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Synopsis
A town historian is dead—and there may be ties to an old cold case—in this clever mystery starring a professional pet-treat baker.
Kristan “Stan” Connor is thrilled to be invited to the Groundhog Day festivities in quirky Frog Ledge, Connecticut. Her organic, home-baked pet treats are a big hit at the annual celebration, though an important guest is curiously absent . . .
When Helga Oliver, the town’s elderly historian, is found crumpled in the basement of the Historical Museum, the close-knit town is devastated. But after some tenacious digging, Stan discovers Helga was pushed down the stairs—and that this picture-perfect New England town may hide some dark secrets.
Stan’s dogged determination reveals Helga’s ties to an unsolved death in 1948 . . . but how does that connect to Adrian Fox, who’s just arrived in town to shoot an episode of Celebrity Ghost Hunters? Stan is going to have to be very careful in chasing down the killer—if she wants to live to see another winter . . .
Includes Gourmet Pet Food Recipes!
Kristan “Stan” Connor is thrilled to be invited to the Groundhog Day festivities in quirky Frog Ledge, Connecticut. Her organic, home-baked pet treats are a big hit at the annual celebration, though an important guest is curiously absent . . .
When Helga Oliver, the town’s elderly historian, is found crumpled in the basement of the Historical Museum, the close-knit town is devastated. But after some tenacious digging, Stan discovers Helga was pushed down the stairs—and that this picture-perfect New England town may hide some dark secrets.
Stan’s dogged determination reveals Helga’s ties to an unsolved death in 1948 . . . but how does that connect to Adrian Fox, who’s just arrived in town to shoot an episode of Celebrity Ghost Hunters? Stan is going to have to be very careful in chasing down the killer—if she wants to live to see another winter . . .
Includes Gourmet Pet Food Recipes!
Release date: March 31, 2015
Publisher: Kensington Books
Print pages: 304
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The Icing on the Corpse
Liz Mugavero
Groundhogs invaded the basement of the Frog Ledge Unitarian Universalist Church. They came in all shapes and sizes, at least sixty of them—tall, short, fat, skinny, fluffy tails, flat tails. Some stood around drinking coffee, others chatted in groups, still more milled around the makeshift podium at the front of the meeting room, waiting for the festivities to begin.
“This is surreal,” Stan Connor said quietly.
“You just feel out of place because you don’t have a groundhog costume like the cool people.” Jake McGee, her sort-of boyfriend, gazed solemnly at her. “I told you I would’ve gotten you one.”
She elbowed him. “Oh, be quiet. You don’t have a costume.” Not that he needed one to stand out. He was easily one of the best-looking people around, in his own jeans, baseball cap, and stubble kind of way.
“I’m not cool.” He winked.
“Good morning!”
All eyes turned to the podium now commandeered by Betty Meany, Frog Ledge’s librarian. Betty was so short you could barely tell she stood two steps above the crowd. But the tangerine-colored scarf she’d tied around her spiky white hair, combined with her bubbly energy, made up for what she lacked in height. A drop-down screen lowered behind her. Not surprisingly, a smiling groundhog image appeared.
“Happy Groundhog Day,” Betty continued. “I’m so thrilled you’re all here. We have such a great program planned for you today. Before I give you a sneak peek, I’d like to introduce you all to this year’s Groundhog Gift-Giver: Stan Connor, owner and chief baker at Pawsitively Organic!” She led a round of applause. “Stan has been chosen to present Lilypad, our groundhog guest of honor, with her annual gift. Stan, can you please come up?”
Stan felt her face heat up. She’d never been asked to give a groundhog a gift before. That alone was stressful. And a groundhog named Lilypad took it to a whole new level. Couple it with being on display for the whole town’s critical eye, and it was worse than her most contentious media face-off at her old corporate job. The situation was exacerbated by the continuous replay of the Ally McBeal theme song in her head—because certainly, this could only happen on a nineties TV show. She still hadn’t lost her old habit of assigning most things in her life a soundtrack. She mentally shoved the song out of her head. Jake gave her a gentle push forward.
“Go! You don’t want to miss your moment in the sun,” he said.
She didn’t have time to glare at him as all eyes turned toward her. She took a deep breath and squeezed through the crowd until she reached Betty.
Betty beamed at her. “Congratulations! Would you like to say a few words?” She moved aside, giving Stan room at the podium.
Luckily, thanks to her past life in public relations, Stan could recite a good quote without even thinking about it. “I’m absolutely honored Pawsitively Organic has been chosen as the gift-giver for Lilypad. I can’t think of a better way to spend my first Groundhog Day in Frog Ledge.” She smiled brightly, showing plenty of teeth.
A flashbulb went off from the front of the crowd, nearly blinding her in the dim room. Cyril Pierce, publisher and lone reporter for the local newspaper, the Frog Ledge Holler, called out. “Is the gift edible?”
“The gift is edible,” she assured him. “But that’s all I can tell you before the unveiling.”
As the “chosen citizen”—the one who presented a gift to the town groundhog—Stan had a tradition to uphold. Namely, no one could see the present before Lilypad. Many citizens had been vying for the honor of gift-giver for years and had never even been considered. At least that’s what her friend Char Mackey had told her in awed tones when she’d heard the news. Who knew? But the whole town had been speculating like crazy about what Stan would do for Lilypad. Which had resulted in a whole lot of pressure over the last two weeks since the mayor had tapped her as “the one.”
“Thank you, Stan.” Betty led the round of applause as she stepped down. “We can’t wait to see the gift. In the meantime, we’ll continue social hour right here, with refreshments, stories, a slideshow of our past events”—she indicated the screen behind her—“and then we’ll move outside around eleven. Lilypad will arrive shortly thereafter. We’ll have live music and our town historian, Helga Oliver, will start the ceremony with a history of Groundhog Day in Frog Ledge. Mayor Tony Falco will present Lilypad with a citation. Then Lilypad will offer her verdict and hopefully, we’ll bring winter to a close!” Betty smiled and nodded as the crowd offered up another round of applause.
