Murdering the Roses (A Heavenly Highland Inn Cozy Mystery) (4 page)

BOOK: Murdering the Roses (A Heavenly Highland Inn Cozy Mystery)
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"I'm sorry," Mitchell said quickly. "It's just one of the first questions we always ask in the case of a homicide," he reached up and perched his hat back on top of his head so he could continue to take notes. "Did you notice anything out of the ordinary this morning?" he asked, still avoiding looking directly at her.

"No," Vicky said firmly, she had been through it many times in her mind. "I just walked into the garden, and I…" her voice broke off slightly. She had never experienced anything so disturbing before.

"It's okay," Mitchell said gently and reached out to softly caress her shoulder.

"Deputy Slate," the sheriff called from behind him in a sharp no nonsense tone. Sheriff McDonnell was a surly looking man. He had a round belly that caused his tan uniform shirt to be strained and a black mustache that hung limply over his mouth. He wore a broad hat similar to a cowboy and his piercing, brown gaze always seemed to be accusing someone of something.

Mitchell drew his hand back quickly and turned to fac
e the sheriff with a slightly guilty expression.

"Can you tear yourself away from your lady friend long enough to give me an update on the corpse in the garden?" he asked in a short tone. He swept a judging glare over the two
sisters.

"Oh
, yes of course," Mitchell mumbled and looked over the notes he had made. "Well, he was discovered this morning by Ms. Braydon, and so far that is all we really know. It does look like he was bludgeoned with something, maybe a shovel, or a baseball bat."

“How awful,”
Sarah winced at the details and tugged lightly at Vicky's arm. "Maybe we should go inside, and get out of the officers way so that they can clear out the body."

"Wait just a minute," the s
heriff called out as he stomped up the steps of the front porch.

"First of all, no one is moving that body until all of the forensic evidence is collected," he said sternly.

"But Sheriff I have a wedding set to take place in that garden this weekend," Vicky protested, her eyes wide with surprise. She had assumed they would be done with their investigation by the end of the day.

"I'm sorry if this poor fellow's misfortune ha
s caused you any trouble," the sheriff said rather rudely and narrowed his eyes. "Now from what I understand from questioning the other employees, there weren't too many people that actually liked this fellow Bob. Did the two of you have anything you were arguing about?"

Vicky
's eyes widened at the idea that the sheriff was actually questioning her, as if she might somehow be involved.

"Of course not. I hired him as a favor, and he simply wasn't good at his job, so I was going to fire him," she frowned as she realized that could very well paint her as a suspect. Then
Vicky suddenly remembered the argument that Bob had had with the chef. Was it possible that it had continued after she left? Did they fight so badly that it had ended in murder? She couldn't imagine Henry ever doing something like that. But maybe Bob had confronted his brother, or maybe his brother had finally hunted him down.

"Did you notice anyone suspicious around this mor
ning, or maybe yesterday?" the sheriff asked, taking over the questioning for Deputy Slate who asked a few questions of Sarah about the property itself.

"No,"
Vicky said carefully, and then she thought better of it. She didn't want to be accused of withholding information. "Well, he did mention he had a falling out with his brother over some money he owed him. Apparently his brother had been trying to find him.”

"I see," the s
heriff nodded to Mitchell for him to make a note of her words, which Mitchell did. “We'll make sure that we look into that. Now would you mind showing us where the shovels and other tools might be stored. Maybe our murderer used a shovel and decided to put it back where he got it from," Sheriff McDonnell said hopefully. He wanted the case to be solved before lunch.

"The garden shed is just around back,"
Vicky began to explain to him. The sheriff smiled at her in a way that was not at all friendly.

"Why don't you show us?" he suggested with thinning patience. The last thing
Vicky wanted to do was walk back through that garden. But she knew that the sheriff already had something against her, so she decided to cooperate as much as possible.

“I'll go with you,”
Sarah suggested quickly when she saw the discomfort in her sister's expression.

"No it's a
ll right, you take care of the guests," Vicky said to Sarah as she walked down the front steps. Mitchell followed closely after her.

“Don't worry
Sarah, I'll stay with her,” he assured Sarah.

"Yes, and do get me a list of your guests please
Sarah," the sheriff requested sternly. "I want to know everyone who checked in or out in the past week, understand?"

Sarah
nodded and stepped back into the inn. Vicky walked carefully through the garden with Mitchell remaining closely at her side. She kept an eye out for anything else she might trip over.

"This is the shed," she said as she stopped beside a large wooden structure. "Oh," she murmured as she looked closely at the lock. "Well
, that's strange," she started to reach for the lock, but Mitchell grabbed her hand before she could. His touch inspired a quick increase in her heartbeat that startled her. He had noticed that the lock was broken as well.

"Fingerprints," he explained as he quickly released her hand and ducked his head to hide a blush. He nodded to one of the gloved officers who carefully opened the door to the shed.
Inside it looked as if a tornado had struck. Everything that was normally neatly stored on the shelves that lined the walls had been tossed down onto the floor. Pots and bags of soil were overturned and even ripped open. Buckets had been emptied out all over the floor. It was such a mess that Vicky wouldn't even know where to begin to clean it up.

"Seems like someone was looking for something," Mitchell said quietly as his gaze stroked over the horrible mess.

“The question is, did he find what he was looking for?” the sheriff wondered out loud as he peeked in the garden shed from behind them. “I think this is going to be one long investigation,” he sighed and pulled out his phone. “Better let the wife know.”

Mitchell met
Vicky's eyes as she stood outside the garden shed. He frowned as he studied her.

“I'm glad you didn't get hurt,” he said quietly. “Who knows what could have happened if you walked into the garden in the middle of the attack.”

