Dead to the World

Dead to the World

by Susan Rogers Cooper
Dead to the World

Dead to the World

by Susan Rogers Cooper

Paperback

$17.95 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

E.J. has a surprise twentieth wedding anniversary present for Willis – a weekend away in the Texas hills. She’s found the perfect Bed and Breakfast – the Bishop’s Inn in the quaint town of Peaceful. Unfortunately, they’ve barely arrived before the inn’s troubled elderly owner, Carrie Marie Hutchins, confides in them about a harrowing event from her childhood involving her dead father . . . and his spirit, which won’t go away . . . E.J. has little time to digest Carrie’s tales of strange goings-on: screaming, the guests’ suitcases slashed, underwear hanging from a light fixture, before a further bizarre twist occurs: Humphrey Hammerschultz and Diamond Lovesy, self-proclaimed ‘psychic detectives’, suddenly turn up at Carrie’s door. And when E.J. discovers a body, she determines to find out what’s really going on in this not-so-peaceful town.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781847515599
Publisher: Severn House
Publication date: 09/01/2015
Series: An E.J. Pugh Mystery , #12
Pages: 224
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Susan Rogers Cooper is half-Texan, half-Yankee, and now lives with her family in a small town in central Texas. She is the author of the ‘E.J. Pugh’ series and the ‘Milt Kovak’ series, amongst other books.

Read an Excerpt

Dead To The World

An E.J. Pugh Mystery


By Susan Rogers Cooper

Severn House Publishers Limited

Copyright © 2014 Susan Rogers Cooper
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-84751-559-9


CHAPTER 1

Willis and I take turns planning our anniversary celebration every year. This year was my turn, and since it was the big two-oh – yes, folks, twenty years married to the same man – I was pulling out all the stops. Knowing that in five years it would be our truly significant twenty-fifth, I decided this would be great, yet a little understated. Travel, but within reason. Since we both loved the Texas hill country, that would be my destination. Doing my research, I found the small town of Peaceful, Texas, north of San Antonio, west of Austin and just a smidgen away from Bourne. It was full of antique stores, boutiques and restaurants. All the goodies.

I wanted this to be a surprise, so I packed a suitcase for the two of us and stashed it in the trunk of my Audi TT Roadster (a two-seater I bought with an extra-big book check), and told him we were going for a drive. This was on a Friday afternoon.

Things were OK at home – my three girls are all seventeen now, and my college-aged son has been living with my mother-in-law. We were just going to be gone Friday and Saturday, back on Sunday, and with Elena Luna, our police detective next-door neighbor on the alert, I figured I didn't need to worry about them getting into too much trouble.

Willis and I got in my beautiful sports car with me driving and headed west. I call him Grandma Willis for his less-than-stellar driving skills. He calls me a stunt driver – which I think is grossly unfair. I never go more than five to ten miles over the speed limit – unless I'm really in a hurry. He sets the cruise control on his Texas clown truck (one of those big trucks balanced on way too big tires that means you have to have a ladder to climb into the damn thing) to the exact speed limit. He also stops at green lights. Not necessarily a complete stop, but irritating none the less. I, on the other hand, spent my formative driving years in Austin at the University of Texas and picked up the Austin rule of thumb concerning traffic lights: it doesn't matter at what point in the yellow light sequence you are – run it. And a red light is really only slightly more than a suggestion.

Once we were west of Austin, getting into the hill country and its winding roads up and down steep hills, I hit the accelerator and got into some serious driving. It infuriates me when people in front of me have to slam on their brakes for a rolling turn or going down a barely steep hill. I mean, come on folks, you accelerate into a turn, and why do you have to stop to go downhill, for God's sake? Willis, of course, spent the entire time with one hand clutching the door and his left foot raised to the dashboard – which is a feat and a half for a guy who's six foot three and most of that's leg.

