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Synopsis
Krissy Hancock runs a bookstore-café in Pine Hills, Ohio, but she'll be setting up shop as a sleuth when she discovers a long-unsolved murder . . .
Krissy's helping a friend clean out her late mother's house when she learns that although the deceased died peacefully at an advanced age, her brother did not. In fact, Wade was killed more than thirty years ago, and the case was never closed. What surprises Krissy even more is that she has a personal connection to the story—her friend Rita was seeing Wade at the time, scandalizing the town with the couple's large age difference.
With an older Rita now part of Krissy's writing group—and another member with police experience—she starts digging up gossip, talking to the victim's local coffee klatsch, and trying to find real clues amid the old rumors. But things just seem to grow muddier as she fights to identify whodunit . . .
Release date: October 27, 2020
Publisher: Kensington Books
Print pages: 320
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Death by French Roast
Alex Erickson
I lowered my head and wiped away a tear. Two rows behind me, a woman—Judith Banyon, I believed—sniffed. Other than the two of us, and Jane up front, all the other eyes in the place were dry.
“Mom didn’t have many friends,” Jane Winthrow went on. “She preferred it that way. She always said that there is only so much love to go around, and she’d much rather share it with a special few, rather than dilute it among too many people, many of whom might not deserve it. I didn’t agree with her for the longest time, but now, I see that maybe she was right.”
A quick glance around the funeral parlor showed me that no one else had shown up since Jane had started talking. My neighbors, Jules Phan and Lance Darby, sat a couple seats down, hands intertwined. They’d lived two houses down from Eleanor long before I’d moved to Pine Hills. They hadn’t always seen eye to eye with her—no one really did—but they did seem sad to see her go.
Judith and Eddie Banyon, the owners of the local diner, the Banyon Tree, sat a few rows behind Jules and Lance. Behind them, a group of dour-looking men whispered amongst themselves. A man who often played Santa every Christmas, Randy Winter, sat to the front of the room, but he was lounging back, almost as if he was watching a play, rather than a funeral.
And that was it. Jane was Eleanor’s only remaining family as far as I was aware. Eleanor, while a bit on the nosy side when it came to the neighborhood, had kept to herself in most matters. Her husband had died of an aneurism sometime before I’d moved to Pine Hills, so I’d never met him. Eleanor’s only true friend I knew about was Judith, and last I heard, they weren’t seeing each other as much as they once had.
I had a feeling health had a lot to do with that. Eleanor wasn’t in the best shape, but I never realized it was so bad. Jane had shown up one day last week, and the next thing I knew, Eleanor was gone, passed away quietly in her sleep. Apparently, she’d known it was coming and had called her daughter so they could spend a final couple of hours together.
Jane finished up her speech with a few words of thanks and then turned to the casket. She laid a hand on it briefly, whispered something to her mother, and then she headed down the aisle, and out into the lobby.
One by one, Eleanor’s few mourners rose and walked to the front of the room to view her casket. I remained seated and watched as Judith stiffly paid her respects. From the tension I saw on her face, I could tell she was just barely holding it together. Her husband, Eddie, looked sad, but wasn’t in danger of breaking down in heaving sobs anytime soon.
Jules and Lance passed by, said their good-byes, and then when they walked back down the aisle, Jules gave my arm a squeeze. He didn’t say anything; he didn’t need to. I understood him perfectly. Eleanor had driven us both crazy with her constant binoculars-assisted spying from the armrest of her chair, but now that she was gone, we’d both miss her.
I rose, but before I could leave the aisle, two of the men I’d seen sitting together in the back walked by. They were older—one completely bald, the other with fine wisps of white hair that stood up every which way—and neither looked happy to be there. When I glanced back, I noticed the other men had already left. Randy Winter was also gone.
I waited for the two men to be done, rather than intrude, but neither of them said anything. They stood there, looking down at the casket, side by side, and then, as one, they turned and walked away. Both their faces were void of emotion, as if Eleanor’s passing couldn’t touch them. It made me instantly dislike both men, even though I didn’t know a thing about them, let alone how they knew Eleanor.
With everyone else gone, I made for the front. The casket was open, and I noted Eleanor looked peaceful, which made me happy. She’d never seemed at peace while she was alive. I was glad she’d found it now.
“We had our differences,” I said, keeping my voice low so it wouldn’t echo in the now empty room. “But know that I never hated you. Not when you were peeping in my windows with your binoculars, or all those times you called the police on me because you misunderstood what was happening at my place. Rest well, Eleanor. You’ll be missed.”
And with blurry eyes and a sniff, I turned and walked away.
