Better Dead

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by Pamela Kopfler




  Better Dead

  PAMELA KOPFLER

  KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.

  http://www.kensingtonbooks.com

  All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  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

  CHAPTER 24

  CHAPTER 25

  CHAPTER 26

  CHAPTER 27

  CHAPTER 28

  CHAPTER 29

  CHAPTER 30

  CHAPTER 31

  CHAPTER 32

  CHAPTER 33

  CHAPTER 34

  CHAPTER 35

  CHAPTER 36

  CHAPTER 37

  CHAPTER 38

  CHAPTER 39

  CHAPTER 40

  RECIPES

  Teaser chapter

  To the extent that the image or images on the cover of this book depict a person or persons, such person or persons are merely models, and are not intended to portray any character or characters featured in the book.

  KENSINGTON BOOKS are published by

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  119 West 40th Street

  New York, NY 10018

  Copyright © 2018 by Pamela Kopfler

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.

  If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the Publisher and neither the Author nor the Publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”

  Kensington and the K logo Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.

  ISBN: 978-1-4967-1321-6

  First Kensington Mass Market Edition: January 2018

  eISBN-13: 978-1-4967-1322-3

  eISBN-10: 1-4967-1322-2

  First Kensington Electronic Edition: January 2018

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Writing is solitary but not lonely. In fact, I dreamed up the plot for Better Dead during a writers’ retreat at Nottoway Plantation in White Castle, Louisiana. The organizer challenged us to write a ghost story in the spirit of Lord Byron’s challenge to Mary Shelley (Frankenstein) during an 1816 retreat at the Villa Diodati in France. I will be eternally grateful to the late Nick Genovese for the writing prompt that drove me to see Better Dead through to THE END.

  Before I wrote the first word of this novel, my dear husband, Joe, believed in me and proved it in deed and spirit. Many thanks to my children, Adam and Caroline, for their cheers and hugs along the way, and to my mother for her tolerance of my tall tales years ago.

  Never underestimate the power of a bookseller. Molly Bolden, co-owner of Bent Pages, sat with me one fine day on the front porch of her bookstore after reading my short stories. She leaned back in her rocker and tossed me a simple question. Why don’t you write a novel? She asked with every confidence that I could. Her question nagged me enough for me to park my caboose in a chair in front of my computer to find out. Thank you, Molly, for asking the right question, being my friend, and always giving your honest opinion.

  Along the way, I had tremendous support and friendship from the Southern Louisiana chapter of Romance Writers of America®, where I met my critique partner extraordinaire, Jaimie Bergeron. I thank her from the bottom of my heart for her commitment and sage critiques from concept to completed novel. Special thanks also go to chapter mates Vicky McHenry, Charlotte Parker, and June Shaw, as well as to my dear friend Emily Rash for beta reading my entire draft and offering insights that enriched the story.

  As an RWA® Golden Heart® finalist, I found mentorship and fellowship with the other finalists, which developed into a priceless sisterhood I treasure. Thank you, Firebirds, Dragonflies, and Mermaids.

  I owe many thanks to my incredible literary agent, Rachel Brooks (BookEnds Literary Agency) a relentless champion of my work and my savvy guide through the journey to publication.

  I can’t thank the teams at Kensington Books enough for their dedication to making this book the best it could be. My talented editor, Esi Sogah, and Norma Perez-Hernandez (editorial assistant) offered insights and guidance, which enhanced this novel and my skills as a novelist. I appreciate Rosemary Silva’s fine eye for detail in her superb copyedit. Special thanks to art director Louis Malcangi, who rendered a beautiful cover that captured the essence of Better Dead.

  Finally, dear reader, I must thank you. Writing and publishing a novel is not complete without you. Only through your willingness to open the book can the people between these pages come to life. Then they can take you on an adventure of clues, twists, turns, and laughs to solve a mystery. I hope you enjoy Better Dead.

  Special note: Two of my characters are named in honor of real people, Mickey and Charlie Lusco. Their generous bid at an auction won them a place between these pages and helped fund their local Kiwanis club in their mission “to improve the world, one child and one community at a time.”

  CHAPTER 1

  Holly Davis wanted a divorce, not a funeral.

  The young widow eased her desk drawer open and removed two files. The first held the divorce papers her husband hadn’t lived to receive. The second was filled with every reason to divorce him in full-color, glossy prints. She strolled to the fireplace in the parlor of her bed-and-breakfast and dropped both files onto the cold ashes.

  Two drops of brut slid between her lips as she tilted her crystal flute. “This requires another glass of champagne,” she announced to her Yorkshire terrier.

  Rhett’s ears perked up.

  Holly frowned and shook a finger at him. “Don’t you tell me I’m drunk.”

  As she turned toward the armoire that concealed the bar, she wobbled on her stiletto sandals. “Lordy. Good-looking shoes are just like good-looking men. Dangerous.”

  She kicked off her shoes. One hurled through the air and bounced off the wall, barely missing a portrait of her great-great-grandfather.