“Stan will present the gift in closing. Lastly, I just want to remind everyone what an honor it is to have Lilypad the groundhog here. Lilypad’s handler told me when she accepted our invitation that Frog Ledge is the only celebration she would consider, because our programs are so classy. So thank you all for your help in making our town’s celebration the go-to event! We’ll see you outside in an hour!” And she hurried off the podium. Behind her, the slide show began to flash across the screen as “We’ve Only Just Begun” began playing. The Carpenters? Really?
Stan looked at Jake. “Do other towns really do this? I thought it was just that little town in Pennsylvania where the media always converges.”
“We’re the only ones in Connecticut who do it up this big,” a voice from behind Stan chimed in.
They both turned to find Cyril Pierce behind them. He wore his typical outfit—a black trench coat over black jeans and a button-down shirt—and his short, curly hair stuck out every which way, thick glasses askew. He carried a steno pad and the offending camera. He nodded at Stan. “Congratulations.”
“Thanks. Is there a reason we do it up big?” Stan asked.
Cyril shrugged. “We like to celebrate random holidays.”
It was as good a reason as any. Stan had gotten to the point where, almost a year after moving to Frog Ledge and despite still feeling sometimes like she’d gone down the rabbit hole, she was much better at accepting the way things were done.
“I’m going to go see if Betty needs help.” Jake leaned down and kissed her cheek. “I’ll find you.” He walked off. She watched him go, not sure if her cheek was really burning from his lips or if she was having some weird flashback to sixteen.
“Hello? Stan?” Cyril waved his steno pad at her. “I have a couple more questions.”
“Hmm? Oh, sure. Shoot.” She focused on him. “But I can’t give anything away about the gift.”
She spent the next few minutes dodging specifics while explaining that, based on her research, groundhogs were vegetarians who enjoyed an occasional bug. Those findings had given her pause considering her occupation—baking healthy, natural, organic pet treats—and the task before her, but she figured she could make it work. She’d spent all day yesterday baking a special, full-sized, carrot-shaped cookie flavored with nuts and berries, resting on a bed of grass. Organic, homegrown cat grass, to be specific. She hoped Lilypad liked it.
“Excuse me.” A groundhog-costumed man tapped her on the shoulder. “Do you have any treats here? I promised my dog I would bring some home. I hope you do. He’ll be real upset if not.” He looked anxious.
Stan glanced at Cyril. He seemed about to protest this diversion of her attention when a portly old man with an unlit cigar clamped between his teeth materialized at his elbow. Stan noticed their resemblance to one another immediately. Namely, the same thick glasses and unkempt curly hair, although the older man’s was gray.
Cyril looked startled. “Dad. What are you . . .” He turned so Stan couldn’t hear him and said something. The old man looked annoyed. Cyril glanced back at Stan and flipped his notebook closed. “I’ll need comments and a photo after the presentation.”
“Absolutely,” Stan promised. She watched them walk away, the faint smell of stale cigar following. Cyril had a dad. Funny thing to be surprised about. She’d never actually thought about Cyril as a real person with a family. Mostly he was Frog Ledge’s prickly newsman.
“So what kind do you have?” the groundhog man asked, dragging her attention back.
She focused on him. “I have broccoli and cheese, peanut butter and banana, and blueberry vanilla barley. Three sizes—large, medium, and small.”
The man pumped his furry fist in the air. “Awesome! Are they . . .”
“Groundhog shaped?” Stan finished. “You bet.” She smiled as she led the delighted customer to her display set up on one of the folding tables Betty and her team had dragged from the storage room and dusted off that morning. She was catching on to this group of quirky townsfolk and their preferences. It had been a mad search for three sizes of groundhog-shaped cookie cutters, but her persistence had paid off. She’d even made salmon-flavored cat treats in the same shape.
She packed up some cookies, collected her money, and sent the guy on his way, then scanned the crowd for Jake. Nowhere in sight. If he’d offered himself up to Betty, she was sure to keep him busy for the rest of the event. He might even miss her gift presentation.
“Hey! You ripped out my fur!” The ear-splitting shriek jolted Stan. Two kids faced off, one with a clump of fake fur from the other’s costume in his hand, an evil smile on his face. The kid unfortunately missing his tail burst into tears and began screaming for his mother, who didn’t seem to be anywhere in sight.
In the midst of the chaos, Stan heard the shrill voice behind her loud and clear. “You’re the pet food lady!”
She turned automatically at the title—she was used to it in some form or another these days—to find a woman with long, frizzy platinum curls, dressed like Stevie Nicks from Fleetwood Mac. Her flowy purple skirt was accented by a lacy top and high-heeled boots. All that was missing was a top hat and a microphone with a scarf tied around it. She smiled eagerly at Stan, waiting for her response. Her right front tooth was smeared with Corvette red lipstick, a color that remained only in faded tones on her lips. Immediately, the opening bars of “Gypsy” floated through Stan’s head. She half expected the woman to break into a signature twirl. Another woman who seemed to be accompanying her stood a couple of steps behind, a slightly mortified smile on her face. By contrast, she looked like an affluent soccer mom, sporting a North Face coat, expensive-looking yoga pants, and carefully messy, salon-streaked hair. And a very nice Louis Vuitton bag.
“That’s me.” Stan offered her hand, clamping down on her runaway mental activity. “I’m Stan Connor.”
“Sarah Oliver. I have heard delightful things about you.” Sarah took her hand, clasped it between both of hers, and closed her eyes.
What the heck is she doing? “Oliver. Are you Helga’s daughter?” Stan asked, delicately trying to tug her hand away.
Sarah didn’t say anything for a long minute and continued to hold on to Stan’s hand, her grip like a vise. Finally, she opened her eyes. “You have strong energy,” she said.
“Uh, thanks.”
Sarah smiled and nodded. She finally dropped Stan’s hand. Stan swore it felt hot. “I am Helga’s daughter. Do you know Mum?”
“I do. I’m—I know her through Jake. McGee.” Four months in and she still didn’t know what to say about Jake. Were they dating? Was he her boyfriend? As much as she liked him—heck, she really liked him—did she want to put a label on it? This stuff shouldn’t be as complicated in your thirties as it was in your teens and twenties.
But the recognition dawned as Sarah put two and two together. “Of course. Jake’s new gal. We’ve heard all about you. But I knew about you because my mum is a fan of your cat treats. Her Benedict is a picky eater.”
Heard all about her? Was Jake talking about her to Helga? She knew Helga was a very close family friend of the McGees, basically a surrogate grandmother to Jake and his two sisters. The thought of Jake confiding in her about his sort-of relationship made her blush.
The other woman finally stepped forward. “Hi. I’m Carla Miller.”
“Nice to meet you, Carla.” Stan shook her hand, too.
“Carla’s my sister-in-law,” Sarah said. “I drive her crazy.”
Carla flushed. “You do not. Hush.”
“She’s a politician’s wife,” Sarah told Stan. “That’s why she’s so polite. And a little snobby.” She elbowed Carla playfully, but Carla did not look amused. She shifted her bag to her other shoulder, adjusting it so the Louis Vuitton tag was unmistakable.
“Politician?” Stan asked.
“Don Miller. Town councilman,” Sarah said. “My big brother. Different fathers,” she added.
Carla looked like she wanted the floor to open up and swallow her. Sarah was oblivious to the discomfort she appeared to be causing her sister-in-law. She leaned closer to Stan. “Are you giving the groundhog a dog cookie?”
Stan glanced around to make sure no one else was paying attention and answered in her own stage whisper. “It’s not a dog cookie . . . it’s a groundhog cookie.”
Sarah’s lips formed an O. “Can I see it?”
Stan cringed at the question, hoping no one had heard. Too late. Betty materialized at Stan’s elbow, and the look on her face could’ve crumbled the cookie into a million pieces. “Sarah, what do you think you’re doing? You know better than that!”
Stan opened her mouth to intervene, but Sarah suddenly closed her eyes and swayed, grabbing the edge of the table. Alarmed, Stan reached for her.
“What’s wrong?” She looked at Betty. “Is she okay?”
Betty’s look of disdain said it all, but Sarah’s eyes flew open. “Where’s Mum?” she asked urgently.
Stan looked around. “I haven’t seen her.”
“Neither have I,” Betty said, still sullen. “Why?”
Sarah’s flighty demeanor was gone. In its place, Stan read fear in her eyes. “Something’s wrong. We need to find her.”
“She’s just a drama queen. She was trying to divert my attention from her inappropriate question about Lilypad’s gift.” Betty stormed outside and scanned the crowd huddled in the parking lot, braving the cold and waiting for the event to start. The green itself was still covered in at least six inches of snow, so they were relegated to the smaller concrete area for the festivities. Stan hurried to keep up with her.
“Everyone knows you can’t peek at the gift! She doesn’t bother with her mother that much anyway. All of a sudden she’s worried about her?” Betty made a hand gesture that Stan wouldn’t expect from a librarian.
“Are you sure?” Stan asked. “She seemed pretty serious.” After her near-fainting spell, Sarah had rushed off, Carla in tow, presumably to look for her mother. Stan didn’t know where they’d gone.
“Trust me. You don’t know Sarah. She’s trouble with a capital T. Raymond!”
Ray Mackey turned from the group of people he huddled with. “What can I do for you, Betty? Hello there, Stan.”
Stan gave him a hug. Ray and Char Mackey, owners of the Alpaca Haven Bed-and-Breakfast, were her first and most trusted friends in Frog Ledge. They knew all the gossip, were always supportive of her, and the fact that Char was from New Orleans originally didn’t hurt. She made the best food and strongest drinks in town, though Stan wouldn’t tell Jake that. As the owner of McSwigg’s, the local Irish pub, he would find that assessment offensive.
But Betty was in no mood for niceties. “Where’s Helga?”
Ray, in his usual slow and steady manner, thought about that long enough that Betty looked about ready to pop. “I’m afraid I don’t know, Betty.”
“Aargh,” Betty muttered. “She’s got to be around here somewhere.”
“Do you need a replacement historian?” A man with a scraggly beard and tiny eyeglasses appeared behind Betty. “I’m happy to jump in if Helga is neglecting her duties. I’m quite an expert on our town’s Groundhog Day legacy.” He smiled at Stan and held out a cold, thin hand. “Dale Hatmaker. I’m—”
“We’ll be fine, Dale,” Betty cut in, stepping in front of Stan before she could shake his hand. “Thanks for offering.”
Despite Betty’s curt tone, Dale Hatmaker didn’t look offended. Instead, he smiled at them both, clasped his hands together, and bowed his head at Betty, then walked away.
Stan looked from Betty to Ray. Both were glowering after Hatmaker. “Who was that?”
Betty rolled her eyes. “That’s Dale. Self-elected historian. He wants Helga’s job and doesn’t make it a secret. Shameless, if you ask me.”
“Completely shameless,” Ray added, snapping his suspenders. “As my wife would say, he ain’t got the good sense God gave a rock.”
Stan smiled at the southern phrase so common to Char. “Her job? You mean you get paid to be the historian?” she asked.
