SHOOTING ON LOCATION
Lisa Chance Cozy Mysteries, book 2
Estelle Richards
This is a work of fiction. Any similarities to actual persons, places, or events are entirely coincidental.
SHOOTING ON LOCATION
First edition.
Copyright © 2017 Estelle Richards
Cover by Spencer Pierson
Edited by Ella Medler
She’s done with the movies, but the movies aren’t done with her.
Lisa Chance has it all. Her coffee shop is starting to succeed and her relationship with Mo is getting closer. She doesn’t miss her old life in Hollywood at all.
But when a film crew comes to town, she’s roped into working on the movie set. Worse, her ex-boyfriend Dylan thinks his role in the film is the perfect opportunity to win her back.
Lisa’s delicate balancing act crumbles when there’s a murder on set – and Dylan is the primary suspect. Can Lisa clear her ex’s name? Or will Dylan get a second chance to ruin her life?
Books by Estelle Richards
Lisa Chance Cozy Mysteries
Last Chance for Murder
Shooting on Location
Killer Campaign
March Street Cozy Mysteries
March Street Murder
Chapter 1
Someone was pounding on the front door. Lisa Chance pulled her sweater tight around herself and tiptoed down the stairs. With the winter nights still long, it had been dark for hours already.
She definitely wasn’t expecting anyone, and Lisa’s Last Chance Café was closed for the day.
The pounding came again, shaking the doorframe.
In the front hall, she hesitated a moment, then pulled out her phone. She dialed the police but didn’t hit Send.
Lisa flipped on the porch light and opened the door. At the same time, she stepped to the side and cringed back into the shadows, peering out to see who was there.
The porch light gleamed off Claire Comstock’s beaky nose. Her frown deepened as she faced the empty doorway.
Lisa stepped into the light again, a sheepish smile on her face.
“Miss Comstock! What a surprise.”
Claire shook a piece of paper at Lisa. “Do you know what this is?”
Lisa shook her head. There was writing on the paper but she couldn’t make it out.
“Your rent check bounced.”
Lisa swallowed and shifted her weight to her other foot. “It did?”
“This isn’t a game. I could still sell this property to Jake Peterman for a nice profit.”
“No, please! I might have had a little cashflow problem mid-month, but I can write you a new check. It’ll clear! Please don’t make me close the café.”
“You are an immature, irresponsible young woman. What makes you think I’d accept another check from you?”
Lisa took a deep breath, preparing to defend herself. After a second, she let it come whooshing out again. “I’m sorry. I won’t let it happen again. I’m still getting my legs under me with the café, but I know I can do it.”
“Why should I believe that?”
“Please, just listen. This town is better off with this café in it than without it. You’re a Comstock, your family helped found Moss Creek. Surely you can give me another chance, for the town’s sake.”
Lisa held her breath, a bubble of fear expanding inside her. Without the café, she would be lost again, adrift.
A muscle in Claire’s jaw flexed. The bubble of fear expanded more as Lisa saw the hardness in her landlady’s expression.
A soft meow interrupted them. Mama Cat padded into the hallway, her tail swishing. Lisa wished she could pick up the black and white cat and bury her face in the soft warm fur. Mama Cat meowed again and rubbed up against Claire’s pant leg, leaving a dusting of fur.
Claire looked down at the cat and smiled, her face appearing decades younger. “Hello again, kitty.”
Claire reached down to gently pet the cat’s head. A soft purr rumbled against her hand. Just months earlier, Claire had adopted one of Mama Cat’s kittens, a playful roly-poly fellow she’d declared the perfect double of the cat she’d grown up with.
Lisa shifted her weight again, making the floorboard squeak.
“Very well,” Claire said. “Write the check. Don’t forget to add the fifty-dollar bounced-check fee as stipulated in your rental agreement. But this is your only warning.”
“Yes! Absolutely. Let me just get my checkbook.” Lisa raced up the stairs to her second-floor apartment and scrambled through her top dresser drawer for the checkbook.
