.” Christina said the last part all sing song-y. Oh brother.

  Aria shrugged her bare shoulders. “Just give me five minutes. I want to talk to the seamstress about our dresses and then I’ll be ready.”

  Our dresses were a cranberry-satin number. Completely ugly, also Christina’s doing.

  “Okay, five minutes,” I said. Maybe four and a half and then I was out of there.

  My mom called for the third time that day on the drive downtown.

  “Ziva dear, you didn’t answer me. Is Finn coming tomorrow?” Ugh, why wouldn’t she just drop it? No way was I inviting Finn over to dinner at my parents. Birthday dinner implied a certain level of relationship status that I was
trying to avoid. I had already learned that lesson and kept Finn a safe distance from my heart.

  “Sorry, Mom. Not happening. He’s taking off tomorrow for work. But I’ll pass the invite on.” Liar, liar pants on fire. But what was I going to say? My mother expected nothing less. She put the P in proper, which wasn’t a surprise seeing that her mom and Mrs. J. had been best friends. Those ladies had spent a lifetime gathering dirt on everyone. The secrets those two must’ve known… My mom made sure none of them were about her.

  I dropped the thought as we caught up to traffic. Seaside Days was the festival of the year for Port Haven. This event turned our small seaside town into a happening hot spot. The high school parking lot transformed into a carnival, Main Street was packed with sidewalk sales and street vendors, and the ocean-front park pavilion morphed into ground zero. This weekend’s events featured an airshow, farmers market, country-music concert, and of course, fireworks. If you were a small-business owner, you cherished Seaside Days more than Christmas. I was planning on using the extra publicity to launch my own personal business—Serenity Now. I was introducing the spa line first as to not compete with my Beauty Secrets clientele. Privately, I already had friends raving about and reviewing my product line, but this weekend was going to be my grand public debut before opening my storefront next month (hopefully!). Thanks to the added investment of Mrs. DeVine, my business was blooming faster than I could have ever imagined. I needed everything to be perfect this weekend.

  Parking, of course, was a nightmare, which is why I agreed to meet Finn at the marina where he worked, and we’d walk down together. I parked my cute little pickup next to his real truck on the scorched grass next to Murphy’s Bait and Tackle. The spot had become my unofficial parking space.

  Finn made his way down the docks as we turned the corner to search for him. His shirtless state and khaki cargo shorts put a smile on my face. Happy birthday to me. Before I met him, I had dubbed him the “shirtless hottie,” and the nickname still fit.

  Christina smiled at him a little too sweetly. I didn’t blame her. He was smokin’.

  “Happy birthday, babe,” Finn greeted me with a kiss on the cheek. He lingered for just a moment, but it was long enough for me to take in the rugged, sexual scent of motor oil mixed with cologne that was quintessentially him.

  “Do you girls want to come up?” Finn’s studio apartment was above the bait shop. Thankfully, he had a separate outside entrance. The waterfront views were amazing. The sunrise? Not so much.

  “No, that’s okay. You run up. We’ll wait right here.” If Christina hadn’t been with us, my answer would have been much, much different. I tempered down my thoughts by reminding myself that the bake off was set to start in forty minutes, and I didn’t want to be late. I was sure it was going to be a mouthwatering event. Grand prize was also five thousand dollars, but it wasn’t about the cash for Mrs. J. She was all about the bragging rights. If you asked me, she didn’t need a title; she was the best baker in Georgia.

  Finn was back down at the docks and ready to go in less than ten minutes. Seriously, how did guys do that? I hadn’t introduced Christina yet, so we took a few seconds to get that formality out of the way and then discussed our game plan. As far as Christina was concerned, she was only there to taste the cake and then be on her way. Knowing Christina, she probably had a checklist that she had to get back to. That was fine by me. The girl was way more organized than I could’ve ever hoped to be. Even as kids, she had a love of making lists and she always insisted on being the teacher when we played school. Somehow, I always got detention.

  We heard Mrs. J. before we saw her.

  “Now you wait just a second, Paulette. I told the committee I was making this cake, and that’s exactly what I’m going to do.”

  Paulette scrutinized the recipe card in her hand. Her salt-and-pepper hair swept across her face. She wore a silver headband that wasn’t doing its job, but it did match the silver sequined blazer she wore. I had no idea how she could stand it. Not the sequins, although that was questionable, but the long sleeves with this heat. It had to be ninety degrees out.

  “Well, I’m not even sure this recipe qualifies. It might be one of them copycat ones. You see them on the internet all the time,” she said with authority in her voice. “And secret ingredients? Tsk-tsk.”

  “Copycat my foot! This here is my world-famous chocolate cake, and you know it. I’m not telling you what’s in it either!” Mrs. J. had on a bedazzled apron, hot-pink-and-orange leggings, and a lime green shirt. She looked like rainbow sherbet. Crazy, yet somehow still coordinated. “Now, y’all better give me back my recipe and get out of my way. I’ve got some baking to do.”

  Paulette didn’t move. She stared down Mrs. J. The last time this happened, someone got a pie to the face.