“Well, of course you do!” Betty looked at Stan like she was slow. “It’s not a fortune, but it’s a small salary. Dale just wants the title. He knows some things, sure, but he’s not a lifer in town like Helga and her family. He’s only lived here about fifty years.” Betty sniffed, as if that were equivalent to about two weeks. “He just wants his name in the paper. Anyway, I must go find her. If you see her, please find me right away.” She hurried off, leaving Stan and Ray staring after her.
“What’s Betty so frantic about finding Helga for? The ceremony isn’t in danger of starting without her.” Ray looked at his watch. “Although we are getting close. Holy smokes,” he interrupted himself. “Is that Arthur Pierce?”
Stan turned to see Cyril and his dad engaged in a serious discussion under a tree. “I think so. Cyril called him dad.”
“Well, of course it is. It’s wonderful to see him. They just had some devastating news.” He leaned close to Stan, and whispered, “Arthur has terminal cancer. Diagnosed just last month.”
Stan made a sympathetic noise. Poor Cyril.
“Anyway, I apologize. I sidetracked you. What’s got Betty so up in arms?”
“There was a strange episode with Helga’s daughter. She said something was wrong and we had to find her,” Stan explained.
“Ahh. Sarah?”
Stan nodded. “What’s her deal? She seemed a little . . . spacey.”
“She does tend to appear that way,” Ray said. “But, actually, she’s a medium.”
Stan’s eyes widened. “A real one?” That explained the energy comment.
Ray pulled a pack of chewing gum out of his pocket, unwrapped a stick, and offered it to Stan. She declined. He popped it in his mouth, chewed slowly. “She thinks so. I don’t think it’s her day job, but she considers it a talent. What’s the fuss about? What’s wrong with Helga?”
“Sarah didn’t say. She looked like she was going to pass out. Then she said something was wrong and we had to find her. Betty shrugged it off, but now she seems concerned.” Stan huddled deeper in her coat. Now she knew why people were wearing groundhog costumes. The day was cold, overcast, and damp. She was freezing and wished for a hat. At least she’d had the foresight to bring gloves. February was not the best time of year for an outdoor event in New England.
“Hmmm.” Ray stroked his own beard. “Well, I’ll take a walk around. Anyone seen Gerry?”
Helga’s companion, Gerry Ricci, was ninety-two to her eighty-seven. Despite their advanced ages, they were one of the most visible couples in town, always out and about, participating in some historical event or other town gathering. Gerry had bad knees and Helga had a bad hip, but they got around swimmingly. They reportedly met for breakfast twice each week and dinner on the weekends, but both maintained their own households in that true old-fashioned mind-set. Stan hadn’t seen him either and told Ray so.
“I’ll put an APB out.” He winked at her. “We’ll get to the bottom of this. Don’t you worry. I’ll get Char on it. You know my wife. She can find out anything.”
He wasn’t kidding. Char Mackey had a gift for gossip. There was nothing she couldn’t get people to tell her. Part of it was a gift, and part of it was her Southern heritage.
Before he could walk away, a shout from farther down the green distracted them.
“She’s here!”
They both turned to look. Stan hoped it was Helga, but realized the pseudo-groundhog making the announcement pointed to a woman unloading a pink carrier from an SUV parked on the road next to the green.
“Lilypad’s here,” Ray said. “You better run in and get your gift. Don’t worry, I’ll keep looking for our errant historian. She probably just got tied up at the museum. You know how she is when she’s working.”
“Hope so. Thanks, Ray. Speaking of missing people, have you seen Jake?”
Ray pointed to the side of the church. “I think Betty asked him to pull some chairs out from the other entrance.”
“Thanks.” Stan darted back inside the nearly empty meeting room and went to retrieve her bag from under the table where she’d stashed it. Instead of leaving through the main exit, she went to the side door in hopes of tracking Jake down. But when she shoved the door open, she nearly hit a tiny woman on the other side. Tinier than Betty Meany, even. She had tight, silver curls and wore a long red coat that probably weighed more than she did. She was engaged in what looked to be a serious conversation with Carla Miller, who was leaning against the building. Neither of them looked happy.
“Oh, my goodness, I’m so sorry!” Stan peered around the door. “I didn’t mean to interrupt. I was looking for Jake.”
The tiny woman glared at her, causing Stan to freeze in her tracks. Whoa. Not so friendly.
Carla shook her head. “It’s fine. I haven’t seen Jake out here.”
Stan mumbled another apology and a thanks. As she shut the door, she heard Carla say, “You could try to be nicer to people, Maeve.”
She didn’t wait to hear Maeve’s reply. Instead, she hurried back through the basement and out the main door. Helga still wasn’t in sight when Stan stepped outside. Neither was Jake. Instead, she ran into the new mayor, Tony Falco. And her mother, who was always on Falco’s arm these days. Here in Frog Ledge, instead of her home in Narragansett, Rhode Island. Falco, a newcomer to town, had usurped the incumbent mayor last November. And captured her mother’s normally blasé heart at the same time.
Stan stifled a sigh. “Hello,” she said, pasting on her best blankly pleasant face, a holdover from her corporate days, and trying not to wince as Falco pumped her hand a bit more enthusiastically than necessary.
“Kristan!” Patricia Connor bussed her cheek with a kiss. “Hello, dear. How exciting to have my daughter as the gift-giver!”
That was a switch. When Stan had first started her business, her mother had brushed it off as nonsense and tried to encourage her right back into the dysfunction of corporate America. When she’d resisted, citing a much-needed rest from the cutthroat corporate world, Patricia had shifted gears and tried to push her into politics. Because that wasn’t cutthroat at all.
“Yes, it’s cool. I have to run, Mom. They’re about to get started. I’ll talk to you later,” she promised, and hurried off, relieved to see Jake up ahead. He stood with Frank Pappas, the builder working on Jake’s newest renovation project in town. Frank was doing most of the talking, and his hands moved in short, curt gestures in time with his lips. Jake listened, but he didn’t say a word. Stan hesitated for a second, then figured she had every reason in the world to interrupt. She was the groundhog gift-giver, for goodness’ sake.
