Getaway Bay Cozy Mysteries Box Set 1

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Getaway Bay Cozy Mysteries Box Set 1 Page 3

by Grace York


  "When you say first thing…"

  Jason laughed. "I'll make a start outside if I'm too early for you."

  "Thanks." Addison smiled. "We've got a lot done today."

  "We have. I'll be off then." He tipped his head, which seemed to be a habit whenever he entered or left a room. Nice country manners. Addison liked him a lot.

  "Come on then, let's get cleaned up," she said once he was gone. "I told Layla we'd only be ten minutes."

  "I'll be that long just in the shower if we've got hot water," said Olivia, running up the stairs.

  "No you won't. You're too conservative with water to do that."

  "You know me too well."

  They got themselves ready and left to pick up Layla. Addison let Olivia drive. She wouldn't get much chance to drive once she left for campus, and Addison felt a young driver should get as much practice as she could. It also meant she could have a glass of wine or two at the pub without worrying about driving.

  Addison directed Olivia to Layla's art gallery. She filled with pride at her cousin's accomplishments as they pulled up outside the building. The cousins had always stayed in contact over the years, but they hadn't seen much of each other. Addison had only met Layla's ex-husband twice, and both times the meeting had been strained. She was glad when Layla had finally left Rick.

  Layla had left both her husband and her Brisbane home behind. She'd come back to Getaway Bay because her father was sick, but also to start her life over. She was a brilliant painter, and she finally got to follow her dream and build an art gallery. The finished building included a studio in the back, and a flat upstairs. It was wonderful.

  Olivia pulled up outside the gallery. "We going in?" she asked.

  "Definitely. You have to see some of Layla's work. She's very talented."

  Layla greeted them at the door, and Addison immediately lost herself again in the paintings adorning the walls of the gallery, as she had when she'd come here three months ago. There were a couple of new works up now.

  "These are awesome," said Olivia, following her mother around the room. "Did you do them all?" she asked Layla.

  "Yes, they're all mine. Come, I'll show you the studio." Layla linked her arm through Olivia's and led her out the back to the studio. Addison had actually slept there on a blow-up mattress last time she was here. It had certainly been an interesting place to lay her head.

  Now, she left them to it and went upstairs to Layla's flat. Might as well get it over with.

  "Hello, Addison."

  Addison followed the sound of the voice. Jenna was sitting out on the small balcony overlooking the water.

  "Hello, Jenna. Long time no see." There was no hugging, or even a shaking of hands. Addison nodded; the small gesture seemed the most appropriate.

  "Yes, I suppose it has been a while." Jenna didn't get up. She sipped a glass of wine and turned back to watch the waves. "I was sorry to hear about Rob. He was a good man."

  "Thank you." Addison gritted her teeth. So good you tried to steal him from me all those years ago. She took a deep breath and let the past slide by. "What brings you back to Getaway Bay?"

  "I suppose Layla has told you about our father," Jenna replied.

  "She mentioned he's not doing so well. I'm sorry to hear that."

  Layla and Jenna's father, Dennis, had been diagnosed with Alzheimer's five years ago. It was what prompted Layla's move back to the Bay. She'd moved back in with him until she built the gallery, and he'd become too sick to stay at home. He was in a nursing home now, and Layla said the home and the staff were excellent. Still, Layla spent a lot of time visiting him. Something Addison felt sure Jenna wouldn't be bothered to do.

  "He's going to die," Jenna said matter-of-factly. "I thought it best I be here. For Layla, you know."

  And so you can get your hands on his money quicker. Addison kept that thought to herself. "That's nice of you," she said instead.

  Jenna shrugged, and Addison was saved from more small talk by the arrival of Layla and Olivia. Olivia went straight over to Jenna on the balcony.

  "Hi, I'm Olivia. Mum's told me… well, she says you're her cousin. Nice to meet you." Before Jenna could respond Olivia had pulled her to her feet and wrapped her in a hug. Addison and Layla did their best not to burst out laughing. Jenna wasn't a big fan of human contact.

  "We're going to the pub for dinner," Olivia continued, oblivious to Jenna's discomfort. "Do you want to join us?"

