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  MURDER AND WINE IN THE AFTERNOON

  Peggy’s house was across the street and down from mine, and when I saw one with the door open I figured that was it. I had two bottles of wine in my arms and a taut leash, thus not afforded the freedom to look up the address on my phone.

  “Hellooo,” I said, walking in. “I come bearing wine and a lovable beast.”

  I let Bardot loose and headed inside. It was awfully quiet. There were supposed to be something like six women in this club, but I couldn’t hear any voices. The drapes were closed and I was so busy trying to catch up to Bardot at the dark end of the hall that I didn’t see the telephone table until my waist hit it, forcing me to slump across the top. When I reached the end, Bardot was scratching at the back door. It was locked from the inside with a deadbolt. I should know, every apartment door in NYC has at least three of them.

  Strange. Did they all come in through the driveway? Then why is the front door open?

  I turned the key and Bardot bolted out. When my eyes adjusted from the dark to the sunlight, I saw that she was anxiously circling a woman laying facedown on the grass . . .

  Full Bodied Murder

  CHRISTINE E. BLUM

  KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.

  www.kensingtonbooks.com

  All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.

  Table of Contents

  MURDER AND WINE IN THE AFTERNOON

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  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

  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

  Epilogue

  What the Rose Avenue Wine Club Drank

  The Rose Avenue Wine Club Glossary of Wine Terms

  Acknowledgments

  Teaser chapter

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  KENSINGTON BOOKS are published by

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  119 West 40th Street

  New York, NY 10018

  Copyright © 2017 by Christine E. Blum

  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.

  eISBN-13: 978-1-4967-1211-0

  eISBN-10: 1-4967-1211-0

  Kensington Electronic Edition: December 2017

  ISBN: 978-1-4967-1210-3

  First Kensington Mass Market Edition: December 2017

  To Mom and Dad for believing unconditionally

  Chapter 1

  You’re a long way from home, Dorothy.

  I finally had time to think about what I had just done. As I passed the Santa Monica Airport, my car loaded down with the few belongings too precious to trust to any mover, I was overcome with a stomach sinking anxiety. Which was hilarious because I had pretty much landed in paradise. My nine-month-old yellow Lab, Bardot, (think Brigitte), was taking it all in with unchecked wonderment. I was taking deep breaths and trying not to dry heave.

  New lives don’t happen overnight. I needed to give myself some slack. Heck, I’d already bought the house on Rose Avenue. So it was clear across the country. No biggie.

  The neighborhood I’d moved to was just south of the Santa Monica Airport. It is located about two miles from the Pacific Ocean in Southern California and has a rich history.

  It was originally called “Clover Field,” named after Greayer “Grubby” Clover, a First World War aviator.

  “Greayer” or “Grubby”? It’s an embarrassment of riches.

  The airport blossomed in 1926, when it became the home of the Douglas Aircraft Company, known for developing the air travel innovation the DC-3. In its heyday the company employed some forty-four thousand people, and to keep them productive, built housing on the undeveloped grasslands of the airport’s perimeter. Today, the airport hosts hangars for small planes, a dog park, sports fields and, much to the locals’ chagrin, private jets owned by celebrities and business CEOs who would otherwise be taking off over the hill in the dreaded Valley.

  Just south of the airport sits Rose Avenue. This suburban cocoon, with its homey California bungalows built up as the original owners made way for a younger, more affluent clientele, was now my new permanent address. Rose Avenue begins at the top of a hill and rolls down as it makes its way to the ocean. The closer you are to the top, the more of a sea breeze you’ll enjoy. Mine was one of the lucky “upper berth” houses. I was promised that I would never be too hot living there, and rarely too cold.

  * * *

  My alter ego “Dorothy’s” real name is Annie Elizabeth Hall. I am the only child of lovely parents who innocently gave me a perfectly fine name, unaware that Woody Allen had already claimed it as his own. Luckily people had started nicknaming me Halsey early on, so apart from events like jury duty, I am saved the bad Diane Keaton impressions.

  I think of myself as average. I’m five foot eight, not fat, not thin, have brown hair that I highlight when I have the time and funds, and a pleasant but unremarkable face. I’d be hard to pick out of a police lineup except for one feature. I have Kelly green eyes. And they tend to turn to sea foam from the salt when I cry. Believe me, I know.

  There had been too many tears recently, and I was done with that. At thirty-six I was starting over. And the wounds were fresh, so I’ll quickly summarize. I left behind a failed marriage in New York City to a self-absorbed, meagerly talented writer whose most seductively crafted line to me was, “I love you like shit.”

