As Stella Wright's Nantucket candle store thrives, her knack for solving mysteries burns equally bright—especially when a Halloween haunted house uncovers evidence of a centuries-old murder . . .
When Stella's friend inherits a creaky, abandoned home in Nantucket, she knows it's the perfect setting for the town's annual Halloween fundraiser. A deserted, boarded-up building on the property—once used as a candle-making shop—adds to the creepy ambiance. But as Stella explores the shack's dilapidated walls, she discovers a terrible secret: the skeleton of a Quaker woman, wrapped in blood-soaked clothing and hidden deep within a stone hearth . . .
While police investigate, Stella wastes no time asking for help from friends with long ties to Nantucket's intricate history. The key to the murder may lie within a scorching 18th century love triangle that pit two best friends against one another over a dubious man. But before the case is solved, another life will be claimed—leaving Stella to wonder who in Nantucket is friend, and who is foe . . .
Release date:
August 25, 2020
Publisher:
Kensington
Print pages:
304
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Saturday morning, I was lounging in my backyard and enjoying a little sun. My chaise for such luxury was a fold-out chair, the kind with plastic straps across a metal frame where one or two bands always seem to be missing in crucial places. Even though my rear end sank a little lower to the ground than I’d prefer, I was deeply engaged with the clouds rolling above me on this late October day. Thick, fluffy, bright white, and moving fast along an otherwise clear blue sky. As one remarkably beautiful apparition whisked by me, I remembered a game I used to play as a kid. My friends and I would study a cloud, and then we’d compare the images we saw. Mickey Mouse, a choo-choo train, a duck. It was amazing how often we saw different pictures in the same floating cloud.
You’d think I’d have learned from our game that there are a thousand ways to see the world, but it took me until I was almost thirty years old to really grasp the concept. Less than six months ago, I was grappling with the fact that my small candle business, the Wick & Flame, would not make it through another year on Nantucket Island. My dream of making candles and selling them in a store I owned, in my hometown, with the good fortune of being with family and friends, could have vanished like the flicker of a flame when it’s snuffed out. But then solving a murder, of all things, helped me see the world differently. Puzzling out a crime and restoring justice was as fascinating to me as studying the ways a wick might last longer or a flame might burn brighter. I’d jumped in to help before I’d even thought about it, and never looked back. After I solved the case, my business grew like a wildfire, and, most surprisingly, I fell in love with Peter Bailey, the town’s newest reporter for the local Inquirer & Mirror.
To my surprise, it was my fate to find murder one more time, less than two weeks ago. Unlike my first foray into the world of crime, no one knew I was even on a murder case except for my mom, who’d been home for a short while. Andy Southerland, the town’s best police officer and one of my oldest friends, caught on too. It’s a good story—spies and national security abound—but that’s a whole other kettle of clues.
This morning, my thoughts drifted to something much lighter: Halloween, which was only six days away. This year, I’d volunteered to assist the Girl Scouts’ Halloween Haunts fund-raiser for the island’s neediest. I’d helped them over the last week build papier-mâché cauldrons, bats, and spider décor. We’d carved pumpkins. We’d planned activities for all ages, ranging from crafts and apple bobbing to a scary, ghostly maze. Today my sales assistant, Cherry, was covering for me at the Wick & Flame, and I planned to use my free time to drop by the girls’ weekend meeting.
I raised one leg in the air and pulled it toward my forehead as a cloud that looked like a gun—I’m not kidding—rolled by. For one moment, I had the witchy feeling that I was too complacent. As its shadow passed, I caught my breath, wondering if the peaceful afternoon, the healthy stock in my store, and the warmth of my relationship with Peter was no more than the calm before another storm. I shook it off. The flip side of having solved two murders is the danger of getting a little paranoid.
Also, I was in close proximity to two boys, all of eight and ten years old. They were the sons of my cousin Chris, with whom I was sharing my patch of lawn. My home is the apartment over Chris’s garage. My bucket list includes owning my own place one day, something with room for a studio and a garden out back, but for now, the company of Chris and his family is wonderful, and the modest rent is ideal for my entrepreneurial ambitions. The boys had inched closer and closer to my personal space over the last half hour, however, so I chalked up my unease to their questionable skill set when it comes to a ball and mitt.
Chris appeared at his kitchen window as their last pitch zoomed over my chair.
“Dudes! Don’t bug Stella,” he said.
“Hi!” I waved to him as the boys retrieved their ball and continued their game.