The convertible top on my Audi was down, the spring sun was shining on us and the wind was kissing my cheeks. I had had my curly copper-red hair chopped off recently so the wind wasn't going to do much damage on that score. I loved the new do – definitely wash and wear. Get out of the shower, towel it dry, hand comb it, give it a toss and there you go. Willis said it made me look like Little Orphan Annie, but I think he's just jealous because there's more hair on the floor of the tub after his shower than on his head.

Being April, the sides of the back roads I was taking had sprung to life with bluebonnets, Indian paint brush, primroses and other Texas wild flowers whose names I didn't know. Suffice it to say there was a riot of color on both sides of the road, interrupted only by a steep, rocky hill or a large-limbed oak tree, and there was a plethora of both. In front of us we could see hills of all shapes and sizes and, like clouds, you could identify a dog or a rabbit or a guy with a flat-top. The roads swooped up and down, a hair-pen curve here, a ninety-degree turn there. And I made them all going somewhere between seventy and eighty miles an hour. Which, personally, I just don't think is all that excessive.

At about four in the afternoon we pulled into the outskirts of Peaceful. Like many a small town in Texas (and I'm sure other states as well), the outskirts were scattered with car graveyards, junk dealers, auto repair shops and the like, but once past those we found ourselves in a quaint little village of Sunday houses and ornate cisterns. I knew from my reading that Peaceful was founded by German immigrants, and the ornate cisterns were straight out of the old country. They had stored water before the town had its own reservoir, but were now home to small shops and tea rooms. Some were shaped like small windmills, others patterned after the Sunday house they'd belonged to. For those not in the know on Sunday houses, that was a tradition where wealthy farmers and ranchers would buy a house 'in town' and the family would drive in on Saturday, buy whatever supplies they needed, spend the night in their second home and go to church on Sunday.

Our destination, The Bishop's Inn, was on a street called Post Oak, two blocks off the main thoroughfare, which, strangely enough, was called Main Street and looked just like the pictures I'd seen on their website. The house was a beautiful Victorian in excellent condition, with a garden my black-thumbed self envied beyond reason. We parked in the small parking lot adjacent to the house, and I confessed all to Willis.

'But I was supposed to play handball with Jim tomorrow!'

'I told his wife that you had to cancel.'

'You what?'

I sighed. 'Willis, this is our twentieth wedding anniversary! Cut me some slack here, OK?' Had the asshole forgotten it was our anniversary? Was he that big a douche? All the fun was slipping out, quickly replaced with a building anger – and, I'll admit, a little sadness with a touch of embarrassment.

Then my husband of twenty years grinned at me. 'Good thing I decided to bring this along on our, excuse the expression, "drive."' And he pulled a small box out of one of the pockets of his cargo pants and handed it to me. He did remember! He was just giving me grief, like only he could. I leaned over and kissed him, and he kissed me back, putting a little more into it than you'd think after twenty years. Which was a good thing.

Once that had ceased, I unwrapped the box and opened it. Winking at me from the depths of a ring box was a diamond. I'm not well versed in diamonds, having never had one, but this looked to be at least a full karat. I stared at it – a baguette-shaped solitaire – then up at my husband. Then back at the ring.

'Wha—' I started, then stopped.

Willis was shaking his head and laughing. 'E.J. Pugh, speechless! I never thought I'd live to see the day!'

'But ...'

He took the box out of my hand, removed the ring and held up my left hand. 'When I asked you to marry me twenty years ago, all I had to give you was that stupid friendship bracelet that your roommate made into a ring for me. And still you said yes. I was looking for something in our bedroom the other day and happened to open that big old jewelry box of yours. There it was – that friendship ring – all the threads losing their color, just sitting there. I couldn't believe you'd kept it all these years. That's when I decided it was about time you got a real engagement ring.'

He lifted my ring finger and slid the ring on it. The gold of my wedding band matched the gold of the engagement ring perfectly. And, as if in on a private joke, the diamond winked at me. 'I love this, Willis,' I said, and kissed him again, 'but it doesn't mean you can touch my original engagement ring! That stays right where it is, you hear?'

