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One for the Books
One for the Books Read online
Titles by Jenn McKinlay
Library Lover’s Mysteries
BOOKS CAN BE DECEIVING
DUE OR DIE
BOOK, LINE, AND SINKER
READ IT AND WEEP
ON BORROWED TIME
A LIKELY STORY
BETTER LATE THAN NEVER
DEATH IN THE STACKS
HITTING THE BOOKS
WORD TO THE WISE
ONE FOR THE BOOKS
Cupcake Bakery Mysteries
SPRINKLE WITH MURDER
BUTTERCREAM BUMP OFF
DEATH BY THE DOZEN
RED VELVET REVENGE
GOING, GOING, GANACHE
SUGAR AND ICED
DARK CHOCOLATE DEMISE
VANILLA BEANED
CARAMEL CRUSH
WEDDING CAKE CRUMBLE
DYING FOR DEVIL’S FOOD
PUMPKIN SPICE PERIL
Hat Shop Mysteries
CLOCHE AND DAGGER
DEATH OF A MAD HATTER
AT THE DROP OF A HAT
COPY CAP MURDER
ASSAULT AND BERET
BURIED TO THE BRIM
Bluff Point Romances
ABOUT A DOG
BARKING UP THE WRONG TREE
EVERY DOG HAS HIS DAY
Happily Ever After Romances
THE GOOD ONES
THE CHRISTMAS KEEPER
Stand-alone Novels
PARIS IS ALWAYS A GOOD IDEA
BERKLEY PRIME CRIME
Published by Berkley
An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC
penguinrandomhouse.com
Copyright © 2020 by Jennifer McKinlay Orf
Excerpt from Paris Is Always a Good Idea by Jenn McKinlay copyright © 2020 Jennifer McKinlay Orf
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BERKLEY and the BERKLEY & B colophon are registered trademarks and BERKLEY PRIME CRIME is a trademark of Penguin Random House LLC.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: McKinlay, Jenn, author.
Title: One for the books / Jenn McKinlay.
Description: First edition. | New York: Berkley Prime Crime, 2020. | Series: A library lover’s mystery; book 11
Identifiers: LCCN 2020019703 (print) | LCCN 2020019704 (ebook) | ISBN 9780593101742 (hardcover) | ISBN 9780593101766 (ebook)
Subjects: GSAFD: Mystery fiction.
Classification: LCC PS3612.A948 O54 2020 (print) | LCC PS3612.A948 (ebook) | DDC 813/.6—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020019703
LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020019704
Cover art by Julia Green
Cover design by Rita Frangie
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
PUBLISHER’S NOTE: The recipes contained in this book are to be followed exactly as written. The publisher is not responsible for your specific health or allergy needs that may require medical supervision. The publisher is not responsible for any adverse reactions to the recipes contained in this book.
pid_prh_5.6.0_c0_r0
Contents
Cover
Titles by Jenn McKinley
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
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
Epilogue
The Briar Creek Library Guide to Crafternoons
Readers Guide for A CHRISTMAS CAROL
Craft:Fire-starter Pine Cones
Recipes
Acknowledgments
Excerpt from PARIS IS ALWAYS A GOOD IDEA
About the Author
In loving memory of Jonathan Edwin McKinlay.
You were our gentle giant, our fixer of all things, our true north,
our hero. You loved deeply and truly with your whole heart,
and we will miss you forever.
Chapter 1
Why is everyone staring at us?” Lindsey Norris asked her fiancé, Mike Sullivan, known to everyone in their small Connecticut shoreline town as “Sully.”
“Are they staring at us?” He looked up from his phone where he was scanning the news, which for him meant the current sports scores, and glanced around the shop.
“Yes,” she confirmed. “And it’s kind of creepy.”
Having slept late that morning, they were in line at the bakery, which was tucked into the back corner of the town’s lone grocery store. Their dog, Heathcliff, was sitting between their feet and behaving like a perfect gentleman, so Lindsey was certain he wasn’t the one drawing the attention of every other customer in the bakery their way.
“You’re right,” he said. “They are staring.”
“But why?” she asked. She gave each of their persons a quick visual scan. They were both dressed with buttons aligned and zippers up and clothes right-side out. There were no spectacular bedhead or egregious stains to be seen. Having been the focus of unwanted attention a few months before, being stared at still gave Lindsey the odd twinge of anxiety.
Sully put his arm around her in a comforting gesture and pulled her close, kissing the top of her head. “Wild guess here, but I imagine it’s because we’re getting married in just over a week.”
“Yes, but it’s a tiny ceremony on Bell Island,” she pointed out. “Just family and close friends, hardly an event worth noting.”
“People like weddings.” He shrugged.
“Sully, Lindsey, yoo-hoo!” A voice called, and Lindsey glanced past Sully to see Mrs. Housel, coming at them as fast as her short legs could carry her. Heathcliff hopped to his feet and began wagging his bushy black tail, looking for love from anyone willing to give it.
“Morning, Mrs. H,” Sully said. “What can we do for you?”
