Sunday, December 15, 2024

Book Sunday

 Today's recommendation is a cozy mystery


The Mystery at Love’s Manor

D.W. Thompson

Chapter One

A feeling of dread squeezed my soul in its dark grip. I bolted upright in bed and searched the darkness for the source of my discomfort. Was it a sound, real or imagined? A consequence of my first week’s stay in a new home? I was chilled to the bone, and goosebumps rose on my flesh. Too many of my premonitions proved well founded to ignore…something was wrong. My thoughts went to my estranged family. Nana, in the sunset of life, was in a battle with the demon possessing her—Dementia. Her curse weighed heavily on my brother, Daniel, his wife, and their relationship. If something was as wrong as my churning gut indicated, was it Nana?

No, if it was Nana, Gwen would have called to let me know. Wiping the crud from the corners of my eyes, I crawled out of bed. Last night’s mystery novel fell from its hiding place between my flannel sheets. The day’s traumas and the two-hour drive to gather the last of my possessions from my old digs had overwhelmed my curiosity about the fictional “who-done-it.” My brother used to mock my choice of literature. I considered it professional reading.

I glanced out of my bedroom window. Raindrops slithered down the glass, and the filtered dawn cast its shadowed light. I wished the window faced east for the sunrise, like my childhood bedroom in the old house. Nana is staying there now. It was the closest one to Daniel and Gwen’s bedroom. I hoped Nana would find more peace there than I had.

Sliding my feet into cheap imitation fur-lined slippers, I set the book on my nightstand and made my way to the kitchen, and the coffee pot. The old- fashioned percolator began its flirtatious dance, and the scent of the fresh ground coffee teased my nostrils. I glanced around the room, noticing all the work needing to be done. The condition of the place made it affordable for me. The paint was chipping from the walls, and the kitchen cabinets were stained with decades of accumulated grease. The sink’s constant drip kept time with the ticking of the kitchen clock, a throwback black cat with rolling eyes and a swishing tail. But it was home, and it was mine. Well, mine and Old Joseph’s—the name I gave to the source of falling objects and bumps in the night. What I only somewhat jokingly referred to as my resident ghost. I wasn’t sure I believed in ghosts, but I was a firm believer in my vivid imagination.

As I poured my first cup of the day, the phone rang, and my teeth clenched. I hated the sound, the nerve-rattling jangle, and the irrational call to immediate action it demanded. I wished the telemarketers would at least allow me to enjoy my morning coffee. Who else would call so early?

At the second ring, I felt an ice-cold trickle creep up my spine, like the time Sammy Mattingley threw ice cubes down the back of my blouse. My hand trembled, hesitating to answer when I recognized the number. It was my brother, Daniel.

At the third ring, I wished he hadn’t discovered I was home. Last month, Gwen spotted me leaving the crappy hotel I used as my temporary local residence while I house-shopped. This phone call meant the cat was out of the bag. I felt disloyal anyway, not letting Gwen in on my secret return, but Daniel? My ten years away hadn’t healed all the old wounds. Creating a new life and forging my independence provided a much-needed salve to my soul. Still, I wished he didn’t know.

By the fourth ring, I’d convinced myself his call was to bitch at me—feigning hurt for not telling him I was back. My finger brushed against the phone’s “ignore” button…but what if it was about Nana? And he was my brother…the DNA test said so.

I answered before the fifth jingle when the voicemail would kick in. Might as well get it over with—in case it was about Nana…

“Hello?”

“Emma, I need you at the house as soon as you can get here.”

“Daniel? How about ‘Good morning, Emma. Did you pass the test and get your license, Emma? I’m so glad you’re home safe and—’ ”

“Not now, Sis. Please get here as soon as you can. It’s important. I need you.”

“Is something wrong with Nana? Is she—” But the line was already dead. Typical of my brother. His needs came before anyone else’s.

Pouring coffee in a go-cup, I threw on a pair of well-broken-in jeans and a sweatshirt, hopping toward the door as I pulled on my soft rubber clogs—as fancy as I get to go to the family farm. They needed me, and from Daniel’s perspective at least, they needed me now. He must figure even the black sheep of the family is handy in bad times. I brushed my hair with one hand and backed my old soft-top Bronco down the driveway with the other.

My recently purchased cottage on the outskirts of Newtowne was seven miles from the farm. The home place was a sprawling acreage with a creek bed running along one border and a pond at the bottom of the hill from the main house—what some called Love’s Manor. Many of those same folks claimed the place was haunted. At times when I lived there, hearing the scratching in the walls and the bumps in the night, I almost believed the stories to be true. Locals claimed the hauntings were from the deaths occurring in the house over the past century—not least of which were my parents, my older sister, Maya, and her best friend, Jessie. Others widened its haunted origins to include the entire town. These candidates included Benjamin Hance, the young black man who was lynched on June 17, 1887, for allegedly attempting to assault a white woman. An even older tragedy was that of the legendary witch, Moll Dyer, whose cabin was set ablaze on the coldest night of the winter of 1697 by village vigilantes. Moll froze to death. It is rumored she still roams the area and wishes to reclaim the lands she once walked. I put little stock in such things. It wasn’t the supernatural that had pushed me away from my ancestral home, nor was it the reason for my return.

