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BETRAYED IN PARADISE (PAPERBACK)

BETRAYED IN PARADISE (PAPERBACK)

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BOOK 6 OF THE DESTINATION DEATH COZY MYSTERY SERIES WITH AMATEUR SLEUTH HARRIET MONROE.

Two months have passed at the Island Resort without a murder, missing person, or even a serious injury. Fingers crossed, Harriet hopes this becomes a new trend. No murder, no mayhem–just happy guests.

Every available room and cottage on the resort has been booked for a week-long family reunion. When the daughter of the reunion’s main organizer decides to get married that same week, Harriet jumps into high gear. Flowers, food, cake, music–the bride’s mother changes her mind on a daily basis, driving the resort staff bonkers.

With the family settled in and Harriet running interference between the bride’s mother and the staff, it looks as if the wedding will take place without any major drama–until someone turns up dead at the bridal shower. What looks like an unfortunate accident is soon revealed to be murder.

Perfect for fans of Death in Paradise, Agatha Raisin, and Jude Devereaux’s Medlar mysteries.

PAPERBACK

246 Pages

ISBN

978-1-945856-87-7

DIMENSIONS

5 x 0.62 x 8 inches

PUBLISHER

Timberdoodle Press

PUBLICATION DATE

April 10, 2022

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BETRAYED IN PARADISE
Chapter 1
Two blissful months. Sixty-five days without a murder, mayhem, or even a serious injury at the Island Resort. Harriet Monroe wished it would last indefinitely, but she felt fairly certain that she herself was going to commit murder in the next day or two.

She often took on special projects to help Cassandra Montgomery–the resort manager–because she enjoyed a challenge. It took anticipation, hard work, and focused dedication to meet all the guests’ needs–and never more so than when a wedding was involved.

This particular wedding, however, was fast becoming the straw that broke her back, or rather, the event that finally put her in the camp of “if this one person no longer walked the earth, my life would be so much better.”

The bride to be’s mother called several times a day and had been doing so for the previous two months, after her daughter and soon to be son-in-law had decided the large family vacation/reunion at the resort would be the perfect time and place to get married.

Harriet had felt excited about the wedding when Cassie first asked her to pull it together. Weddings were a time of joy, an excuse to get the family and close friends together and party. Fun times. How much more difficult could it be to expand a family reunion into a wedding?

Oodles more difficult, as it turned out.

Not because of the bride and groom, who were a lovely couple, a couple who insisted they wanted a simple marriage ceremony and a multi-tiered chocolate cake with mocha frosting and minimal decoration. Unfortunately Marolyn Packard, a.k.a. Mother of the Bride, decided the wedding had to incorporate every new idea that came to her attention. And because Marolyn obsessively stalked every wedding website to grace the internet–tasteful or atrocious–many bizarre and impractical ideas came to her attention.

Worse, Marolyn changed her mind several times a day and kept Harriet informed of every consideration, no matter how silly.

“I want Victoria to ride a white stallion to the altar on the beach,” Marolyn gushed. “It will be so romantic.” Never mind that Victoria was frightened of horses and, other than chickens, the World Wildlife Sanctuary prohibited bringing domestic livestock to the island.

“I want a chocolate fountain. It was all the rage fifty years ago. I’ll be reigniting a trend.” There was a reason the trend had died. Harriet pictured the chocolate-covered insects that would fill the fountain within minutes.


“Yellow roses.”

“Stargazer lilies. No, I changed my mind. Lilies are for funerals.”

“Purple pansies.”

Every day a different flower for the table arrangements and bridal bouquet. It had become a running joke between Harriet and Solly, who was in charge of the resort’s seven greenhouses.

“I want to release a thousand blue and white butterflies when they’re pronounced man and wife.” (Again, prohibited by the World Wildlife Sanctuary.)

“She changed her mind about the flowers again,” Harriet told Solly when he answered his link. There was no need to identify “she” by name. Solly shook his head and sighed.

“What’s the new flower of the day? Marolyn does realize the wedding takes place day after tomorrow?”

“She does. Lily of the Valley.”

“Ooh. That’s a brilliant choice for the bride’s bouquet, actually. I’ll do it. Tell Marolyn it’s too late to change her mind again if she tries. I’m going to mix in island flowers for the table bud vases and the arch and we’re done. Have you talked to the bride about her mother’s flower choice?”