“I just need to know where you’re registered,” she said. She was breathless, but still bent over to pat Heathcliff on the head before rising back up to smile at them.
“Registered?” Lindsey asked.
“Yes, you know, for a wedding gift,” she explained. “I can’t possibly show up at your wedding without a gift. It would be bad form.”
“Uh.” Lindsey glanced at Sully in a mild state of panic.
Mrs. Housel was one of Lindsey’s favorite patrons. They had bonded over a deep and abiding love of all things Agatha Christie. A tiny little bird of a thing, Mrs. Housel was the sweetest of the sweet. She lived on a fixed income in a modest c
ottage in the old part of town. Telling her the wedding was private and that she wasn’t invited would be like punting a puppy into oncoming traffic. Everything inside Lindsey rebelled at the mere idea. Judging by the flicker of alarm in Sully’s eyes, he was thinking the same thing.
“Mrs. H, Lindsey and I really appreciate the thought,” he began, and then he stalled out. Sully’s heart was as big as one of the tour boats he captained around the Thumb Islands in the bay, and Lindsey knew he was struggling to find the right words. She immediately decided having one more guest wasn’t going to be a problem, especially one as tiny as Mrs. Housel.
“We haven’t registered anywhere,” Lindsey said. “In fact, we’re asking anyone who attends our wedding to donate a book to the library instead of giving us gifts.” This much was true, at least.
Mrs. Housel clasped her hands over her heart. “How wonderful. I just love you two. You’re like family to me.”
“And we love you, Mrs. H,” Sully said. He looked oh-so relieved.
Mrs. Housel reached forward and squeezed their hands with hers. Then, with a wave, she fluttered out of the bakery as quickly as she’d arrived.
“That was nice of you, darlin’,” Sully said.
Lindsey shrugged. “What’s one more guest when it clearly means a lot to her? Besides, she’s so tiny. How much could she possibly eat?”
“Yeah, it’s like inviting a hummingbird to the wedding,” he agreed.
Lindsey smiled, then she tipped her head back to meet his gaze. He was wearing his thick wool peacoat, a knit hat over his reddish brown curls and the scarf Lindsey had knit him last winter that matched his eyes perfectly. His cheeks were ruddy from the cold, making his bright blue eyes even more so. Lindsey felt her heart squeeze. He was going to be her husband in just a matter of days.
The thought never ceased to make her dizzy. She knew it was silly, that some would say marriage was just a piece of paper, but it felt like more to her. Much more. She was committing her life to his, a promise she didn’t take lightly, and she found the thought alternately thrilling and terrifying, but definitely more thrilling.
“What are you grinning at?” he asked. A smile played on his lips, bracketed by deep dimples in each cheek.
“We’re getting married,” she whispered as if she was giving him brand-new information.
“Well, I, for one, can’t wait,” he said. “‘Mrs. Mike Sullivan’ has a nice ring to it.”
“As does ‘Mr. Lindsey Norris,’” she retorted.
“It does at that.” He grinned and kissed her quickly before gently moving her up the line.
Brendan Taggert was working the counter. He grinned at the sight of them. “There’s the bride and groom! Not much longer now, eh?”
Brendan was a big man in his mid-thirties. He was the chief baker and occasionally came out of the kitchen to lend a hand at the counter when the bakery was especially busy. He gave them each a large coffee in a thick paper to-go cup and pushed a bag of muffins at Lindsey while Sully paid. She glanced inside to find their usual, a lemon–poppy seed for Sully and a cranberry-walnut for her. The morning was looking up.
“Your wedding cake is going to be a thing of beauty,” Brendan declared.
“Since you’re baking it, I have no doubt,” she said. Brendan was a wizard with fondant.
“I am a little worried, though.” Brendan rubbed his jaw with the back of his hand.
“Oh?” Lindsey tried to keep the panic out of her voice, but the week before a wedding, a woman did not want to hear her cake baker expressing doubts. She knew she’d failed when Sully gave her shoulder a reassuring squeeze.
“Yeah, I don’t think you ordered a big enough cake,” Brendan said. “I hear people talking in the bakery all day long, and it sounds as if a lot of folks are planning to attend your big day.”
Lindsey and Sully exchanged confused looks. Was Mrs. Housel not the only one planning to crash the wedding?
“But we’re keeping it small,” Sully said. “Just family and close friends.” He frowned, clearly not understanding how it could be spiraling out of their control.
“I don’t know what to tell you.” Brendan shrugged. “You’re the town boat captain, a native son no less, and she’s the library director. Everyone knows you two, and they’re very invested in your romance. Whether you invited them or not, it sounds like people are planning to attend. You’re going to want a bigger cake. I’m just sayin’.” Brendan raised his hands as if to signal that he’d done his part in warning them.
Lindsey felt her heart pound hard in her chest. Surely, he was overstating it. People didn’t crash weddings en masse, did they? Then she thought of Mrs. Housel and her determination to be at their wedding, declaring that they were like family to her. How many other Briar Creek and Thumb Islands residents felt that way? Oh, no.