“Do you want some oatmeal? I’m on breakfast duty,” Chris called out to me.
“That’s very tempting, but I can’t,” I answered. “I’m heading over to the Morton house in about ten minutes.”
The Morton house was home to Halloween Haunts. It was owned by John Pierre Morton, whom I’d met during my last case, when he’d come to our island to check out his inheritance of the musty, forgotten home. Although I’d briefly considered John Pierre a murder suspect, we’d left on good terms when he returned to Canada.
There’s something about the house that has a spell on me. It is inviting in spite of, or perhaps because of, its walls’ crooked lines. The Girl Scouts’ troop leader, Shelly, had the same reaction while shopping at my store one day when she heard me talking to Cherry about the creaky old place. On the spot, Shelly decided it would be the perfect location for her troop’s event. At her request, I gave John Pierre a call, and he graciously agreed to allow the scouts to use his house.
“That place is haunted,” said Chris’s youngest, rubbing his ball into his mitt.
I smiled, knowing the source of his fears. In an effort to drum up business, the troop had circulated a few rumors that the house was actually haunted. Given Nantucket’s foggy nights and seafaring past, filled with shipwrecks and whales’ tales, the town has no shortage of ghost stories. It wasn’t hard for the girls’ propaganda to take off.
“Things aren’t haunted in real life,” I said.
“Yes, they are,” he said, pulling his arm back for a throw.
“Mwah-ha-ha,” I said with my campiest vampire-slash-ghost voice, my arms held high in zombie fashion to play along.
“Boys!” said Chris.
It was then that I realized how sharp a parents’ instincts can be. My arms still raised, I looked up to a new vision of white streaking across the sky. Not a cloud. Nay, it was the white leather of a baseball that flew from the hand of Chris’s youngest with the greatest speed and farthest distance of the day. Right toward the closed kitchen window of my apartment. Unable to interrupt its trajectory, the four of us watched, our jaws hanging, as the ball hurtled toward my window and crashed unapologetically through the glass.
The boys took a step back, and then froze, torn between the primordial instincts of fight or flight.
I managed to stifle an “Oh, no!” in spite of my shock. The boys would have enough to answer for without me. The window’s glass hadn’t even hit the ground before Chris’s back door shot open.
“What the—?” he said, storming across the law. “Get inside!”
“It wasn’t my fault,” each boy said in his own fashion as they both scrambled, defiantly but obediently, toward the main house.
“Sorry, Stella,” said Chris, not pausing to stop.
I grasped at the unbroken chair straps beneath me and hopped up as Chris opened my unlocked door and stormed up the stairs to my apartment. Following him, I saw my cat, Tinker, who was on the top step. His whiskers peeked over his paws in a way that suggested a combination of empathy for and disappointment in his humans. Indeed, there were glass shards on my countertop and in the sink. The window would need to be replaced.
Chris, a contractor, immediately dialed his window-repair guy on the Cape, so I grabbed a broom and got to work. I looked at the window as I heard him complain to his colleague about how long the delivery might take. I knew he was concerned about being a good landlord, but I figured with a trash bag and some heavy tape from under my kitchen sink, I could probably cover the hole well enough until a new window arrived.
“I got this,” Chris said to me, his hand over the receiver. “Really. Scoot.”
Chris went right back to his phone call without waiting for me to answer. Realizing my garbage-bag proposal might only serve to add to his frustration with the boys’ shenanigans, I tactfully traded my broom for my keys and wallet. I silently waved to Chris. He responded with a shooing motion toward my stairs, so I headed down with Tinker behind me. My pet refuses to limit his role to house cat. Sometimes I think he sees himself as another human, or maybe a faithful dog. I didn’t mind. Aside from saving me the worry of having one of his paws land on a shard of glass in my absence, I knew the girls would get a kick out of seeing him.
The two of us jumped in my red Beetle and headed to the Morton house. Having left the chaos of the boys’ game of catch, I was delighted when Tinker and I stepped out of the car to hear a happy chorus of voices coming from inside.
As I was heading up the stairs to the front door, ready to give Shelly a break, I was surprised to hear another sound. It was of a heavy creak from behind the house, followed by a shriek that sang of pure mischief. Fool me once, as they say. My radar for middle-school high jinx was on red alert, thanks to my own family. I headed around the back to investigate.