  "Um, no, thank you. They don't have anything on the menu I can eat."

  "Are you on a special diet?" Olivia asked.

  "Jenna's always on some special diet or other," said Layla. "Come on, honey. You must be starving after all that hard work today." She ushered Olivia and Addison out of the flat and down the stairs, before turning back to Jenna. "Don't do anything I wouldn't do."

  They'd made it to the car before Layla stopped. "Shoot. I forgot my purse. I'll be back in a minute." She turned on her heel and went back into the gallery.

  "Jenna seems interesting," said Olivia while they waited.

  "Interesting is one word for her," said Addison. As much as she'd always loved Layla, Addison had never been as fond of her younger cousin. When they were very little Jenna had always tagged along, wanting to join in. But as they got older, Jenna grew apart from Addison and Layla. Instead of wanting to join them, she'd spied on them and played tricks on them.

  "Did you ever miss having a sister?" Olivia asked.

  "Not really," said Addison. "Do you?"

  "Sometimes I think it would be nice. But then I look at my friends who have sisters, and they always seem to be fighting with them."

  "You fought with your brother enough when he lived at home."

  "True. But I think brothers and sisters fighting is different to sisters."

  Layla came running out the door with her handbag held high. "Found it!" she said, jumping into the Rav. "Sorry about that. I'd lose my head if it wasn't screwed on." She clicked her seatbelt locked. "Let's get out of here."

  5

  The pub was gorgeous. It was in the style of an English pub, and having been to England with Rob and the children a couple of times to visit her mother's family, Addison absolutely adored English pubs. It was called the Red Lion, and inside it looked just like one from her mother's home village in Lancashire.

  Outside, however, it had more of an Australian feel. There was a large beer garden, and with it being Friday and a beautiful summer's evening, it was very busy. They got a table out there, and Layla went to the bar for drinks.

  "This is pretty cool," said Olivia. "I can imagine myself hanging out here on uni breaks."

  "So can I," said Addison. "I think we're going to like Getaway Bay."

  "That sounds like something we should drink to," said Layla, returning with two glasses of wine and a lemonade. She handed them out and they all toasted the future.

  "Now," said Addison to Layla. "Tell us what's happening with Uncle Dennis. All of it."

  Layla's smile faded. "He's almost totally bedridden now. He's been getting infections. They're telling me it's close to the end."

  Addison reached for Layla's hand. "I'm so sorry."

  "It's hard, watching him go through this. Some days I go in there, and honestly, Addison, I just want it to be over for him. But then other days he's a bit brighter, and we can have a conversation of sorts. Those days I don't feel like giving up."

  "Has Jenna been any help at all?"

  Layla shook her head. "She'll never change. She's my sister, and I love her, but you know what she's like. She's only interested in herself. Even so, it's been good to have her here. For me, at least."

  "What do you mean by that?" Addison took a sip of her drink. She felt a little self-conscious having such a deep conversation in front of her daughter, but Olivia was an adult now. She had a right to participate in adult conversations. Especially when they were about family.

  "Jenna's been here for almost two months now. I won't sugar-coat it – she
's just waiting for Dad to die."

  Addison opened her mouth to speak, but Layla held up a hand to stop her. "No, don't defend her. You know her as well as I do. I don't care anymore. She's his daughter too, she's entitled to half of his estate. I don't care about that. I just wish she'd leave everyone else out of it."

  "Everyone else?" Olivia asked.

  "The rest of the town," said Layla, glancing around the beer garden. "Sorry, Olivia. I should explain. Jenna gets bored easily. She likes to stir up trouble. Has done all her life. She's been gracious enough to leave me out of it this time. I'm too busy caring for Dad to worry about her little games. But she's got a few of the folk around here into quite a bit of a flap."

  Addison's eyes widened. "Tell us more."

  Layla went on to explain how Jenna had managed to create a turf war between Hazel, maker of such wonderful coffee and terrible scones, and Edward, the owner of the local bakery. Edward served coffee and light refreshments at his bakery, apparently, so the two businesses were competitors of sorts. But there was plenty of business to go around, Layla explained, especially in the summer months when tourists outnumbered locals almost two to one.

