Six people are missing from a mystery weekend, and aspiring mystery writer Caro Swenson is on the case with a hot-but-possibly homicidal hunk who seems to want to get his hands on Caro's. . .clues.
Single White Dead Guy - Amy Garvey
Lanie Burke spent one insanely hot night with Mr. Drop-Dead Gorgeous. Now he's just dead on the steps of her cabin. What to do with the body? Hopefully, she can get some help from the cute guy with groceries tromping through the snow toward her. . .
Fast Boys - Jennifer Apodaca
How did Tess Collins get caught up in a sleazy tabloid reporter's bid to get the dirt on NASCAR's pin-up boy, Ark Underwood? How did the jerk reporter end up dead on Underwood's hotel room floor? How is Tess going to save Ark's reputation? Or say no to his every desire?
Three Men And A Body - Nancy J. Cohen
Reality show contestant Heather Payne's assignment is simple: get a bed-and-breakfast in Winter Park up and running within seven days. But when "accidents" start plaguing the show, Heather begins to suspect the contestant she's sleeping with. . .
Release date:
November 1, 2011
Publisher:
Kensington Books
Print pages:
336
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“This is all Jeannie Desjardin’s fault,” Caro declared to the people in the hallway.
Lynn Myers blinked at her. “Who-who’s Jeannie Des-jardin?”
“My friend. She’s this awesomely horrible woman who generally revels in being bad. You know—she’s one of those New York publishing types. But every once in a while she gets an attack of the guilts and tries to do something nice. Her husband and I try to talk her out of it, but ... anyway, this was supposed to be her Maine getaway. But she gave me the tickets instead and stayed in New York to roast along with eight million other people.” And the yummy, luscious Steven McCord, Caro thought rebelliously. That lucky bitch. “And now look,” she said, resisting the urge to kick the bloody candlestick. “Look at this mess. Wait until I tell her being nice backfired again.”
“Well,” Lynn said, blinking faster—Caro suspected it was a nervous tic—“we should—I mean—we should call the—the police. Right?”
Caro studied Lynn, a slender woman so tall she hunched to hide it, a woman whose darting gray eyes swam behind magnified lenses. She was the only one of the group dressed in full makeup, pantyhose, and heels. She had told Caro during the first “Get Acquainted” brunch that she was a realtor from California. If so, she was the most uptight Californian Caro had ever seen. Not to mention the most uptight realtor.
“Call the police?” she asked at last. “Sure. But I think a few things might have escaped your notice.”
“Like the fact that the storm’s cut us off from the mainland,” Todd Opitz suggested, puffing away on his eighth cigarette in fifteen minutes.
“Secondhand smoke kills,” Lynn’s Goth teenage daughter, Jana, sniffed. She was a tiny brunette with wildly curly dark hair, large dark eyes edged in kohl (making her look not unlike an edgy raccoon), and a pierced nostril. “See, Mom? I told you this would be lame.”
“Jana ...”
“And secondhand smoke kills,” the teen added.
“I hope so,” was Todd’s cold reply. He was an Ichabod Crane of a man, towering over all of them and looking down his long nose, which was often obscured by cigarette smoke. He tossed a lank of dark blond hair out of his eyes, puffed, and added, “I really do. Go watch Romper Room, willya?”
“Children,” Caro said. “Focus, please. Dana’s in there holed up waiting for les flic to land. Meantime, who’d she kill?”
“What?” Lynn asked.
“Well, who’s dead? Obviously it’s not one of us. Who’s missing?” Caro started counting on her fingers. “I think there’s ... what? Maybe a dozen of us, including staff? Well, four of us—five, if you count Dana—are accounted for. But there’s a few of us missing.”
The four of them looked around the narrow hallway, as if they expected the missing guests to pop out any second.
“Right. So, let’s go see if we can find the dead person.”
“Wh-why?” Lynn asked.
“Duh, Mom,” Jana sniffed.
“Because they might not be dead,” Caro explained patiently. “There’s an old saying: ‘A bloody candlestick does not a dead guy make,’ or however it goes.”
Jana was startled out of her sullen-teen routine. “Where the hell did you grow up?”
“Language, Jana. But—but the police?”
“Get it through your head,” Todd said, not unkindly. “Nobody’s riding to the rescue. You saw the Weather Channel ... before the power went out, anyway. This is an island, a private island—”
“Enjoy the idyllic splendor of nature from your own solitary island off the Maine coast,” Lynn quoted obediently from the brochure.
“Don’t do that; it creeps me out when you do that.”
“I have a photographic memory,” she explained proudly.
“Congratufuckinglations. Anyway,” Todd finished, lighting up yet another fresh cigarette, “the earliest the cops can get here is after the storm clears, probably sometime tomorrow morning.”
“But they have helicopters—”
As if making Todd’s point, a crack of lightning lit up the windows, followed by the hollow boom of thunder, so loud it seemed to shake the mansion walls. The group pressed closer to each other for a brief moment and then, as if embarrassed at their unwilling intimacy, pulled back.
“They won’t fly in this weather. We’re stuck. Killer in the bedroom, no cops, power’s out. The perfect Maine getaway,” Todd added mockingly.
“It’s like one of those bad horror movies,” Caro commented.
“Caro’s right.”
“About the horror movies?”
He shook his head. “Let’s go see who’s dead. I mean, what’s the alternative? It beats huddling in our rooms waiting for the lights to come back on, don’cha think?”
“What he said,” Caro said, and they started off.
“Did you used to be a Boy Scout?” Caro asked Todd, who was briskly handing out large flashlights.
“No. When you’re a smoker, you get to know the lay of the land pretty quickly.”
“Secondhand smoke—” Jana cut herself off as the blond man glared down at her.
“Anyway,” he continued, “when you have to sneak around to take your cigarette breaks because the entire fucking world has gone crazy over cigarettes—don’t start, you guys, I know it’s bad for me; nothing that feels so good could ever be healthy—you get to know the place you’re staying at pretty well. I found this little pantry the first hour I was here.”
When they all had flashlights—with working batteries, for a change—Caro set off, and after a moment the others fell into step beside her. She had given up her vacation as ruined, but setting that aside, she had an urgent need to find Dana’s victim. Sure, there had been blood, but the human body could lose a lot of it and still live to play poker the next day. She had seen it.
“First thing, we find who Dana clocked with the candlestick,” Caro said, leading them down yet another long, carpeted hallway. She could hear rain beating against the windows and followed the signs to the main dining salon. “See if he—or she—is okay.”
“You’re a nurse, right?” Lynn asked.
“Uh-huh. Maybe I can do something.”
“Raise the dead?” Jana muttered.
Caro ignored that, pushed through the double doors to the dining room, and immediately shivered. All the windows against the far wall were open, as were the French doors leading to the large balcony where they’d had a pleasant lunch—was it only eight hours ago?
“Then we try to figure out how come.”
“How come what?” Lynn asked.
“Well, why did Dana kill whoever-it-is? She must have had a reason, unless she’s a sociopath. And she didn’t strike me that way at lunch. And—eesh, this is mega-creepy.”
White curtains billowed and plumed out from the windows, and another crack of lightning lit up the room. Caro hurried through the doors—
“Careful!” Todd said sharply. “Don’t slip.”
—and skidded to a halt right before the waist-high stone railing. She looked over ... and nearly fell herself.
“There!” she said, pointing with her flashlight. “Down on the rocks! Oh, Jesus, what a fall ...”
The others crowded around her, their flashlight beams poking like long white fingers. Far, far below, a body was washed up on the rocks. It was so far below, and so battered by the waves, it was impossible to tell if it was even a man or a woman. The head was so tiny, you couldn’t tell the length of hair or even the color of the hair—the rain could have made a blonde brunette, could have made a brunette more of a brunette, could have made a redhead mud-colored.
The setting sun set a bloody, broody glow over everything through the clouds, the perfect horrible creepy touch—not that one was needed.
“Oh, my God,” Lynn peeped.
About the only thing she could tell for sure was—
“Well, that poor bastard’s deader than shit,” Todd declared.
“Very helpful,” Jana said acidly.
“Oh, why don’t you go try to put this place on the market? That’s what you do, right?”
“I’m the realtor,” Lynn said. “Jana works in a CD store.”
“Well, go listen to Trent Reznor’s latest, then.”
“Quit it, children,” Caro said absently. “Why is he—or she?—naked?”
Jana shuddered. “I don’t even want to think about it.”
“Why would Dana undress the victim?” Caro said to herself.
“To keep us from knowing if it’s a man or woman?” Lynn ventured.
“Maybe ... but why?” Caro frowned and stepped back from the railing. “Why let us know she killed them, but not tell us who it was? I mean, pardon my French, but what the fuck?”
“She’s a model. That’s what she said at lunch earlier, right? Well. They’re capable of anything.” Todd shuddered. “Anything.”
Caro ignored the sarcasm. “Boy, there’s just no way to get down there without breaking our necks, is there?”
“Get down there?” Jana’s wild curls were plastered to her head in the driving rain, and she had to shout to be heard over the thunder. “Get down there? Have you lost your mind? We’re not cops! I vote we all go back to our rooms and wait for the police to get here and take Dana back to the mainland.”
“Yeah,” Lynn added with a mighty sniff. She dashed rain out of her eyes and looked away from the body.
“Forget that,” Todd said. “Just leave that poor schmuck down there on the rocks all night? For the birds and the fish and the—the whoever to do—you know. How’d you like it if it was you? Besides, he—she—they might be alive.”
Caro didn’t say anything. She certainly wasn’t going to argue with him, although his initial assessment had been correct: whomever-it-was was deader than shit. Not that she was going to take that road ... she and Todd were on the same page—she wanted to get to the body. Skulking in her room waiting for rescue didn’t exactly appeal. She wasn’t happy to be in the middle of this, but by God, she was in it.
“Look at this,” she said, pointing. There was blood on the stone railing, blood that trailed all the way back into the dining room. “That’s Dana, carrying the candlestick. She clocked this poor guy, shoved him—or her—over, then walked back to her room.”
“Naked,” Lynn added. “Shoved them naked.”
“Barf out,” Jana said with a grimace.
“Then told us she did it,” Todd added. “In the movies, the killer usually tries to, you know, cover up.”
“She forgot to leave the candlestick behind—shock, probably,” Caro continued, picturing it. “Didn’t even remember holding it until she was talking to us. That’s why there’s a trail of blood.”
“How handy for us,” Todd said, trying unsuccessfully to light a new cigarette in the downpour. “Explains the blood in the hallway, too, huh, Sherlock?”
“Are you smoking those things, or eating them?”
“Hey, I’m stressed, all right?” he snapped back. “This isn’t exactly my idea of a luxurious Maine getaway.”
“What, it’s ours? I could be in Minnesota right now, fishing on a lake.”
“I could be in wine country,” Lynn said mournfully.
“I could be indulging in minor property damage with my friends,” Jana sighed.
“Aw, shaddup, you guys. Be nice or I won’t tell you where the boathouse is.”
“The boat—”
“I had a cigarette there earlier.”
“Where haven’t you had a cigarette?” Jana snapped. “Your lungs must look like a couple of pieces of beef jerky.”
“Aw, shaddup. Look,” he said, turning back to Caro, “we could take the little outboard, maybe try to rescue the—maybe try to get the body. Or whatever.”
“Forget it,” Jana said.
“Fine. Stay here. Alooooone,” Todd said, wiggling his brows in a meaningfully scary way. “Hopefully Dana won’t come out of her room and decide to decorate your head with another candlestick.”
They stared at each other in the rain. Nobody consulted Lynn, but then, why start now?
Mother and daughter exchanged a look. Then, “So, where’s this boathouse?” Jana asked, resigned.
“... just through here ... a little bit farther ...”
“That’s what you said ten minutes ago,” Caro pointed out.
“Well, we’re getting close.”
Under ordinary conditions—which was to say, when they weren’t looking for a dead body in the steadily deepening dark, worried about the killer up at the mansion and being lashed by torrents of rain—this was probably a pleasant little path to the boathouse.
Not so much right now.
“It’s just down there,” Todd said, pointing. “See?”
They could see a small, squat building with a green roof just at the end of the path, and beyond that, a river gurgled alongside. Caro guessed the river must lead directly to the sea, and they could take the boat around to the back of the mansion, fish the body out, and then ...
What?
She’d worry about that later.
“Is there a reason we aren’t leaving this to the owner of the mansion?” Lynn ventured, stumbling in her pumps.
“He might be the dead guy,” Caro replied. “And it’s a big place. He could be anywhere. Heck, he could have gone back to the mainland after supper for all we know. I don’t want to waste time looking for someone we don’t even know is alive. I’d rather get to the victim.”
“It’s touching, yet a little on the creepy side,” Todd said. “I’m sure it has nothing to do with your obsessive need to be in charge.”
“Here we—ow! Son of a bitch!” Jana cursed and shoved the branches out of her face.
“Jana!” her mother gasped. “Watch your mouth.”
“That probably stings like crazy,” Todd commented, smothering a snicker.
“Does anyone know how to drive a boat?” Lynn asked timidly.
“I can do it,” Caro said. “I used to go fishing with my old man on the Mississippi all the time.”
“Aw, that’s so cute,” Todd said. “And when I say cute, I mean lame. Uh-oh.”
Caro didn’t ask what uh-oh meant. She and the others had reached the door to the boathouse ... and the lock was smashed and hanging open.
“Dana’s smarter than I thought,” Todd said. “And that’s really saying something—didn’t she say she was a teacher?”
“What’s so dumb about that?”
“She teaches modeling.”
“Her evil knows no bounds,” Caro said. “And she knows a few other things, too.” Caro poked at the broken hasp. “Well, let’s go see how bad it is.”
She pushed the door open with tented fingers and walked in. Part of her couldn’t believe this was happening to her, would-be author and pediatric nurse. Tramping around in the dark, in a spooky damp boathouse where she could barely see her hand in front of her face. Followed by the three musketeers: Larry, Moe, and Curly. Oh, Lord, what a day. Next time, she told herself grimly, stay home or stay in bed. Possibly both.
She took a deep breath and went in a little farther, feeling like every stupid horror movie heroine ever conceived. She could practically hear people yelling at the screen, “Don’t go in there, dumb bitch!”
She kept her flashlight trained in front of her, which was why she didn’t see the body at her feet and went sprawling.
“Ouch,” Todd said, looking down at her. “That looked embarrassing.”
Caro scrambled back, away from the body. She could feel wet muck sliding down her shorts and didn’t care. Wet snakes could be sliding down her shorts and she wouldn’t care. The body on the floor ... she cared about that.
“Oh, gross!” Jana cried.
“Another body,” Lynn gasped.
“Dana’s been a busy girl,” Todd said. “Where’s my lighter?”
“You dropped it on my back,” the body said, rolling over and sitting up. The four of them screamed in unison. “Ow! Not so loud ... my head ...”
“You’re alive!” Caro blurted. It was the first thing they taught in her nursing courses: determine if your patient is living or dead.
“Unfortunately, yes.” The body rubbed the back of his head and squinted up at all of them. “Hey, thanks for coming to get me, you guys. I thought I was a goner when she nailed me.”
He got to his feet with some care, then bent, winced, and helped Caro to her feet. She couldn’t help staring at him. He was mussed and muddy and a little pale from the blow to his head, but for all that, yummy besides.
He was dressed in dark blue boat shoes and black swimming trunks, and nothing else. The mat of hair on his chest was dark and curly, the hair on his head a lighter color with streaks of gold, and his eyes were—she squinted in the gloom—dark green ... almost exactly the color of the wet leaves all over the boathouse floor. She’d never seen eyes that color before.
“You’re not a dead body!” Caro said again, because she honestly couldn’t think of what else to say to him.
“I’m Turner.”
“Last name Turner or first name Turner?”
“Just Turner.”
“Like just Kramer on ‘Seinfeld,’ ” Jana said helpfully.
“No, Kramer’s first name was Cosmo,” Todd said. To Turner, “I remember you. Breakfast, right?”
“Yup.”
“Like Madonna, then,” Jana was babbling.
“Or Cher,” Lynn added.
“You guys, could we stay focused?” Caro demanded. “Turner’s not the dead body. In fact, who are you? I didn’t see you at lunch.”
“Oh, I work here. Give tours, run the tourists down the river to some of those riverside restaurants ... kind of an all around go-to guy.”
“Oooh, ooh,” Todd said, grinning. “Stop it.”
The body quirked an eyebrow at him, then continued. “I came down here when the storm started kickin’ up to make sure the boathouse was locked up, when—holy crap—you’ll never guess—”
“Dana smashed the lock, damaged the boat, hit you over the head with something, came back told us what happened, and locked herself in.”
Turner was gaping at them. “Well, shit. There goes my story. Figured it was good for a couple of beers at least. Not to mention, you guys know more of what happened than I do.”
“I’ll buy you a beer anyway,” Lynn said.
“I got here in time to hear her rummaging in the boat and got my ‘guests aren’t supposed to use the boats unless I’m with them’ lecture ready, when everything went dark and I went night-night. Didn’t even see her coming.” He rubbed the back of his head and winced. “Girl’s got a swing like a Major Leaguer, I’ll tell you that much.”
“That’s interesting,” Todd said.
“Interesting as in psychotic? Interesting as in laughable? What are we talking about? Help me out.”
“Well, you’re a big guy, a very big guy, pardon me for noticing, and Dana’s at least a foot shorter than you. She would have had to swing up. She must have really wanted you out of her way.”
“Or didn’t like you.”
“At least she didn’t kill me, and believe me, this isn’t the first weekend I’ve had to say that. Well, let’s check the boat anyway.”
They did, and Turner announced, “Even if she hadn’t punched that hole in the stern, I don’t see any spark plugs, do you?”
“What does one look like?” Lynn whispered in Caro’s ear.
“Search me,” she shrugged. “So Dana knows about engines, too. Okay.”
“But ... how come?” Jana ventured. “I mean, grody enough that she killed whoever, but why come down here and fix it so we couldn’t get the body?”
“Probably the same reason she won’t tell us who she killed,” Caro said. “Question is, now what?”
“Now we go back up to the mansion and wait for the cops,” Lynn declared. “We’re soaked, it’s getting late, it’s dark—”
“Aw, Mom,” Jana whined, stealing another glance at Turner’s legs.
“—and there’s a body bobbing around the water somewhere. . .” Lynn shuddered.
Turner looked puzzled. “Well, who is it?”
“That’s what we’re trying to figure out,” Caro explained. “Obviously, it’s not you. And there’s a few more of us missing. Four or five at least. We don’t know who she killed ... or even if she’s done killing.”
“Well, shit! Let’s find out!”
“It’s so nice to have a man in charge,” Todd murmured, taking a deep drag.
Caro giggled. “Want me to look at that?” she asked, indicating the lump Turner kept rubbing.
“Naw. Got worse than this from my mama. Let’s try to round up the others, make sure they’re all okay.”
“There aren’t that many more of us,” Caro reminded them. “Stop me if you’ve heard this, but ... who the hell did she kill? And why?”
“I can get the list of guests from the register, and we can go from there.”
“What a great idea!” Caro cried. “Shoot, we should have done something like that first.”
“I thought you wanted to find the body first?” Todd asked.
“Well, now I’ve reprioritized. So, let’s go get that list. You guys? Everybody game?”
“Okay,” Jana and Lynn said at once. They both had identical expressions of hunger on their faces, which made them look more than ever like mother and daughter. Caro supposed they just needed the right incentive to be socially conscious. The right, six-foot, three-inch incentive.
Caro and Todd rolled their eyes. “All right, then,” Caro said. “Let’s go.”
“You know, you should go for it,” Todd told her. They were trudging back up to the mansion/resort/hellhole, rain beating down on them like a live, malevolent thing. Todd and Caro were trailing behind the group. Jana and Lynn hovered so close to Turner, they were practically holding his hands. “I saw the way you looked at his butt.”
“I was not,” she said, jerking her gaze higher. “What are you talking about?”
“Oh, come on. You like him, I can tell.”
“Todd,” she said patiently, “I don’t know him. Or you. Can we stay focused, please? Heck, a few minutes ago I thought he was a dead body.”
“The only impediment to your budding romance, I might add. Make a pass. He’ll be receptive, I bet. A little va-va-voom on your vacation, do you good.”
“Todd! We’re sort of in the middle of something, here. There’s a time and a place, and this ain’t it.”
“Details,” Todd grumbled.
“Why don’t you make a pass, you think it’s such a great idea?”
“Oh, believe me, I did. Right after breakfast. Hello, you see his pecs? Oofta. Alas, he politely turned me down.” Todd sighed, then brightened. “But I bet he wouldn’t turn you down.” He squinted at her in the rain. “I bet your hair is past your waist when you get it out of that tacky braid. And it’s probably not usually muddy and brownish.”
“It’s blond,” she said, stung.
“Well, drowned rat is not a good look for you, darling. And you’re almost as tall as he is. Actually ...”
“That’s enough.”
“... you’ve got sort of the forties starlet thing going, with your teeny waist and big boobs.”
“That’s the nicest thing anyone’s ever said to me,” she said sarcastically. “Now shut your face.”
“Except for the glasses,” he added heartlessly. “Big purple frames? In this decade? You should lose them and try contacts.”
“I hate contacts. They itch my eyeballs. Can we please stop this?”
“But it’s why you came here. It’s why we all came here.”
“That’s not true!” she cried.
“Oh, sure it is,” Todd went on cheerfully. “Not necessarily to hook up—like an island Love Boat, how lame would that be? And who does that make me? Doc? Gopher? But to be with people.”
“I’m here only because my friend was too busy to go and she gave me her tickets.”
“Okay,” he said. “But why did you come?”
“It doesn’t matter,” she snapped.
“I’m just saying.” Todd looked at the fresh cigarette and tucked it away without bothering to try to light it in the downpour. “You should ask him out. I bet he’s into you. God knows he wasn’t into me.”
“And who could resist you?”
“Exactly.”
Caro grinned in spite of herself. “You’re an asshole, Todd.”
“Exactly.”
“Okay,” Turner said as they all dripped across the lobby. The mansion had such a large foyer, it was used as a check-in area. He went behind the large mahogany desk, rummaged around, and produced a printout. “Here’s the guest list for the weekend. Everybody on the island is on this. There’s—”
“What do you think you’re doing?”
“Aaiigghh!” they all cried, including Turner, who straightened so fast he clutched his head. Todd actually jumped behind Caro.
They all spun around to look. The manager of the resort was blinking at them from the doorway leading to the kitchen. He was dressed in a tan linen suit and looked like a sleepy Colonel Sanders with his closely trimmed beard and short white hair. His eyes were very blue as he stared at them. “Why are you yelling? And isn’t it getting a little late for all this charging around? I was just about to retire for the night. And why are you all wet? Do you know what these carpets cost?”
“That’s the owner guy,” Jana said suddenly. “He checked us in this morning.”
“I remember, miss. Richard Calque,” he said. “What’s going on?”
“Rich, you’ll never believe this,” Turner said. “One of the guests is dead. I’m glad it’s not you. Best boss I ever had,” he added in a mutter to Lynn, who had sidled over to him.
“Dana killed him ... remember from lunch? Short, red curly hair, wicked swing? And locked herself in and won’t come out.”
“What?”
“I know, I know,” Caro said. “But it’s true.”
“But who is dead?” Richard asked, looking bewildered.
“That’s just it. We don’t know. I mean, we know it’s not you,” Caro said, “and we know it’s not Turner. We came up here to get the names of the . . .
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