Jane was waiting for me by the door. Her smile was sad, but appreciative as she took my hands in both of hers. “Thank you for coming, Krissy.”
“She was a good neighbor,” I said, trying my best to be diplomatic, considering how often Eleanor had frustrated me. “I wish I’d gotten to know her better.”
“We both know that’s not true. Mother could be difficult at the best of times, and a downright terror the rest.”
“Yeah, but she didn’t hurt anyone.”
“That’s true.” Jane was wearing a black pantsuit, which suited her. I couldn’t imagine her wearing a dress, no matter the occasion. “Her life wasn’t easy. She did it to herself, and I know that despite what she said, she missed having more people around her. She was lonely, and nothing I ever said helped ease that loneliness.”
I didn’t know what to say to that, so I merely nodded.
“I don’t know why we bothered!” The shout came from outside. Both Jane and I moved so we could see what was happening on the other side of the door.
The group of older men were standing in a huddle, a few yards from the funeral parlor. The man who’d shouted was slightly younger than the rest, meaning he had all his gray hair, and he didn’t have quite as many wrinkles lining his face as his companions.
“You’ll be lucky if someone comes to your funeral, Arthur.” This from a man with bifocals who was wearing a black suit and tie—an upgrade from the more casual attire of his friends.
“She hated every last one of us,” the shouter—Arthur—said. “Do you think she would have paid her respects to a single one of us? No, she wouldn’t have. She’d have spit on our graves before we were buried!”
“She had her reasons,” the bald man said.
“They weren’t good ones,” Arthur muttered. He looked up, noticed Jane and me watching, and then turned and marched angrily away. After a moment, his friends followed.
Jane heaved a sigh and shook her head. “I can’t believe they’d do that here. I was surprised they even came, to be honest.”
“Who are they?” I asked. I didn’t know them from around town, which wasn’t saying much. Pine Hills might be small, and I owned and ran the only dedicated coffee shop in town, but that didn’t mean I knew everyone.
“People from Eleanor’s past,” Jane said. “They—” She cut off as a man in a dark blue suit and a somber expression approached.
“Ms. Winthrow,” he said, voice barely above a whisper. “If you have a moment, there’s a few details we should go over before we proceed to the burial.”
Jane glanced at me, but before she could speak, I waved her off.
“Go ahead,” I said. “I’ll talk to you later.”
She started to walk away with the man, but paused. “I’m going to be going through a few of Mom’s things once I’m done here. I . . .” She cleared her throat, and briefly, I saw a woman devastated before her mask was back in place. “If you have the time, I could use some help.”
“Of course,” I said. Going through her mother’s things would be hard. She didn’t need to do it alone.
“Give me an hour,” Jane said, and then she headed into a side room with the man.
I drove home with a heavy heart. When I parked in front of my house, the neighborhood felt different, lonelier. Eleanor and I might not have been friends, but I’d always felt her presence nearby.
Her house looked strange knowing that she was no longer in it. It seemed smaller somehow, a shell of what it was. I wondered what would happen to it now, if it would be sold, or if Jane would keep it. I couldn’t imagine anyone but Eleanor living there.
I spent the next forty minutes puttering around my house, cleaning with my long-haired orange cat, Misfit, trailing in my wake. He was rather demanding about being pet. Every time I paused, he would butt his head under my hand and then run his entire body across both of my legs. I had to be careful not to step on his long tail.
“I know,” I told him. I knew the neighborhood would be more peaceful now without Eleanor calling the cops on me every chance she got, but oddly, I feared I’d miss it. I guess the fact that she was gone contributed to my somber, reflective mood.
Misfit meowed once, and then dug his claws into my leg to force me to pay more attention to him. I was happy to oblige.
When Jane’s car pulled up in front of Eleanor’s house, I was standing by the window, waiting. The sun was bright in the sky, the breeze cool. I crossed the yard and met her just as she unlocked the front door.
“I have a couple of hours,” I said. “Then I’m due for work, if that’s okay?”
“Thank you for coming,” she said. “I should be fine to go it alone after the first twenty minutes or so. Starting is going to be the hard part.”
We entered the house together, each of us braced for the oppressive silence that would follow.
The place was much like I remembered. The orange shag carpet was still dirty and faded, the television ancient. There were more newspapers stacked on the floor next to the blue armchair where Eleanor had often sat than the last time I was here, but that was to be expected. I’d learned then that Eleanor was a hoarder when it came to newspapers, and seeing that she’d kept at it, even as her health waned, made me feel somehow better.
