Val Deniston is catering the debut of Bayport’s newest bookstore—but the death of a customer is about to draw her into a real-life murder mystery … Suzette Cripps has been occupying a spare bedroom at Val’s granddad’s house while she takes classes in this Maryland Eastern Shore town—but she’s always seemed a little secretive and fearful, and any talk about her past is a closed book. After winning the costume contest at the Halloween-themed bookstore party, Suzette is mowed down by a hit-and-run driver—and Val and her grandfather start to wonder whether it was really an accident or if someone was after Suzette. Granddad is a little distracted by his new enterprise as a ghost-buster, but as Val talks to Suzette’s coworkers and fellow creative writing students, she grows more convinced that the dead woman’s demons weren’t imaginary—and that she needs to rip the mask off a killer… Includes delicious five-ingredient recipes!
Release date:
August 27, 2019
Publisher:
Kensington Books
Print pages:
226
* BingeBooks earns revenue from qualifying purchases as an Amazon Associate as well as from other retail partners.
Val Deniston smiled as she read the words painted on the store’s display window—TITLE WAVE. The name suited a bookshop near the Chesapeake Bay’s tidal waters. A sign on the entrance announced the shop’s grand opening party would be a week from today. Good timing. The celebration would coincide with the Spooktacular, Bayport’s annual festival held the weekend before Halloween.
Granddad had urged Val to offer her services as a caterer for the party. She looked forward to meeting Dorothy Muir, a retired teacher intrepid enough to open a bookshop when most people bought their reading matter online. The Title Wave had a good location on historic Main Street. Lots of foot traffic during the long tourist season on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. The town’s only bookshop had closed four years ago, so Val hoped the Title Wave would prosper.
With the late afternoon sun reflecting off the shop’s windows, she pressed her nose to the glass and peered inside. Shelves lined the side walls from the floor to the ten-foot-high ceiling, tall bookcases sat at angles throughout the shop, and cardboard book boxes littered the floor. Only the shelves near the front had books on them. A staircase, with a bicycle propped against the railing, led to the second story.
Val knocked on the door. She’d never gone into the antique shop that used to occupy the building. The Victorian house she shared with Granddad already had plenty of antiques. She peered again in the shop window. No one stirred inside. Maybe Mrs. Muir had left the shop to run an errand. Val tried the handle.
The door opened. “Hello,” she called out. No one responded.
She heard low voices coming from the rear of the shop. At five-foot-three, she couldn’t see over the tall bookcases. She threaded her way around them. The shop smelled faintly of fresh paint. A woman’s voice came from beyond a wide opening in the back wall. She spoke too quietly for Val to make out the words.
But a man’s voice came through loud and clear. “I don’t see why you want a caterer for the grand opening. It’s a needless expense. You can buy snacks from the supermarket.”
Val slowed down as she neared the back of the shop. According to Granddad, Dorothy’s son had come from Silicon Valley to help her get the shop ready. Was he the guy complaining about hiring a caterer?
“I don’t care about the expense,” Dorothy said. “I’ve waited a long time to open a bookshop. I’m throwing a party to celebrate.”
Val was standing close enough to the backroom that she could call out and be heard, but she didn’t. Blessed with acute hearing, she’d frequently eavesdropped as a teenager, and now, in her early thirties, she felt no guilt about exercising her skill. Use it or lose it.
“I appreciate that, Mom.” The man’s voice had softened. “Have an opening bash, but do it in style. Get a full-service catering company from Annapolis, not someone who supplies dinner-party food as a sideline.”
“She also runs a café at the athletic club. Cooking and serving food is what she does for a living.”
“But catering isn’t. Just because you knew her grandfather ages ago doesn’t mean you have to hire her.”
And just because Granddad knew Dorothy long ago didn’t mean Val had to supply the food for the shop opening, but he’d be disappointed if she walked away without talking to the bookshop owner. He remembered Dorothy fondly from when he was in high school and she was the cute first-grader next door. Her family had moved away from Bayport five decades ago. Now she’d come back, determined to share her love of books in her hometown.
“You may know a lot about starting tech companies, Bram,” Dorothy said, “but you don’t know anything about doing business in small towns. It’s all about community and relationships.”
She should send her son packing before he chased away customers with his negative attitude. Val imagined what he looked like—scowling, tight-lipped, nose in the air. She hadn’t particularly wanted to cater the shop’s grand opening when Granddad suggested it, but now she’d do it gladly, if only to prove Dorothy right and her know-it-all son wrong.
