Please welcome author Kris Bock to the blog today with an excerpt from her new mystery, Something Shady at Sunshine Haven: The Accidental Detective Mystery Series. Published by Tule Publishing, the read dropped on April 7th in eBook format and is the first book in a new series.
War correspondent Kate Tessler has followed the most dangerous news stories around the world. But can she survive going home?
Injured in a bombing, Kate returns to her hometown in Arizona to recover. For the first time in her life, she's starting to feel her age (49), even though she's living like a teenager again: staying with her father, trying to understand why her sister resents her so much, and running into people who still think of her as Kitty.
Seeing her mother in an Alzheimer's unit is the hardest part – until an old friend asks her to investigate suspicious deaths at that nursing home. Is a self-appointed "Angel of Mercy" killing patients to end their suffering? Are family members hastening their inheritance? Is an employee extorting money and removing the witnesses? Kate uses her journalism skills to track clues, but the puzzle pieces simply won't fit.
If Kate can't
uncover the truth, her mother could be next on the killer's list.
Excerpt from Something Shady at Sunshine Haven
My
childhood home had faded in the harsh Arizona sun and now showed its age—rather
like me. I’d never dreamed of living here again after thirty years of traveling
the world.
This is temporary. You’ll find a way out.
“Do
you need help?” My sister’s tone made it clear the correct answer was no. She’d
already hinted that picking me up at the airport had been one more burden in
her busy life.
“I
got it.” I eased out of the car and limped to the trunk to retrieve my travel
backpack, still getting used to my new cane. My thigh throbbed where the
doctors had dug out the shrapnel and stitched it back together with
Frankenstein scars. My usual fast stride was an awkward hobble up the walkway.
My luggage might have been “light,” considering it held everything I owned, but
it still nudged the airline’s weight limit.
The
front door opened, and I forced a smile. Jen disappeared inside, and Dad and I
stood face-to-face.
Our
smiles faltered. I dropped the backpack and stumbled into his arms. Tension
drained out of my body. I blinked back tears and felt his frailty, the tremor
in his hands. He smelled like Dad with a hint of a newer scent, something that
only seemed to come from old men.
“Welcome
home,” he whispered.
“It’s
good to be home.” I needed to rest and heal, and where better to do that than
in my parents’ house? In a few weeks—I promised myself weeks, not months, and
definitely not years—I would be well enough to return to journalism. “How’s
Mom?”
“Good.
Well, you know. She’s settled in. She can’t wait to see you.”
I
didn’t ask if she’d remember me. I hadn’t noticed signs of Alzheimer’s on my
last visit, but that had been a year ago, and Jen assured me Mom had faded
fast. She also made it clear that since I was home with no job, it was my turn
to take care of our parents.
“Sit,”
Dad said. “You need to rest that leg.”
Behind
him, Jen sighed loudly. “Don’t coddle her. She needs to stay active.” You
wouldn’t know from the way she acted that Jen was younger by two years.
Dad
winked at me. “Come and sit anyway.”
Jen
hustled outside. She glanced back through the open door. “Welcome home.” She
sped down the path without waiting for an answer.
I
closed the door and looked at Dad. “I guess I caught her on a bad day.”
“No,
just a day. Hey, a friend of yours runs the care home. She gave me a message
for you. Said it was urgent.” He shuffled through the mail on the little table
by the door.
I
couldn’t think of any friends in Arizona. I hadn’t had any here since my
childhood. My friends were scattered around the world, wherever news was
happening. If she ran the nursing home, she might hope I’d write a story on the
facility to promote it, or do some free PR work. Drat. Were people going to
treat me like I had nothing better to do than give away my time?
Double
drat. I did not, in fact, have anything better to do. And I wanted a nap.
Dad
handed me an envelope. I leaned on the door and propped my cane against the
table so I had two hands to tear open the envelope. The handwritten message
inside was brief:
Kitty—Please come see
me ASAP. I need your help.
—Heather Garcia
“She
sounded . . .” Dad hesitated. “She
asked about your journalism and begged me to bring you in as soon as possible.”
Begged?
This could be interesting after all. But who was Heather Garcia? Someone I knew
in high school, given her use of my old nickname. Maybe I’d recognize her when
I saw her. Or maybe not. I hadn’t
changed a bit, of course, but other people sure looked different after thirty
years.
“We
can go see your mother whenever you’re ready,” Dad said.
See
Mom in a nursing home, literally losing her mind? I’d never be ready for that.
“No time like the present.” Plus I could find out more about Heather Garcia’s desperate plea for help.
Kris Bock ©2022
Kris Bock writes novels of mystery,
suspense, and romance, many with Southwestern landscapes. Sign up for her newsletter
and get a free Accidental Detective short story plus a free sweet romance set in
the world of the Furrever Friends cat café. Kris also writes with her brother,
Douglas J Eboch, who wrote the movie Sweet Home Alabama. Sign
up for their romantic comedy newsletter and get the short story Felony Melanie Destroys the
Moonshiner’s Cabin. Her website is https://www.krisbock.com/ for more
information.
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