  “Just think, next year I’ll be a judge and you’ll be baking for me!” Mrs. J. said. “Honorary Judge, there’s nothing honorary here,” she added under her breath. Last year, Paulette won the competition and had been promoted to judge along with her best friend, Suzanne Butterfield, who I saw joining them now. Mrs. J. was still not over it. I didn’t think she’d ever be.

  “Ha! Over my dead body. You’ll NEVER be a judge,” Paulette said, puffing out her chest.

  “Don’t tempt me.” Mrs. J. narrowed her eyes and took a fighting stance. My surrogate nana could deliver a threat like a boss. It was inspiring.

  “Please, you hardly scare me.” But Paulette took a step back. Suzanne looked behind her. I wondered if she was looking for a pie.

  “Ladies, if you please.” The town mayor, Mr. Humphrey Potts, hobbled over with his ivory-handled cane and tried to defuse the situation. “We have guests.” His head motioned to the gathering crowd, in a nervous sort of way. The women ignored him. If he was smart, he would’ve just gotten out of the way. Mayor Potts wouldn’t get anywhere with those two. This feud had been going on for years. They weren’t about to stop. Besides, I never thought of Mayor Potts as an authority figure with his bumbling personality. The title Town Ambassador was more appropriate, which was probably why he was the festival’s Grand Marshal every year.

  “Admit it, that’s why you’re not baking this year. Couldn’t handle a little competition,” Mrs. J. said.

  “Oh Birdie, you’re pathetic. Must I remind you, Deep South Cuisine named my pecan torte Best of the Best,” Paulette said.

  “That’s true, they did,” Suzanne said, nodding her head to the gathering crowd.

  “Well, whoopty flippin’ do. I guess that settles it,” Mrs. J. replied, twirling her finger in a circle.

  “And you darn well know last year I won fair and square,” Paulette insisted.

  “If you call having relations with the festival’s Grand Marshal fair and square…” Mrs. J. trailed off. Mr. Pott’s complexion now matched his red bow tie. Suzanne covered her mouth with her hand and widened her eyes.

  “Why you!” Paulette got all huffy. She turned her head to the right and then left in swift desperation, but no pies were in sight.

  Mrs. J. smirked. I wasn’t sure if I should laugh or be horrified. Finn found it totally amusing. Christina’s eyes nearly bulged out of her head. I bet they didn’t have drama like this at the country club.

  “UGH!” Paulette turned on her heel and marched off, balling up Mrs. J.’s recipe card in her fist and throwing it on the ground. Suzanne threw an evil eye at Mrs. J. and followed Paulette. Mayor Potts trailed after them both, picking the card up and smiling at the crowd as if it had all been part of the show.

  “Humph. I’d like to put a little something extra in her cake,” Mrs. J. mumbled. I could relate. I had my own frenemy that brought out the worst in me. I tried to keep it in check, because, you know, Karma and all that; but man, sometimes … Justine could irk me like no one else. Speak of the devil, I thought, as I saw her making her way through the crowd. She had her dolled-up poodle under one arm and was passing out flyers with the other. I didn’t even want to know. I turned my
back to her and got Mrs. J.’s attention.

  “So, you ready to do this?” I asked her.

  “Sug’!” Mrs. J. wrapped me in a giant hug. She smelled like chocolate and peppermint, and I drank it all in. She whispered, “And I see you brought Mr. Hot Pants, too.” I gave her a little extra squeeze.

  “Hey, this is Christina,” I said when we broke free. “She’s Aria’s cousin. I told her you were making the wedding cake and she wanted to give it a little sample.”

  “Well, it’s no buttercream; but if you ask me, this tastes better.” Mrs. J. turned to the table behind her and came back with a bakery box filled with her chocolate cake. I opened the box and took in a big whiff. Forget a plate. Someone needed to get me a fork, stat!

  “Happy birthday, sweets.”

  “Thanks, Mrs. J.”

  “You enjoy it, now. I got to be getting to work. The show starts in twenty minutes.” Mrs. J. scooted us on our way.

  We wished her luck and headed toward the makeshift food court, which was basically an open area with plastic tables and chairs, with food vendors outlining the perimeter. I didn’t even let them sing “Happy Birthday” to me. We cut into the cake with a plastic knife and I doled out the deliciousness. Any skepticism Christina might have harvested vanished the moment that cake was in her mouth. I could see it in her eyes. Dessert nirvana. I’d be a total liar if I didn’t say I would’ve eaten more than my fair share if Finn and Christina hadn’t been there. The cake was that good. But, seeing that I was trying to be a lady (don’t laugh) and we couldn’t take a cake on the Ferris wheel, I thought it would be nice to give some away. So, I did. Satisfied with the cake, Christina took off, and Finn and I passed out the remaining slices on paper plates to whomever wanted one. Well, everyone except Justine. She tried to snag a piece from Finn (did I mention she was also his psychotic ex-girlfriend? Small world, huh?), but I told her no. And then I smiled.

 

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