The backyard was empty, but I wasn’t ready to concede that I was alone. I headed across the half acre of dead grass which was shrouded in fallen leaves, toward a dilapidated stone structure behind the main house that had once been a smokehouse. The girls affectionately called it The Shack. Homes built in the early nineteenth century sometimes had additional buildings behind them that served as workshops. By now, most of these structures have been razed for garages or more yard space, but the Morton house still had one. It was so run-down, however, that no one particularly relished it as history.
The scouts were strictly forbidden to enter The Shack, partly because a chain, which usually secured the front door, screamed tetanus shot. From the squeal I’d heard and the now-opened door, however, I concluded that some of our scouts had decided to break a few rules today. I didn’t blame them. I’d have likely done the same at their age. The question, now, was whether they’d scrambled back into the house or were still exploring. When I reached the front door of The Shack, I heard nothing from within, but I lifted Tinker into my arms.
“Ready?” I said into his soft, pink ear.
With a Cheshire smile, Tinker answered me by jumping from my arms into the small building with one big yowl, which can be deafening when he’s in the mood. His cry, however, was followed by a disappointed sniff. I gathered that his performance had been for nothing. The girls had not waited around to see what was inside.
I, however, decided to finish what they’d started. I was more than a little intrigued as I slipped around the thick, rotting door, standing ajar, and into the one-room building. After I brushed aside some cobwebs, I found myself in a space that smelled of dried dirt and a few autumn leaves. Although the main house was old and musty due to years of neglect by its last owner, it was thoroughly modernized compared to The Shack. Some daylight crept through the door, but the only other source of light was a small window, across which several weeds had taken root. The floor was made of wide wooden planks, which were warped from damp and neglect. The walls were exposed stones, round and about the size of the cobblestones on Main Street. It was a pleasant day outside, but the room was noticeably cold.
As I took a step forward, my phone rang, and my boyfriend’s name scrolled across my screen. My ring tone is an old-fashioned one, but it sounded loud and alien in those hollow surroundings.
“Hello, handsome,” I said.
“Hello, beautiful,” said Peter. “Are you interested in joining me at Crab City later? Low tide is in two hours.”
Peter was working on a story that had lately consumed him about the island’s hermit crabs. He was having the time of his life studying the thousands of crabs that emerge at low tide off the shore of the Nantucket Field Station, which is managed by the University of Massachusetts’s environmental studies department. I’d been competing with the crabs for his time lately, but I was glad that he had taken such an interest in the ocean life that surrounded us. I was still figuring out how I might share his latest passion. Fortunately, I’d come up with an idea this morning.
“Sure,” I said. “I’ve been wondering if it’s possible to develop a marine-life scent that’s appealing for a summer candle.”
“Sounds like an impossible challenge, but I’m sure you will figure it out if anyone can,” he said.
“I’m at the Morton house,” I said, appreciating the compliment. “I can meet you when I’m done.”
“I’m happy to carve pumpkins or whatever you need until low tide,” he said.
“Your skills with a staple gun and your eye for boyishly creepy things might be of use,” I said.
“You had me at staple gun,” he said. “See you.”
I smiled, and figured I had about twenty minutes before he arrived, so I walked toward the most notable feature of The Shack, a hearth at the back of the dimly lit room. I passed a few odds and ends from the last owner. A rusty bike wheel. A spade. A roll of chicken-coop wire. Tinker sprang to my shoulder as a field mouse scrambled along the base of one of the walls.
“You’re a cat,” I said, in case he’d forgotten. “You’re supposed to chase mice.”
He put a paw on my forehead for balance, however, and did not budge.
Like many old fireplaces, the one I approached was huge, at least seven feet wide and maybe three feet tall, with a cooking hook on the left and space to build a large fire. In their day, these household features had served as heaters, lights, stoves, dryers, and more. The mantel of the hearth was made of the same stones as the walls, and cantilevered over the firepit for protection.
As my eyes adjusted, I noticed a sign hanging above the hearth. It was the length of the mantel and about two feet high. Holding up my phone for extra light, I made out the words: COOPER’S CANDLES. The letters were painted in pale blue, were faded and cracked in some places, but were still clear.
“No way,” I said, as much to myself as to Tinker, who whisked his tail and jumped to the ground to investigate.