* * *
* * *
A puppy—not Heathcliff, who’d gone to work with Sully—romped past the circulation desk where Lindsey Norris stood. White, with floppy ears and a stubby tail, its coat was covered in bright spots of purple, green, yellow and all the other colors in the rainbow.
It was a big puppy, more like the size of a small horse. Lindsey squinted at it. Sure enough, a closer look identified the canine as being the Briar Creek Public Library’s children’s librarian, Beth Barker, wearing what looked like adult-size footie pajamas that she’d tailored to look like a dog by adding ears to the hood, a tail to the bottom and spots all over.
“Reading Dog’s Colorful Day today?” Lindsey asked.
“Woof!” Beth barked. “Colors and counting, does it get any more fun?”
“It does not,” Lindsey agreed. “Unless it’s crafternoon Thursday and we’re discussing A Christmas Carol by Dickens.”
Beth stopped romping, and her eyes sparkled. A thick thatch of black bangs stuck out from under her hood, giving her delicate features a mischievous air.
“Do you think Nancy made cookies?” she asked. She hugged her belly, where her new status as a mom-to-be was just beginning to show. “She’s in charge of food this week, and baby and I are craving some of her Scottish shortbread.”
“No.” Lindsey shook her head, knowing full well that Nancy, who was her former landlord and a good friend, had surely made some. Then she teased, “But I’ll bet she made you some dog biscuits.”
“Woof, woof, so funny,” Beth retorted. Then she looked thoughtful and scratched one of her dog ears. “Actually, if Nancy made them, they’re probably pretty good.”
“Fair point.” Nancy was their local amateur baker extraordinaire and was known all over Briar Creek for her magical cookies.
“Whatever she brings, save some for me. I’m eating for two!” Beth cried, as she scampered off to the story time room in anticipation of the toddlers who would begin arriving in the next thirty minutes.
Petite in build and swallowed up by her slouchy dog outfit, Beth looked like a kid herself. Lindsey smiled. The town was very fortunate to have such a dedicated librarian. Beth’s programs packed the house, making a delightful connection with the next generation of enthusiastic readers.
“Well, that should be quite a fun story time.”
Lindsey turned to find Ms. Cole—nicknamed “the lemon” for her frequently sour disposition and old-school librarian ways—standing beside her.
Lindsey blinked. “Are you feeling all right, Ms. Cole?”
Today Ms. Cole was in her purple outfit. Purple tights with a dark purple wool skirt, matched—sort of—with a twilight-hued purple cardigan and a lavender silk top. It gave her an overall ombre effect that was actually rather appealing. Ms. Cole favored outfits that fell distinctly into one category on the color spectrum, so apple green was worn with chartreuse and forest green as if they all matched. They didn’t. In fact, none of her outfits really matched, but neither Lindsey nor any of the other staff had the hear
t or nerve to tell her so.
“Yes, I’m fine. I’m trying to be less rigid,” Ms. Cole said. She glanced at Lindsey over the tops of her reading glasses. “How am I doing?”
“Well, you didn’t shush her,” Lindsey said. “I’d call that a big improvement.”
“I haven’t shushed anyone in months,” Ms. Cole said. She sounded forlorn. “My shusher has probably atrophied, but Milton told me that if I’m serious about running for mayor, I might want to be friendlier to my constituents.”
Milton Duffy, town historian and president of the library board, was Ms. Cole’s significant other. Ms. Cole had squashed any use of the word boyfriend, saying it sounded ridiculous to call a man in his eighties a boy, and she wouldn’t tolerate being called his girlfriend either.
“He didn’t tell you to smile more often, did he?” Lindsey teased. “Because that would be annoying.”
Ms. Cole laughed, which was a rare occurrence, and it made Lindsey smile. “No, he didn’t. He did say I needed to start attending all the town events so that I become more well known. I’m even going to the Briggses’ Annual Christmas Bash this weekend.”
“You are?” Lindsey could not have been more surprised if Ms. Cole had said she’d taken up exotic dancing for fitness.
“Yes,” Ms. Cole sighed. “I’ve lived in Briar Creek my entire life, and I have never attended one of the famed Briggs Bashes. I thought I’d be shuffling off this mortal coil with my streak intact, but politics make strange bedfellows, as they say.”
It was a wise political move. Steve Briggs was a corporate attorney, one of the wealthier residents of Briar Creek, and he was also the local justice of the peace. Ms. Cole needed to have his endorsement if she was to stand a chance against the incumbent, Mayor Hensen.
“Steve’s not so bad,” Lindsey said. “A little over-the-top in his enthusiasm for his parties, but during the holidays, that’s not such a terrible thing.”
The Briggses threw a holiday extravaganza every year. Lindsey and Sully always made an appearance because Sully and Steve had grown up together in Briar Creek and were, if not quite friends, then very warm acquaintances. While the parties were fun, Lindsey and Sully never lingered. Being an introvert at heart, Lindsey had a two-hour window for the overcrowded, loud sensory overload that was a Briggs party, and Sully was right there with her. If ever she needed proof that they were soul mates, that was it.