He put up his hands in surrender. 'Jeez, I thought you were only sentimental about the kids!'

I really wasn't paying that much attention. I was staring at my hand with the beautiful new ring. I really needed to do my nails.


It took a little longer than would seem necessary to get out of the car, grab our one bag and head up the seven steps to the front door of the Bishop's Inn. The inn itself was painted a subtle gray-blue, with wine-red shutters and white accents. The floor of the deep front porch had been fairly recently painted white and held white rocking chairs and two porch swings, one on each side of the porch. Willis went up to the wine-red door and used the lion's head knocker.

There was no answer, so he knocked again. Still no answer. He turned and looked at me.

'We have reservations,' I said. 'Try the knob.'

He did and the door swung open into a wide foyer, empty of people but well-appointed with an ornate antique coat rack, an antique grandfather clock and an antique half-circle pedestal table with a cut-glass vase atop it. The vase contained multicolored roses that were beginning to all turn the same shade of dead brown.

'Hello?' Willis called out.

'Miss Hutchins?' I said. Miss Hutchins, the owner, and I had corresponded through email about the reservation weeks ago.

There were rooms to the right and to the left of the foyer. The room on the right appeared to be a living room/parlor; the one on the left was outfitted as a library. Coming off the library was another room – a formal dining room. As we stepped toward that, we saw the staircase on the right, with a hall between it and the living room that led to more rooms. We heard steps on the staircase and looked up. That's when we heard a tiny squeak come out of the mouth of the woman descending the stairs.

She was an older lady, probably in her seventies or eighties, with a halo of thinning white hair, fading blue eyes, thin, and with a handicapped right arm. 'You startled me!' she said, stopping on the landing, her left hand clutching the area around her heart. 'Who are you?'

Her voice was thin and reedy, and a little trembly. I said, 'Miss Hutchins? I'm E.J. Pugh. I emailed about reservations?'

She continued to stare at me for a full minute, then turned to stare at Willis for another minute. Then said: 'Well.' She continued to stand where she was – on the landing – still clutching the material of her blouse above her heart.

'Is there a problem, Miss Hutchins?' I asked.

'Problem?' she said. 'Well, yes, I guess you might say that.'

'May we do something to help?' I asked.

Another minute of staring. Then she said, 'Thank you, but I don't really see how you could.' Tears sprang to her eyes. 'I don't think anyone can help.'

I slowly walked up the stairs to the landing and took her by the arm. 'Let's go to the kitchen and make some tea, shall we?' I asked.

We slowly descended the stairs and she replied, 'I'd prefer a shot of whiskey, but I know you mean well.'


The kitchen was bright yellow with new appliances but old painted cabinets and bright white Formica counter tops. There was a large round claw-foot table in the middle of the room (I'd mention it was an antique, but I have a feeling that word's going to be a description for almost everything in the house), and we sat down on old ladder-back chairs. She pointed at a cabinet in which I found a bottle of Tennessee sipping whiskey and three glasses, and brought it all to the table. I poured each of us two fingers, then the old lady took the bottle from me and added two more to her glass.

'I'm not much of a drinker,' she said and downed the glass. 'But lately it seems like the best solution.'

I lifted my glass and smelled the whiskey. It made me want to throw up. I set it back down. Give me a nice daiquiri or a tequila sunrise, but straight whiskey? Not my poison of choice.

I touched the old lady's hand. 'What's the problem, Miss Hutchins?' I asked.

She squeezed my hand. 'Call me Carrie Marie,' she said, and tried a tentative smile. Her false teeth were an awesome white even against her pale skin. 'Well, you see, my daddy has come back. Which is a hell of a problem.'

Willis and I looked at each other – both thinking the obvious, I'm sure. At her age, her 'daddy' had to be in his hundreds, right?

'Your daddy?' Willis said. 'You mean your father or your husband?'

