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Synopsis
Jill Gardner—owner of Coffee, Books, and More—has somehow been talked into sponsoring a 5k race along the beautiful California coast. The race is a fundraiser for the local preservation society—but not everyone is feeling so charitable.
The day of the race, everyone hits the ground running . . . until a local business owner stumbles over a very stationary body. The deceased is the vicious wife of the husband-and-wife team hired to promote the event—and the husband turns to Jill for help in clearing his name. But did he do it?
Release date: August 18, 2015
Publisher: Lyrical Press
Print pages: 196
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Killer Run
Lynn Cahoon
Like the current Business-to-Business meeting where I presently sat, eating my second slice of Sadie Michaels’s Black Forest Cheesecake, the newest selection from her bakery, Pies on the Fly. Each slice had enough calories to feed a small South American village for a week. However, Josh Thomas was off on a rant and the creamy chocolate dessert was the only thing keeping my mouth shut instead of pointing out the flaws in his reasoning. Today, the owner of Antiques by Thomas thought we should do something about the ocean smell that permeated our little tourist town. His idea was to have electronic air fresheners installed on each streetlight on Main Street.
I guessed the fact that South Cove was located on central coastal California, thereby, the ocean, hadn’t been included in Josh’s memo when he opened the store last year. I glanced over at Aunt Jackie and raised my eyebrows, a signal that she needed to control her tubby boy toy before someone pointed this fact out to the clueless Josh.
She ignored me.
As I eyed the last piece of cheesecake heaven, Bill Sullivan, owner of South Cove Bed-and-Breakfast, and our committee’s chair, interrupted Josh’s tirade. “I’m afraid I can’t support your idea. Most of my guests book rooms with us specifically because of South Cove’s proximity to the ocean. In my mind, the sea air is a selling point, not a distraction.”
“You don’t understand how damaging it can be to my inventory. I’m always having to dehumidify my shop. If air fresheners were installed, at least the smell wouldn’t enter with my customers.” Josh looked around the table. “I’m sure others on the committee feel the same way.”
I saw ten heads shake as Josh tried to make eye contact with the other business owners. Even this month’s representative from the local art galleries failed to meet Josh’s eyes. Of course, that could have been because he was asleep behind the dark shades. Artists loved the grant money that being a member of the Business-to-Business committee gave them; they just didn’t like the actual meetings. Or helping with community projects. Or even expressing a freaking opinion.
“Well, it looks like we can table this discussion for another time then.” Bill took charge and glanced down at the agenda. “One more item, The Mission Walk sponsorship. Darla? Do you want to present or is Jill handling this?”
The Jill he was referencing is me. I’m Jill Gardner, owner of Coffee, Books, and More, or CBM according to the new logo on our last cup order. I’m also the liaison between the South Cove City Council and the business community. Which means I’m responsible for setting up the monthly meeting, publishing the meeting minutes on our website, and any other crappy job the mayor decides to assign me.
I nodded to Darla Taylor, the owner of South Cove Winery, and our local event planner extraordinaire. “Go ahead, you’re spearheading this event.”
The Mission Walk was South Cove’s first entry into the world of the California Mission Society. The charity focused on the preservation of historic missions throughout the state. Now that the small wall in my backyard had moved up on the list from application to possible historic landmark, I’d been invited to help sponsor this year’s 5K walk-and-run fund-raiser. Darla had jumped at the chance to plan the event, and I blessed her every time I got a new e-mail from her on one more task she’d completed that I hadn’t even thought of doing.
I reached for the last slice of cheesecake, but Aunt Jackie slapped my hand, moving the plate off the table and onto the coffee counter. I refilled my coffee cup instead and sat back to listen to Darla’s report.
“We’re all set for next Saturday’s run. The greenbelt has been measured and we’ve got parking set up for the start and finish lines. Greg hired off-duty police officers from Bakerstown to help with patrols that day. The only thing I need is a small group to walk the distance on Friday so we can make sure there aren’t any surprises Saturday morning.” She glanced around the table. “Who’s going to volunteer?”
The room went quiet. I raised my hand. “You know Greg and I will be there, just name the time.”
