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Murder Above the Fold




  Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Excerpt from Murder on the Backswing

  Chapter One

  “I like them. They add a little class to the joint.” Margaret Balefire stretched herself into as menacing a posture as she could manage, narrowed her eyes and glared at her sister, Clara. She waggled a finger, and a set of tatted lace doilies magically appeared on the shelf.

  Not intimidated in the least, Clara retaliated with a haughty lifting of her chin. “They’re old-fashioned and not in a good, antique-y way.”

  She swiped her hand through the air, clearing the offending bits of material for the third time, then continued lining the oak bookcase with sparkling bottles and jars. Each sported the store’s distinctive label—the store name, Balms and Bygones emblazoned in silver and green across a complicated Celtic symbol stood out nicely against a creamy background.

  “You can arrange the antiques any way you like them, but the personal care products are my domain,” Clara said, placing each jar just so. “Besides, I chose the jewel tones of these glass bottles because I knew they’d look great on the antique shelving. I’m not displaying my products on the next best thing to a pair of granny panties.”

  If Margaret—Mag to her friends—had her way, everything in the shop would be covered in Victorian lace or dripping with tassels and frills. Her decorating tastes ran completely counter to the staunch exterior she presented to the world and hinted at gentler emotions lurking beneath the prickly shell.

  “Some people have no sense of style.” Mag wrinkled her nose, waggled her hips, and flashed a rude hand gesture behind Clara’s back. Hair aged to a dandelion-fuzz-like texture floated in the breeze created by the motion.

  “I saw that,” Clara said. “Mature, Margaret, real mature.” Resisting the temptation to return the gesture took every ounce of her self-control. Instead, she swiveled a jar of face cream so the label faced front, and the ruby-colored glass picked up a shine from a strategically placed spotlight. After a moment’s thought, she added a bar of soap in the same scent.

  Heart, soul, and a dollop of true magic went into every drop of her ever-growing product line.

  “You want to flaunt your wares on naked shelves, that's your business. Now, if you’re done communing with the display, we should get moving before we miss our appointment at the newspaper office. You have the photos, right?” Despite the tart delivery and emphasis on the words communing with the display, there was no real heat behind Mag’s comment.

  “I’ve got everything right here.” Clara brandished her cell phone.

  “Should have known. That thing is practically melded to your hand these days. What self-respecting witch takes selfies, I ask you?”

  “It’s a handy organizational tool. You should get one.” Like that would ever happen. “And it takes fantastic photos.” To illustrate, Clara snapped one of the look on Mag’s face, and flipped the phone around so Mag could see the sneer of disdain. “My new screensaver.”

  Opening a shop together hadn’t been the main reason the sister witches moved to the hamlet of Harmony, but the joint venture was turning out to be more interesting than either of them expected, and not only because it gave them a chance to spend time together after too many years apart.

  The soft opening, about a month before, had drawn in curious customers from miles away. Artful window displays piqued interest and once inside, Clara’s open smile and friendly ways combined with Mag’s fabulous stash of antiques put people in the buying mood.

  “Stop being grouchy,” Clara breezed past her sister, “and I’ll get you an ice cream cone on the way back. Dairyland opened today.”

  Mag scowled. “I’m not a ten-year-old, you know,” she said, then sniffed and added, “You think they have butter pecan?”

  Smiling and shaking her head, Clara flipped the sign to closed and locked the door behind them.

  Postcard-pretty, the town of Harmony hugged the southern bank of Big Spurwink River and, Mag insisted, possessed a seedy underbelly. But then, she harbored a bone-deep suspicion of almost everyone and everything, so her opinion was best taken with a grain of salt. Or a shaker full.

  Summer leaves would soon hide all except for the barest glimpse of the river, but that day, a stand of white birch trees perfectly framed Clara’s view of the rock-strewn banks.

  Balms and Bygones was situated on Mystic Street, which meandered along Big Spurwink’s banks before ending abruptly in a parking lot at the edge of the town square. Positioned in a place of honor at the far end of a grassy quad, Harmony’s municipal office was the oldest standing structure in town.

  C-shaped, the town-hall courtyard backed the second oldest structure in Harmony. The clock tower speared skyward and, especially during the summer months, tempted tourists off the main road for a prime photo opportunity.

  On either side of the square, a bank of buildings housed shops, eateries, and offices. Today, Mag and Clara approached a brick structure with picture pane windows on the town’s westerly edge—the one separated by the river by only a small, rear parking area and a steep embankment.

  “Sorry, we’re a couple of minutes late,” Clara said to the harried-looking brunette who stepped up behind the tall counter spanning the front of the narrow space. “We had an appointment to discuss putting an ad in the paper.”

  “No worries,” the woman said. “I'm Marsha Hutchins. You probably spoke to Leanne on the phone.” The way her voice lifted made the statement sound like a question. “She usually handles setting up new ad accounts.”

  “We did. Is Leanne here? It looks like you have your hands full.” Clara nodded toward a long table strewn with photographs, a few of which were arranged in a grid pattern.

  “Leanne left to run an errand.” Marsha frowned at her watch and tucked a stray strand of hair behind one ear. “She should have been back by now. Anyway, what can I do for you?”