“I’m not sure where to start,” Jane said from the middle of the living room. “I mean, do I clean up the trash first? Or should I go through her clothes?” When she took a breath, it trembled. She was just barely holding on.
“What about the newspapers?” I asked, figuring that if anything, it might be the easiest. “What do you want to do with them?”
Jane picked up a stack and flipped through them. “It seems a shame to throw them all out,” she said. “Mom took such good care of them.” She set the papers on the recliner, and picked up a box sitting beside it. She ran a hand over the wood and then twisted the key that was already shoved into the lock. She lifted the lid and a sad smile played across her lips.
I was dying to know what was inside the box, but remained silent. Now wasn’t the time to pry. If she wanted to tell me, she would.
After a few moments of quiet perusal, Jane removed a photograph from the box. She brushed her fingertips across it once, and then handed it to me.
The photograph was old. It looked like it was taken in the seventies, if the way the two people in it were dressed was anything to go by. The photo was of a man and a woman—the woman being a much younger Eleanor Winthrow. I recognized her features, but barely. Time had indeed been hard on her, and had worn her down to the bitter older woman she’d become. The man was taller than her by about a foot, and was extremely good-looking.
“That’s Mom and Wade.”
“Was Wade your dad?”
Jane surprised me by laughing. “No, Wade was my uncle.”
“Eleanor had a brother?” I asked, looking at the photo again. Now that I knew they were related, I could see the resemblance. “I never knew.”
“He died a long time ago.” Jane took the photograph back. “He was the reason Mom started collecting papers. They’d always been close, and when he died . . .” She shrugged. “She sort of lost it.”
“Did he get sick?” I asked.
Jane stared at the photo for a minute more before placing it back into its box. She turned the key and returned the box to where she’d found it. She then picked up the stack of newspapers from the recliner and carried them into the kitchen, where she set them on the table.
“I’m sorry,” I said, following after. “I didn’t mean to upset you.”
“It’s not that,” Jane said. “I needed a moment to think.”
“Still, I’m sorry. It has to be hard reliving any of this.”
“It is.” She turned in a slow circle, taking in her mother’s kitchen. “It’s much like it was back then,” she said. “Everything is. After Wade died, Mom got stuck in the past. She didn’t want things to change, refused to move forward, not until she learned the truth.” She touched the stack of newspapers. “Now she never will.”
Jane slid into one of the dining-room chairs and then motioned for me to do the same.
“You’ve solved a few murders in your time, haven’t you?” she asked me once I was seated. She already knew that I had; she’d been around for one of them.
“A few, I suppose.” Though, honestly, I was hoping to steer clear of any more suspicious deaths.
“Mom said it was a hobby of yours.”
“Not on purpose,” I said. “I tend to be in the right place at the right time.” Or the wrong place, I thought.
Then it dawned on me why she might be asking. “Wade was murdered?”
Jane nodded. “It happened over thirty years ago. I think it was around 1985, ’86. I was away at college, and honestly, back then, I wasn’t too close with my family, so I hope you’ll forgive me if I don’t know the exact date.”
“It was a long time ago,” I said.
“Those men you saw at the funeral were Wade’s friends. They didn’t get on with my mother all that great, but knew her well enough. She always suspected they knew what happened to Wade, but none of them ever admitted to it.”
“What do you think?”
Jane ran her hand over the table, then shrugged. “I don’t know. All I know for sure is that one day, my uncle was killed, and the police never found out who did it.”
A lightbulb clicked on in my head. “That’s why she collected newspapers.”
Jane nodded. “Mom was obsessed. She grabbed every paper she could and would scour them for information, hoping that something in one of them would tell her who killed her brother. It sounds crazy, but she believed it. I think she was hoping that the culprit would write in or something, like those serial killers you hear about who want attention.” She laughed, and then motioned toward the hall, and the room that was filled with years of newspapers, stacked nearly to the ceiling. “He never did, obviously.”
It made my heart ache to think about it. I might have treated Eleanor Winthrow with more understanding if I’d known what she’d gone through. That’s not to say it made me approve of her spying on me, but perhaps I’d have stopped by more often to try to work things out, rather than just assume the worst of her.
“Mom spent years begging the police to do something, but what could they do? There was no evidence they could use, no witnesses. He was found off a trail, in a spot that didn’t make sense.”
“How so?”
Jane considered it a moment before responding. “It was an isolated spot. No one knew why he was there, and as far as I know, they still don’t.”
My interest piqued. There was a mystery here, and I was a sucker for a good mystery.
“Mom swore up and down the police were protecting the killer for some reason, though why she suspected that is anyone’s guess,” Jane went on. “She alienated most of the town with her accusations. It didn’t help that Wade had started a controversy of his own before his death.”
