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  Copyright Information

  A Vintage Death: A Keepsake Cove Mystery © 2018 by Mary Ellen Hughes.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any matter whatsoever, including Internet usage, without written permission from Midnight Ink, except in the form of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

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  Any unauthorized usage of the text without express written permission of the publisher is a violation of the author’s copyright and is illegal and punishable by law.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either 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.

  First e-book edition © 2018

  E-book ISBN: 9780738755496

  Book format by Bob Gaul

  Cover design by Kristi Carlson

  Cover Illustration by Mary Ann Lasher-Dodge

  Midnight Ink is an imprint of Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Hughes, Mary Ellen, author.

  Title: A vintage death : a Keepsake Cove mystery / Mary Ellen Hughes.

  Description: First edition. | Woodbury, Minnesota : Midnight Ink, an imprint

  of Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd., 2018. | Series: A Keepsake Cove mystery ; # 2

  Identifiers: LCCN 2018027586 (print) | LCCN 2018028353 (ebook) | ISBN

  9780738755496 () | ISBN 9780738752273 (alk. paper)

  Subjects: | GSAFD: Mystery fiction.

  Classification: LCC PS3558.U3745 (ebook) | LCC PS3558.U3745 V56 2018 (print)

  | DDC 813/.54—dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018027586 Midnight Ink does not participate in, endorse, or have any authority or responsibility concerning private business arrangements between our authors and the public.

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  Manufactured in the United States of America

  For Madison Hughes, with love.

  One

  Ooh, lovely,” Dorothy said as she pulled an arrangement of gold and brown leaves dotted with bright red berries out of the large box she’d just opened. “And the perfect size for our lampposts.”

  Callie smiled, letting out a small sigh of relief. She’d searched long and hard for the right street decorations for Keepsake Cove, the unique section of Mapleton on Maryland’s Eastern Shore where she now lived. Filled with every kind of collectible shop anyone could imagine, Keepsake Cove had developed a reputation for stunning seasonal and holiday decorations, which highlighted the Dickensian quaintness of its shops. This, in turn, drew tourists and collectors from far and wide to admire, take photos, and of course shop. In a moment of fearlessness or madness, Callie wasn’t sure which, she had volunteered to handle that year’s autumn decorations.

  It had only seemed right at the time. She’d recently been given so much. First, the collectible music box shop, House of Melody, which she’d been shocked to inherit through the untimely death of her Aunt Melodie. Next, the touching support she’d received from so many Keepsake Cove shop owners once she took over. When the request was thrown out at the association meeting for someone to lead the decorations committee, Callie had raised her hand. It was her turn, she’d decided, and she felt good about it. That is, until her eyes ran down the extensive list of things to do.

  But Dorothy Ashby, owner of the vintage sewing shop Stitches Thru Time, had volunteered to help, and Pearl Poepelman, of Pearl’s Bangles and Beads, had offered the unused cottage behind her shop to gather and store the materials. Both offers were extremely welcome—Dorothy’s for her experience with the decorations committee, and Pearl’s because Callie had visions of boxes piling up ceiling-high in her own tiny cottage.

  She absolutely loved the cottage that sat only steps behind House of Melody. Her aunt had transformed it into a fairy tale vision with its brightly painted exterior, flower-filled window boxes, and rose-covered trellis arching over the path to the front door. But the little house was not designed for storage, barely offering space for Callie’s own belongings. A Cove-full of street decorations would totally overwhelm it.

  “I thought these pole banners could hang on the posts at intersections,” Callie said, pulling out several rectangular cloth pieces from another box, screen-printed with designs of autumn leaves, corn stalks, or scarecrows. “They’re guaranteed for two years, but with luck—and good weather—we might be able to use them longer.”

  “Love them!” Dorothy declared. “Colorful and tasteful.”

  “The shop owners will be hanging autumn wreaths on their doors and decorating their own windows, which will add to the scene. And for the big outdoor book event, I’ve snagged a wagon that we can fill with hay and pumpkins to sit nearby.

  “Wonderful! Oh, and a spooky scarecrow and a few floating ghosts would be perfect if you can get them,” Dorothy said. “Lyssa Hammond’s books are the scary, supernatural kind, you know, which is exactly why we invited her to do an event so close to Halloween.”

  “Right.” Callie’s thoughts flew to Grandpa Reed’s music box, which might have fit right in with that scene, too, with its disconcerting habit of turning itself on at random times as though commenting or sending a message. But very few people knew that, and Callie intended to keep it that way. “I understand Miss Hammond doesn’t live all that far away, in DC, but she’ll be staying at a B&B?”

  “Yes, that’s something she planned long ago. Her house will be going through major renovations. She can’t stand the muss and fuss, says she can’t possibly write with all that going on around her. So she’s taking a room at the Foxwood Inn for the duration.”

  Callie noticed Dorothy’s nose wrinkle slightly at the mention of the inn. “Is that not a good choice?”