  "The café and the bakery have co-existed quite peacefully for decades," said Layla. "But then Hazel lost her baker. Carol retired and moved back to Brisbane to be closer to her children and grandchildren. Hazel didn't blame her, of course. But she hasn't hired a replacement, and it's hard to get career people to move to little seaside towns."

  Addison sipped her wine. "Go on."

  "Jenna took a liking to Hazel, or so she says. I don't believe it for a minute. I think she just saw an opportunity to play her little games. Anyway, Jenna saw that Hazel was losing business to Edward, and she didn't like it. More to the point, she didn't like Edward."

  "Edward's the bakery owner?" asked Olivia.

  "Yes. Anyway, first Jenna tried to get Edward's baker to leave and come work for Hazel. She didn't realise that Edward's baker is also Edward's niece, so she came out a bit red-faced on that one. Ever since she's been playing her games to get under Edward's skin."

  "What sort of games?" Olivia was riveted by now. Addison smiled; she was well used to stories of Jenna's games.

  "Oh, all sorts," said Layla. "For example, a couple of tourists were sat outside the bakery having coffee and croissants, apparently, when the woman screamed. She'd found a cockroach in the croissant. Jenna was at the table next to them, and Edward swears there was no cockroach in the croissant when it left his kitchen. He'd prepared that one himself. Now, Edward can be a pain in the backside around this town, as you'll soon learn, Addison, but he doesn't strike me as a liar."

  "So you think Jenna put the cockroach in the croissant when the tourist couple weren't looking?" Olivia asked.

  "I would believe that before I'd believe Edward a liar," said Layla. "That's just one example. Edward says she's been making his life a misery, and I don't doubt it. When Jenna gets fixated on a target, there's not much gets in her way. That young lad you've got working for you needs his head read."

  "Jason?" said Addison. "What's he got to do with it?"

  "Oh, didn't he tell you? They've been dating. He's smitten, apparently."

  "With Jenna? He's only a kid. She's got to have at least twenty years on him."

  "He's older than he looks. Twenty-nine, Jenna tells me. But yes, she is technically old enough to be his mother. Which I've pointed out."

  "What on Earth does the poor boy see in her?" Addison asked.

  "Beats me," said Layla, finishing off her wine. "He's going to get his heart broken, though. As soon as Dad is no longer with us and Jenna's got her half of his money, she'll be off. I'm not sure Jason realises that."

  "Shouldn't you tell him?" asked Olivia.

  "I've tried. He won't listen. No doubt she's been stringing him along. He'll be just a plaything to her."

  They heard sirens in the distance, coming closer. A moment later a fire engine raced past, its flashing lights and ladder visible over the top of the beer garden's fence.

  Addison tried to wrap her head around Jason dating Jenna. Nope. She couldn't see it. She went back to the alleged feud between Jenna and Edward.

  "What does Hazel think about what Jenna's been doing to Edward, supposedly on her behalf?"

  "I don't know, to be honest. Like I said, I've stayed out of it as much as possible. I'm at the nursing home most days with Dad." Layla looked towards the bar. "There you go," she said, pointing to a woman at the bar with long, wavy brown hair and wearing a purple shirt. "That's Hazel. You can ask her yourself while you're getting us another drink."

  Hazel turned out to be a lovely woman. She joined them at their table and explained how she couldn't really care less about Jenna and Edward's feuding.

  "I just wish they'd leave me out of it," she said, sipping on a beer. "I have nothing against either of them. I just want to find myself a baker and get on with running my business."

  "Sounds like your sister is a real piece of work," said Olivia to Layla, once Hazel had left.

  Addison nodded. "She always has been. Anyway, enough of that. Let's check out the menu. I'm starving."

  Olivia got them three menus from the bar, but before they'd finished choosing their meals Hazel came running back to their table. She grabbed Layla by the arm.

  "You've got to come quick!" She said, pulling Layla out of her seat. Conversations stopped around them.

  "What's happened?" asked Addison, frightened by the look on Hazel's face.

