Contents
Copyright
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
Chapter Twenty One
Chapter Twenty Two
Chapter Twenty Three
Chapter Twenty Four
Chapter Twenty Five
Chapter Twenty Six
Epilogue
A Note From The Author
About The Author
This is a work of fiction.
None of it is real. All names, places, and events are products of the author's imagination. Any resemblance to real names, places, or events are purely coincidental, and should not be construed as being real.
Dead Wrong
Copyright © 2013
Leighann Dobbs
http://www.leighanndobbs.com
All Rights Reserved.
No part of this work may be used or reproduced in any manner, except as allowable under “fair use,” without the express written permission of the author.
Cover art by: http://www.coverkicks.com
***
More Books By This Author:
Lexy Baker
Cozy Mystery Series
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Killer Cupcakes
Dying For Danish
Murder, Money and Marzipan
3 Bodies and a Biscotti
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Contemporary
Romance
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Sweet Escapes
Reluctant Romance
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Dobbs “Fancytales”
Regency Romance Fairytales Series
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Something In Red
Snow White and the Seven Rogues
Chapter One
Morgan Blackmoore tapped her finger lightly on the counter, her mind barely registering the low buzz of voices behind her in the crowded coffee shop as she mentally prioritized the tasks that awaited her back at her own store.
“Here you go, one yerba mate tea and a vanilla latte.” Felicity rang up the purchase, as Morgan dug in the front pocket of her faded denim jeans for some cash which she traded for the two paper cups.
Inhaling the spicy aroma of the tea, she turned to leave, her long, silky black hair swinging behind her. Elbowing her way through the crowd, she headed toward the door. At this time of morning, the coffee shop was filled with locals and Morgan knew almost all of them well enough to exchange a quick greeting or nod.
Suddenly a short, stout figure appeared, blocking her path. Morgan let out a sharp breath, recognizing the figure as Prudence Littlefield.
Prudence had a long running feud with the Blackmoore’s which dated back to some sort of run-in she’d had with Morgan’s grandmother when they were young girls. As a result, Prudence loved to harass and berate the Blackmoore girls in public. Morgan’s eyes darted around the room, looking for an escape route.
“Just who do you think you are?” Prudence demanded, her hands fisted on her hips, legs spaced shoulder width apart. Morgan noticed she was wearing her usual knee high rubber boots and an orange sunflower scarf.
Morgan’s brow furrowed over her ice blue eyes as she stared at the older woman’s prune like face.
“Excuse me?”
“Don’t you play dumb with me Morgan Blackmoore. What kind of concoction did you give my Ed? He’s been acting plumb crazy.”
Morgan thought back over the previous week’s customers. Ed Littlefield had come into her herbal remedies shop, but she’d be damned if she’d announce to the whole town what he was after.
She narrowed her eyes at Prudence. “That’s between me and Ed.”
Prudence’s cheeks turned crimson. Her nostrils flared. “You know what I think,” she said narrowing her eyes and leaning in toward Morgan, “I think you’re a witch, just like your great-great-great-grandmother!”
Morgan felt an angry heat course through her veins. There was nothing she hated more than being called a witch. She was a Doctor of Pharmacology with a Master Herbalist’s license, not some sort of spell-casting conjurer.
The coffee shop had grown silent. Morgan could feel the crowd staring at her. She leaned forward, looking wrinkled old Prudence Littlefield straight in the eye.
“Well now, I think we know that’s not true,” she said, her voice barely above a whisper, “Because if I was a witch, I’d have turned you into a newt long ago.”
Then she pushed her way past the old crone and fled out the coffee shop door.
***
Fiona Blackmoore stared at the amethyst crystal in front of her wondering how to work it into a pendant. On most days, she could easily figure out exactly how to cut and position the stone, but right now her brain was in a pre-caffeine fog.
Where was Morgan with her latte?
She sighed, looking at her watch. It was ten past eight, Morgan should be here by now, she thought impatiently.
Fiona looked around the small shop, Sticks and Stones, she shared with her sister. An old cottage that had been in the family for generations, it sat at one of the highest points in their town of Noquitt, Maine.
Turning in her chair, she looked out the back window. In between the tree trunks that made up a small patch of woods, she had a bird’s eye view of the sparkling, sapphire blue Atlantic Ocean in the distance.
The cottage sat about 500 feet inland at the top of a high cliff that plunged into the Atlantic. If the woods were cleared, like the developers wanted, the view would be even better. But Fiona would have none of that, no matter how much the developers offered them, or how much they needed the money. Her and her sisters would never sell the cottage.
She turned away from the window and surveyed the inside of the shop. One side was setup as an apothecary of sorts. Antique slotted shelves loaded with various herbs lined the walls. Dried weeds hung from the rafters and several mortar and pestles stood on the counter, ready for whatever herbal concoctions her sister was hired to make.