“As it happens, Lily of the Valley was Victoria’s first choice. Marolyn overruled her, but eventually came around. Will you need extra hands to set everything up? I can find some volunteers if you do.”

“Nope. We’ve got it.” Solly plus his greenhouse crew of eight made nine sets of hands. Harriet checked Flowers off her list.

“Any chance you and William can come to dinner tonight?”

Solly raised one eyebrow. “You cooking? Last time you invited us didn’t work out so well. If I remember right, you turned sweet, succulent shrimp into little bits of dry, pink rubber.”

Harriet stuck her tongue out at Solly’s smirking face. So far, her recent attempts to master more than eggs and sandwiches had been an unmitigated disaster. “Yes, I’m cooking.”

“Order extra garlic bread for me and William.” He smirked and hung up before Harriet could think of a comeback. That was the trouble with having a close friend who knew you almost as well as they knew themselves. Solly guessed correctly that she wouldn’t attempt to cook again so soon after her last disastrous attempt. She sighed and called the employee canteen to order takeout for four.

Harriet’s link buzzed as soon as she ended the call to the canteen. She decided not to answer if it was Marolyn again, but when she checked the screen she saw the caller was Victoria’s maid of honor, Cynn Gaudreau.

“Miss Gaudreau. What can I do for you?”

Cynn’s face popped on the screen. Her short, spiky, bright red hair, up-tilted green eyes, and pointed chin made Harriet think of elves. The illusion shattered as soon as Cynn spoke. Her voice had a breathy, sex symbol quality to it that made her sound as if she was in the throes of an orgasm–or about to die from lack of oxygen.

Harriet sympathized with the bride’s best friend. Cynn was in an untenable position, caught between Victoria and Victoria’s mother.

“It’s Marolyn, Harry. Can you talk to her? The maid of honor is supposed to host the bridal shower, but Vic’s mother keeps calling me and telling me what to do. I told her I have it under control but she doesn’t listen. I have a plan. She needs to leave me alone.”

“I thought the bridal shower was tonight.”

“It is! Even if I agreed with Marolyn, it’s too late to change my plans again. I wanted to take Vic and her closest cousins out on the excursion party boat, but Marolyn insists that I have the shower on the rooftop restaurant. Can’t you make Vic’s mother see reason?” 

Harriet could empathize, but she didn’t want to be sucked into the role of peacekeeper. She had enough on her plate and her own problems with Marolyn. She carried her link over to the French doors that opened onto a lanai and the beach and stared out at the sparkling turquoise water. A large group of youngsters dashed in and out of the waves, screaming and shouting at the top of their voices.

   “I understand how frustrated you must be, Miss Gaudreau, but it’s not my place to speak to Mrs. Packard. Perhaps you should ask Victoria to have a word with her mother. Or speak to Mr. Packard.”

“No! Vic thinks I can handle her mother. That’s why she chose me to be her maid of honor. Forget it. I’ll think of something.” She hung up before Harriet could say anything more.

The family and wedding party had arrived two days before, filling every available room and cottage on the west side of the island. Because she had been fielding calls from them for nearly two months, Harriet had greeted them at the shuttle pad, feeling that it was important to meet the bride and groom, the bride’s parents, and the maid of honor in person.
Big mistake. Her link had rung almost non-stop since that meet and greet. For some reason, Marolyn and Cynn thought of her as their personal attendant, a general dogsbody.

“I’ll need someone to do Victoria’s and my hair.”
Harriet suggested Marolyn contact the spa and see if someone there could oblige.

“I have several outfits that will need to be cleaned.”
Call the hotel concierge, Cynn.

The beach rang with the shouts of the youngsters playing in the water. All were all first and second cousins, many meeting for the first time. Harriet wondered what that would feel like–to have an extended family so large they filled all the resort’s available rooms. She did a quick calculation–that was well over three hundred guests. Other than the maid of honor, the groom and his immediate family and the best man, all the resort guests were related.

Harriet had exactly two living relatives she was aware of and she had cut all ties with them when she was fifteen. Solly was her family, another runaway she had bonded with and kept. Happily, a few of her resort co-workers had become family as well.