“Mom, have you even checked this caterer’s references?”
“I will deal with the caterer, Bram. Would you please go to the party store at the strip mall and pick up Halloween decorations? Here’s a list of what I want.”
Uh-oh. If Bram left now, he’d catch Val lurking and listening. Better to announce her presence. Before she could do that, she saw movement out of the corner of her eye. Something brushed past her legs. She jumped back, startled. A black cat leaped onto a cardboard box and regarded her with mesmerizing copper-colored eyes. Val returned the cat’s stare and heard a muffled sound from the backroom like a door closing.
A woman in jeans and a T-shirt bustled out of the backroom. She had a shapely figure with only a little thickening around the waist. “Hello! You must be Don Myer’s granddaughter. I’m Dorothy Muir.”
“Val Deniston.” They shook hands. “Sorry for barging in. I knocked, and when no one came to the door, I tried the knob. I called out, but you must not have heard me.”
“No problem.” Dorothy studied Val with a gaze as intense as the cat’s. Then smile lines appeared around her generous mouth. “I see the family resemblance. When your grandfather was a teenager, he had hair just like yours, curly and the same shade of reddish brown.”
“He remembers you on your tricycle with pigtails flying behind you.”
“Long gone.” Dorothy fingered her chin-length silver hair. “Shall we get down to business? I’ll show you the room where we’ll serve refreshments at our grand opening party.” She led Val through the opening wide enough for a double door, but it had no doors.
The backroom ran the width of the shop and was almost as deep. It was empty except for three folding chairs and a card table. Where was Dorothy’s son? Val spotted an outside door in the far corner. He must have gone out that way.
“This will be the shop’s coffee-and-tea area, the CAT Corner for short.”
“Complete with cat,” Val said as the black feline followed them.
“She’s a stray that my son Bram took in. The cat was wandering in the cemetery. We call her Isis. She can’t decide if she wants to be a bookshop cat or a graveyard cat.”
The two back windows, framed by shelving, offered a view of a churchyard with the tombstones of long-dead Bayport residents. Isis sprang onto the windowsill and gazed out at the graves, setting the mood for Halloween without the decorations Dorothy had asked her son to buy.
Val looked up at the dark wood ceiling. “The ceiling is lower in this room than in the rest of the shop. This must be an addition.”
“Yes, the original building was a shipbuilder’s home in the nineteenth century. The family added this part in the early twentieth century.” Dorothy gestured around the room. “I’ve ordered tables to be delivered Monday. For special events like book talks or signings, we’ll put the tables against the walls and set up the chairs in rows. When book clubs meet here, we’ll push the tables together to make discussion easier.”
“My grandfather said you plan to start a lot of book clubs.”
“I’ll turn this into a gathering place for book lovers even if I have to lead each discussion myself. After forty years of teaching English I’m used to doing that. We’ll shelve classics in here and random books that don’t fall into any of the categories we feature in the shop.” She pointed to a compact kitchen in the corner near the opening to the shop floor. “I hope the food prep area has all you’ll need for the party.”
Val glanced at the medium-size refrigerator, small cooktop, and large wall oven. Basic, but fairly new appliances. The commercial coffeemaker wasn’t as fancy as the one she had in the Cool Down Café. You couldn’t make a cappuccino or a latte here, but the machine would produce coffee aroma and a decent cup. A serving island about six feet long and a foot wide separated the prep area from the rest of the room.
“Looks fine,” she said. “What type of food do you want for the party?”
“Halloween treats for children in the afternoon and for adults in the evening.”
“A lot of Main Street shops will be giving out Halloween candy and cookies from the supermarket.” And Bram had suggested his mother buy them. “If you want to do something special, the children could participate in making their own treats, decorating plain cookies. For a healthier snack, they can make boo-nanas.”
Dorothy grinned. “Boo-nanas?”
“Cut bananas in half crosswise. Stand them on the flat end. The kids put mini chocolate chips on the tapered end to make ghost eyes and a big chip to make a round mouth. They can also draw jack-o-lantern faces on unpeeled tangerines. The longer they’re busy here, the more time their parents will have to buy books.”
“I like that idea. You’ll supervise the children, Val?”
“No. I’m judging the pumpkin bake-off at the Spooktacular that afternoon. I can’t cater until the evening.” Val noticed Dorothy’s face fall. “But a friend, Bethany O’Shay, might do it. She’s a first-grade teacher and a certified food handler. She helps me with catering when I need an extra hand.”