On her side sat a variety of gemologist tools and a large assortment of crystals. Three antique oak and glass jewelry cases displayed her creations. Fiona smiled as she looked at them. Since childhood she had been fascinated with rocks and gems so it was no surprise to anyone when she grew up to become a gemologist and jewelry designer, creating jewelry not only for its beauty, but also for its healing properties.
The two sisters vocations suited each other perfectly and they often worked together providing customers with crystal and herbal healing for whatever ailed them.
The jangling of the bell over the door brought her attention to the front of the shop. She breathed a sigh of relief when Morgan burst through the door, her cheeks flushed, holding two steaming paper cups.
“What’s the matter?” Fiona held her hand out, accepting the drink gratefully. Peeling back the plastic tab, she inhaled the sweet vanilla scent of the latte.
“I just had a run in with Prudence Littlefield!” Morgan’s eyes flashed with anger.
“Oh? I saw her walking down Shore road this morning wearing that god-awful orange sunflower scarf. What was the run-in about this time?” Fiona took the first sip of her latte, closing her eyes and waiting for the caffeine to power her blood stream. She’d had her own run-ins with Pru Littlefield and had learned
to take them in stride.
“She was upset about an herbal mix I made for Ed. She called me a witch!"
“What did you make for him?”
“Just some Ginkgo, Ginseng and Horny Goat Weed … although the latter he said was for Prudence.”
Fiona’s eyes grew wide. “Aren’t those herbs for impotence?”
Morgan shrugged “Well, that’s what he wanted.”
“No wonder Prudence was mad…although you’d think just being married to her would have caused the impotence.”
Morgan burst out laughing. “No kidding. I had to question his sanity when he asked me for it. I thought maybe he had a girlfriend on the side.”
Fiona shook her head trying to clear the unwanted images of Ed and Prudence Littlefield together.
“Well, I wouldn’t let it ruin my day. You know how she is.”
Morgan put her tea on the counter, then turned to her apothecary shelf and picked several herbs out of the slots. “I know, but she always seems to know how to push my buttons. Especially when she calls me a witch.”
Fiona grimaced. “Right, well I wish we were witches. Then we could just conjure up some money and not be scrambling to pay the taxes on this shop and the house.”
Morgan sat in a tall chair behind the counter and proceeded to measure dried herbs into a mortar.
“I know. I saw Eli Stark in town yesterday and he was pestering me about selling the shop again.”
“What did you tell him?”
“I told him we’d sell over our dead bodies.” Morgan picked up a pestle and started grinding away at the herbs.
Fiona smiled. Eli Stark had been after them for almost a year to sell the small piece of land their shop sat on. He had visions of buying it, along with some adjacent lots in order to develop the area into high end condos.
Even though their parents early deaths had left Fiona, Morgan and their two other sisters property rich but cash poor the four of them agreed they would never sell. Both the small shop and the stately ocean home they lived in had been in the family for generations and they didn’t want their generation to be the one that lost them.
The only problem was, although they owned the properties outright, the taxes were astronomical and, on their meager earnings, they were all just scraping by to make ends meet.
All the more reason to get this necklace finished so I can get paid. Thankfully, the caffeine had finally cleared the cobwebs in her head and Fiona was ready to get to work. Staring down at the amethyst, a vision of the perfect shape to cut the stone appeared in her mind. She grabbed her tools and started shaping the stone.
Fiona and Morgan were both lost in their work. They worked silently, the only sounds in the little shop being the scrape of mortar on pestle and the hum of Fiona’s gem grinding tool mixed with a few melodic tweets and chirps that floated in from the open window.
Fiona didn’t know how long they were working like that when the bell over the shop door chimed again. She figured it must have been an hour or two judging by the fact that the few sips left in the bottom of her latte cup had grown cold.
She smiled, looking up from her work to greet their potential customer, but the smile froze on her face when she saw who it was.
Sheriff Overton stood in the door flanked by two police officers. A toothpick jutted out of the side of Overton’s mouth and judging by the looks on all three of their faces, they weren’t there to buy herbs or crystals.
Fiona could almost hear her heart beating in the silence as the men stood there, adjusting their eyes to the light and getting their bearings.
“Can we help you?” Morgan asked, stopping her work to wipe her hands on a towel.
Overton’s head swiveled in her direction like a hawk spying a rabbit in a field.
“That’s her.” He nodded to the two uniformed men who approached Morgan hesitantly. Fiona recognized one of the men as Brody Hunter, whose older brother Morgan had dated all through high school. She saw Brody look questioningly at the Sheriff.
The other man stood a head taller than Brody. Fiona noticed his dark hair and broad shoulders but her assessment of him stopped there when she saw him pulling out a pair of handcuffs.
Her heart lurched at the look of panic on her sister’s face as the men advanced toward her.