I realized, with much delight, that I was in a chandlery. The Shack was, in fact, Cooper’s Candles. I couldn’t believe I had accepted Shelly’s explanation that the building had been used for smoking meats when, in fact, the fireproof stone structure with its large chimney was once a place where candles had been made, stored, and, it seemed, sold. The discovery caught me completely by surprise, although the business of Cooper’s Candles would not have been an unusual one for Nantucket during the period the Morton house had been built. Around that time, about a third of the island’s economy came from candle making. Nantucket’s candles were known to have the brightest and whitest light due to the islanders’ access to spermaceti oil from sperm whales.
I couldn’t help it, but I envisioned a young me, sitting by the flames in this room, melting wax and pouring candles that the neighbors might buy. I touched the name on the sign and wondered who Cooper had been. It was likely a family surname, as was the custom back then. My sign over the Wick & Flame is a shiny black quarter board, framed in silver with expertly carved, silver block letters announcing the name. Cooper’s sign was homier. I imagined its architect with a brush in one hand and a paint can in the other.
I took a poorly lit photo and sent it to John Pierre Morton in Canada. A moment later, he responded with words to brighten a candle maker’s day.
Amazing! He wrote. Take it for your apartment. It was meant for you.
I’d lost a window but gained a treasure. I sent back a thank-you, and a heart.
Then I got to work.
First, I tugged at the oversized board, gently, so as not to break it. The wood was thick and still strong in spite of years of neglect and the island’s sea air. When I realized it wouldn’t budge, I searched the items strewn about the floor and picked up the spade. Carefully, I used it as a lever to pry the wood ever so slowly from the wall. Before I knew it, I was building up a sweat, but I didn’t mind. At one point, my phone pinged. I knew it was probably Shelly, wondering where I was, but I’ll admit I couldn’t stop. Although we’d steered clear of The Shack, I was seduced by it now that I was inside. I felt like I had crossed from one world and back into another.
Finally, the wood came free. I slowly lowered it to the floor. I’m respectably strong, but the sign was long and wobbled in my arms like a seesaw. Once I’d laid it on the ground, I needed to stand up to make sure my limbs were still intact. It was a good thing I did because a stone fell from the newly exposed wall, missing my head by a couple of inches. Another followed. Then another. I looked above the mantel and caught another. They loosened like dominos. I removed a couple more before they could fly into the room on their own.
“Psssssst,” said Tinker, coming to my heels.
I pulled three or four more stones from the wall. As I did, I was sure I felt the room became icy cold. Then, behind us, I heard the door move, and with it, a ray of light crossed the floor.
“Stella?” said Peter, peeking through the door frame, first at me and then at the mantel behind me. He straightened at the sight. “Wow. I thought the decorations would be spooky in the house, but that’s overkill. Get it?”
“It’s not a decoration,” I said, staring back at the hole in the wall. “John Pierre said I could have a candle sign I found. When I took it down, this is what I found.”
The two of us faced the mantel, and the human skeleton I’d uncovered, nestled into a carved-out space in the wall.
“Is that a real skeleton?” said Peter.
“Looks like it,” I said, staring at a skull that seemed to look right back at me.
Peter switched on his phone’s flashlight and joined me. I wouldn’t say I was afraid of my discovery, but it’s not every day you plan to carve a pumpkin and end up finding a skeleton. It was nice to have his warm body beside me at that moment.
“Are you sure the scouts didn’t pull a prank on you?” he said, lowering the phone under his chin for a spooky effect.
“Not a chance,” I said. “This is the real deal.”
I explained how I’d found the body behind the mantel’s large stones, which had been covered by the heavy, wooden sign.
We both shuddered.
“I wonder how long it’s been here,” he said.
I’d been wondering the same thing. I closed my eyes and inhaled deeply, deconstructing the odors in the room as I did so. I smelled the autumn leaves, the dirt, the rusted wheel, gate, and spade. I also picked up the scent of turkey and swiss, with a dash of mustard, that wafted from Peter’s knapsack, and a little of his Old Spice. I did not, however, smell any rotting flesh. Granted, my experience with the smell of body decomposition was limited to a squirrel that had died in my wall last year, but that odor was filed away in my highly sensitive olfactory files, honed after years of mixing and matching candle scents for customers.
“I think this guy’s been here a long while,” I said, opening my eyes.
“I can’t believe you found a skeleton,” he said, absently touching a pencil he keeps behind his ear, ready for any story. “You’re like a tomb raider.”
I had to agree I’d stumbled on an unbelievable find. I picked up my phone, which I’d left lying on the floor, and turned its flashlight toward my skeleton. Moving a. . .
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