The half-mile driveway followed the contour of old tobacco fields—now covered with stubble from this year’s crop of soybeans. Not much appeared to have changed in the years I was away. Driving past the pond, I smelled the honeysuckle vines, and an unexpected tear slid down my cheek.


“Miss you always, Maya,” I said to the ghost of my sister claimed at Love’s Manor.

Flashing red and blue lights flickered through the trees as the Bronco sputtered up the hill toward the house. Cops were everywhere. Three squad cars and a lone ambulance were parked in front of the house.

The car groaned as I slapped it into Park and raced to the house to beat the rain. Daniel met me, holding the front door open.

“What the hell’s going on?” I asked.

“Emma, it’s Gwen. I don’t know what’s happened. The house was broken into, and she’s nowhere to be found.”

“What’s Sheriff Wathen saying?”

“Just what I told you. The glass in the side door was broken, and that’s how they got in. There’s no note from Gwen saying she was going anywhere, and if she was taken against her will, there’s nothing from the kidnappers.”

“The sheriff thinks she was kidnapped?”

“I don’t know what he thinks, but he suspects me of something, the way he’s putting me through the third degree. That’s why I called you. You’re a private investigator now, right? You passed your test?”

“Where were you and Maria when the house was broken into? You didn’t hear anything?”

“No, but we weren’t in the house, Emma. Maria can vouch for that. She heard me driving the tractor to check on the cover crop in the backfield. I offered to take her along as Gwen suggested. She said a break from Nana might be good for her, but Maria wanted to weed Nana’s flower bed. She said she’d promised her.”

“When was this?”


“Last evening. I got back around dusk and parked the tractor in the barn. Maria was still in the backyard in the flower beds. We came in together through the back and went up to check on Nana. She was agitated about something, but I couldn’t make much sense of it and didn’t pay her much mind. You know how she gets. After I calmed her down, I went to bed. Gwen wasn’t there, but she often stays up late. She curls up by the fireplace with a glass of wine and a book. I tried to wait up for her, but I must’ve passed out as soon as my head hit the pillow. I woke up this morning, and she wasn’t in bed. I went through the house calling for her. That’s when I saw the broken glass.”

“So, after you came home, you never saw her before you went to bed?”

“No, I told you—

“Have they found anything yet?”

“They found blood on a broken necklace outside in the grass, Emma. The clasp snapped like it was ripped from her neck. It was the one I gave Gwen on her birthday last year.” Daniel’s face was pale, bloodless, and his eyes swollen.

“Deep breaths, brother,” I said.

“Right. So, did you pass your test? Did you get everything unpacked in the new place?”

“I did, and I have. Thanks.”

“What do you think happened to her, Emma?”

“I don’t know, but here comes the sheriff. Maybe he found something new.”

“He’s been grilling Maria for the last hour as if she would know anything…”

Sheriff Wathen stepped toward us. His footfalls were as silent as our father taught us to be when stalking game, like a true predator. John Wathen was Daniel’s age, but young to be sheriff—even in a community as small as ours. It helped that he ran unopposed in the last election and that his family went back as far as ours. His ancestors were also passengers on the Ark at Maryland’s beginning. They’d lost some local standing in recent times over a scandal involving his younger brother Robert and drugs. The family’s wealth and social standing meant Robert got off with less than a slap on the wrist, but it did rub some muck on the family’s name. I heard Robert was running for County Commissioner next year. He’d probably win too.

“Emma,” the sheriff said. His hand gripped my shoulder, and I felt his nails dig in through my sweatshirt. He twisted me around to face him.

“How have you been, girl? I’ve heard good things.”

“I’m doing well, Sheriff.” I grabbed his hand, lifted it off my shoulder, and dropped it as if it were repulsive, rotted flesh. I wiped my hands on my jeans.

“Same old Emma, I see.”

The sheriff smiled as if it hurt his face, and his jowls shook at the effort. He was a bull-in-a-china-shop sort of man and kept his dark receding locks slicked back like he owned stock in several hair products. His girth had grown proportionate to his arrogance since I’d last seen him.

“Congratulations on winning the election, Sheriff. Do you have any clues about what happened to my sister-in-law? This isn’t like her at all.”

“I’m hoping your brother can help me with that. What do you say, Mr. Love? Would you like to chat here or back at the Newtowne station?”