When she came back downstairs, Claire was squatting down to pet Mama Cat. She straightened up to her full height and held out her hand. Lisa placed the check in it. Claire stuffed it into her purse and turned on her heel.
Lisa sighed in relief as she closed the door behind the angry patrician. “Mama Cat, you really saved my bacon.”
Mama Cat meowed at her and ran up the stairs. Lisa locked the door and followed.
She sank into a chair at her tiny kitchen table and opened the check register. Despite her assurances to Claire Comstock, she didn’t have enough in the account to cover the rent.
She put her chin in her hands. Opening the café had been a dream come true. But like many dreamers, she woke up to find that the reality wasn’t quite as rosy as the pretty picture in her mind.
“How am I going to cover that check, Mama Cat? There aren’t enough plasma banks in the whole state of Arizona to make that kind of money. Plus, of course, the whole risk-of-death-from-lack-of-plasma thing.”
The cat looked at her and gave a long slow blink.
“I love you, too. And don’t worry, no matter what, your tuna treats will always be a priority.”
Lisa stared down at the check register, chewing her lip. Her plans for a profitable Christmas season at the café had not panned out. She’d hoped that the tourists coming to the area to ski might stop in Moss Creek. They didn’t. She’d ordered a hundred pounds of dried and candied fruit to make a special holiday recipe, fruitcake muffins, which no one had bought. And she’d ignored her mother’s suggestion to make up a selection of holiday gift baskets with items like mugs, coffee beans and fancy cocoa, all wrapped up with cellophane and topped with a fancy bow. Lisa hadn’t wanted to feel like a retailer selling out for the season. But the slowdown to business as people did their Christmas shopping and avoided spending extra on themselves had cut into her revenue stream in a serious way.
There had to be a way to cover the rent. And the next month’s rent, which would come due in just a week. She would do anything. Anything except admit to her mother how bad things had gotten. Lisa couldn’t stand to imagine the I-told-you-so look in her mother’s eyes. No, she would find a way to make it work without having to admit how badly she’d messed up.
Mama Cat jumped up on the counter next to the little pile of the day’s mail. An envelope fell on the floor. Lisa went to pick it up. It had the logo of one of her credit card companies. More bad news. She ripped it open.
Inside, the credit card company had sent a set of checks with her statement. Lisa caught her breath. She could write herself one of these checks and deposit it in her account to cover the rent. Then, all she’d need to do was increase revenue in the month of January so she could keep up with the payments. Maybe she could find a way to move those fruitcake muffins, or use the ingredients in a recipe that would actually sell.
She ignored the uneasy feeling in her stomach and got her pen, ready to write her second check for the night.
*
“Watch out for the reindeer!”
Lisa looked up at Annette’s shout and was rewarded with a giant, rapidly deflating Christmas reindeer to the face. She backed out from under the droopy antlers.
“Flying reindeer after Christmas?” Lisa said.
“Sorry, boss,” Annette said, peeking over the edge of the porch roof. Her phone appeared in her hand and she snapped a quick shot of Lisa tangled in the slick fabric.
“It’s ok,” Lisa told the teenager. “Rudolph is pretty soft and squishy.”
“That can’t be Rudolph.”
“No?”
“Black nose.”
“Hmm.” Lisa studied the nearly empty decoration. “Dasher, maybe. Or Comet.”
“Ready for the last one?”
“Go for it,” Lisa said, backing up a couple of feet.
The last bit of Christmas decoration came floating down from the roof of the Folly. Lisa had decided, for her first year in business, to decorate Lisa’s Last Chance Café to within an inch of its life. The majestic Second Empire Victorian had sparkled with lights and glittering snowflakes and blow-up reindeer on the roof through the month of December. All month, Lisa walked around humming carols as cold mountain winds whipped through the mountains to dump snow on Lisa’s tiny hometown of Moss Creek, Arizona. After years in Los Angeles, Lisa found it to be a winter wonderland.