  “Oh, it’s a lovely place. No problem there. It’s just the proprietor.” Dorothy paused. “My husband.” She laughed lightly at Callie’s puzzled expression. “You probably thought I was a widow or divorced, right? No, Clifford and I are still married. Legally, that is. We’ve been estranged for some time.”

  Callie didn’t quite know what to say to that. She had assumed the sixty-ish, soft-spoken, gray-haired woman before her was a widow, having heard her addressed as Mrs. Ashby and never having seen or heard of a man in the picture until now. So she settled for “I’m sorry.”

  “Don’t be,” Dorothy assured her. “We’re both much better off for it. The B&B was Cliff’s dream; Stitches Thru Time was mine. Despite years of ongoing difficulties between us, I gave the B&B a try when Cliff went ahead and bought it three years ago. We quickly saw it wasn’t going to work, so here I am!” Dorothy’s smile was so firmly upbeat that Callie had to return it, despite her initial impulse toward sympathy.

  Maybe it was the idea that a long-standing marriage deserved to be happier, if only for all the time and effort spent on it? But then Callie thought
of her too-long relationship with Hank. She’d been unable to shake herself free of it until her unexpected inheritance offered the opportunity to start anew in Keepsake Cove. She’d dragged along until then, less and less happy but not able to make that final decision until, at twenty-nine, she was suddenly forced to. Callie had to admire Dorothy for apparently taking the reins on her own. At her age, it must not have been easy.

  “So,” Callie asked, “is Lyssa Hammond likely to enjoy her stay at your husband’s B&B?”

  “I’m sure she will, once she gets past what I consider Cliff’s overblown greeting. He likes to play the jolly host, welcoming one and all to his home like some kind of B&B Santa Claus.” Dorothy’s nose wrinkled more firmly this time.

  A celebrity author might have to face even more of that jollity, Callie thought. Hopefully she would be able to make it to the peace and solitude of her room, laptop in hand, without too much delay. Callie pictured a bespectacled, hunch-shouldered woman, much more comfortable in the world of her fictional characters than in the real one. Knowing the author had fled her own home to escape the renovation noise and fuss, Callie hoped the large crowd expected for the book event wouldn’t be too much for her.

  “Do you happen to know when she’s checking in? I have a Keepsake Cove welcome basket to run over.”

  “I don’t know, exactly,” Dorothy said. “But I can find out. I’d offer to take the basket over myself, but I try to keep my visits there to a minimum.”

  “No problem. I appreciate all the help you’ve already given me on this committee, believe me.”

  Dorothy smiled. “Well, let’s get the rest of these boxes checked out. Then we can get everything lined up for the volunteers. You do have volunteers, don’t you?”

  “Oh, yes, several, and we’re all meeting here first thing Monday morning, since it’s the only day when everyone’s shops are closed.”

  “Sounds like you’ve got things well in hand, my dear!”

  Callie crossed her fingers that the sweet lady before her was right. In her admittedly limited experience, however, it was just when things seemed to be rolling along that bumps in the road suddenly appeared. Sometimes boulders, as had happened on her final visit with Aunt Mel.

  But there was no reason whatsoever to think that way, she chided herself. With the current beautiful autumn weather and a crew of great people working together to celebrate it in Keepsake Cove, there was nothing worth worrying about that could possibly go wrong.

  “Lyssa Hammond has arrived at the Foxwood Inn,” Dorothy informed her over the phone.

  “Great,” Callie said. “Thanks. I’ll run the welcome basket over as soon as I close up.” She was currently on her own at House of Melody, as was usual on Sunday afternoons when her part-time assistant, Tabitha, wasn’t scheduled to work.

  She hung up and glanced around her shop. One customer was browsing through the music boxes Callie considered truly collectible, the ones likely to become family heirlooms. A second person slowly circled the table of musical novelties such as the wind-up, Disney-themed snow globes that were more often chosen by vacationers returning from Maryland’s Ocean City.

  Callie’s favorites, of course, were the collectibles, and she was pleased when the customer in that section finally picked up a lovely box, whose music—Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring—had been listened to more than once. He brought it over to the front counter.

  “I’m very fond of that hymn,” he said. “And I know my wife will love this inlaid flower design on the lid.”

  “The mechanism is Swiss,” Callie informed him. “But the box itself was made in Italy. It’s beautiful, isn’t it?”

  “I’ve just started collecting these. I bought my first music box here, a year or so ago.” He handed Callie his credit card, and Callie made a note of the name on it, intending to update the list Aunt Mel had kept of regular customers and their preferences. “Another lady was here then,” he added. “Older.”

  “That would have been my aunt, Melodie Reed. She passed away a few months ago.”

  “I’m sorry. I didn’t know.”

  The man, fifty-ish and tall, looked sincerely sympathetic, and Callie had to swallow the lump that still rose in her throat, especially when the subject came up unexpectedly. She didn’t mention the circumstances of Aunt Mel’s death—a murder, which Callie herself had uncovered—but simply nodded and turned the discussion back to music boxes.

  Her second customer decided to buy a snow globe that played We Wish You a Merry Christmas. Inside the globe were two smiling cats wearing Santa hats. Callie remembered having found it at an estate sale during the summer.

