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That's the last time Amy agrees to do a favor for a stranger...
Down South Cafe owner, Amy Flowers is in over her head. Operating a cafe while hosting the first Farmers' Market in Winter Garden has her swimming in apples. And when an elderly woman calls the cafe, pleading for a delivery for her upcoming party, Amy relents, feeling compelled to help the desperate customer.
But when she arrives, the woman is slumped over her kitchen table, and Amy is catapulted into the middle of a small-town crime. Guilt-ridden for not arriving earlier to save the woman, she sets out to unravel the mystery surrounding her death. Now, between running the cafe and dealing with the chaos of the farmers' market, Amy is squeezing in a murder investigation, a run-in with her boyfriend's mom, and her own mother's quirky life decisions. Life can't get any worse...or can it? This cafe owner needs a break--in the case.
Excerpt:
At
the end of the day, I looked around at my weary staff. Anyone would’ve
been able to tell we were bone tired. Even sixteen-year-old Oscar, who’d
tackled his first day at work with gusto, was stifling a yawn.
“Everyone did a wonderful job today,” I said. “May I count on all of you to be back next Saturday?”
“Yes, ma’am,” Oscar said. “I had fun.”
“I’m glad. Could I ask one more thing of you before you go?”
He nodded.
From the corner of my eye, I saw Luis try to hide a grin. He knew what was coming—it was our usual Saturday routine.
“Would you help me divvy up the desserts in the display case?” I asked. “New employees get to choose first.”
Oscar’s brown eyes danced as he hurried over to the display counter and chose chocolate chip cookies and brownies.
“Anything else?” I asked.
He glanced at Luis for approval. I could see that Luis was shaking his head, so I cleared my throat.
“Just this once,” Luis said.
“May I please have two pieces of the caramel apple pie for my parents?”
“Sorry,
you’re going to have to take the whole half pie.” I shrugged. “We don’t
do slices at the end of the day on Saturday. Whatever’s left has to
go.”
“Thank you, Ms. Flowers.”
“Please call me Amy.”
The boys said their goodbyes and left, Luis with his arm around his brother’s shoulders. I smiled at their retreating backs.
“They’re sweet, aren’t they?” Shelly asked.
“They sure are.” I turned to her. “Shelly, won’t you please take this banana pudding home with you?”
“Honey,
if I did, I’d have it eaten by tomorrow morning, and I’d be sick as a
dog. Besides, I’ve got my figure to watch. Grandma always did warn me
about the middle-age spread.” She waved as she headed for the door.
“Donna?”
Donna was our part-time waitress. “I’d love to take a few slices of that chocolate cake to Bill and the kids.”
I boxed up what was left of the chocolate cake and handed it to Donna. “Anything else?”
She shook her head. “This is more than enough. Thanks, Amy.”
“Thanks for coming in today,” I said.
“Glad to help.”
I turned to Jackie. “It’s just you and me. What are you taking?”
She
blew out a breath. “We can’t eat all that. The boys should’ve taken
more. I think Oscar was too shy, and Luis was trying to set a good
example.”
“Well,
I’m taking food out to Ms. Pridemore, so I’ll include the banana
pudding with her order free of charge. It’ll be a bonus.”
“What’s up with that? Since when did we start a delivery service?”
“We didn’t.” I shook my head. “I wish she’d have talked with you, and then I wouldn’t be driving out there.”
“You’re darn right you wouldn’t. How’d she rope you into doing it?”
I lifted and dropped my shoulders.
“Let me guess,” Jackie said. “Guilt trip?”
“Pretty much. I could just imagine it being Aunt Bess.”
“Wait
a minute…Pridemore…” Jackie raised her eyes to the ceiling as she
wracked her brain. “Pridemore…” She brought her eyes down to meet mine
and then hurried out to the parking lot.
“What is it?” I hurried behind her.
“I
was checking to see if the Ostermanns were still here. If so, they
could’ve taken the food to Ms. Pridemore. They live in a mobile home on
her property.”
“That’s right. I’d forgotten about that. Their farm is actually her farm, isn’t it?”
Jackie
nodded. “I heard they have some kind of lease-to-own deal, or that they
get the farm after Ms. Pridemore dies or something. But, yeah, they
could’ve taken the food.”
“Maybe
she didn’t know about the farmers’ market…or didn’t realize it was in
our parking lot. Still, how weird is that? The first time she ever calls
us for food—and begs me to deliver it—her tenants are here.”
“Yeah, that sounds fishy to me. Want me to go with you?”
“No. I’m sure it’s all right. She’s probably just old and stubborn,” I said.
“Still, you’ve never met this woman before. And what if she has a big mean dog or something?”
“I told her I would call when I got there. If nothing else, maybe she can come out to meet me.”
“I still don’t like it,” Jackie said.
“Fine. You can come along.”
After
we dropped the rest of the desserts off at my house, I drove Jackie to
the Pridemore house. Before we got to the property, we saw signs
directing people to the corn maze. It reminded me to make this a quick
visit so that Jackie and I didn’t get blocked in or caught up in the
traffic.
The
large, white farmhouse set about a hundred and fifty yards off the
road. I couldn’t see a mobile home or the corn maze from Ms. Pridemore’s
driveway, so I guessed the woman must have quite a bit of acreage.
I requested my Bluetooth device call Ms. Pridemore as we neared the house. There was no answer.
“Oh, well…I don’t see any dogs around,” I said. “Do you?”
“No. And surely we’re close enough that they’d be running out barking by now.”
“We’ll just go to the front door then.”
After
getting no response from Ms. Pridemore at the front door, we decided to
go around back. From the back of the house, we could see the corn maze,
the apple orchard, the garden, the barn, the mobile home, and other
small buildings on the Pridemore property.
I knocked on the back door. Again, no answer.
“Let’s just go,” Jackie said.
“But
all this food…” I shook my head and tried the door. It was unlocked and
opened easily. “Ms. Pridemore! It’s Amy and Jackie from Down South
CafĂ©!”
There
was a strong, almost overpowering musty odor in the room. I pushed the
door open farther and saw Ms. Pridemore slumped onto the kitchen table,
an overturned coffee cup by her left hand.
I
thrust the box toward Jackie and hurried into the room. “Ms.
Pridemore!” I kept calling her name as I patted her arm and tried to
rouse her. I noticed that her fingernails and lips had a bluish tinge.
“Jackie, call 9-1-1.”
“Already on it,” Jackie said.
I
looked around to try to figure out what had caused Ms. Pridemore to
collapse. My head was starting to ache, and given the odor in the house,
I thought maybe there was some sort of gas leak. I noticed that the
stove was on. There was a Dutch oven on one burner, and it was on low.
The pot must’ve contained only water, however, because it had
evaporated. That or Ms. Pridemore hadn’t put anything in the pot. I
wondered if she suffered from dementia.
I
turned the oven off and moved the pot to the kitchen sink. There were
no other dishes in the sink, and the room was tidy. I didn’t hear any
hissing, and since the stove appeared to be electric instead of gas, I
didn’t think that was the problem.
“The paramedics are on their way,” Jackie said.
“I sure hope they hurry.”
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