The rodeo’s in town, and a Texas bookstore owner may have to lasso a killer . . . “The conclusion proves to be as unexpected as it is satisfying.” —Kings River Life. Magazine
Charli Rae Warren is back home in Hazel Rock, Texas, spending her time reading, collecting, and selling books—at least, the ones that don’t get eaten first by her father’s pet armadillo. Running the family bookstore is a demanding job, but solving murders on the side can be flat out dangerous . . .
The Book Barn is more than just a shop, it’s a part of the community—and Charli is keeping busy with a fundraising auction and the big rodeo event that’s come to town. That includes dealing with the Texas-sized egos of some celebrity cowboys, including Dalton Hibbs, a blond, blue-eyed bull rider who gets overly rowdy one night with the local hairdresser . . . and soon afterward, disappears into thin air.
Dalton’s brother also vanished seven years ago—and Charli is thrown about whether Dalton is a villain or a victim. After a close call with an assailant wielding a branding iron (that plays havoc with her hair), and some strange vandalism on her property, she’s going to have to team up with the sheriff to untangle this mystery, before she gets gored . . .
“Fans of the mysteries by Joan Hess and Margaret Maron will find much to appreciate in this series, which highlights the humor of Southern culture while simultaneously celebrating it.” —Kings River LifeMagazine
Release date:
May 16, 2017
Publisher:
Lyrical Press
Print pages:
250
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Literally. The clock over the bookshelf struck six and the class was over. Thank God.
Sure it had been fun, but it was the end of a long day and I was ready to call it quits. The students were in a good mood and the whispered tidbits of gossip had been friendly all evening, with no tinge of envy or meanness attached. It was the type of camaraderie a teacher dreams about with her students.
Not that it ever happened in my former kindergarten classes, but I’d given up teaching in an elementary setting a few months back when I’d chosen to followed my heart on an emotional journey home to work in the family bookstore. That decision had been the best one I’d made in over a decade.
Now my students ranged from eighteen to eighty-seven and gathered in the loft of the historic barn that my parents had converted into The Book Barn Princess when I was a little girl. And once a week my class gathered to create something new out of something old. Specifically, old and/or damaged books. This week we were repurposing books into wall clocks for a local charity auction.
“We need to wind things up, ladies and gentlemen.” I smiled as they groaned at my clock-based humor.
Scarlet, the owner of the Beaus and Beauties hair salon across the street, developed our program and was the creative genius behind every project. She was also the sassiest woman in town, which was saying a lot. Her flaming red hair, worn curly and wild today, bounced as she sauntered across the room and joined the conversation. “Time flies when you’re having fun.”
“Big time,” replied Betty, the local quilt shop owner, her blue hair bobbing up and down as if she wore a helmet two sizes too big.
“Maybe we could turn back the hands of time,” added Jessie, my oldest student.
Jessie’s wife eyed the other women in class who had the audacity to smile in his direction. It didn’t matter that they’d all known each other for years, Daisy had a habit of establishing ownership of her man—repeatedly. “That’s my husband,” she warned.
My dad decided to chime in. “You can’t beat the clock.”
I stood, debating if my dad was referring to Jessie’s fifty-plus-year marriage to Daisy, or if he was adding his own pun to the mix, when two incredibly good-looking men climbed up the stairway to the loft. One of them was a staple in our town, but the other was new to the circuit and had been turning heads for the past two days. He joined the conversation without missing a tick—or a tock.
“Darn, I was hoping to kill some time with y’all.” Rodeo star Dalton Hibbs smiled. His blond hair glistened under the fluorescent lights, and his deep blue eyes made every woman in the room drown in their cool depths. He had what it took to melt the coldest of hearts, and I had to admit, even though he wasn’t my type, he gave me warm fuzzies whenever he winked in my direction.
“Which will put you behind bars, serving time,” said our handsome sheriff, Mateo Espinosa, who’d walked into the room with Dalton and wore a light brown uniform shirt with dark brown pants. The outfit looked downright terrible on most officers—on Mateo it was dreamy and steamy earth tones that complemented his dark complexion. His presence served as a reminder of how complicated my love life was without adding another guy to the mix.
“Time’s up!” Joellen added with the blushing grin of a teenager as Dalton turned his pearly whites on her.
“I think I’m going to be ill,” grumbled Jessie, holding his chest.
A laugh traveled through the room as Scarlet snorted.
Daisy looked over the top of her glasses at my best friend, who seemed to be enjoying Jessie’s humor more than the rest of us. “That’s my husband,” she reminded Scarlet.