“Thanks. I’d like to do the run-through at 5 p.m. sharp. That way we’ll know how long it will take our slower walkers so we don’t leave anyone on the trail.” Darla wrote down our names in her notebook. “Who else?”
“Josh and I will be there.” Aunt Jackie lifted the coffee carafe from the table, taking it back to the pot to refill.
“Jackie, you know I don’t . . .” Whatever Josh had been going to say was blocked by the scorching look my aunt gave him. Sure, now he shut up.
“Perfect. Matt and I will start timing you at the start line, and then we’ll drive to the finish line to wait for you.” Darla focused on me. “Do you want to ask Amy if she and Justin would come, too? I’d like some runners to see how quickly people can get through.”
I held back my retort about me being chopped liver and nodded. Besides, if Amy and Justin ran, I could bring Emma and then Greg and I could have some quality time before the craziness of the weekend hit. We hadn’t had much couple time lately, between the shop and his annual training requirements for the local police department.
Yes, my boyfriend was the local detective for South Cove. Greg King had just returned to the area when my friend, Miss Emily, had been murdered. When he’d started investigating her death, we’d started spending time together. I think he just wanted to keep his prime suspect close. He tells a different story. No matter what, we’d been a couple for over a year now. And we rarely, if ever, fought. Unless he thought I was messing with one of his investigations.
As Darla wrapped up the list of assignments for Saturday’s run, the committee members filled their to-go cups with more free coffee and squirmed in their seats, ready for the meeting to be over. Fortunately, Darla was enough of a bulldog that she filled the final few volunteer spots before turning control of the meeting back to Bill.
“And that’s everything.” Bill closed the cover on the South Cove notebook where he kept the meeting notes. Mary, his wife and a marketing maven, hadn’t attended the meeting, but she’d been working with Darla this last month to analyze the effect of the run on the city’s business community. The couple’s bed-and-breakfast had been filled for the last week with runners getting ready for the event. He waved as he left the shop. “See you all Saturday.”
“As usual, they leave all the cleanup for the meeting to us,” Aunt Jackie grumbled as she started moving tables back to their normal places scattered around the shop.
Josh inched toward the door. “Sorry, I have to open in ten minutes. Otherwise . . .”
We watched as Josh lumbered through the door, his next words lost to the wind. He scurried as fast as his close-to-four-hundred-pound frame would go toward his shop next door.
“I’m shocked, I tell you, shocked.” Darla laughed as she placed chairs around a table my aunt had just moved. “Seems that Josh always has an excuse when there’s actual work to be done. I don’t think the guy has moved a box since Kyle started working for him.”
“Being catty doesn’t suit you, dear,” my aunt chided Darla, her tone gentle. If I’d said that I would have gotten a lecture about being generous in spirit or at least in my words. Darla just got a verbal tap on the hand. I would have received a slap on the head.
My thoughts were interrupted when the door opened and a man and woman entered the shop. To refer to the pair as Ken and Barbie would be too generous to the dolls. Both of the new arrivals were actor-level beautiful. We had tourist traffic that came up from Hollywood at times, but typically they came later in the day and dressed in clothes a bit more casual, but just as expensive.
“I told you we were going to be late, Michael.” The woman tossed back her blond hair with caramel highlights as she watched us moving the tables.
He sighed. “We would have been on time if you hadn’t had to call your stylist about what outfit would be appropriate for a business meeting.”
The woman smoothed down the blue jacket that hugged her curves. “Blame me for wanting to make a good first impression.” She turned toward me and flashed a hundred-watt smile. “Forgive our bickering. I’m Sandra Ashford and this is my husband, Michael. We’re the owners of Promote Your Event. We’ve been hired by the Mission Society to assist with their fund-raising events. We’re checking in to see if you all are ready for the walk on Saturday.”
“I’m Jill Gardner. I own the land where the South Cove Mission was found.” I held my hands up and glanced around the room. “As well as this store. We’ve committed to be one of the sponsors for the event.”
“Lovely.” Sandra’s gaze covered the shop’s dining area and book department in less time than it took to read a road sign. A look of disgust flashed on her face for a second, her lip twitching like the smell from the coffee of the day was Stockyard Drip instead of Vanilla Bean Delight. Then her plastic veneer went back up and I almost thought I’d imagined the negative assessment. Until she spoke her next words. “I guess it will have to do.”