I leaned forward. “What kind of controversy?”
Jane fiddled with the newspapers as she answered. “As I mentioned, I wasn’t around for it, so I got a lot of the details afterward. I’m not sure how accurate some of it is, mind you. I’ve heard different versions of the tale over the years, but nothing recently, other than when I talked to Mother. Most of what she heard were mere rumors, and you know how that goes.”
“Yeah.” Rumor had a tendency to become fact sometimes, especially in a small town.
“My uncle was a few years younger than Mom, which put him in his thirties at the time of his death. The big hubbub started when it came out that his girlfriend was in her teens.”
I couldn’t help it; my eyebrows rose at that. “He was dating a teenager?”
“She was eighteen, I believe. Might have been nineteen, though the way some tell it, she was barely fifteen. I know for a fact that Wade wouldn’t have dated her if she wasn’t legal, so that’s just hogwash.”
“That’s still a pretty big age difference, even if she was legal,” I said.
“It was. And back then, people were more sensitive to that sort of thing, at least here in Pine Hills they were. The way Mom told it, Wade was harassed pretty badly, and his friends were involved just as much as everyone else. The girl was treated just as horribly, if not more so. You know how kids can be. School had to have been a nightmare for her.”
I could only imagine. “Did someone kill him because of his relationship?” I asked, thinking that if the girl’s parents disapproved of the two of them dating, one of them might have acted rashly and killed Wade for it.
“No one knows for sure,” Jane said. “Mom thought so. She claimed there was no other reason anyone would want to hurt him, that Uncle Wade was well liked by everyone up until he started dating that girl.”
I thought that it was a pretty crappy thing to do, to turn on someone just because you didn’t approve of who they were dating.
“What about the teenager?” I asked. “Was she murdered too?”
Jane shook her head. “No. Mom told me she still lives here in Pine Hills, but I can’t fathom why she would. If she was treated as badly as I’ve heard, it would have made more sense for her to leave town and never come back. I know I would have.”
“Do you know her name?” I asked, curious. If I knew her, then perhaps I could learn more about what made Eleanor like, well, Eleanor.
“I do,” Jane said, rising. She grabbed a box of trash bags out from beneath the counter, removed a bag, and dumped the stack of newspapers into it. “Her name was Rita,” she said. “Rita Jablonski.”
“Rita?” my best friend, Vicki, asked later that day. “Are you sure she meant our Rita?”
“Positive,” I said. I took a sip from my coffee before tying on my apron. “Apparently, our young Rita had a thing for older men back in the day.”
“Wow.” Vicki looked to her husband, Mason, who merely shrugged.
Vicki, Mason, and one of our employees, Lena, had worked the early shift at Death by Coffee, giving me time to go to Eleanor’s services. I’d be working alongside Beth Milner and Jeff Braun until close, which was fine—I liked both of them—but I couldn’t gossip with them like I could with my best friend, so I’d come in a little early so I could do so.
“I can’t believe Rita’s never said anything about it,” I said. “She spends half her time egging me on to solve crimes around town, and she’s never once brought up the fact she was involved, even indirectly, in a murder investigation over thirty years ago.”
“Maybe she’s forgotten about it,” Mason said.
“Or she wishes she could forget.” Vicki nudged her husband with her elbow. He grinned and then went to the counter to take an order from a regular with an allergy to cats—a sneezing Todd Melville.
“I feel like I should do something,” I said, watching Todd. The man came to Death by Coffee nearly every day, but with his allergy, he looked miserable doing it. Even though Trouble—Vicki’s black-and-white cat, who was also Misfit’s littermate—rarely left the books section of the store, Todd’s allergies made it a chore for him to order his coffee. I sometimes wondered why he bothered.
“Like what?” Vicki asked. “It happened a long time ago.”
“I know, but I feel like I should, I don’t know, check it out.”
“You mean, investigate it?”
I gave a halfhearted shrug. “It sounds silly, but I keep thinking it might be a good way to honor Eleanor’s memory. She spent her life wondering what happened to her brother. It caused her to become a hoarder and to pull away from society. If I could solve his murder, then perhaps her spirit might be able to rest peacefully.”
Vicki regarded me a long moment before speaking. “It could be dangerous,” she said. “Whoever killed him has kept it secret for over thirty years. They won’t like you reviving it.”
“There’s no telling if he or she’s still alive,” Mason said, rejoining us.
“If the killer’s dead, then I have even less to worry about.”
“And if they’re not?” Vicki asked.
“I’l. . .
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