  “I’m Clara Balefire, and this is my mother, Margaret.” The lie tripped easily off her tongue, having repeated it in practice about a hundred times. Clara expected she’d slip up eventually, but given the assumed difference in age based on Mag’s outward appearance, no sane person would buy the story of the two being sisters.

  The blood-born power of magic slows the aging process and adds centuries to the lifespan of a natural witch unless she’s the victim of a curse or magical disaster. Mag knew all about the kind of accident that could add years to a witch’s face, but she didn’t like to talk about her past much.

  “We’ve recently opened a shop over on Mystic Street. You might have heard about us.”

  Gossip travels fast in small towns and any newspaper woman worth her salt would already know when a new business opened up. Marsha didn’t disappoint.

  “Oh, yes. Balms and Bygones. Antiques and personal care products. Whatever made you decide on that combination?” A smile made the question seem less like prying and more like friendly interest.

  “Playing to our strengths and interests, you could say.” While Clara chatted pleasantly, Mag listened without seeming overly interested. She liked to get a feel for people through shrewd observation rather than taking anyone at face v
alue.

  Marsha's eyes glinted with more than casual interest when she said, "I never thought I'd see the day when Hagatha Crow would sell her place. She’s a character. The kind people talk about but no one seems to know her.”

  Most of the reason the Balefire sisters ended up in Harmony had to do with Hagatha and her inability or unwillingness to keep the existence of magic to herself.

  The line, as far as Mag was concerned, between fishing for info and exchanging gossip was as fine as a strand of spider-web and nearly as sticky. Clara barely had to dodge a single question because Marsha stayed clear of both while still showing genuine interest. Her indulgent smile when she mentioned Hagatha's name went a long way toward earning Mag's respect.

  Her dress got the elder witch’s stamp of approval, too, since there was a tiny hint of lace peeking out around the neckline of the muted paisley print, and if there was one thing Mag loved, it was lace. On shelves, on tables, on other people—just not on herself.

  Had they been shopping together, Clara would have been drawn to the garment based on style. She appreciated the way the cut of it hugged Marsha’s curves while remaining work-appropriate.

  As soon as talk turned back to business, Mag tuned out.

  “Leanne mentioned we could do a half-page spread as an introductory piece, and then she wanted to talk about an ongoing placement where we could feature new items each week. In color.” Clara whipped out her cell phone, pulled up the email with the quote, and once she'd shown it to Marsha, started leafing through images.

  “This is perfect timing since I’m working on the layout for a commemorative…” Before Marsha could finish, the sound of a slamming door and male voices issued from the rear of the building and interrupted her.

  “Go left. No, your other left,” said a gruff voice Clara recognized as Perry Weatherall’s. Perry, though no witch himself, had ties to the organization that camouflaged the local coven.

  “Dude, it’s heavy. Where does she want it? Marsha, come here!”

  Marsha huffed out a breath. “Excuse me, ladies, won’t you? I’m sorry about this, I feel like a duck paddling backward today.” Leaving that odd mental image, and tossing a second sorry over her shoulder, Marsha hurried toward the commotion in the back room. “In that corner. Watch out for…” Banging noises and grunts preceded a conversation about whether an industrial-sized printer would fit through the door.

  Several minutes later, which Mag and Clara spent eavesdropping shamelessly, the back door slammed shut behind Perry, and Marsha popped back into view just ahead of a younger man who was wiping sweat on the sleeve of his Oxford shirt. Everything about him could best be described as average—height, weight, even the color of his hair landed in a nondescript shade between blond and brown. If not for the fact he was wearing neon-yellow cross trainers below the khaki pants, Mag might have thought him completely devoid of personality.

  When he noticed the newcomers, he stepped up to the counter, aimed a gleaming smile toward the sisters, and whipped a card out of his pocket.

  “I don’t believe we’ve met. The name’s Bryer Mack, and you’d be the ladies who bought Hagatha Crow’s place. Good bones, that one. They don’t build them like that anymore, you know. Foundation needed work, but I’m sure your agent gave you the proper disclosures.”

  He might as well have made air-quotes around the word agent, and when his business card landed on the counter, Clara understood why. Mack owned a real estate office, a rival to the witch-owned agency they’d used.

  His smile, though artificially whitened a shade too bright, seemed genuine. “Anyway, welcome to Harmony.” His gaze roved over Clara’s curves with interest.

  She needed no magic to draw a man’s attention; the curvy body, emerald eyes over rose-petal lips, and a lush cascade of chestnut hair were enough. The spitting image of their mother, Clara took after the Balefire side of the family while Mag carried the long and lean look of her father. A rangy man without an ounce of spare flesh over a runner's frame, ginger hair, and pale skin that freckled in the sun.

  “Now, what was I doing?” Marsha shook her head to clear away the cobwebs. “Sorry. What I started to explain before the guys showed up is that I’m putting together the layout for a special edition of the paper. You’re aware we’re commemorating our town bicentennial this week, I assume.” She waited for Clara’s nod before continuing. “Your timing couldn’t be better. Since I’m already late getting this to the printer, there’s time to add your business as a sponsor if you’re interested.”