She walked up and tapped Jake on the shoulder. “This event is getting wacky,” she said. She smiled at Frank. “Hi.”
Frank grunted.
“There you are.” Jake twined her fingers with his. “Frank, I’ll talk to you later.”
Frank shrugged and walked away.
“What was that about?” Stan asked.
“Nothing. We’d better hurry—you need a spot right near the guest of honor and the head groundhog.” Jake tugged her toward the crowd, in the opposite direction of where Frank had gone.
“Head groundhog?” Stan repeated.
He grinned. “You haven’t met the head groundhog?” He swung her hand as they walked. It fit nicely in his, she noticed, then felt like a silly sixteen-year-old again.
“I haven’t. Do I know him?”
He maneuvered her into the crowd so she had a front-row view of the outside podium, which had been set up on a platform at the southernmost edge of the library parking lot. He stood behind her, hands resting lightly on her sh. . .
“This is surreal,” Stan Connor said quietly.
“You just feel out of place because you don’t have a groundhog costume like the cool people.” Jake McGee, her sort-of boyfriend, gazed solemnly at her. “I told you I would’ve gotten you one.”
She elbowed him. “Oh, be quiet. You don’t have a costume.” Not that he needed one to stand out. He was easily one of the best-looking people around, in his own jeans, baseball cap, and stubble kind of way.
“I’m not cool.” He winked.
“Good morning!”
All eyes turned to the podium now commandeered by Betty Meany, Frog Ledge’s librarian. Betty was so short you could barely tell she stood two steps above the crowd. But the tangerine-colored scarf she’d tied around her spiky white hair, combined with her bubbly energy, made up for what she lacked in height. A drop-down screen lowered behind her. Not surprisingly, a smiling groundhog image appeared.
“Happy Groundhog Day,” Betty continued. “I’m so thrilled you’re all here. We have such a great program planned for you today. Before I give you a sneak peek, I’d like to introduce you all to this year’s Groundhog Gift-Giver: Stan Connor, owner and chief baker at Pawsitively Organic!” She led a round of applause. “Stan has been chosen to present Lilypad, our groundhog guest of honor, with her annual gift. Stan, can you please come up?”
Stan felt her face heat up. She’d never been asked to give a groundhog a gift before. That alone was stressful. And a groundhog named Lilypad took it to a whole new level. Couple it with being on display for the whole town’s critical eye, and it was worse than her most contentious media face-off at her old corporate job. The situation was exacerbated by the continuous replay of the Ally McBeal theme song in her head—because certainly, this could only happen on a nineties TV show. She still hadn’t lost her old habit of assigning most things in her life a soundtrack. She mentally shoved the song out of her head. Jake gave her a gentle push forward.
“Go! You don’t want to miss your moment in the sun,” he said.
She didn’t have time to glare at him as all eyes turned toward her. She took a deep breath and squeezed through the crowd until she reached Betty.
Betty beamed at her. “Congratulations! Would you like to say a few words?” She moved aside, giving Stan room at the podium.
Luckily, thanks to her past life in public relations, Stan could recite a good quote without even thinking about it. “I’m absolutely honored Pawsitively Organic has been chosen as the gift-giver for Lilypad. I can’t think of a better way to spend my first Groundhog Day in Frog Ledge.” She smiled brightly, showing plenty of teeth.
A flashbulb went off from the front of the crowd, nearly blinding her in the dim room. Cyril Pierce, publisher and lone reporter for the local newspaper, the Frog Ledge Holler, called out. “Is the gift edible?”
“The gift is edible,” she assured him. “But that’s all I can tell you before the unveiling.”
As the “chosen citizen”—the one who presented a gift to the town groundhog—Stan had a tradition to uphold. Namely, no one could see the present before Lilypad. Many citizens had been vying for the honor of gift-giver for years and had never even been considered. At least that’s what her friend Char Mackey had told her in awed tones when she’d heard the news. Who knew? But the whole town had been speculating like crazy about what Stan would do for Lilypad. Which had resulted in a whole lot of pressure over the last two weeks since the mayor had tapped her as “the one.”
“Thank you, Stan.” Betty led the round of applause as she stepped down. “We can’t wait to see the gift. In the meantime, we’ll continue social hour right here, with refreshments, stories, a slideshow of our past events”—she indicated the screen behind her—“and then we’ll move outside around eleven. Lilypad will arrive shortly thereafter. We’ll have live music and our town historian, Helga Oliver, will start the ceremony with a history of Groundhog Day in Frog Ledge. Mayor Tony Falco will present Lilypad with a citation. Then Lilypad will offer her verdict and hopefully, we’ll bring winter to a close!” Betty smiled and nodded as the crowd offered up another round of applause.
“Stan will present the gift in closing. Lastly, I just want to remind everyone what an honor it is to have Lilypad the groundhog here. Lilypad’s handler told me when she accepted our invitation that Frog Ledge is the only celebration she would consider, because our programs are so classy. So thank you all for your help in making our town’s celebration the go-to event! We’ll see you outside in an hour!” And she hurried off the podium. Behind her, the slide show began to flash across the screen as “We’ve Only Just Begun” began playing. The Carpenters? Really?
Stan looked at Jake. “Do other towns really do this? I thought it was just that little town in Pennsylvania where the media always converges.”
“We’re the only ones in Connecticut who do it up this big,” a voice from behind Stan chimed in.
They both turned to find Cyril Pierce behind them. He wore his typical outfit—a black trench coat over black jeans and a button-down shirt—and his short, curly hair stuck out every which way, thick glasses askew. He carried a steno pad and the offending camera. He nodded at Stan. “Congratulations.”
“Thanks. Is there a reason we do it up big?” Stan asked.
Cyril shrugged. “We like to celebrate random holidays.”
It was as good a reason as any. Stan had gotten to the point where, almost a year after moving to Frog Ledge and despite still feeling sometimes like she’d gone down the rabbit hole, she was much better at accepting the way things were done.
“I’m going to go see if Betty needs help.” Jake leaned down and kissed her cheek. “I’ll find you.” He walked off. She watched him go, not sure if her cheek was really burning from his lips or if she was having some weird flashback to sixteen.
“Hello? Stan?” Cyril waved his steno pad at her. “I have a couple more questions.”
“Hmm? Oh, sure. Shoot.” She focused on him. “But I can’t give anything away about the gift.”
She spent the next few minutes dodging specifics while explaining that, based on her research, groundhogs were vegetarians who enjoyed an occasional bug. Those findings had given her pause considering her occupation—baking healthy, natural, organic pet treats—and the task before her, but she figured she could make it work. She’d spent all day yesterday baking a special, full-sized, carrot-shaped cookie flavored with nuts and berries, resting on a bed of grass. Organic, homegrown cat grass, to be specific. She hoped Lilypad liked it.
“Excuse me.” A groundhog-costumed man tapped her on the shoulder. “Do you have any treats here? I promised my dog I would bring some home. I hope you do. He’ll be real upset if not.” He looked anxious.
Stan glanced at Cyril. He seemed about to protest this diversion of her attention when a portly old man with an unlit cigar clamped between his teeth materialized at his elbow. Stan noticed their resemblance to one another immediately. Namely, the same thick glasses and unkempt curly hair, although the older man’s was gray.
Cyril looked startled. “Dad. What are you . . .” He turned so Stan couldn’t hear him and said something. The old man looked annoyed. Cyril glanced back at Stan and flipped his notebook closed. “I’ll need comments and a photo after the presentation.”
“Absolutely,” Stan promised. She watched them walk away, the faint smell of stale cigar following. Cyril had a dad. Funny thing to be surprised about. She’d never actually thought about Cyril as a real person with a family. Mostly he was Frog Ledge’s prickly newsman.
“So what kind do you have?” the groundhog man asked, dragging her attention back.
She focused on him. “I have broccoli and cheese, peanut butter and banana, and blueberry vanilla barley. Three sizes—large, medium, and small.”
The man pumped his furry fist in the air. “Awesome! Are they . . .”
“Groundhog shaped?” Stan finished. “You bet.” She smiled as she led the delighted customer to her display set up on one of the folding tables Betty and her team had dragged from the storage room and dusted off that morning. She was catching on to this group of quirky townsfolk and their preferences. It had been a mad search for three sizes of groundhog-shaped cookie cutters, but her persistence had paid off. She’d even made salmon-flavored cat treats in the same shape.
She packed up some cookies, collected her money, and sent the guy on his way, then scanned the crowd for Jake. Nowhere in sight. If he’d offered himself up to Betty, she was sure to keep him busy for the rest of the event. He might even miss her gift presentation.
“Hey! You ripped out my fur!” The ear-splitting shriek jolted Stan. Two kids faced off, one with a clump of fake fur from the other’s costume in his hand, an evil smile on his face. The kid unfortunately missing his tail burst into tears and began screaming for his mother, who didn’t seem to be anywhere in sight.
In the midst of the chaos, Stan heard the shrill voice behind her loud and clear. “You’re the pet food lady!”
She turned automatically at the title—she was used to it in some form or another these days—to find a woman with long, frizzy platinum curls, dressed like Stevie Nicks from Fleetwood Mac. Her flowy purple skirt was accented by a lacy top and high-heeled boots. All that was missing was a top hat and a microphone with a scarf tied around it. She smiled eagerly at Stan, waiting for her response. Her right front tooth was smeared with Corvette red lipstick, a color that remained only in faded tones on her lips. Immediately, the opening bars of “Gypsy” floated through Stan’s head. She half expected the woman to break into a signature twirl. Another woman who seemed to be accompanying her stood a couple of steps behind, a slightly mortified smile on her face. By contrast, she looked like an affluent soccer mom, sporting a North Face coat, expensive-looking yoga pants, and carefully messy, salon-streaked hair. And a very nice Louis Vuitton bag.
“That’s me.” Stan offered her hand, clamping down on her runaway mental activity. “I’m Stan Connor.”
“Sarah Oliver. I have heard delightful things about you.” Sarah took her hand, clasped it between both of hers, and closed her eyes.
What the heck is she doing? “Oliver. Are you Helga’s daughter?” Stan asked, delicately trying to tug her hand away.
Sarah didn’t say anything for a long minute and continued to hold on to Stan’s hand, her grip like a vise. Finally, she opened her eyes. “You have strong energy,” she said.
“Uh, thanks.”
Sarah smiled and nodded. She finally dropped Stan’s hand. Stan swore it felt hot. “I am Helga’s daughter. Do you know Mum?”
“I do. I’m—I know her through Jake. McGee.” Four months in and she still didn’t know what to say about Jake. Were they dating? Was he her boyfriend? As much as she liked him—heck, she really liked him—did she want to put a label on it? This stuff shouldn’t be as complicated in your thirties as it was in your teens and twenties.
But the recognition dawned as Sarah put two and two together. “Of course. Jake’s new gal. We’ve heard all about you. But I knew about you because my mum is a fan of your cat treats. Her Benedict is a picky eater.”
Heard all about her? Was Jake talking about her to Helga? She knew Helga was a very close family friend of the McGees, basically a surrogate grandmother to Jake and his two sisters. The thought of Jake confiding in her about his sort-of relationship made her blush.
The other woman finally stepped forward. “Hi. I’m Carla Miller.”