Dorothy’s smile returned. “Wonderful. Please ask her if she’ll come in the afternoon. What kind of treats do you suggest for the grown-ups?”
Val had been wracking her brain to come up with Halloween names for the desserts on her catering menu. “Mummy’s apple pie, small rectangular hand pies with pastry strips on top. They’ll look like wrapped mummies. Their raisin eyes will peek out from their wrappings.” As Dorothy nodded her approval, Val thought of another treat she could give a spooky name, a favorite of Granddad’s temporary boarder—Suzette Cripps. Val thought of her as cryptic Suzette because of her secretive ways. “Crypt Suzette is another option. If I serve a crêpe in an elongated paper container, it’ll resemble a shrouded corpse in a crypt.”
“Crêpes would be a hit, something the patrons would remember.” Despite the positive words, Dorothy’s face showed she had doubts. “Don’t you have to ignite the liqueur when you make crêpes Suzette?”
“You can have the flavor without the flame. I’ll make the crêpes and the orange sauce ahead of time so I can just heat and serve them here. What time will the party start?”
“Six. You can take a break around seven when we hold the costume contest on the sales floor. The contestants will dress up as characters from books and talk about who they are.”
“What fun!” Val hoped she’d get to watch the contest.
The cat jumped from the sill, went over to the door in the corner, and meowed.
Dorothy opened the door. Isis stood on the threshold and then ambled toward the cemetery.
Fifteen minutes later, Val left by the shop’s front door, glad to have worked out the details of catering before Bram returned to raise objections.
She glanced up and down Main Street. The historic district was decked out in Halloween colors, pumpkins and chrysanthemums at shop entrances, autumn leaves clinging to the trees. Skeleton scarecrows mounted on the lampposts would greet visitors to the Spooktacular. If the usual autumn weather prevailed—sunny days and clear, crisp nights—the festival would attract visitors from Washington, D.C., and Baltimore, as well as locals from the Eastern Shore.
Val drove to the supermarket in the mall between Bayport and the larger town of Treadwell and did her grocery shopping for the week. It was past seven and dark by the time she got back to Bayport. When she turned onto the street where she lived with her grandfather, she saw a crowd gathered in front of his house.
Her heart leaped into her throat. Had something happened to Granddad?
A knot of people blocked the driveway where Val usually parked. She pulled in behind Granddad’s Buick parked in front of the house and jumped from her car. A streetlamp dimly lit the crowd. She recognized no one. If anything had happened to Granddad, surely neighbors would be here, not a bunch of strangers. Who were these people and why had they gathered here? Val edged toward the group clustered around a woman.
“I’ve given you the history of this house with no mention of the ghost.” The woman emphasized her final word in a throaty stage whisper that could have been heard in the balcony. “This house is a unique stop on our walk. At all the other places, the ghosts have been around for decades and, in some cases, for centuries.”
Val relaxed. The group was on a haunted house walk, and Granddad was fine. She glimpsed him creeping down the driveway, apparently to eavesdrop on the ghost tour. He and Val had heard from their neighbor, Harvey, that last weekend’s ghost tourists had trampled his chrysanthemums and talked nonsense about haunted houses.
“A ghost would be right at home in a house like this,” a woman on the tour said.
Val looked up at the gables and the turret on the Queen Anne Victorian. Less of an eyesore now than when she’d moved in a year and a half ago, but outlined against the night sky, the structure resembled a classic eerie house. Granddad was only now catching up on maintenance he hadn’t done in the seven years since Grandma died. Despite the house’s appearance, Val had yet to encounter a ghost, though she sensed Grandma’s spirit in the kitchen, where they’d spent happy hours cooking.
“Who’s haunting the place?” a teenage girl said.
“Someone only a little older than you.” The tour leader pointed at the girl. “A year ago this month, she was murdered in the backyard.”
Val’s jaw clenched. That young woman’s death had touched her and Granddad personally, and now someone was exploiting it.
A teenage boy nudged the girl who’d spoken up. “Maybe if we hang out in the backyard at night, we’ll see the ghost.”
Val was sure the young man had something in mind besides ghost hunting.
“Has anyone spotted this ghost?” an older man said, his tone skeptical.
The tour guide paused before saying, “Neighbors have noticed a shadowy figure and strange lights in the backyard.”
Easy to explain. Granddad or his tenant, Suzette, might have taken out the trash at night and used a flashlight crossing the yard.
Granddad emerged from the dark driveway into the light cast by the streetlamp. He resembled a professor in a pullover sweater with patched elbows, wire-rimmed bifocals, and the beard he’d started growing for his Santa Claus role in December. “If you folks are looking for the ghost, you’re wasting your time. It’s gone. As a qualified ghost hunter, I got rid of it.”