  "There's a fire at the art gallery."

  Addison, Layla, Olivia, and Hazel raced out into the street, followed it seemed by half of the occupants of the pub. The art gallery was only two streets away, and they were halfway there on foot before Addison even remembered the car.

  Olivia raced out in front, but the others were close on her heels. The smell of smoke hit them on the way. As they rounded the corner Olivia came to a sudden stop, and Addison almost collected her. The art gallery was well alight, the fire engine parked out the front. Firefighters raced around getting their hoses ready. Addison turned to grab hold of Layla, but her cousin was already ahead of her.

  "Jenna!" Layla cried, scanning the crowd that had formed across the street from the fire. "Jenna! Where are you?"

  The crowd from the pub added to the people on the street, and combined with the smoke it became difficult to see much at all. Addison scanned the crowd, looking for Jenna. She couldn't see her. She caught Layla's eye, and they both shook their heads. Then Layla looked to the fire.

  Addison caught her in time.

  "You can't go in there. It's too far gone. The firemen are handling it."

  "They need to know she could be still in there."

  "I'll tell them," said Olivia, and she crossed the street towards the fireman who seemed to be in charge. They watched as she spoke to him, then came running back to them. "They'll do their best," she said.

  They watched and waited while the firefighters battled the blaze. Tears were streaming down Layla's face by the time the firefighter in charge finally came over to talk to her.

  He pulled the helmet off his head. "This is your place?" he asked her.

  "Yes. Did you find my sister?"

  His eyes fell to the ground. "I'm sorry. We did everything we could. But I'm afraid there's a body inside."

  6

  Once the flames were finally extinguished, the police moved in. Detective Sergeant Isaac Wilcox introduced himself to Layla and Addison, who were still huddled together across the street. Olivia had gone back to the pub to get their bags and the car.

  "I'm so sorry," said Detective Wilcox to Layla. He towered over Layla, and even Addison was half a head shorter than him. He was solidly built and quite imposing, but his manner was soft and kind. "We'll get a formal identification on the remains as soon as possible, but it is looking likely at this stage that the body inside is that of your sister."

  Fresh tears rolled down Layla's cheeks. It was dark now, a
nd despite the fire and it being the middle of summer, Addison felt a chill. She didn't want Layla to have to sit here much longer.

  "Is it okay if I take my cousin home to my place?" she asked the detective.

  "Of course," he replied. "You're the new occupants of the beach house on Seaview, right?"

  "That's right. I'm Addison Lake. I just moved there with my daughter, Olivia. Although she's off to uni in a couple of weeks."

  "Okay. If you can take Ms Dallimore there, I'll be over to speak to you both again sometime tomorrow."

  Olivia arrived with the Rav 4, and Addison helped Layla into the front seat. She climbed in the back and Olivia drove them back to the beach house.

  Once inside, Addison guided Layla to the kitchen and sat with her at the table while Olivia put the kettle on and set about making tea.

  "Are you okay, honey?" Addison asked.

  Layla shook her head. "I feel numb. I can't believe it. How could a fire have taken over the gallery so quickly? There was nothing left. How could it have even started?"

  "I'm sure the police will investigate." It was all Addison could think to say. "That Detective Wilcox seemed competent."

  Layla nodded. "He's all right, I suppose. I haven't had much to do with him since I arrived back in town. Seen him around, that's all."

  Olivia placed mugs of tea in front of each of them. "Between him and the firefighters, they'll figure it out," she said, joining them at the table.

  "I'll make up one of the rooms for you," said Addison.

  Layla wrapped her hands around her mug of tea. "Thank you." She looked down at what she was wearing, and burst into tears again. "It's all gone. Everything. And Jenna…"

  Addison put an arm around her cousin and held her close. She had no idea what to say, so she didn't say anything. She exchanged an anxious glance with Olivia, who was quietly wiping away her own tears. Only hours ago they were celebrating their new beginning. Now one cousin was dead, and the other had lost everything she owned.

  Layla pulled herself together enough to take a small sip of her tea. "Thank you," she said to both of them. "What would I have done if you two weren't here?"

 

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