Carrie Marie gave him a horrified look. 'My father, of course! That's just sick!'

'Oh, no, ma'am,' Willis started, 'I mean—'

'Young man, I think you've said enough,' the old woman said, and turned her face away from Willis.

'He meant no disrespect,' I said quietly. 'It's just that some women call their husbands daddy.'

She looked from me to Willis and back to me. 'Why in the world would they do that?' she asked, her faded blue eyes big and round.

I shrugged. 'I have no idea, but some do.'

'Well, I've never married,' she said, and pointed at her disfigured arm. 'Men don't like girls who aren't whole, you know.'

I started to open my mouth to confront her with the political incorrectness of her statement, then thought better of it. 'So let's get back to your daddy being back,' I suggested.

'Certainly,' she said. 'Well, first, you know, he killed Mama back in 'forty-five—'

'Excuse me?' Willis said.

Carrie Marie looked at my husband and proceeded to repeat herself slowly and succinctly. 'He. Killed. My. Mother. In nineteen forty-five.'

'I'm so sorry, Carrie Marie!' I said. 'That must have been awful!'

'Oh, it was,' she said, filling her glass yet again with the Tennessee sipping whiskey. 'I found her body and him standing over her with a knife or something in his hand.' She took a long sip and nodded her head. 'Yep. Awful is a good word for it.'

'Is he out of prison now?' Willis asked.

'Prison?' she repeated. 'Oh, no! He didn't go to prison. Nobody believed me when I told 'em my daddy killed her.'

'Why not?' I asked.

She drained her second glass (I was losing track of the finger amount) and said, "Cause he got killed on D-Day. We were sent his dog tags and everything. Still got 'em. And they say there was no mistake.'

'So he went to war after he killed your mother?' Willis asked, a frown on his handsome face.

'No, no,' she said. 'Mama died after we got the telegram from the War Office. Gosh, it had to have been close to eighteen months since D-Day.'

'Then how—' Willis started.

Carrie Marie looked around the room, as if to make sure we weren't going to be overheard, and whispered, "Cause it's my daddy's spirit, y'all! He'd come back from the dead. And now he's back again!'


Not much later we were in a suite on the second floor. There was a sitting room with a camel-backed sofa and an easy chair, both covered in a blue willow-patterned brocade. Two paintings of blue bonnets graced one wall, while a second held large windows and a French door leading to a balcony overlooking the back garden. The bedroom held an antique four-poster bed that had been adjusted to queen-size, and covered with a blue willow-patterned comforter. A second wall of windows overlooked a side garden. The bathroom was one door down and contained the largest claw-footed bathtub I'd ever seen, with a toilet that had a chain one used to flush. Being early spring, Miss Bishop had opened the windows to air the room out before leaving us alone.

Before leaving, however, she'd said, 'I've lost so many customers to daddy's shenanigans that I had to let my helper go. I don't climb these stairs often, so if you need something you might want to come downstairs to tell me.'

'We'll be fine,' I assured her as I closed the door behind her. Leaning against it, I looked at my husband. 'Well,' I said.

'So get your phone out and find us another place to stay,' Willis said.

I pushed away from the door and shook my head. 'Can't. There's a big bicycle ride going on this weekend and every room in three towns is in use.'

'So you took the last room available?' he said, giving me the evil eye. 'Didn't you wonder why nobody else wanted it?'

I sank down on the camel-backed sofa. 'Honey, I didn't know about the ride when I made the reservations three weeks ago! I wanted to make reservations for dinner and I tried calling the only restaurant in the area fancy enough to take reservations but the guy told me they were full up the entire weekend, and that all the hotels, B&Bs and motels were too. I just felt lucky that I got this reservation when I did.'

Willis sank down beside me. 'Oh, yeah, boy are we lucky. In a haunted house with a crazy lady.'


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Dead To The World by Susan Rogers Cooper. Copyright © 2014 Susan Rogers Cooper. Excerpted by permission of Severn House Publishers Limited.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews