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Authors: Jessica Beck

Powdered Peril

BOOK: Powdered Peril
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To my daughter, Emily

 

“Ich bin ein Berliner.”

—Attributed to President John F. Kennedy during a speech in Berlin, Germany on June 26, 1963. Some believe it directly translated into “I am a jelly doughnut,” but others feel he correctly said in German, “I am one with the people of Berlin.” You decide, but I love the idea that he might have identified with donuts so much! That’s my kind of Commander in Chief!

 

CONTENTS

Title Page

Copyright Notice

Dedication

Map

Epigraph

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Teaser

Also by Jessica Beck

Copyright

 

CHAPTER 1

The dead body was hard to see at first in the deep shadows that surrounded it. Soon enough, as darkness faded into the edges of light, a false dawn would spread over the crime scene and reveal some of its secrets; photographs and videos would be taken, notes would be written, and the careful study of not only the victim, but the area around it, would occur. An amount of intense activity like no other would consume the investigators as they sought to solve the murder in the early hours of discovery.

But none of that would happen for hours yet.

For now, only one person knew about the crime, and they weren’t about to tell anyone.

One thing was certain; the lives of the people in April Springs, North Carolina, would never be the same once they knew that murder had come back to visit their sleepy little town nestled in the Blue Ridge Mountains.

 

CHAPTER 2

My name is Suzanne Hart, and I’ve lost boyfriends in the past in as many ways as you can imagine; at least that’s how it feels to me sometimes when I look back on my life so far. I hope I never lose my current beau, State Police Inspector Jake Bishop, but I can honestly say that I’ve never lost one to murder.

And hopefully, I never will.

I just wish I could say the same thing about a good friend of mine.

If I think about it, that’s when everything started to fall apart in town, and it took all I had to keep the world from crashing down around me.

And more importantly, to save someone I cared for more than I could express.

*   *   *

It wasn’t all that late in the day for most of the folks I knew, but for a donut maker, it may as well have been midnight. My crazy schedule often precluded me from staying up much past dark by the time April rolled around. I was just about to go upstairs for bed when the doorbell rang at the cottage I shared with my mother in April Springs, North Carolina. It was nearing seven in the evening, and I’d had another exhausting day making donuts by myself at my shop, Donut Hearts. Nan Winters, the woman I’d hired to replace my dear friend and longtime assistant, Emma Blake, was starting work tomorrow, and while I knew that I would miss Emma for a very long time, I needed
someone
there with me, because doing all the work at the donut shop alone was getting to be way too much for one person to handle.

I answered the door, ready with an excuse that would allow me to beg off and get my much-needed sleep, but all thoughts of rest vanished when I saw my best friend, Grace Gauge, standing there, an emotional wreck. It was pretty obvious that she’d been crying for a while, and it broke my heart to see her like that.

“Grace, what happened?” I asked as I stepped forward and wrapped my arms around her. She was the sister I never had, and I liked to think that I was the same to her. On the outside, the two of us were pretty different, Grace being blond and trim while I was a brunette with a bit more than my share of curves, but inside, we were two peas in a pod. She was my longest-lasting and dearest friend, and I hated seeing her so upset.

As I stroked her hair gently, I asked softly, “Are you okay?”

“Peter and I just broke up,” she whimpered, and the tears started in full force. I could feel her shaking as she cried, and I held her tight, stroking her hair lightly, and doing my best to offer her what comfort I could.

“Come on inside,” I said as there was a break in her sobs. She fought to catch her breath as she pulled away a minute later. “I can make us some coffee and we can talk all about it.”

Grace wiped her nose with a tissue as she shook her head. “I shouldn’t have come at all. I know it’s getting late for you, Suzanne. You need your sleep. I just didn’t have anyone else to talk to.” She sniffed again, as though she were holding back more tears by sheer willpower alone, and then she added softly, “You don’t have to worry about me. I’ll be okay. I promise.”

“Don’t be silly. I wasn’t going to go to bed for hours,” I said as I led her inside into the living room.

She stopped dead in her tracks. “Don’t lie to me, Suzanne, especially tonight. I’ve had just about all of that I can take from the rest of the world.”

“Okay, I’m sorry; you’re right. I shouldn’t have said that. The truth is that I was heading off to bed when you rang, but I don’t have to go to sleep this instant. I’ve got time to talk, at least a little bit, anyway.” I had to get Grace talking. Once she started, I was pretty sure she wouldn’t be able to stop until I had the whole story. If I paid for it later by being drowsy tomorrow at work, then so be it. Grace came first in my mind, on an equal level at the top of my life with Momma and Jake. Without any one of the three of them, my life just wouldn’t be the same, and I knew it. There were people who floated in and out of my life and others who always seemed to hang just around the edges, folks I cared about, but those three were my core.

