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Cancelled by Murder
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THIS JUST IN . . .
“I’m afraid there’s some unfortunate news,” Rick said, interrupting. “As tireless as our city workers have been, on alert for the safety of all”—he turned to address Erin—“I’m sorry to say that we have our first casualty, Erin.”
Erin’s face took on a somber look, and I noticed a discreet gulp and a soft clearing of her throat. “What do we know for sure, Rick?”
Probably nothing, ever, I thought, but a negative outlook was the last thing we needed today.
“Emergency workers arrived on the scene in downtown North Ashcot just moments ago, and have confirmed that the storm has claimed one life in that town,” Rick said.
Erin took over, facing the camera. “This might be a good time for a break while we seek out the details. We’ll be back shortly with more news on this devastating storm.”
In a minute, the storm had gone from “dud” to “devastating.” And my attention went from a dull interest to full alert.
One life lost will do that.
Prime Crime titles by Jean Flowers
DEATH TAKES PRIORITY
CANCELLED BY MURDER
BERKLEY PRIME CRIME
Published by Berkley
An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC
375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014
Copyright © 2016 by Camille Minichino
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BERKLEY is a registered trademark and BERKLEY PRIME CRIME and the B colophon are trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.
eBook ISBN: 9780698185180
Interior map by Richard P. Rufer
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
The recipes contained in this book are to be followed exactly as written. The publisher is not responsible for your specific health or allergy needs that may require medical supervision. The publisher is not responsible for any adverse reactions to the recipes contained in this book.
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For my husband and greatest support, Richard Rufer
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Thanks as always to my critique partners: Nannette Rundle Carroll, Margaret Hamilton, Jonnie Jacobs, Rita Lakin, Margaret Lucke, and Sue Stephenson. They are ideally knowledgeable, thorough, and supportive.
Special thanks to Linda Plyler, retired postmaster with a thirty-year career in the postal service. I received the full benefit of her professional experience as a training and development specialist in a large city and as a postmaster in a one-woman office in a small town. Linda is also an award-winning quilter, whose Zip Code Quilt received national recognition and media coverage.
Thanks also to the extraordinary Inspector Chris Lux for continued advice on police procedure, and to the many other writers and friends who offered critique, information, brainstorming, and inspiration: in particular, Gail and David Abbate, Sara Bly, Mary Donovan, Ann Parker, and Karen and Mark Streich.
My deepest gratitude goes to my husband, Dick Rufer. I can’t imagine working without his support. He’s my dedicated webmaster (minichino.com), layout specialist, and on-call IT department.
Thanks to Bethany Blair for her expert attention, and to all the copy editors, artists, and staff at Berkley Prime Crime for their work on my behalf.
Finally, my gratitude to my go-to friend and editor, Michelle Vega, who puts it all together. Michelle is a bright light in my life, personally supportive as well as superb at seeing the whole picture without missing the tiniest detail. Thanks, Michelle!
CONTENTS
This Just In . . .
Titles by Jean Flowers
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Map
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
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Post Office Stories
1
August—the peak of the Atlantic hurricane season. The Monday-morning sky above the post office in my hometown of North Ashcot was heavy, and becoming darker by the minute. Or maybe my perception was influenced by the news, dominated by warnings of a severe storm heading our way. This was nothing new. Here in the Berkshires of western Massachusetts, serious flooding and wind damage were a major threat all year long.
I had a decision to make. The flagpole in front of my building stood waiting. One of my favorite duties was the morning ritual of raising the flag, but I didn’t want to hoist Old Glory at eight a.m., only to have to pull her down before noon.
I pinned my badge—CASSIE MILLER, and under it, POSTMASTER—to my regulation blue-striped shirt, and stepped out through the side door of the post office, an old redbrick Colonial, the folded flag under my right arm. No gusts, and not a drop of rain. Yet.
Current predictions varied from a low-category hurricane heading straight toward us, to a storm that might turn south, or north, and produce only heavy rain, or none. In other words, it was New England, so anything could happen weatherwise. It wasn’t unusual, at any time of the year, to have a sudden downpour with no warning. Dry sidewalks one minute, and a curtain of water the next. ETAs today ran the gamut from late morning to early evening. The common wisdom: Batten down the hatches, just in case.
More often than not, my experience as a lifetime resident of New England was that the more news there was about the pending arrival of bad weather, the more likely it was that we’d never see it. Especially so now that we were treated to a twenty-four-hour news cycle. As my predecessor and mentor, former postmaster Ben Gentry, would put it, “The news of the storm lasts longer than the storm itself these days.”