Annette climbed down the ladder and dusted off her hands. “Ok, boss, what’s next?”
“Are the snowflakes all wrapped and packed?”
“Yep.”
“The lights, too?”
“Sure are.”
Lisa had been reluctant to ask her young employee to come in on a holiday, not being used to being anyone’s boss. But Annette had assured her that she didn’t particularly celebrate New Year's Day and that she’d rather get in the hours during the holiday break from school than sit at home watching the Rose Parade on TV. Lisa was about to mention that she used to go to the Rose Parade in Pasadena every year when she lived in LA, when Annette had continued by saying that only Olds liked the Rose Parade.
“Ok, then let’s get these guys deflated and packed, and then you can knock off for the day.”
“Thanks, boss.”
They made quick work of packing away the inflatable decorations. Annette hung up her apron to leave, but paused by the door with her phone in hand.
“You’ve already got fourteen nibbles,” she said.
“Nibbles?” Lisa said, wondering if she’d misheard or if this was new teenage slang.
“Yeah, on Krumbsi. See?”
Lisa looked at the screen and saw the picture of herself with Comet in an app with a series of little cookies below the bottom of the picture.
“If you post a cookie krumb that people like, they nibble, like this,” Annette explained, swiping across the screen with a thumb and making another little cookie appear.
“Social media app?” Lisa said, feeling out of touch.
“Of course. Everyone is on Krumbsi now.”
Lisa nodded. “Right, everyone.”
“Really, everyone,” Annette insisted. “Like movie stars and everyone. See? Kaden Nicolini just posted a cookie krumb and…”
Annette’s mouth dropped open as she stared at her phone.
“What is it? Nothing bad, I hope,” Lisa said. She remembered seeing Kaden Nicolini in a low-budget action martial arts movie that her ex, Dylan, had wanted to watch. His acting had been good for the kind of movie it was and, with his looks, she wasn’t surprised when he started to show up in bigger pictures.
“Kaden Nicolini is coming to Moss Creek!”
Lisa clapped her hands over her ears at the piercing shriek of teenage glee. “He is?”
“They’re going to be filming here. Oh, I can’t believe it!” Annette hugged the phone to her chest and twirled around before skipping out the door.
Lisa shook her head as she watched her employee skip down the path. The sun was going down and Lisa was looking forward to a relaxing evening at home in her apartment above the coffee shop. Not quite as nice as a relaxing evening with Mo, but as the town’s only veterinarian, he had a busy schedule. Lisa took her phone out to send him a quick text. “Looking forward to our date tomorrow XOXO.”
Chapter 2
“Sorry about the heater,” Mo said.
Lisa blew out a breath. With the cab of Mo’s truck almost as cold as the frigid iciness outside, her breath turned into a cloud of vapor. Her wool hat and mittens and down-filled coat meant that only her cheeks and the tip of her nose felt the chill. She was certain that all three were bright pink with cold.
“Don’t worry about me. I’m all bundled up,” she said. If she were being honest with herself, she would admit that the winter cold of Moss Creek was bothering her more than she’d expected. All those years in LA had thinned her blood, and it would take more than one season to thicken it up again.
“I need to get it fixed, but the garage said they couldn’t fit me in until after the holiday.”
“I could have driven us today,” Lisa said.
Mo chuckled. “No offense, but I don’t think I’d want to ride in your little car on these roads. Did you get the snow tires put on?”
Lisa blew out another cloudy breath. “I meant to, but…”
“See all this white stuff?” He gestured at the snowy ground whizzing by on both sides. “That’s snow, and on the roads it can turn into ice. This isn’t LA.”
“I grew up in Moss Creek. I know it’s not LA.”