Scarlet blushed, while our newcomer, Dalton, appeared somewhat confused by Daisy’s jealous outburst.
Betty patted him on the shoulder as she stood up from the long wooden table where she’d been working. “Daisy has been reminding every woman in town that Jessie is her man for the past fifty years. We’re beginning to think those are the only words she knows in the entire English language.”
A grin spread across Dalton’s face. “Let me guess, Daisy’s used to reminding women that Jessie’s married because Jessie’s a bull rider?”
Jessie stood up tall, all five foot seven inches of lean cowboy in boots almost as old as him and showed off the worn buckle on the belt that cinched his jeans up around his ribs. “You’re looking at the nineteen forty-seven Champion Bull Rider. The best in North America.”
“That’s my husband,” Daisy added, her tone full of sarcasm.
This time, everyone laughed at Jessie’s wife, leaving the grumpy old codger at a loss for words, but his disparaging expression was still intact. I secretly believed Jessie was laughing at all of us despite the permanent frown creasing his face.
I addressed the class as a whole. “If you’re going to donate your clocks to the auction, please leave them here to dry. Dad added the new shelves on the side wall this week so we’d have more room. Just make sure they’re high enough to be out of the reach of the preschoolers who will be making book collages tomorrow morning.”
I set my project on the highest shelf I could reach without the ladder we had yet to install. I’d made my piece of book art out of a first edition of Nancy Drew’s The Secret of the Old Clock. Some readers might get their panties in a bunch and gasp at the destruction of such an iconic book, and believe I did something sacrilegious to a classic novel worth more in the world of literature than it was as a clock at auction. I would wholeheartedly agree, if my dad’s pet armadillo, Princess, hadn’t torn off the back cover and eaten a hole in the middle of the last thirty-seven pages of the book before I transformed it. As it turned out, my work was an improvement.
Princess, a nine-banded armadillo, was a freak of nature. Her pale pink coloring made it impossible for her to be let loose in the wild. She did, however, have her own pet door and roamed freely in the backyard behind our barn. She was also the reason we’d started the book art classes to begin with. She had a taste for books—too bad it had nothing to do with reading.
“You’ve got some mighty fine pieces of art downstairs for the auction.” Dalton was talking to me, but his eyes roamed toward Scarlet, who turned as red as her name suggested.
“Thank you. We hope to make a little bit of money to add to all of the donations the rodeo stars are making to the cause.” I was very aware of the members of the class watching our exchange. They couldn’t help themselves. Dalton Hibbs was making small talk with a local girl and the town had dreams of him becoming one of our own. Except their eyes had gone to the wrong woman—they should have been watching Scarlet instead of me.
“Who made the incredible bull rider out of Zane Grey’s Light of the Western Stars?” he asked.
I smiled, knowing I could direct Dalton’s attention toward Scarlet, right where they both wanted it to be. “That would be Scarlet. She’s the real artist. I’m just mildly crafty.”
Dalton took advantage of the out I’d given him and gave Scarlet his full attention. “Is that so?”
All eyes pinged to my best friend, her skin now two shades closer to the color of her hair.
“I—I’ve always like sculpting,” Scarlet stammered. Dang, if she didn’t have it bad for the young rodeo star who was only in town for a couple weeks.
“You’re good with your hands.” Dalton’s voice held all the innuendo a man of his looks and status could get away with, and the crowd was eating it up.
Including me. I couldn’t help but envy all that charm directed at my friend. Not that I wanted Dalton flirting me up one side and down the other, but if those daring innuendos were thrown at me by someone else, it would be nice. I looked over at the sheriff, whose chocolate-brown eyes made me want to melt.
Dalton made his way across the room and stood in front of Scarlet. “I’d like to buy it.”
Scarlet’s disappointment was evident in the slight downward turn of her mouth as she shook her head, obviously saddened that she couldn’t just give the piece of art to the sexy man in front of her. But the piece, like so many others in the store, was earmarked for auction.
“It’s up for auction tomorrow,” Scarlet said.
The annual Cowboy Ranch Auction ran in conjunction with the Cowboy Ranch Invitational, a rodeo that brought all the big names in the sport to our small town. Both events benefited injured and aging rodeo stars who’d given everything they had, and more, to the sport. It’d only been recently that the cowboys started making big money to put their lives, and health on the line. And even now, for every cowboy who made it rich, there were thousands working two and three jobs to make ends meet. The Cowboy Ranch stepped in to help those cowboys who’d suffered career, and life-altering injuries with no source of financial backing to get them through.
Dalton’s charm, however, was a force to be reckoned with. His voice had a low register that made a woman’s body stir. “Surely if I bid high enough now, I can bypass all the competition.”