I attached our flag to the rope and, hand over hand, ran it up the pole.
* * *
An hour into a busy retail morning, most of the muffins I’d brought in were gone. I’d begun the custom of feeding my customers once a week a year ago when I was feeling my way as a prodigal daughter. I’d left North Ashcot after high school and stayed away until my only living relative needed my help in her last days. Baked goods from our local bakery, A Hole in the Wall, originally a donut shop, were my way of pandering for acceptance by those who’d never strayed from home. Whether the pastries helped or not was anyone’s guess, but it was clear that there was no way to end the tasty custom now.
After a year back in my hometown, I finally had my footing as sole operator of the North Ashcot Post Office. I also had a new BFF in Sunni Smargon, the chief of police, and a new boyfriend in a
ntiques dealer Quinn Martindale. I even had a hobby—I had been talked into taking a quilting class and joining a group on Tuesday evenings. Things were looking good.
The weather held out longer than the muffins, and the morning passed quickly. My usual pet lovers Carolyn and George Raley came to the counter around eleven thirty, each holding an infant African genet wrapped in a swaddling cloth. The old couple were volunteer wet nurses of a sort, raising small exotic animals to the point where they would be comfortable in venues like petting zoos or school programs. Assigning the label “service animals” to accommodate post office rules for pets worked for me.
“We have twins today,” Carolyn said as she stroked the spotted gray fur of a large-eyed catlike animal barely filling the palm of her hand. Its ears were too big for its tiny head, but I knew from experience that all parts of its anatomy would soon be in proportion.
“Morning, Cassie. Say hello to Abby and Tabby,” George said, his unruly gray hair in need of attention. I might have been more sensitive to George’s locks since I’d just had my own long, untamed mop cut and styled appropriately for a professional woman halfway through her thirties.
I weighed each animal and Carolyn entered the numbers into her logbook while George told me once again how grateful they were that I was willing to let them take advantage of the most accurate scale in town.
I’d just passed the animals back to their keepers when a loud noise resounded through the lobby, shaking us all into a state of alert. A gust of wind had blown a tub of mail from the hands of a customer entering the front door. The white plastic container hit the glass door, dozens of pieces of mail spilling over the entrance. Anyone within three feet of the door was treated to a shower as heavy rain came on the tail of the wind.
“Maybe there’s something to those storm warnings after all,” George said.
“Let’s move,” Carolyn said, and, in fact, I’d never seen her move so fast as she and George rushed out with Abby and Tabby tucked under their arms.
What had started as a smattering of rain a few minutes ago now appeared as a sheet of water slamming down on the trees and cars in the parking lot. Customers inside moved closer to one another as if seeking protection from the sudden (except for the newscasters’ warnings, but who believed them?) cloudburst.
Weather words flew among the people gathered.
“I hope I can find my hurricane kit,” from an older woman as she abandoned her place in line and headed for the door.
“I’m right behind you,” from a woman in a business suit and stilettos, whom I recognized as one of the financial officers at the bank in town. “I think this downpour is payback from my boss. He didn’t like that I was taking an early lunch.”
“Yeah, you never know who might be in charge of climate around here.” Sarcasm, from a young guy in a Red Sox cap. Even here, one hundred and fifty miles from Boston, where I’d spent the first decade or so of my career, there was no shortage of red-and-blue Sox apparel.
Our high school science teacher tried to take advantage of the situation to give us an impromptu (and unsolicited) lecture on wind speed and high- and low-pressure areas.
“Which are red and which are yellow?” a young woman asked him, scrolling through satellite pictures on her smartphone.
“And don’t forget the storm now raging on Saturn,” the teacher continued, ignoring the weather map question. “It’s big enough to swallow four earths,” he reminded us.
At that, several people snapped to attention and looked up at the sky. Three more people turned and left the building, toting their unprocessed packages with them. I pulled my regulation blue cardigan closer around me and took care of mail from Harvey Stone, the second-oldest man in the Berkshires, or so he claimed.
Harvey had been laughing through it all. “This is nothin’,” he said. “I’ve seen worse storms before breakfast many a time.” Harvey stood his ground now, and very quickly became the only person in the lobby once the teller, the science teacher, and all the other North Ashcot natives left the scene.
Harvey was on his usual errand, with a package to his youngest “boy” in Michigan, who was probably only in his seventies. I knew I’d be treated to a few storm stories while I weighed and labeled the box.