  Holly returned to the fireplace with a full glass of champagne and a box of matches. She lit the files, then perched on the antique settee in front of the fire. The files curled as the flames consumed them and their secrets. She owed Burl that much.

  At least he’d done his philandering out of town. The good people of Delta Ridge, Louisiana, had turned out for his funeral, and they’d poured sympathy her way for the past three months. Holly couldn’t make them feel like the fool she was. She’d keep Burl’s secret, but she’d accept no more sympathy. Tonight was her last night as a grieving widow. She’d dressed up to celebrate her new life and bid her old one good-bye.

  Raising her glass, she made a toast on what would have been their tenth anniversary. “I didn’t wish you dead, Burl Davis, but thanks for setting me free.”

  Smoke curled over the mantel.

  “Oh, crapola. I forgot to open the damper.” She scrambled to flip the metal catch open as the fire licked her arm. Without thinking, she doused the flames with her champagne.

  The fire hissed. Thick billows of smoke swirled and grew. A hazy figure took shape in front of the
fireplace.

  She gasped and stepped back.

  “Is this any way to mourn your dearly departed husband?”

  “B-Burl?” She blinked, hoping the image would disappear. Glass shattered as her flute hit the hardwood floor. Her heart jumped from her chest into her throat. Raising her hand to her neck, she took another step back and stared at the silhouette of her dead husband.

  The wind howled, sucking the smoke and Burl up the flue. A surviving flame flickered between the logs as silence fell around her.

  Holly fingered the Mikimoto pearls Burl had given her last year, on their anniversary, and shook her head. She swallowed hard. She’d buried Burl three months ago. Trying to compose herself, she smoothed her hands over her red silk dress.

  Nothing but the wind and her imagination. Guests at her Louisiana bed-and-breakfast often insisted they’d seen the supernatural. Holly didn’t believe in ghosts, but visitors expected an antebellum plantation to have a spirit or two roaming around. She played along to boost her business.

  She blew out a long sigh. Guilt and too much champagne. Both self-inflicted. She didn’t have anything to feel guilty about. Burl had crashed his airplane, and she couldn’t help it if her life was better without him.

  Holly tiptoed around the shards of glass and retrieved one of her stilettos. The room tilted as she tried to balance on one foot to slip on her shoe.

  Rhett peeked from under the antique settee.

  “Guess I scared you to death when I dropped that glass.” She scooped him up and rubbed his head, then sat him down a safe distance from the glass. “You didn’t see a thing, did you, boy?”

  She scanned the room for her other shoe, then eyed Rhett. “Where is it?”

  He wagged his entire backside, as though he had nothing to hide.

  “Just like a man.”

  The opened bottle of brut chilling in the ice bucket was too expensive to waste. She poured another glass of champagne and downed it, hoping for a good night’s sleep. Since she had no guests, she’d have the luxury of sleeping until eight o’clock.

  Carrying the champagne bucket, she hobbled on one shoe to the kitchen. Then she armed herself with the Dustbuster and a fire extinguisher to clean up her mess.

  Even tipsy, she considered the possibility of the ancient damper closing in the middle of the night, filling the place with smoke or burning down her home and business. Luck had never sided with Holly.

  When she returned to the parlor, the logs above the ashes had caught fire. The charcoal scent of the old fireplace floated through the room. Focusing on the tiny shards of glass challenged her alcohol-impaired vision, but she vacuumed, anyway. She didn’t want to chance Rhett stepping on a sliver of glass. Besides, the Delta Ridge Bridge Club had rented the parlor for nine o’clock in the morning for their weekly game. She couldn’t have broken glass on the floor.

  Holly tossed the Dustbuster on the settee, then picked up the fire extinguisher. She couldn’t trust the damper to stay open. One spark and the fire could ignite again while she slept.

  She’d never used a fire extinguisher before, and reading the label was out of the question tonight. Holly closed one eye and aimed the fire extinguisher toward the flames. Swaying, she squeezed the trigger, and a wide spray of white foam gushed onto the hardwood floor. She tilted the nozzle upward and lost her balance, sending the spray up the fifteen-foot wall to the carved crown molding.

  A Casper the Friendly Ghost version of Burl coated in white foam stood before her. She dropped the fire extinguisher and dashed to the kitchen like a peg-legged pirate.

  She grabbed the bottle of champagne off the counter and poured it down the drain. “I swear, God, if you’ll get Burl out of my parlor, I’ll never drink another drop,” she said, with as much sincerity as she could pump into her plea to God, since she hadn’t talked to Him lately.

  She glanced over her shoulder.

  Rhett scooted backward into the kitchen and barked all the way.

  “What I wouldn’t give for a drink right now. And there you go, pouring my best bottle down the drain.”

  Holly spun around to the powdery face of Burl Davis smiling at her. She strangled the neck of the empty bottle and wagged it at the apparition. “Y-you’re not here. Y-you’re dead. I buried you three months ago.”

  “Yeah. I’m dead. You buried me. But I am here.” He opened his arms, as though she’d rush to hug him.