He sighed. “Don’t be upset. I’m worried about you. I see what can happen in car accidents all the time.” As a veterinarian, Mo treated myriad animals hit by cars on icy roads in the winter. Lisa knew that every time he saw that innocent suffering, it tore him up inside. She’d never met anyone else who cared as much about animals as Mo did.
“Ok, sorry, I’ll get it done.”
“Promise?”
She looked at his handsome face scrunched up with worry. How could she say no to that face?
“Snow tires. I promise.”
“Good.”
“Where are we going anyway? It’s almost dark out,” she said.
“When I took over the veterinary practice, Dr. Schrader left me a list of places to check for illegal traps. I check them pretty regularly.”
“You’re taking me to check for illegal traps?”
“Actually, I went through the whole list over the weekend. But one of the places on the list is just… I don’t know. I had to show you.”
Lisa was quiet as they wound through the forest. The light outside was starting to turn bluish as the afternoon wore down toward evening. Finally, he turned off the road and drove slowly through a short series of twists and turns, and then around a bend where he stopped the car.
When they got out and ventured a few feet from the truck, Lisa gasped. They were in the mouth of a tiny canyon. Snow had drifted into glistening waves under the red of the rock walls. Ponderosa pines gathered in a stately parade, their boughs heavy with virgin snow.
Mo put his arm around her, and Lisa snuggled into his shoulder and sighed.
“It’s so beautiful,” she said.
“You’re beautiful.” He put his hand on her face and tilted it up to his. Their eyes met, and she fell into the warm chocolate brown. Her heart beat faster as he leaned in to kiss her. She met his lips, loving their soft eagerness.
When they broke apart, she sighed. “Sometimes I wish we could just spend all our time up here, away from the drama.”
“Drama?”
She groaned. It was hard to think about everything going on with her family, much less talk about it, even with someone as loving as Mo.
“Let’s walk the trail,” he said, knowing that the activity would make it easier for her to talk. It was one of the little ways he was always looking out for her.
They were glad of their boots as they broke through thin crusts of ice over the soft snow on the trail through the woods. A distant t
ap-tap-tap of a downy woodpecker’s beak in a treetop echoed through the forest. A puff of snow fell from a ponderosa up the trail, hinting at the bird’s location. Hand in hand, Lisa and Mo took in the wintry beauty of the canyon.
“Drama?” he said again.
“Maybe not drama. Maybe tension. My dad and Aunt Olivia spending Christmas together, Toby acting like it doesn’t bother him, my mom’s sadness.” She shrugged. “I still wish it could go back to how it was before.”
Mo nodded and squeezed her hand. They stood in silence again, watching the play of shadows in the snow.
“Do you smell that?” Lisa said. She took a deep sniff of the freezing air. “Snow.”
Mo sniffed the air and shook his head. “I don’t, but I trust your nose. We should go back.”
As they walked back up the path, snowflakes began drifting down around them. The fluffy flakes were big, like bits of down after a pillow fight.
When they got back to the truck, the air was noticeably colder and the light was dimming.
“Ok, now I wish the heater in here worked,” Lisa said as she sat on the seat and came into contact with the chilly fabric.
“You get your snow tires and I’ll get the heater fixed.” Mo smiled at her.
He turned back onto the road and headed for Moss Creek. Lisa watched his profile, admiring the little curls on his forehead and the way his nose turned up just a little at the end.
The snow had turned the whole town white and sparkly by the time Mo pulled into the driveway of the Folly.
*
Lisa still wasn’t used to seeing the inside of the café without the holiday decorations. Some people didn’t care for the carols or the poinsettias but Lisa had always loved them. January felt like a bleak month, with the world left to endure the cold and snow without the cheer of Christmas stockings or candy canes.
“I am so glad we don’t have to play that silly music anymore,” Annette said, wiping down a table. “Normal, boring stuff is way easier to tune out. I kept going home and singing Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer or Frosty the Snowman. It was embarrassing.”
Shooting on Location (Lisa Chance Cozy Mysteries Book 2) Page 1