  “Aren't there computer programs for that type of thing.” Clara indicated the table covered with images. “Digital seems to have taken over the world.” Mag’s snort went ignored.

  “Call me old-fashioned, but I like to do the front page layouts of all our special editions by hand.” This from a woman who looked barely old enough to remember the days when papers were printed on presses. “The way my grandfather taught me.”

  “To hear her tell it, ink runs in her family’s veins instead of blood.” Bryer skirted the table without looking at its contents and made his way to the far corner where a mini-fridge and coffeemaker sat on a 1950s-era sideboard with an aqua- and- black laminated top and frosted glass doors. Mag eyed the piece with disdain. Too modern for her tastes even if there was money to be made from vintage furniture.

  As though he’d performed the task a hundred times before, Bryer poured himself a cup of coffee, toasted Marsha with it, and delivered his parting shot, “There are half a dozen celebrations in this town every year, and they all get the special-edition treatment. Seems like you’d have a template ready, I mean, how different can it be? Besides, no one is even going to bother looking at the same old pictures of the same old clock tower. Might be time to think up a new angle.”

  Marsha ignored the mild criticism, but not the insistent series of bing-bong sounds coming from the sleek laptop sitting in the corner of her layout table.

  She shot a half-smile at the sisters. “If you’ll excuse me for one moment.” She muttered something impatient and mildly unflattering about Leanne’s lack of punctuality as she hit a key to bring up her email.

  “Tell her I’ll be back with the proper cables in a few minutes, won’t you?” Bryer flashed a smile toward Clara and Mag, then turned to leave the way he’d come in—through the back of the office. He cast an idle glance at the contents of the table as he passed by, paused to look back at Marsha, then strode out of the room.

  “Can’t anyone hit a deadline this week?” Marsha’s fingers danced across the keyboard in rapid-fire movements for a minute, and then she flipped the screen down and returned her gaze to the sisters. “I really am sorry for being so distracted.”

  Marsha pulled out a form and laid it on the counter with a pen. “Here’s what I can do. We’ll bump you up to a sponsor level, give you a quarter-page ad. I know that’s smaller than what Leanne quoted, but we’ll move you up to page three, so it’s big and bold, and right there when people open up the paper. We’re expecting an exceptional turnout—at least triple our normal readership, so you’ll receive plenty of exposure.”

  Ever the pragmatist, Mag cut right to the chase, “How much?”

  Marsha named a price and went into a spiel about the forms of accepted payment.

  Reasonable, Clara thought. She reached into her Hermione’s purse of a pocket, fished around between the potion bottles and a spare scarf for windy days until her fingers closed on a wad of crumpled-up cash. The sight of Clara smoothing the bills against the edge of the counter to get the wrinkles out brought a hint of a twitch to the corner of Marsha’s mouth.

  “Thank you for your business,” she said, taking the money. “And if you’re willing, I’d love to send one of my feature writers around for an interview that would run the next week as a follow-up piece. A mother and daughter moving to a new town and opening a business together would make a great human-interest piece. I don’t suppose either of you has a checkered past to spice things up?”


  Just for fun, Clara told part of the truth. “My mother,” she cocked a thumb at Mag, “used to kill rogue hellbeasts and I spent the last twenty-five years in a stone prison for a crime I didn’t commit.” The utter dryness of her tone pulled a trill of laughter out of Marsha and even tweaked a grudging smile from Mag.

  “Now, Clara,” Mag scolded, “you know that’s not completely accurate. Hellbeasts are an entirely different species.”

  “What wonderful senses of humor. You’ll want to hang onto them when tourist season gets into full swing.” Turning back toward her layout, Marsha missed Mag’s suppressed snort and Clara’s waggling eyebrows.

  “Anyway,” Marsha continued, motioning for them to follow her. “I'm really excited about the special edition this year because we’re celebrating two important anniversaries. Why don’t you come take a look?” She flipped one hinged end of the counter up to let Mag and Clara pass through to the area behind the scenes.

  Despite appearing a jumbled mess, there was a sense of order to the table holding Marsha’s proposed layout. Two photos of the clock tower lay side by side in the spot Clara assumed would make up the main body of the front page and looked like one of those puzzles where players are invited to find the differences. Not that it would be difficult in that case.

  Marsha tapped first one picture, then the other. “These were taken ten years ago. Before and after the restoration was completed.”

  In the first photo, the clock had lost its minute hand and several of the numbers. Peeling paint and sections of battered trim marred the wooden structure, and the peaked roof badly needed new shingles.

  In contrast, the second image featured gaily colored banners festooned across pristine white paint below the fully restored clock Clara had admired earlier in the day. More banners decorated the town square, which was filled with people in the midst of a celebration.

  Underlining the before-and-after shots, another series of images tracked the progress of the renovation.

  “But, anyway,” Marsha said, “part of the reason I’m so excited is that these photos were taken with an old pocket-sized camera that was past its prime long before the digital age, and the negatives were so small, every effort to blow them up turned out incredibly grainy. I found a company that specializes in digitally re-mastering old film and had a new set made. As you can see, they did a spectacular job.” The pair of prints looked like day and night.