“Nice to meet you, Carla.” Stan shook her hand, too.
“Carla’s my sister-in-law,” Sarah said. “I drive her crazy.”
Carla flushed. “You do not. Hush.”
“She’s a politician’s wife,” Sarah told Stan. “That’s why she’s so polite. And a little snobby.” She elbowed Carla playfully, but Carla did not look amused. She shifted her bag to her other shoulder, adjusting it so the Louis Vuitton tag was unmistakable.
“Politician?” Stan asked.
“Don Miller. Town councilman,” Sarah said. “My big brother. Different fathers,” she added.
Carla looked like she wanted the floor to open up and swallow her. Sarah was oblivious to the discomfort she appeared to be causing her sister-in-law. She leaned closer to Stan. “Are you giving the groundhog a dog cookie?”
Stan glanced around to make sure no one else was paying attention and answered in her own stage whisper. “It’s not a dog cookie . . . it’s a groundhog cookie.”
Sarah’s lips formed an O. “Can I see it?”
Stan cringed at the question, hoping no one had heard. Too late. Betty materialized at Stan’s elbow, and the look on her face could’ve crumbled the cookie into a million pieces. “Sarah, what do you think you’re doing? You know better than that!”
Stan opened her mouth to intervene, but Sarah suddenly closed her eyes and swayed, grabbing the edge of the table. Alarmed, Stan reached for her.
“What’s wrong?” She looked at Betty. “Is she okay?”
Betty’s look of disdain said it all, but Sarah’s eyes flew open. “Where’s Mum?” she asked urgently.
Stan looked around. “I haven’t seen her.”
“Neither have I,” Betty said, still sullen. “Why?”
Sarah’s flighty demeanor was gone. In its place, Stan read fear in her eyes. “Something’s wrong. We need to find her.”
“She’s just a drama queen. She was trying to divert my attention from her inappropriate question about Lilypad’s gift.” Betty stormed outside and scanned the crowd huddled in the parking lot, braving the cold and waiting for the event to start. The green itself was still covered in at least six inches of snow, so they were relegated to the smaller concrete area for the festivities. Stan hurried to keep up with her.
“Everyone knows you can’t peek at the gift! She doesn’t bother with her mother that much anyway. All of a sudden she’s worried about her?” Betty made a hand gesture that Stan wouldn’t expect from a librarian.
“Are you sure?” Stan asked. “She seemed pretty serious.” After her near-fainting spell, Sarah had rushed off, Carla in tow, presumably to look for her mother. Stan didn’t know where they’d gone.
“Trust me. You don’t know Sarah. She’s trouble with a capital T. Raymond!”
Ray Mackey turned from the group of people he huddled with. “What can I do for you, Betty? Hello there, Stan.”
Stan gave him a hug. Ray and Char Mackey, owners of the Alpaca Haven Bed-and-Breakfast, were her first and most trusted friends in Frog Ledge. They knew all the gossip, were always supportive of her, and the fact that Char was from New Orleans originally didn’t hurt. She made the best food and strongest drinks in town, though Stan wouldn’t tell Jake that. As the owner of McSwigg’s, the local Irish pub, he would find that assessment offensive.
But Betty was in no mood for niceties. “Where’s Helga?”
Ray, in his usual slow and steady manner, thought about that long enough that Betty looked about ready to pop. “I’m afraid I don’t know, Betty.”
“Aargh,” Betty muttered. “She’s got to be around here somewhere.”
“Do you need a replacement historian?” A man with a scraggly beard and tiny eyeglasses appeared behind Betty. “I’m happy to jump in if Helga is neglecting her duties. I’m quite an expert on our town’s Groundhog Day legacy.” He smiled at Stan and held out a cold, thin hand. “Dale Hatmaker. I’m—”
“We’ll be fine, Dale,” Betty cut in, stepping in front of Stan before she could shake his hand. “Thanks for offering.”
Despite Betty’s curt tone, Dale Hatmaker didn’t look offended. Instead, he smiled at them both, clasped his hands together, and bowed his head at Betty, then walked away.
Stan looked from Betty to Ray. Both were glowering after Hatmaker. “Who was that?”
Betty rolled her eyes. “That’s Dale. Self-elected historian. He wants Helga’s job and doesn’t make it a secret. Shameless, if you ask me.”
“Completely shameless,” Ray added, snapping his suspenders. “As my wife would say, he ain’t got the good sense God gave a rock.”
Stan smiled at the southern phrase so common to Char. “Her job? You mean you get paid to be the historian?” she asked.
“Well, of course you do!” Betty looked at Stan like she was slow. “It’s not a fortune, but it’s a small salary. Dale just wants the title. He knows some things, sure, but he’s not a lifer in town like Helga and her family. He’s only lived here about fifty years.” Betty sniffed, as if that were equivalent to about two weeks. “He just wants his name in the paper. Anyway, I must go find her. If you see her, please find me right away.” She hurried off, leaving Stan and Ray staring after her.
“What’s Betty so frantic about finding Helga for? The ceremony isn’t in danger of starting without her.” Ray looked at his watch. “Although we are getting close. Holy smokes,” he interrupted himself. “Is that Arthur Pierce?”
Stan turned to see Cyril and his dad engaged in a serious discussion under a tree. “I think so. Cyril called him dad.”
“Well, of course it is. It’s wonderful to see him. They just had some devastating news.” He leaned close to Stan, and whispered, “Arthur has terminal cancer. Diagnosed just last month.”
Stan made a sympathetic noise. Poor Cyril.
“Anyway, I apologize. I sidetracked you. What’s got Betty so up in arms?”
“There was a strange episode with Helga’s daughter. She said something was wrong and we had to find her,” Stan explained.
“Ahh. Sarah?”
Stan nodded. “What’s her deal? She seemed a little . . . spacey.”