“There’s no competition. Scarlet’s single,” interjected Jessie.
“That’s right,” added Betty, her bobblehead going so fast I thought for sure her wig was going to fly across the room. “If you plan on making a move, you better do it now. Otherwise, you never know who’s going to be making a move in your direction.”
Dalton laughed at the woman well past her prime. Betty had owned the quilt shop in town long before Dalton’s momma was born. “I’d hate to turn down a woman with so much experience, but I’m afraid my heart has been roped,” Dalton replied. He turned his eyes back toward Scarlet. “What’s the opening bid?”
“Two hundred dollars,” I replied before Scarlet sold it for less than half its worth. She’d worked on that particular sculpture for several months and had barely finished in time for the auction.
Dalton tipped his head in my direction. His eyes, however, never left Scarlet’s face. He grabbed her hands and held them steadfast. “I’ll give you two thousand for it.”
“Dollars?”
“Unless you want Euros?” Dalton flashed his killer smile as he lifted her hands to his mouth and kissed the back of her knuckles. “Say yes.”
Mateo cleared his throat and pulled at his collar. Betty sighed to my left.
“Yes,” whispered Scarlet.
“What’d she say?” asked Jessie.
“Shhhh!” Daisy swiped at her husband’s arm.
“How’s a body supposed to keep up with these young ’uns if they whisper all the time?”
“Put your hearing aid in. Then maybe you’ll find out what people are saying about you,” Daisy replied.
“What?” Jessie looked over the top of his glasses, his stare landing on no one in particular.
“She said, put your hearing aid in!” Betty repeated.
Jessie turned his back on his wife and Betty, then winked at my dad. A look of pure devilry passed between them and I began to wonder if my dad would be torturing me in the same manner as he aged past his prime.
“Can I take you out for an early dinner?” Dalton asked Scarlet.
Jessie heard that proposition with no problem. He turned back toward the young couple and waited for Scarlet’s response as if he had more riding on her answer than Dalton did.
“Well, I have to clean up—”
“It’s my turn to pick up things around here,” Dad interjected.
“I’ve got a roast in my Crock-Pot—” Scarlet protested.
“She makes the best roast this side of the Red River,” I added.
“Are you asking me to have dinner with you, Scarlet?” Dalton was still holding her hands and gazing down into her eyes like the rest of us weren’t even in the same universe.
Before Scarlet could say a word, Jessie chimed in with his two cents worth. “Are you waiting for the red carpet, son? The woman just said she had a roast on. She didn’t tell any of us she was cooking.”
Actually, she had. That was my Tuesday night girl’s night out roast dinner going up in the sparks between them.
Scarlet glanced in my direction, and I immediately let her off the hook.
“We still on for dinner, Dad?” I asked.
My dad didn’t miss a beat. “I’ve got a mighty big hankerin’ for a Rocker Burger from the diner, and the sheriff said he was going to join us.”
Mateo’s jaw quirked before he dipped his dark head in agreement. Both men read the situation faster than I expected. But it was the look on Scarlet’s face that nearly brought tears to my eyes. Her very own fairy tale was unfolding in Hazel Rock, Texas.
“Give me thirty minutes and I’ll treat you to a home-cooked meal you’ll never forget.” Scarlet beamed up at Dalton as everyone turned away, pleased with their matchmaking skills.
I was the only one who saw the promise of so much more pass between the couple as Dalton kissed her cheek. Then he headed for the register with my dad to ring up the purchase of his book art. Two thousand dollars was a mighty big start to a week of fundraising for The Cowboy Ranch.
And that small kiss was going to lead to so much more. Too bad it was surrounded by trouble.
Chapter Two
Scarlet’s dinner had obviously gone well if the scene on the dance floor was any indication. Dressed in a black sheer mini dress with one bared shoulder, her two-stepping with Dalton had turned into pouty lips, swinging hips, and the full body contact dips of a country swing dance. It was sexier than all get out, and every woman at the Tool Shed Tavern wanted to be in Scarlet’s black studded boots.
Except me. I currently had my hands full with the mayor, Cade Calloway. Cade was my high school sweetheart, who’d followed in his daddy’s footsteps and run for political office after his professional football career fell through as a result of a serious back injury. The man lived to torture me with the possibilities of, “what if.”
“Is that Dalton Hibbs dancing with Scarlet?” Cade asked, his hazel eyes narrowing in on the couple on the dance floor, instead of me. Not that it bothered me…much.