Vicky smiled faintly at his concern. She still had a hard time reading what his intentions were, but it was nice to know that he cared.

“Actually, it looks like this man was killed sometime in the late evening last night,” one of the assistants to the Medical Examin
er said as he walked up to the sheriff to give him the information.

“Do you have a time of death?” the sheriff asked as he hung up his phone.

“Approximately midnight,” the man said with a slight nod. “Could be an hour either side.”

“Thanks,” the s
heriff said and looked directly at Vicky. “I want to speak to all of your guests, now,” he stated flatly. “Someone may have seen or heard something.”

“Oh S
heriff, do you think that's really necessary?” Vicky pleaded.

“Oh no
, it's fine,” the sheriff shrugged mildly, his tone biting. “We'll just let the murderer walk free so that your high end customers don't get ruffled,” he glowered at her.

“Excuse me?”
Vicky began to say, offended by his tone, but Mitchell stepped boldly between them.

“I'll take care of the questioning Sheriff,” he said respectfully. “I'm sure we can find
a non-intrusive way to handle this,” he assured Vicky as he glanced over his shoulder at her. Vicky was a little startled by how close he was standing to her, but she nodded at his words. She knew that he would be a lot more polite when talking to the guests.

“Fine,” she agreed as she took one last look at the messy garden shed.

“But first we need to search Bob's room, and I want to speak to any staff that might have had an issue with him,” the sheriff insisted.

Vicky
bit into her bottom lip as she realized that was going to include Henry. She knew she had no choice but to tell the truth, so she pulled Mitchell gently aside.

“Listen, Bob d
idn't work here for very long, but he did have a few run ins with the chef, Henry. Just little things, like him being unhappy about the vegetables rotting in the garden because Bob didn't harvest them, and Bob's brother apparently confronted Henry when he was looking for Bob. But Henry is a good man, and I know he wouldn't do this,” she met his gaze, hoping that he would believe her.

Mitchell studied her and then he wrote down the details of her statement. He tucked his notebook into his back pocket and smiled warmly at her.

“Don't worry Vicky, all of this will be over soon. I'll make sure I get the whole story from Henry. It looks like Bob's brother will be the prime suspect. Maybe that's what he was looking for in the garden shed, the money that his brother owed him. Did Bob ever mention how much he owed?”

“No,”
Vicky sighed quietly as she studied the scene unfolding before her. She felt regretful for not prying more into Bob's business. Maybe if she had, she would have found a way to prevent all of this.

***

While Mitchell was questioning the guests inside the inn, and the sheriff was searching Bob's room in the employees’ quarters, Aunt Ida stepped outside to join Vicky.

"
Look at all these handsome police officers,” Aunt Ida whispered in Vicky's ear. “I love a man in uniform!” 

Vicky
frowned as she leaned closer to Aunt Ida and whispered back. "Bob was definitely murdered in the garden!"

"Are you serious?" Aunt Ida gasped with horror and just
a little bit of delight. "Well, isn't that just grand!" she declared, her eyes shimmering.

"What?"
Vicky asked with shock in her voice as she turned to look at her aunt. She wanted to be sure that she had heard her correctly. Grand was not how she would describe the situation.

"Well, I mean it's not grand for Bob of course," Ida frowned as if she was offering the correct amount of grief for the man she barely knew. "He did rescue me from a spider," she said with a nod of respect. "But just
think, our very own murder mystery."

"Aunt Ida this is not one of your books,"
Vicky pointed out with a shake of her head. Aunt Ida had an affection for all things mysterious. She was always reading murder mysteries, though half the time she fell asleep after a few pages. She always said she didn't care, because she had the crime solved in the first few paragraphs.

"No it's better," Aunt Ida insisted with a grim smile as she looked over the gatherin
g of police officers. "Besides if we don't solve the murder, who will? You know none of these boys have any idea what to do about a homicide."

Vicky
considered that as she studied the mostly young men who were idly chatting with one another. Aunt Ida had a point. She couldn't remember the last time there was an actual homicide in their small town. This made it even more unlikely that she would be able to have the wedding on the weekend. She was going to have a very disappointed bride on her hands.

"You may be right,"
Vicky said quietly. "Maybe if we just help out a little by looking into things, we can get this case solved in time for the Merriam wedding."

"Oh yes, I'm sure we can," Aunt Ida nodded, pleased that
Vicky was agreeing to her plan. "With you and I on the case how could we ever go wrong?"

Vicky
laughed and shook her head as she slid her arm through her aunt's. "I don't think we could."

"So where do we start?" Aunt Ida wondered. “Should we question the witnesses, search for
evidence, or consult a psychic?”

"Well
, the garden shed was ransacked, as if someone was looking for something," Vicky said thoughtfully. "I'm willing to bet that they didn't find what they were looking for."

"Hm
m, maybe we should have a second look?" Aunt Ida suggested with a gleam in her eyes. "Maybe there's something they missed?"

“It's such a mess I don't think we could find anything,”
Vicky shook her head slightly. “Actually with everyone being questioned by the police, I think it might be a good idea if I did a check of all the rooms and make sure that nothing else has been destroyed or is missing.”

“You do tha
t,” Aunt Ida agreed with a smile as she began to walk towards the garden shed. “I'll just take a second look!”

Vicky
shook her head in amazement at her aunt. Most people would want to run away from a crime scene, but she couldn't wait to dive in. When Vicky stepped into the inn she saw Sarah looking very frazzled as she tried to explain to each guest what was happening and that they were not in any danger. From the look in her eyes Vicky could surmise that many were asking for refunds or discounts on their stay because of the disruption.

BOOK: Murdering the Roses (A Heavenly Highland Inn Cozy Mystery)
13.4Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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