  I’ve been told that I am “smarter than the average bear,” and I am certainly no pushover. How could I have forgotten this the minute I saw his tight jeans and dimpled smile? I missed every sign, distracted with creating the perfect romantic life in my mind rather than in real life. Maybe it was because of my lack of training being an only child and all. Or, maybe I just don’t play well with others. Or probably, he was a better liar than I’d realized when we first met.

  The day he came home from work and passed up playing with a soft, wiggly puppy whose head was stuck in a shoe and stifled the aromas of my coq au vin with his fetid bong, I knew I was done.

  Equally so, I had had my fill of my business partner of the last three years. Starting a software apps company after the bubble was a Sisyphean enough task without having to play “mommy” to the person who was supposed to be sharing the burden. Questions like, “Can we get paid today?” o
r “Is it okay if I go home?” were not going to contribute to building the next high tech empire. Since I could technically work from anywhere, I took my toys, my puppy, and my intellectual property and followed the sun to the left coast.

  * * *

  I pulled into the driveway and took a deep breath. The smell of jasmine and freshly mowed grass had a calming effect.

  Was it too early for a glass of wine? A nice, crisp Sancerre?

  Before I hopped out, I shut the engine and sat and stared at my home. Who would have guessed that I’d be moving to a quiet, Chinese elm-lined street, and living in a dream California Craftsman? It was so suburban. It made me think of running barefoot, listening to the “sssssssh-chk-chk-chk” of the sprinklers, and waiting on a tire swing for the ice cream truck. I looked down at my navy Talbot’s shift dress and matching striped espadrilles and felt like the one chocolate in the box that nobody wants to eat. I couldn’t wait to change, this time I was going to fit in, damn it.

  Next door, of course, Marisol was outside and pretending not to prowl. I’d been warned about her when I’d come out to finalize the purchase. At the time I wondered why Vincent, the previous owner, had listed Marisol in the disclosures statement of the property sale. Typically, my realtor explained, a seller steers clear of disclosures, unless forced to by extreme conditions such as when a murder had occurred in the house, it sat upon sacred Indian burial grounds, or there was a clear image of the Virgin Mary in the wallpaper and the Vatican had been called. Vincent was a bit of a character, so I chalked this up to some real estate tomfoolery.

  To look at her she seemed harmless enough, watering her lawn in a denim housedress while eyeing the neighborhood. She kept her head down pretending not to notice me. Thin and a bit frail, she had chin length hair that she kept out of the way with small combs. It was blue black but betrayed by a band of gray at the crown.

  Time for Clairol #124, Marisol.

  I pictured her standing at the sink, an old towel around her shoulders, applying a wand of purple touch up goo to her roots. All the while using the vanity mirror to check on the backyard next door.

  My car was bouncing like a monster truck because Bardot was impatient and excited to get out and start exploring. The two of us stepped onto the front lawn and were suddenly face-to-face with Marisol.

  How did she make her way over here so fast?

  “My name is Mrs. Marisol Ysabel Rosario Priscila Cordoba,” she announced without extending her hand. “I hope there is not going to be any trouble like the last people,” she added, laying down the residential gauntlet.

  Does she know I own this house now?

  Bardot cocked her head at Marisol and then stuck her nose up the woman’s housedress. Today’s exploring had begun. I’d have to ask Bardot later what she’d learned.

  I was about to apologize and reply when I realized that Marisol was gone.

  How does she do that?

  A flash of light hit my face as her metal-screened outer door opened and closed, blinding me for a minute. I made a mental note to recheck my disclosure statements.

  I glanced past her property to the next fenced-in yard. A man I hadn’t seen before was dressed all in black and sat crouched atop an equally black motorcycle. His tall, sinewy frame formed a perfect “s” shape with the bike. The sleek, mirrored helmet revealed nothing of his face, but I could tell that he was staring at me.

  Darth Vader called and he wants his suit back. “Attitude, Halsey,” I heard my mother admonish in my head.

  I felt a chill in spite of the seventy-five-degree weather. With barely a move he started his bike and it gave off a thunderous roar. I jumped and gasped with surprise. Without looking anywhere but at me, he drove off down Rose Avenue.

  All at once Bardot and I were alone, standing on our new front lawn, far away from home and, seemingly, civilization as we knew it.

  Was all of this a mistake? I wasn’t expecting the Emerald City, but a little bit of a yellow brick road would’ve been nice.

  Then Bardot proudly squatted in front of the entire street and laid claim to our new home. As we headed in, I saw a slat shift slightly from the blinds in one of Marisol’s side windows. I stopped myself from picking up Bardot’s deposit, something I would never do, and grinned in Marisol’s direction as we walked into my house.

  A little civil disobedience was always good for the soul.