  “My sister loves cats,” the plump woman said. “I’ll give this to her as an extra Christmas gift.”

  “I’m sure she’ll like it.”

  The rest of the afternoon passed with a few more sales, and Callie flipped the Closed sign at five—her Sunday closing time—and headed back to her cottage to take care of Jagger, the large gray cat who’d come as part of her inheritance.

  “Would you like a Santa hat?” she playfully asked him as he greeted her at the door, thinking of the snow globe she’d sold. Obviously considering that a silly question, Jagger quickly pivoted toward the kitchen where his food bowl waited. Callie filled it and watched the cat fondly as he dug into it, remembering her first encounter with him and the explanation of his name.

  “His previous owner was obviously a Mick Jagger fan,” Aunt Mel had said. “I kept the name when I saw how he strutted around the place like a rock star.”

  Callie sighed softly, leaned over to give Jagger’s head a rub, and then turned to get the gift basket from the small kitchen table where she’d left it. There was a variety of wrapped snack bars already in it, a sprinkling of chocolates, Keepsake Cove brochures and coupons for all the shops as well as a map for locating each, and odds and ends of special toiletries. She opened her refrigerator to pull out two perfect apples she’d picked out at a nearby farmers’ market and added them to the cache, snuggling them into the plastic grass.

  She tore off a sheet of green cellophane and wrapped the entire basket in it, gathering the ends at the top and tying them. She added a pretty bow, then stepped back to scrutinize her work. “Not bad, wouldn’t you agree?”

  Jagger paused for a millisecond in his gobbling before continuing on.

  “I’ll take that as a yes.” She lifted the basket carefully, grabbed her purse and keys, and, with a promise to be back soon, took off.

  Though Callie was becoming more familiar with the area roads, she entered the address of the Foxwood Inn into her GPS just to be safe. But not long after passing the Mapleton town limits, she found that the several signs posted to point the way were all she needed. Within minutes she was pulling up the long gravel driveway.

  As the B&B came into view, she took in the charm of its pretty Victorian style, complete with large cupola and veranda. Surrounding gardens were filled with colorful blooming mums, small shrubs, and winding trails, on which at least one guest strolled in the distance.

  Callie parked at the side and carried her basket up the steps to the front door, where a sign bid her to enter. Inside sat a hall table with a small brass bell. After waiting a minute or two and seeing no one, she jiggled the bell. As she watched expectantly down the hallway before her, a tall, rotund man suddenly emerged through a door on her left that had been invisibly worked into the wood paneling. It startled her enough to cause her to jump and nearly drop her basket, but he seemed not to notice, only clapping his hands and crying, “Welcome to Foxwood!”

  The man’s outfit matched the period of the house well: a colorfully embroidered waistcoat and wide tie over a high-necked shirt. From his manner and dress, along with his mop of gray hair, Callie was sure who he was, and she held out her hand. “Mr. Ashby? I’m Callie Reed. I’m here with a welcome gift from the Keepsake Cove Shop Owners’ Associatio
n for Lyssa Hammond.”

  “Wonderful!” Ashby smothered her hand in both of his, shaking it and smiling as delightedly as if Callie were a long-lost relative. She feared he might next throw his arms around her in a great hug, but he kept himself in check, only declaring his intention to immediately run up and summon Ms. Hammond for her.

  “Please don’t interrupt her if she’s busy writing,” Callie begged. “You could just leave it at her door.” But Ashby had already rounded the ornate bannister and was halfway up the stairs.

  “Nonsense!” he called down to her. “She’ll want to thank you in person, I’m sure.” He bounded on up as Callie watched, wavering between a cringe over causing the disturbance and an eagerness to meet someone whose name was on many, many books.

  She heard Ashby’s energetic knocks on the door and a female voice quietly respond. Soon Ashby trotted back down.

  “She’ll be down in a minute. Do come into the parlor to wait.” He waved with a flourish toward a room stuffed with heavy Victorian furniture but lightened by several tall, lace-curtained windows. Callie admired the numerous perfect details as she crossed the room to one of the velvet-covered sofas, then set her basket carefully on the floor beside her as she sat. Ashby followed behind, clasping his hands and nodding in approval, as though she’d picked the perfect spot.

  “So! You’re from the Keepsake Cove group. Wonderful event they’re setting up for our Ms. Hammond. Not that she needs any help in the publicity department. Oh, no! Her books fly off the shelves.” He chuckled delightedly at his own words. “Perfect phrase for her type of books, right?”

  Callie smiled politely. “We’re honored to have her.”

  “Good timing, too, with Halloween coming,” he said, settling into a curved-leg chair across from her. He launched into a chatter about various subjects that seemed snatched out of the air at random and required nothing from Callie beyond her presence. Her eyes began to glaze over and she thought she could understand Dorothy Ashby’s decision to separate from the man, since that was fast becoming her own urgent wish. Much to her relief she heard footsteps on the hall stairs, and Ashby popped up, declaring unnecessarily, “There she comes!”