  “No!” She shook her head. “I don’t see dead people. Bruce Willis sees dead people. My guests see dead people.”

  She slammed the bottle into the trash. “I’m just drunk, and you’re my pink elephant.”

  “Afraid not, Blondie.” He shrugged. “Besides, Bruce was dead. The kid saw dead people.”

  Holly rolled her eyes and hiccuped. “Whatever.”

  She hated it when he called her Blondie. “In the morning, I’ll have a hangover, and you’ll be gone.”

  “Not likely.”

  Stepping from high heel to bare foot in an awkward up-and-down motion that made her dizzy, she backed out of the kitchen.

  “Definitely,” she said with as much diction as her thick tongue would allow.

  He matched her step for step through the entrance hall. “I’m telling you, I’m not going anywhere.”

  Old anger bubbled up from the pit of her stomach. “You always have to win, don’t you?”

  “I don’t want to argue.”

  “That’s a first.” Their entire marriage had been a debate.

  Burl laughed. “First time I’ve been dead.”

  “That’s right. You’re dead. Now, get out of my life.” She flung her arms, as though shooing him away, and stumbled forward.

  He bowed his head and mumbled, “Can’t.”

  She plastered her hands on her hips. “What do you mean, can’t?”

  “Peter wouldn’t let me in.”

  She leveled her eyes at her dead husband in disbelief. “Do you mean St. Peter, as in the one at Heaven’s gate?”

  He nodded.

  “I’m not surprised,” she huffed. “Finally going to hell, huh?”

  “Not exactly.”

  Death hadn’t changed him one bit. “Can you just spit out the truth without twisting it into a pretzel?”

  “I have some unfinished business.” He lifted a shoulder. “Until I make it right, I’m stuck here.”

  “Here? As in on earth?” She took another backward step into the parlor.

  He shook his head and pointed to the floor. “Here, with you, in this house. One step outside and I burn, so I’m stuck here.”

  “You’re not staying here.” I just got my life back. “You can’t.”

  “Afraid so.”

  Jealousy from the past pinched her heart. “Go haunt your girlfriend.”

  She spun around to stomp away and stepped from stiletto to bare foot. In one quick motion, she snatched off her shoe and hurled it at Burl. “Better yet, go to hell!”

  The stiletto sailed through him. “It’s a possibility.”

  Holy moly. The first time her aim hit the target and it didn’t faze him. “I know the devil will let you in.”

  “You don’t want me to burn for all eternity. Do you?” His pale face drooped.

  “I don’t care.” She glared at him, wishing he’d disappear.

  Spots of the powdery foam clung to his outline. Where the foam had flaked off, Burl was transparent.

  “You’re the only one who can see or hear me.”

  “Why me?”

  “You called to me like I was still alive. You brought me back.” He shrugged. “Sort of.”

  “The toast? That was to say good-bye. Did something get lost in the translation from the real world to the”—she drew quotation marks in the air—“other side?”

  Burl grinned. “You called. I came.”

  “I’m having a nightmare, I’m drunk, or you’ve finally driven me completely out of my mind.” Holly clapped her hands over her ears and squeezed her eyes shut, blocking
Burl out of her world. She stood as still as she could, but the floor rolled beneath her feet like the deck of a boat in rough seas. The rocking motion churned her stomach. If she didn’t open her eyes, she would either faint or puke. The thought of living with Burl again prompted the same symptoms.

  Holly landed on the hardwood floor with a thud but didn’t feel the pain she’d expected. She dared to open one eye. A powdery white dust peppered the cypress planks. She pried her other eye open to find the source. Pieces and parts of the dried foam had flaked off Burl onto the floor. “Are you still here?”

  “Barely.” He sounded weak.

  She closed her eyes. “Good. Maybe you’ll be gone when I wake up.”

  “I have only until midnight on Halloween to make things right, or I’m stuck here forever. You’re the only one who can help me.” His voice faded.

  “No problem, Burl. I have thirty days to get you into heaven and out of my hair. We’ll talk about it tomorrow, when I’m sober,” she said, waving him off without opening her eyes.

  Tomorrow I’ll be sober, and Burl will be dead and gone, again.

  “Sarcasm doesn’t look good on you, Blondie. I have a shot at getting in if you help me.”

  Holly opened her eyes and looked up at Burl. “Let’s see.” She lifted her index finger and laid it against her cheek. “You cheated on me, robbed our 401(k), left me in debt for your funeral, and you want my help to get into paradise.” She tapped a finger against her cheek, as if she were thinking, then gave a forced laugh. “I don’t think so, but what can I do to get you into hell?”

  “Very funny. If you don’t help, I’m stuck here at Holly Grove for all eternity, and you’re stuck with me for life.” He raised a brow. “Unless you plan on moving.”

  Holly had sunk every dime of her inheritance into converting Holly Grove into a B & B three years ago, and Burl knew it. This was the year that Holly Grove was finally supposed to make a profit. She sighed. It had to.

 

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