Darla stepped next to me and held out her hand. “Darla Taylor, South Cove Winery, and Examiner lead reporter.” She grinned at me before adding, “And South Cove Mission Walk chairman. I’m so glad you took time out of your busy schedule for us. Come sit, I’ve got the event plan right here. I’d love to have you go over it to make sure I’m not missing anything.”
Michael stepped forward and shook Darla’s hand. “I’m sure it’s grand. You know, these events never could get off the ground without the tireless effort of volunteers like you.”
As Darla stepped toward a clean table, I heard a sigh come from Sandra’s direction. “I swear, if I have to do any more of these one-horse-town events, I’m going to scream.”
Michael grabbed her elbow and leaned closer. “Be nice. Or pretend to be nice. I know it’s hard to act like something you’re not.” The couple followed Darla, and as I watched, Sandra shook off her husband’s grip.
Those two have issues. I knew what it was like to be in a marriage that wasn’t working. Between my law practice and my own failed relationships, I’d had plenty of examples. The Ashfords were definitely dysfunctional and on their way to nuclear relationship blowup. I just hoped they’d get through Saturday. The Mission Walk was too important to be collateral damage from a couple’s disintegration. I stood by the table as they sat on both sides of Darla.
“Before we get started, can I bring you some coffee? A carafe? Or something more decadent, like a cinnamon roll and a hot chocolate?” I wiped a circle from a coffee cup off the almost-clean table before Sandra could zoom in on the flaw.
“Bottled water.” Sandra didn’t even look up from digging in her leather tote.
“I’m good.” Darla waved me to a chair. “Sit down and help me present our plan.”
Michael turned toward me. “That cinnamon roll sounds amazing. Can you heat it with a little butter? And coffee, cream and sugar.”
Sandra snorted. “No wonder you didn’t want to go to the gym today. You were planning on blowing your diet.”
“I’m not on a diet.” Michael smiled up at me. “However, I should have accompanied my wife to the gym. Sometimes you just want that extra sleep.”
And time away from a witch from hell. I started to walk to the counter, but my aunt waved me away. “I can handle this. Just sit down.”
By all rights, Aunt Jackie should have been the one involved in the discussion. She had a knack for marketing. I just muddled through before she’d come to help me run the shop. I slipped into the last chair at the table and accepted a folder from Darla.
Listening to the plans and schedule, I knew that she had been the right choice to set up this event. She had thought of everything. As I looked through the maps, sign-up sheets, and lists of South Cove businesses from which she’d gotten donations, I was impressed.
Aunt Jackie set a glass of orange juice in front of me and looked over my shoulder pointing to an item on the list. “I didn’t think Lille would be participating. That woman’s always griping about giving away her profits.”
Darla laughed. “When I told her you were sponsoring all the water stations and providing CBM cups, she decided she needed to do something. So she’s hosting a small celebration circle at the end of the walk. Burgers and fries.”
“Just what a health-conscious runner wants at the end of an exercise event.” Sandra snorted.
Michael dug in to his cinnamon roll, holding his fork up to show his wife. “There’s more to life than just health food.”
“I hope you choke.” Sandra glared at the man across from her.
Her response sent a chill through me. Seemed like we’d be lucky if they made it through tonight, let alone all the way through the Mission Walk.
When I met Amy for lunch the next day, I recounted the event, blow by blow. The couple had continued to snipe at each other all during Darla’s presentation. What Michael exclaimed over as charming and innovative, Sandra called boring and too “small town” to bring in repeat walkers.
“When they left, I was drained. I went home and took a nap rather than taking Emma for a run.” I dug into my large Asian chicken salad, looking for the perfect bite of crunch, salt, and sweet. Diamond Lille’s might be a total greasy-spoon café, but Lille had branched out into weekly salad specials for the summer and I’d enjoyed every one I’d tried so far. Next week, Southwest Tilapia was on the menu.
“Sounds like a toxic relationship to me.” Amy picked up her double-decker cheeseburger and took a bite, wiping the grease from her mouth with a paper napkin. I loved my friend, but sometimes, I wish I had her metabolism. The girl could eat anything and not gain an ounce. Of course, she surfed for hours most weekends. Except for my beach run with Emma and working at the shop, I tended to stay close to my couch. Especially with a book in hand. Of course, I called it “research.” Bookstore owners had to be up on the current releases.