 

****

 

I knew better than to ask the sheriff’s permission to sit in on the “chat,” AKA interrogation. There was bad blood between our families as far back as anyone could remember. My school years with the younger Wathen brother, Robert, did nothing to dissuade me from my family’s low opinion of the clan.

Deputy Sam Mattingley (yes, that same Sammy Mattingley—he of ice cube notoriety) was a different story altogether. Sam was a tall lanky man with a face full of freckles and an aww-shucks way about him. Despite our childhood pranks on each other, we became good friends over time. It only took a wink and a smile, and Sam had a chair set up for me just outside of the door. I could hear every word…

The sheriff started slow, and I’ll give him the credit due—he knew how to get an interviewee to open up.

“Can you give me a description of your wife, Mr. Love? Or a picture for our case file? I knew her, of course, but a detailed description with any unusual identifying features, that sort of thing, would be helpful.”

“Okay. Gwen is five foot, five inches tall, and weighs about a hundred thirty pounds. I know because she was just saying the other night that she’d gained a few pounds and needed to go on another one of her crazy fad diets. She has shoulder-length wavy black hair. Two weeks ago, she had two pink streaks put in the front of her hair at Brandy’s beauty parlor out on Route 235. She said it framed and accentuated her face or something. I thought it was a little strange at first, but it looks good on her. She has a small mole at the base of her neck that she wants Doc Johnson to look at on her next appointment. The only other thing is a birthmark. Where I won’t say…”

“It could be important, Mr. Love, if we need to identify…Never mind. We’ll let that go for now. Mr. Love, what do you think happened to your wife?”

“I wish I knew, Sheriff. I’m afraid for her. There’s the blood on the necklace, and her purse is still here. I think she’s been taken.”

“We shouldn’t jump to conclusions, Mr. Love. Ordinarily, we wait twenty-four hours to follow up on a missing person’s case when it’s an adult, but for now, at least, her disappearance appears to be involuntary. I understand your pain, Mr. Love, and we’ll do everything in our power to find her. I’d like to monitor your phones in case any ransom demands are made. Is there anything else the sheriff’s office can do for you during this horrible time? I know, I know—catch the perp—but would you like a police presence at night, for instance? You know, to keep an eye on the place? I can spare a deputy…”

“Thank you, Sheriff. I don’t think that’s necessary.”

“That’ll be fine then. Mr. Love, besides the broken door glass, did you notice anything else different in the house this morning?”

“No, except my wife wasn’t anywhere to be found. Otherwise…wait, there was a half-empty glass of milk on the kitchen counter. That wasn’t unusual for her though. Do you think she got up in the middle of the night and that’s when they nabbed her?”

“It is certainly possible. How long have you known Miss Maria Clements?” “A year or so, maybe. She was recommended by a family friend. Honestly, we couldn’t ask for a better live-in companion for Nana. Maria’s been a godsend. She sees to all of Nana’s needs…and our grandmother can be a handful in her condition. Why do you ask?”

“Did she get along well with your wife? Any tension between the two of them? You know what they say about two women not being able to live peacefully in the same house. Was there anything like that?”

“No. They got along well.”

“I’m surprised. Miss Clements is quite a looker. I’m sure you’ve noticed, and you know how women can be. Young Deputy Abell got all tongue-tied when she opened the door this morning. Young and shapely, yes sir…not that your wife wasn’t a lovely woman herself. But no jealousy there at all?”

“No, Sheriff, and I don’t see what this has to do with—”

“So, she’s just an employee of your family? Nothing more? Ever tempted to stray a bit, Mr. Love? Nobody could hardly blame you.”

I heard my brother’s sharp intake of breath and a soft growling sound. The sound he learned to make to control his ill temper. “No, I have not. What are you implying, John?”

“Well. It’s just that the both of you live here but were conveniently absent when the break-in occurred and you’re each the other’s alibi.”

“My wife is missing, Sheriff. There’s nothing convenient about this situation. Is that all or is there another bee in your bonnet?”

“I reckon that’s about it for now. You know what they  say  in  the  movies,  Mr.  Love—‘don’t  leave town.’ ”

I heard the sheriff’s chair scrape against the floor. I gestured to Sam to grab mine before the sheriff cleared the door.

“Oh, one more thing, Mr. Love,” the sheriff said. “Did you know Miss Clements has a police record? Seems she was picked up over in Chapman County for prostitution ten years ago.”


David W. Thompson

https://www.david-w-thompson.com

David is a multiple award-winning author, Army veteran, and graduate of UMUC. He’s a multi-genre writer and a member of the Horror Writers’ Association, and the Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers Association. When not writing, Dave enjoys family, kayaking, fishing, hiking, hunting, winemaking, and woodcarving.

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