  Chapter 2

  The modest house I had first seen on the Internet, I later discovered looked pretty much like its photos. The best two features were:

  1. It had a completely separate guesthouse for my office and, because it was a corner lot, you could enter from the side street, thereby affording me a separation of work and life.

  2. There was a beautiful swimming pool in the backyard.

  The closest that I had ever come to that kind of luxury before was if during a blisteringly hot day in the City someone had popped a fire hydrant. I was hoping that once Bardot got used to it, the pool would become her aquatic doggie day care while I worked.

  The neighborhood was about as different from my last one as Randy is from Dennis Quaid. I had left a third-floor walk-up in the Village where you could hear parties, fights, and lovemaking all night long for a life in suburbia with neat lawns and the nightly aroma of outdoor grilling. I had hoped that I would spot a pink flamingo or garden gnome so that I could join in the fun, but alas, saw none. People do not appreciate kitsch enough.

  A few minutes after I entered the house, I changed and mentally tried to cleanse from Marisol’s less than heartfelt welcome and the mystery man-in-black. My iPhone reminded me that I had an important appointment at four today, my introduction to the Rose Avenue Wine Club.

  On my last trip out here, I’d been advised by my realtor to get a feel for the neighborhood before sealing the deal. I suspect that the fact that I was from New York City, dressed all in black like a mime, and held my purse tightly over my stomach, may have had him wondering if something on Melrose might be more to my liking.

  I took a walk and about halfway down Rose Avenue encountered a striking, statuesque African American woman trimming her roses.

  “Hi, I’m Sally,” she proclaimed with a smile.

  “I’m Halsey and I think I’m about to become your neighbor.”

  “Welcome to Rose Avenue, although you said ‘I think,’ having second thoughts?”

  I shook my head although I was. When I lived in the City everything and everybody annoyed me at one time or another, but I learned to brush it off because we were all dealing with the same issues. But here, a nosy, mean neighbor and a creepy guy aren’t as easily forgotten. Kind of like if you go snorkeling along a reef and see so many tropical fish that you don’t really remember any in particular, but if you come across a rock with just two fish they’ll more likely leave an imprint in your mind.

  If you saw Sally, the first word you would think of is “patrician.” She is a tall, lean, golden brown woman in her early sixties, with angular features and elegant long fingers that look like they should be holding a paintbrush in front of an easel overlooking a scenic panorama. She’s let her hair go white and that serves to add a halo around her long neck and jaw line. Her lovely oval face and broad smile exude a warm and nurturing aura.

  “SLOW DOWN YOU SHITBALL DINGLEBERRY!” Sally screamed at a speeding motorist. “They all think they can race through Rose,” she explained to me, regaining her composure.

  Pretty sure “shitball dingleberry” is redundant....

  Sally is patrician, but with balls, one of my favorite combinations.

  “Will you be available Wednesdays about four o’clock? Some of the girls on the block like to get together, we rotate houses.”

  “Oh, gee, I work during the—”

  “We usually open a couple bottles of wine,” she continued.

  “Then I’ll make sure that I move in on a Wednesday,” I said without skipping a beat.

  * * *

  I was told that we were m
eeting at Peggy’s house today so Bardot and I headed out. The months of clicker training (you look like such a fool doing that) had vanished like the results of Oprah’s diets, and my once heeling dog was trying to pull me down the block.

  I should explain a little about Bardot. She is not the big, boxy kind of Lab who, for even a scintilla of a treat, will lie contented while the kids dress her up and try to get milk from each of her eight nipples. Bardot is an American Field Lab; they tend to be smaller, much leaner, and built with a Ferrari engine. She is hardwired to run through caustically thorny brambles and crash into pond ice to retrieve whatever form of fowl you have shot out of the sky.

  It was a treat to be able to walk down the street at our own pace and smell the flowers instead of the urine of New York City sidewalks. The blue sky glistened from the sun, but that sea breeze kept the air pleasantly cool. The sounds of all kinds of birds punctuated the air in a symphony. This was sweet music, and absent was the grunting and throaty coo of the Manhattan pigeons (rats with wings) that I’d hated on sight.

  Gardeners at the house across the street were working on trimming a giant palm tree. The oldest and smallest man was perched close to the peak, held up by one strap looped around the trunk and his waist. He maneuvered using what looked like two planks of wood tied to the bottom of his boots, each had nails sticking out of them.

  Next time I’m home I will snag Dad’s old golf shoes and sell them at freeway exits....

  He was wielding a large chainsaw, and I was torn between going back in for a lawn chair to watch the disaster unfold or moving on to spare me the task of having to interview new therapists right away. I opted for the latter.

  * * *

  We passed Marisol’s house quickly; I was done with her for the time being. I noticed something in my peripheral vision, looked back and saw that she had dropped bread for the birds on her lawn.