Murder of a Bookstore Babe

Free Murder of a Bookstore Babe by Denise Swanson

Book: Murder of a Bookstore Babe by Denise Swanson Read Free Book Online
Authors: Denise Swanson
floor? Moving to the right, she encountered a wooden barrier. There had definitely not been anything like that in the shop yesterday.
    Sighing, she finally gave up and eased the boxes to the floor. Still unable to see in the darkness, Skye crouched. Tentatively, she reached out and touched the obstruction, then ran her hand down its length. It felt like a cabinet. Had it fallen over during the night?
    Making her way back toward the entrance, she trailed her fingers along the adjacent wall until she found a light switch and flipped it on. Brightness flooded the store. Skye blinked rapidly, blinded by the sudden glare.
    When her eyes finally adjusted, she gasped, “Risé!” and rushed forward.
    The huge, heavy rare-book cabinet that had been set against the wall was now lying across the floor. Sticking out from under it, facedown, were a head and shoulders. The shiny brown ponytail splayed against the yellow polo shirt looked vibrant and alive, but the instant Skye touched the store owner’s neck, she knew the woman had been dead for quite some time.

CHAPTER 7
    The Picture of Dorian Gray
    A squad car squealed to a stop in front of Tales and Treats, but its lights weren’t flashing and its siren was silent. Wally Boyd jumped out and sprinted toward Skye, who was slumped in one of the shop’s outdoor wrought-iron chairs. As the chief of the Scumble River Police Department, Wally worked days Monday through Friday, but knowing he’d want to be first on the scene involving a death, Skye had called him directly rather than dialing 911. Evidently, he’d stopped at the police station to pick up a cruiser before coming to the store.
    Wally’s warm brown eyes held a hint of concern as he gathered her into his arms, but his tone was light. “You can’t even visit a bookstore without finding a body, can you, darlin’?”
    “Guess not.” Skye buried her face in his muscular chest, not wanting him to see her tears. Unfortunately he was right; she’d stumbled across several corpses in the past, and it never got any easier. At least this time it appeared to be a tragic accident rather than a murder.
    Wally settled her back into her chair and handed her a starched white handkerchief. “I’ll go take a look and be right back.”
    Skye nodded, blotting under her eyes and blowing her nose.
    Wally returned a few minutes later. He tucked his cell phone into his shirt pocket and said, “Reid is on his way. He was on I-55 heading to Joliet when I called him, and he had to find a place to turn around.”
    “Okay.”
    “Are you up to telling me about it while we wait for him?”
    “Of course.” Skye took a deep breath. “Yesterday, at the grand opening, I mentioned to Orlando Erwin that I had inherited a bunch of old books.”
    “The boxes you have stacked in one of the upstairs bedrooms?”
    “Right,” Skye confirmed. “Anyway, Orlando is an expert in rare books and first editions, and he offered to take a look at what I had, to see if there was anything valuable.”
    “Is that why you were here when the store was closed? You were meeting him for an appraisal?”
    “Uh-huh.” Her teeth caught her lower lip and worked it for a moment. “But there weren’t any lights on and he wasn’t around.”
    “How did you get inside the building?” Wally ran his fingers through his short black hair, ruffling the silver strands at his temples.
    “The door was off the latch,” Skye said. “I thought Orlando had left it open for me, so I went inside.”
    “I take it he wasn’t there.”
    “No. And the main room was dark.” Skye crumpled Wally’s white linen hanky. “I figured he was in the café since he does all the baking.”
    “So you went in there?”
    “Not exactly.” Skye straightened the hem on her black skirt. “The boxes of books I was carrying were really heavy, and I didn’t want to put them on the floor since it’s so hard to lift them from there, so I headed towards the counter.”
    “In the

Similar Books

Betrayed

Ednah Walters

Her Wicked Wolf

Kendra Leigh Castle

The Bride Who Wouldn't

Carol Marinelli

Carrier of the Mark

Leigh Fallon

Shattered Vows

Carol Townend

Love and Chaos

Elizabeth Powers

Time of Trial

Michael Pryor