“Oh, and I volunteered you and Justin to run the course Friday evening so Darla can time the event.” I took a sip of my iced tap water with a lemon slice and thought about the New York–style cheesecake sitting in my refrigerator at home. Since I’d run this morning and was now eating healthy for lunch, maybe a slice of that would be my dinner. With a fresh pear, of course. “Can you be there?”
“I think so. I’ll text Justin right now. We put off our surfing date until Sunday so we could be part of the five-K. He’s really excited about supporting the town and your mission project.” Amy took her phone out of her purse and clicked out a message. Justin taught history at a local college so if he wasn’t teaching, most likely he was in the library reading or sitting in his office, writing. The guy looked more like the carefree surfer he played on weekends than the stuffy professor, and his students adored him. “Now, tell me about your upcoming trip. A weeklong cruise to Alaska?”
Greg and I had booked the trip last month, kind of a celebration for dating for a year. Mostly a getaway from what had been a crazy-busy winter. Typically, the shop slowed down after the holidays, but not this year. So even though my aunt was griping about me disappearing during prime tourist season, nothing was going to stop our vacation. Well, I guess Greg could be called back to work if some freak weather event hit or worse, but I’d been watching the Weather Channel for a couple of weeks, and so far, we were good.
“I packed two digital cameras and extra memory cards. I’ve loaded my e-reader with books. And I’ve been running every day and eating salads to lose a few pounds before I’m on board with the buffets.” I pointed down at the salad. “I could eat this every day.”
Carrie, our waitress, stopped by and refilled our glasses. “I’ll tell Lille. She’s been all freaked out over some food critic who is supposed to be showing up this month.”
“I didn’t think they scheduled visits like that, or at least, didn’t tell the restaurants when they were coming.” Amy waved a French fry at Carrie. “Are you sure she’s not just having a bad month?”
A grin covered Carrie’s face as she leaned closer to answer. “Normally, I’d agree with you, but I guess Diamond Lille’s was picked to be in some diner food contest for the paper. If we win, the diner will be on the front page. Lille’s dreaming of all the new customers.”
“Not sure where she’d squeeze in one more customer. This place is jam-packed every time I’m here.” I appraised the lunch crowd. Out of all the booths and tables, only two were empty, and I’d watched both of the prior inhabitants get up and leave within the last ten minutes.
Carrie leaned over. “She’s talking about buying the building next door and expanding. Her new boyfriend is a contractor, and he can get her a good deal on the remodel.”
I thought about the building next door. Diamond Lille’s sat on the corner of Main and Gull Street. The house behind the restaurant was Lille’s home, a quaint gingerbread house. I doubted she wanted to tear it down. The only other option was The Train Station on the other side. Harrold Snider had run the model train store for as long as anyone in South Cove could remember. I watched Amy’s face as she came to the same conclusion. “You mean Harrold is closing his business?”
Carrie shrugged, clearly uncomfortable with the way the conversation was heading. “All I know is what Lille lets slip. And Harrold hasn’t been in for breakfast for over two weeks. I think they had a fight.”
“There hasn’t been any application to the city for a remodel permit. Maybe Lille’s just looking to the future. You know, when Harrold decides to retire.” Amy leaned back in the booth and grabbed her phone, keying in a text.
Carrie glanced over at the cashier’s stand, where Lille stood, ringing up an order. “I don’t know. I mean, he’s pushing seventy now. Maybe he thinks he is retired.”
“Well, no use worrying about something that hasn’t happened yet. Right?” I took another bite of my salad.
“It sure would help me out. I’d love to be able to bring home more tips. These old dogs”—Carrie pointed at her feet—“won’t be able to stand many more years working here. Maybe I should go back to school and learn a new trade? But who am I kidding? They’ll probably have to carry my body out of here on a stretcher.”
As Carrie walked away, I focused on my lunch companion. The meal had turned interesting. I loved having businesses grow and thrive in South Cove, but not at the expense of others. Harrold’s train store brought in an eclectic group of tourists, ones looking to expand their collections. A. . .
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