“If you can call it dancing.” Joe Buck’s heavy girth leaned over the bar, the towel draped over his shoulder skirting the wooden surface that had been smoothed out by use and age, not a polyurethane finish. He owned the Tool Shed Tavern and bartended while stirring up trouble with his contagious smile and friendly wink. I’d fallen for his angelic demeanor a time or two in the past. Since I’d returned to Hazel Rock, however, I’d been leery of his dares to do something stupid that no one else would try…or was stupid enough to do. I hoped I’d learned to refrain from making the same mistakes over and over, especially since those stunts had always come back to bite me on the backside in high school.
“Yes, and they seem rather smitten, don’t you think?” I couldn’t help the smile that spread across my face.
“That’s more than smitten. Smitten is the way Princess follows you around the Barn,” Cade said.
“Well, they’ve found something special. So leave Scarlet be,” I warned.
Joe muttered something to Cade in reply, who stared him down as he took a swig of his beer. A silent communication passed between them and Joe laughed before he moved down the bar to a good-looking man in his early thirties who looked vaguely familiar.
Coming back to Texas after living in Colorado for a little over twelve years constantly played tricks on my memory. Placing names with faces was a chore. I constantly thought of a name from Denver, but the face never matched the person I was talking to. Bill was actually Ray, and Mistie was really Maureen. Or I’d remember the face from Hazel Rock High School, but the name never fell into place. It didn’t help, that with time came age, and changes that I hadn’t kept up with. I’d never friended anyone from my hometown on social media until the week I actually moved back to town. The years of growth and change were lost to me.
I stared at the man talking to Joe and I tried to picture what he would have looked like a dozen years ago. About my height with a solid tan and white teeth, his hair belonged on a television show with its expensive cut and perfect swoop across his tall forehead. His plaid shirt looked brand-new and straight from the dry cleaner with heavy starched creases running down the sleeves. His jeans also looked out of place for our local honky-tonk. The pressed lines down the middle of the legs were a shade lighter blue and started at his pockets and ended at his toes, accentuating his lean hips.
Joe pointed in our direction and the man looked toward us and nodded.
“Should I know that guy?” I asked Cade.
He turned and looked down the bar at the man, who was now walking toward us.
“If you watch the evening news, you should. That’s Peter Kroft from CNCB News.”
Recognition finally hit me about the time Mr. Kroft reached us. He held out his hand to shake Cade’s much larger one, and I watched how Cade suddenly transformed into a politician. He wore a smile I didn’t recognize. A little too polished; it was almost as if he put up a shield to protect the real Cade Calloway. His mannerisms were a tad stiff, and if I hadn’t known the man since I was eight years old, I wouldn’t have seen the differences between my mayor and my friend so readily. But they were most definitely there.
“Mayor Calloway, thank you for inviting me to your town.” Mr. Kroft struggled not to let his voice get lost in the din of the music, clearing his throat and lowering the tone more than once.
“Thanks for coming to Hazel Rock. We appreciate you covering the auctions and the rodeo. Can I buy you a beer? The Shed serves the best Southern Ale this side of the Rio Grande.”
“I’d love one.”
Cade raised his bottle and indicated for Joe to grab a beer for Mr. Kroft. “I’d like to introduce you to Charli Rae Warren,” he said as he turned toward me. “She owns The Book Barn Princess and is donating all of the proceeds from her book art auction to The Ranch.” Cade leaned toward me. “Mr. Kroft is here to cover the Cowboy Ranch Invitational.”
I held out my hand and Mr. Kroft grabbed it with both of his, then held on longer than necessary. His show of sincerity seemed anything but genuine. “It’s nice to meet you, Ms. Warren. I understand you’ve got quite a collection you’re donating.”
I pulled my hand back and smiled to erase any unease my action might have caused. “Please call me Charli, Mr. Kroft. And to be honest, most of the art was created by the owner of Beaus and Beauties, the salon down the street. Scarlet is an incredibly gifted woman.”
“Well, I’m looking forward to seeing it and meeting Scarlet. But I’ll only call you Charli if you drop the formality and call me Peter.”
I smile and nodded in agreement. Joe handed Peter his beer from behind the bar and winked. “I put it on the mayor’s tab.”
After thanking Cade, Peter asked, “So is this Scarlet here tonight?” He scanned the crowded bar as if he’d be able to identifier her on his own.
“She’s on the floor dancing with Dalton Hibbs.” I pointed them out just as Dalton swung Scarlet through his legs. The move was full of grace, with an undeniable sex appeal, and it put the biggest smile on Scarlet’s face I’d ever seen.
“I heard Dalton wasn’t coming to the Invitational because of too many bad memories about his brother.” P. . .
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