Val stifled a laugh. First a food guru, then a senior sleuth, and now a ghost hunter. It had bothered her when Granddad claimed cooking expertise to snag a job as the newspaper’s recipe columnist. It had bothered her even more when he touted his skills as a detective after taking an online investigation course. But reinventing himself as a ghost hunter struck her as a fair response to the tour guide’s invention of a ghost.
A man in the crowd laughed. “If there’s no ghost, you’d better take this house off the tour.”
A breeze ruffled the white curls over Granddad's ears. “Yup. This is officially a ghost-free zone.”
An older woman sidled up to the tour leader. “My neighbor says she has a ghost. Things keep disappearing from her house. You can substitute her place for this one.”
Granddad waggled his finger back and forth. “Just ’cause stuff goes missing doesn’t mean you have a ghost. Ghosts have no use for material objects.” He reached under his V-neck sweater, pulled business cards from his shirt pocket, and handed one to the woman. “I help people find missing things in my sleuth service. Tell your friend to call me. Anyone else want one?” He fanned out business cards in his hand.
“I’m not promoting this man’s service,” the tour leader said. “Let’s move on to our next stop . . . the old graveyard.”
Granddad’s tactics made Val cringe, but she couldn’t argue with success. He’d gotten rid of this group and possibly even kept his house from being on the next ghost tour.
A third of the people in the group took Granddad’s card before following their leader. The last to take a card was a young black woman. She stayed behind as the others disappeared in the direction of the historic district.
She squinted at Granddad’s card under the streetlamp and approached him. “You’re the same Don Myer who writes the Codger Cook column for the Treadwell Gazette?” At his nod, she introduced herself and added, “I have an internship as a reporter at the Gazette.”
Though Val didn’t catch the young woman’s name, the word reporter made her wary. Would Granddad’s nonsense about ghost hunting make it into the newspaper? Val moved closer to him.
The would-be reporter glanced at her and then turned back to him. “My assignment is to write about Eastern Shore ghost walks. Can I ask you a few questions about your ghost-hunting experience?”
Val answered for him. “We haven’t had dinner yet. Maybe some other time.” She tried to nudge Granddad toward the house. Proclaiming himself a ghost hunter to get rid of gawkers wasn’t bad, but making the same claim in print would open him up to ridicule.
“I’ll answer your questions, young lady, but only if you agree to my terms. You can’t print anything about the death of the young woman the tour guide said haunted this place.”
The reporter’s brow knit. “Why not?”
“Every other person whose afterlife is part of a ghost walk died long ago. All the folks who knew those people are also dead. But the family and friends of the young woman killed in our backyard are still alive. They still grieve for her. They don’t want to read that she’s a stop on a Halloween ghost tour.”
The reporter took a moment to respond. “I understand. If I leave the ghost out of my article, I can’t write about how you got rid of the ghost here.”
“I wouldn’t tell you that anyway. Magicians don’t reveal how they do tricks. They have a code of secrecy, and so do ghost hunters. They wouldn’t want any ghosts to find out their methods, and you never know when one of them might be listening in.”
Val forced herself to laugh. “My grandfather has a great sense of humor.” She tugged on his arm.
The reporter’s pen was poised over her small spiral notebook. “Where did you get your training, Mr. Myer? Did you intern or apprentice with an experienced ghost hunter?”
Val couldn’t tell from the young woman’s face if she really believed in spirits or was just humoring an old man. Would she write a tongue-in-cheek piece about ghosts and those who believed in them? Or would she use her column inches to expose charlatans who ran ghost tours or claimed to get rid of ghosts?
“I might be a self-taught ghost hunter, but I’m a trained investigator,” Granddad said. “Believe me, ghosts are easier to identify and get rid of than your average criminal.”
The reporter stopped jotting in her notebook. “Even though ghosts aren’t always visible?”
“But you know where to find them. They don’t move from town to town or even from house to house like the living do. Ghosts are tied to their locations.”
The young woman nodded. “The place where they died.”
“Yup. Ghosts return to earth in search of justice. Once you show them justice was done, they can rest easy.”
“And stop haunting.” The reporter put her notebook away.
“Nice talking to you, young lady. I’m looking forward to your article.” He shook hands with her and walked back to the house.
Val pulled her car into the driveway, and Granddad helped. . .
We hope you are enjoying the book so far. To continue reading...