Grace looked around the cottage as she tucked the tissue away in her hand. In a low voice, she said, “I hate to be a pain, but is there any way that we can talk somewhere else? Your mother doesn’t need to hear all of my problems.”

“No worries,” I explained. “She’s off on one of her dates with Chief Martin, so we’ve got time to talk before I have to go to sleep. Honestly, I don’t expect them back for hours.” I took her hands in mine and added, “Grace, I promise you that you’ve got my undivided attention as long as you need it. If I have to go totally without sleep tonight, you’re worth it. I’ll find a way to manage tomorrow.”

“I’m not doing that to you, or your customers,” she said. “I know how grumpy you can be when you’re sleep deprived,” she added, even managing a slight grin. It was good to know that her spirit was still in there somewhere, despite the temporary pall that hung over her.

“I’d say that was patently untrue if I could do it with a straight face, but we both know that you’re right,” I admitted. “I always shoot for seven-thirty as my bedtime, but how many times do I actually make it? Trust me; I’m wide awake. Even if you leave right now, there’s no way I’m going to be able to go straight to sleep.”

“Are you sure?” she asked hesitantly.

“Absolutely,” I said as I settled down on one side of the couch.

She nodded as she sat beside me, and then she started to talk.

“I just found out that Peter Morgan is a liar and a cheat,” she said, her voice now strangely calm as she blurted the information out matter-of-factly. “I knew he seemed too good to be true when we first met, and in the end, it turned out that I had been right all along.”

It wasn’t a huge secret to the world that I’d never been all that big a fan of Peter’s, though Grace had clearly been crazy about the man. I’d done my best to accept him, but it hadn’t been easy. He’d been a little too slick for my taste, and a bit more manipulative than I’d liked, but I couldn’t say that to Grace, especially now that he’d broken her heart and proven my doubts about him had all been right. “Why don’t you tell me what happened?”

“At first, it was a lot of little things that didn’t add up,” she said. “He wouldn’t answer his phone sometimes when we were together, and he’d be late for no real reason when we were supposed to have a date.”

Surely there had to be more than that. “Go on,” I said.

Grace bit her lower lip, and then continued. “I caught a whiff of someone else’s perfume on his shirt collar last night. It might have been innocent enough, and I was going to do my best to forget it, but I couldn’t. I decided that I was going to talk to him about it at dinner tonight. Something happened before that, though. About an hour ago, we were at my place getting ready to go out. We’d been sitting on the couch discussing where we were going to eat, and he’d asked to wash up a little before we left for the restaurant. While he was gone, I heard his phone ringing, and I realized that it must have slipped out of his pocket and was buried in a seat cushion.” Grace looked at me intently as she added, “Suzanne, I wasn’t snooping. Honestly, I didn’t think a thing about it. When a phone rings, I answer it. It’s some kind of compulsion I have.”

“I don’t see how anybody could blame you for that. Who was calling?” I asked. “Did you look at the caller ID?”

She nodded, and I could see her fighting back another onslaught of tears. I touched her shoulder lightly. “Grace, do you need to take a second? You don’t have to tell me all at once, you know.”

She took a few moments to collect herself, and then nodded. “It’s okay. I’m fine. At least I will be.” After blowing her nose, she explained, “It was Leah Gentry.”

I knew Leah, and she wasn’t one of my favorite people in April Springs. In her early twenties, Leah worked at her uncle’s hardware store down the street from Donut Hearts; there wasn’t a man in all of April Springs she hadn’t made a pass at at least once. I’d had my own run-ins with her uncle, Burt Gentry, enough times in the past to realize that bad attitudes must run in their family, and that particular apple was sitting pretty close to the tree.

“I hate to ask this, but could it have all just been innocent?” I asked, playing devil’s advocate for a second. I wasn’t at all interested in defending the man, but I didn’t want Grace to jump to any conclusions either, at least not without knowing all of the facts.

“Actually, she tried to make it sound that way when I answered Peter’s phone,” Grace explained. “Leah made up something on the spur of the moment about a part he had ordered coming into the hardware store, but it was clear to me that she was lying. When I pushed her on it, Leah mumbled something incoherent and hung up just as Peter came back into the room. Do you want to know what his first reaction was when he saw me holding his cell phone? He looked angry and he tried to grab it from me. I held it away from him, though, and asked him about Leah. For a few seconds, I saw him searching for any excuse he thought I would buy, and as he tried to come up with something I might accept, I hit the menu button and checked his recent calls.” Grace looked down at her hands, and then said, “I shouldn’t have done that. I know that now. But I just had to know how big a liar he actually was.”

BOOK: Powdered Peril
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