I’d already heard the one about the huge maple that fell on his station wagon during a microburst in the nineties, and about the time in the eighties when downed utility lines left the town without power for ten days. Harvey’s most dramatic tale, told many times, included the Great Hurricane in September of 1938, when his family’s home had been destroyed.
“That was before they named hurricanes,” he reminded us every time. “But I was a hellion of a small boy, and my daddy used to say they should have named the storm Hurricane Harvey.” He laughed, and ended his visit with another word of wisdom from his daddy. “No matter what you do, the storm is going to win.”
As if in response, a woman seemed to be blown into the lobby when she opened the door from the outside, also serving up another torrent of rain.
It was time to take the flag down.
I looked out the front door and saw that Ben, my pseudoretired predecessor, was way ahead of me, already taking down the flag. For once we were of the same mind.
Ben was kind and generous on the one hand, and a first-class curmudgeon on the other. He’d opposed every ounce of modernization I’d brought to the office, from updated equipment to broader customer service, such as accommodating the Raleys’ young four-legged charges. But when it came to pitching in when I needed a hand, Ben was on the job, often unsolicited, as now, even though he’d long since stopped receiving a paycheck.
With the rattling of windows in the background and a brief respite from customers, I answered quick texts from Quinn, who was off on a treasure hunt through New England, scouting for antique treasures for his shop, and from my friend Linda Daniels in Boston. I knew both of them would be watching the weather map.
The weather could be vastly different from north to south, east to west across our state even though Massachusetts ranked forty-fifth out of fifty in size, only a little more than eight thousand square miles. (“You can fit twenty of them inside California,” Quinn bragged, comparing our native states.)
Today Linda reported only scattered showers in the state’s capital, while Quinn’s return message to me from the far suburbs was
cruising around Taunton today. wild winds starting up here. good bargains. miss u.
I smiled and immediately acknowledged.
miss u 2.
A few brave stragglers ventured in before I could hang the CLOSED sign, which would usually be for the lunch hour, but today was until further notice. I took care of an express mailing headed for the Florida Keys and a media mail package on the way to New York, and then Ben and I struggled together with the shutters.
“Reminds me of the summer of ’04,” he said, his rain-soaked hair and bedraggled face leaving me to wonder which century he was referring to. “I was on vacation in Nantucket when Jeannie hit.”
“Do you think this storm will get a name?”
Ben looked at the sky with a practiced eye. “I doubt it.”
We admitted one last customer, Olivia “Liv” Patterson, an expert quilter and a member of the circle I’d joined. I felt my face flush, since, for a variety of reasons, I hadn’t done my sewing homework for the week.
When I first returned to town and met Liv, I’d foolishly admitted to her that I needed a hobby. She’d been delighted, smoothing the way for me to join her group, reminding me that my new best friend, the chief of police, was also in the group.
“I don’t have a sewing machine,” I’d said.
“You can borrow one of mine.”
“One of yours? How many do you have?”
She’d smiled. “Don’t ask.”
With Liv now stepping up to the counter with a stack
of mail from her card shop, I preempted her potential query about my progress by asking about the enormous quilt she’d been working on for her daughter who was headed for a college in the Northwest. She’d been collecting fabric with a Western theme. Usually, Liv would have no shorter than a five-minute answer to any question related to her quilts. Not today.
“It’s fine,” she said.
“I’ll bet you have a hundred hours invested in it.”
“Right,” she said.
I made one more attempt. “Did you ever find that fabric you were looking for, with a stagecoach?”
She shrugged, a deep frown creasing her brow. “Yeah, well, let’s not talk about fabric, okay?” She waved her hand at my counter, pointed to her pieces of mail, which I’d been working on as we talked. “I’d like to be done with this, please.”
“Okay,” I said. I wondered what had upset Liv enough to produce this mood, but it was none of my business. She was probably nervous about the storm, and besides, I had shutters to put up and howling wind to battle.
While Liv walked away, Ben, who’d crept up behind me, whispered, “Even the grouchiest customer is always right.”
It was always nice when Ben and I agreed on something.
We set to the next task, complying with the request of one of our town selectmen that we check the emergency supplies in the community room adjoining the post office. The all-purpose room ran the whole width of the building, with a connecting door to the retail floor. The closets were always in a ready state for emergencies, with necessities like blankets, flashlights, bottled water, packaged goods, and first-aid kits.
Quinn said the stash reminded him of growing up in San Francisco, where they learned at an early age to be prepared for when the Big One might hit. Not a hurricane or a blizzard, but an earthquake.
“At least there’s warning with our storms,” I boasted.
“But earthquakes last only a matter of seconds, not days,” he countered.