“She does tend to appear that way,” Ray said. “But, actually, she’s a medium.”
Stan’s eyes widened. “A real one?” That explained the energy comment.
Ray pulled a pack of chewing gum out of his pocket, unwrapped a stick, and offered it to Stan. She declined. He popped it in his mouth, chewed slowly. “She thinks so. I don’t think it’s her day job, but she considers it a talent. What’s the fuss about? What’s wrong with Helga?”
“Sarah didn’t say. She looked like she was going to pass out. Then she said something was wrong and we had to find her. Betty shrugged it off, but now she seems concerned.” Stan huddled deeper in her coat. Now she knew why people were wearing groundhog costumes. The day was cold, overcast, and damp. She was freezing and wished for a hat. At least she’d had the foresight to bring gloves. February was not the best time of year for an outdoor event in New England.
“Hmmm.” Ray stroked his own beard. “Well, I’ll take a walk around. Anyone seen Gerry?”
Helga’s companion, Gerry Ricci, was ninety-two to her eighty-seven. Despite their advanced ages, they were one of the most visible couples in town, always out and about, participating in some historical event or other town gathering. Gerry had bad knees and Helga had a bad hip, but they got around swimmingly. They reportedly met for breakfast twice each week and dinner on the weekends, but both maintained their own households in that true old-fashioned mind-set. Stan hadn’t seen him either and told Ray so.
“I’ll put an APB out.” He winked at her. “We’ll get to the bottom of this. Don’t you worry. I’ll get Char on it. You know my wife. She can find out anything.”
He wasn’t kidding. Char Mackey had a gift for gossip. There was nothing she couldn’t get people to tell her. Part of it was a gift, and part of it was her Southern heritage.
Before he could walk away, a shout from farther down the green distracted them.
“She’s here!”
They both turned to look. Stan hoped it was Helga, but realized the pseudo-groundhog making the announcement pointed to a woman unloading a pink carrier from an SUV parked on the road next to the green.
“Lilypad’s here,” Ray said. “You better run in and get your gift. Don’t worry, I’ll keep looking for our errant historian. She probably just got tied up at the museum. You know how she is when she’s working.”
“Hope so. Thanks, Ray. Speaking of missing people, have you seen Jake?”
Ray pointed to the side of the church. “I think Betty asked him to pull some chairs out from the other entrance.”
“Thanks.” Stan darted back inside the nearly empty meeting room and went to retrieve her bag from under the table where she’d stashed it. Instead of leaving through the main exit, she went to the side door in hopes of tracking Jake down. But when she shoved the door open, she nearly hit a tiny woman on the other side. Tinier than Betty Meany, even. She had tight, silver curls and wore a long red coat that probably weighed more than she did. She was engaged in what looked to be a serious conversation with Carla Miller, who was leaning against the building. Neither of them looked happy.
“Oh, my goodness, I’m so sorry!” Stan peered around the door. “I didn’t mean to interrupt. I was looking for Jake.”
The tiny woman glared at her, causing Stan to freeze in her tracks. Whoa. Not so friendly.
Carla shook her head. “It’s fine. I haven’t seen Jake out here.”
Stan mumbled another apology and a thanks. As she shut the door, she heard Carla say, “You could try to be nicer to people, Maeve.”
She didn’t wait to hear Maeve’s reply. Instead, she hurried back through the basement and out the main door. Helga still wasn’t in sight when Stan stepped outside. Neither was Jake. Instead, she ran into the new mayor, Tony Falco. And her mother, who was always on Falco’s arm these days. Here in Frog Ledge, instead of her home in Narragansett, Rhode Island. Falco, a newcomer to town, had usurped the incumbent mayor last November. And captured her mother’s normally blasé heart at the same time.
Stan stifled a sigh. “Hello,” she said, pasting on her best blankly pleasant face, a holdover from her corporate days, and trying not to wince as Falco pumped her hand a bit more enthusiastically than necessary.
“Kristan!” Patricia Connor bussed her cheek with a kiss. “Hello, dear. How exciting to have my daughter as the gift-giver!”
That was a switch. When Stan had first started her business, her mother had brushed it off as nonsense and tried to encourage her right back into the dysfunction of corporate America. When she’d resisted, citing a much-needed rest from the cutthroat corporate world, Patricia had shifted gears and tried to push her into politics. Because that wasn’t cutthroat at all.
“Yes, it’s cool. I have to run, Mom. They’re about to get started. I’ll talk to you later,” she promised, and hurried off, relieved to see Jake up ahead. He stood with Frank Pappas, the builder working on Jake’s newest renovation project in town. Frank was doing most of the talking, and his hands moved in short, curt gestures in time with his lips. Jake listened, but he didn’t say a word. Stan hesitated for a second, then figured she had every reason in the world to interrupt. She was the groundhog gift-giver, for goodness’ sake.
She walked up and tapped Jake on the shoulder. “This event is getting wacky,” she said. She smiled at Frank. “Hi.”
Frank grunted.
“There you are.” Jake twined her fingers with his. “Frank, I’ll talk to you later.”
Frank shrugged and walked away.
“What was that about?” Stan asked.
“Nothing. We’d better hurry—you need a spot right near the guest of honor and the head groundhog.” Jake tugged her toward the crowd, in the opposite direction of where Frank had gone.
“Head groundhog?” Stan repeated.
He grinned. “You haven’t met the head groundhog?” He swung her hand as they walked. It fit nicely in his, she noticed, then felt like a silly sixteen-year-old again.
“I haven’t. Do I know him?”
He maneuvered her into the crowd so she had a front-row view of the outside podium, which had been set up on a platform at the southernmost edge of the library parking lot. He stood behind her, hands resting lightly on her sh. . .
We hope you are enjoying the book so far. To continue reading...
The Icing on the Corpse
Liz Mugavero
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