“Just what is this all about?” She demanded, standing up and taking a step toward the Sheriff.
There was no love lost between the Sheriff and Fiona. They’d had a few run-ins and she thought he was an egotistical bore and probably crooked too. He ignored her question focusing his attention on Morgan. The next words out of his mouth chilled Fiona to the core.
“Morgan Blackmoore … you’re under arrest for the murder of Prudence Littlefield.”
Chapter Two
“Just what is the meaning of this?” Fiona stepped closer to the Sheriff. The smell of stale cigarettes kept her a few paces from getting right in his face.
She felt her stomach curdle as he turned his rheumy eyes on her. The ever-present toothpick bobbed up and down. “Mrs. Littlefield was found not one quarter mile from here. Murdered.”
“And what makes you think my sister did it?” She demanded, hands on hips.
“Earlier this morning, Morgan was overheard telling Prudence that she wanted to turn her into a newt.”
Fiona wrinkled her brow. “So?”
“Prudence was found with a newt stuffed in her throat. She’d been strangled.” He turned to face Morgan. “Where were you two hours ago?”
The girls exchanged glances and Fiona looked at her watch. Two hours ago was about when she was waiting for Morgan to come back with her coffee.
“I was walking here from the coffee shop,” Morgan said. “And I didn’t say I wanted to turn her into a newt, I said if I was a witch I would have already turned her into a newt.”
“Close enough for me,” Sheriff Overton said. “Did anyone see you walking here?”
“Surely, you can’t be serious?” Morgan stared at him incredulously. “That’s just the kind of thing you say when someone pisses you off. You can’t seriously think I actually killed her over a small argument in a coffee shop?”
“That remains to be seen.” Overton nodded at the officers. “Cuff her and get her into the car.” He switched the toothpick from one side of his mouth to the other, then snickered at Fiona before turning and walking out of the shop.
Fiona stared at his retreating back, trying to get her mouth to work. She whirled around at the sound of snapping handcuffs, planting herself firmly in between the officers and the door.
“You can’t just arrest her like this. You need more solid evidence!” She glared at the two men.
Brody looked down at the floor.
“That’s right Brody Hunter, you should be ashamed of yourself.” She turned her steely blue gaze on the other officer.
“And you, whoever you are. How dare you come to our town and arrest my sister on this flimsy evidence. I’ll have you brought up under charges of false arrest!”
Fiona was standing close to him; his height forced her to tilt her head backwards to look up into his face. She saw his gray eyes soften a little before he gently moved her aside.
“Sorry Ma’am,” he dipped his head at her, “Just doing my job." Then he brushed past her, tugging Morgan along behind him.
Fiona stomped outside after them. She noticed with annoyance that they’d parked the police car sideways in the front lawn instead of just leaving it in the driveway. She stood at the side of the car, her fists clenched so hard that her nails dug into her palms painfully, and watched them put Morgan in the back seat.
Bending down, she looked in through the window at her sister. “Don’t worry Morgan, they can’t do this. I’ll be right down to get you out.”
Overton walked by, pushing her aside and the three men piled into the car; Brodie and Overton in the front and the other officer in the back with Morgan. Overton started the car and sped off, digging up a piece of their front yard wi
th his back tire.
Fiona’s heart lurched as she saw Morgan turn her head and look out the back window at her. She spun around and raced back into the store, her heart pounding in her chest. Grabbing her purse, she locked up the shop and ran to her twelve year old pick-up truck.
Mumbling a prayer to the car starting gods, she held her breath while she pumped the gas pedal and turned the key in the ignition. Relief flooded her when the old truck sputtered to life and she jammed it into drive and peeled out, pointing the truck in the direction of the police station.
***
Fiona burst through the door to the police station, her curly red hair flying wildly behind her. Storming over to the counter, she pounded on the top catching the attention of George O’Neil who gave her a sympathetic look.
“I demand to see my sister,” she yelled, accentuating the words by pounding on the counter even louder.
George took a step back and held his hands up, palms out. “Whoa there, Fiona, I know you’re upset but you need to calm down.”
“I’ll handle this, George.” Someone said from behind her and she whirled around to confront him. It was the officer that had arrested Morgan, the one she’d never seen before.
Fiona had heard talk that some fancy cop from Boston had taken a job on their small town police force, which was strange because most cops were trying to get out of Noquitt and move to the big city. Not too many people moved to Noquitt from other places and Fiona had an instant distrust of anyone who did. Probably some big scandal in his past or maybe Overton had brought him in to help corrupt the town.
“Just who are you?” She narrowed her eyes at him.
“Jake Cooper.”
Fiona eyed the hand he stuck out at her suspiciously, then placed her own hand inside it. His handshake was firm, his hand large and calloused. She had to admit the feeling wasn’t all too unpleasant, but she didn’t have time to dwell on that—she was on a mission.
“And you are?” He prompted.
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