A figure in a large straw sunhat stalking toward the office building from the beach caught Harriet’s eye. Marolyn Packard.

“Oh, no you don’t.” Harriet shut down her computer and turned off the office lights, then stood next to the window where Marolyn couldn’t see her. If she didn’t think Marolyn would notice the movement, she’d have closed her drapes.

A broad shadow in a floppy hat crept across the floor until it covered her desk. Harriet held her breath, sure that somehow Marolyn could feel her presence. Too late, she realized she had left the small canvas pack she preferred carrying over a pocketbook on the floor next to the desk–and her sandals lay in a jumble beneath the elegant rosewood desk.

Harriet stifled a groan when Marolyn knocked on the glass and called her name.

“Harry! Harry, I need to talk to you about the bridal shower.” The annoying knocking continued. “Harry! I know you’re in there. I need to talk to you now.”

Not a chance. This was something Marolyn and Cynn needed to work out themselves. Referee was not in her job description. Harriet closed her eyes and waited for Marolyn to go away. She heard the neighboring office’s French door open and Cassie’s voice on the lanai.

Damn. The woman had been speaking loud enough to disturb the resort manager. She was going to have to go out there and deal with Marolyn.

Cassie’s broader shadow joined Marolyn’s.
“Excuse me, Mrs. Packard.” Cassie’s tone through the glass was polite but firm. “These offices are off limits to guests.”

Harriet held her breath and waited.

“But I need to speak with Harry and she isn’t answering her link.”

“Then she must be tied up with something or someone. I suggest you leave Harriet a message. She’s a very busy person, but I’m sure she’ll get back to you as soon as she can.”

Marolyn tried to argue. Harriet watched Cassie’s shadow take the other woman’s arm and lead her off the lanai. The office manager’s French door closed several minutes later.

Harriet’s link buzzed in her hand. She let it go to voice mail when she saw Marolyn’s name. It buzzed again. Cassie’s name popped up on the screen.

“Cassie! Thank you for dealing with Mrs. Packard. The woman calls me practically every twenty minutes.”

“You can stop hiding. And don’t thank me–it’s the least I can do after foisting the annoying woman on you. I swear, I had no idea how awful she was going to be.”

Harriet peered around the edge of the glass and scanned the beach. Marolyn stood near the water with her hands on her hips. From the body language, Harriet guessed she was scolding the kids for something. Several stood knee-deep in the water, staring at their feet. A half-dozen were sneaking away behind Marolyn. It looked like Harriet wasn’t the only one trying to avoid the bride’s mother.

“You had no idea Marolyn was a control freak of epic proportions? Somehow I find that hard to believe. You must have spoken with her when she booked the resort for the family reunion.”

“Fine. I knew.” Cassie huffed out a sigh. “I owe you one.”

“And you can be sure I will collect.”

The women grinned at one another and Harriet ended the call. She listened to Marolyn’s message and erased it. It was too late to make any significant changes to the bridal shower. She only hoped that Marolyn wouldn’t do anything to spoil Victoria’s fun that night.

The Island Resort was a happy place despite the troubles they’d had. There was something about a tropical island that lifted a person’s spirit. Maybe it was the sunshine–all that vitamin D boosting the immune system and the healthy glow it painted on winter skin. Or maybe it was the positive ions given off by the sea water, sucked into thirsty lungs–all that invigorating energy coursing through the blood.

Solly thought it was the good food and slower tempo of island life that made the guests feel happy. Harriet thought it had more to do with leaving the pressures of their lives behind for a completely different environment; one where, for a short while at least, they could feel carefree and relaxed. No worries. No troubles. No anxiety.

It was the same for most of the staff. They had access to the same vitamin D, positive ions, and good food. They had beautiful, airy living quarters and working conditions that were some of the best on the planet. Since opening seven months before, employee turnover (other than a few who had to be let go) was zero.

Despite the murders of several guests and a co-worker, Harriet loved her job as public relations director for the resort. Every time she turned around, she found some new feature to highlight in her ads. One constant she focused on was the resort’s efforts to meet every guest’s needs.
Besides the wedding, the resort would host the originally scheduled family reunion party with music, a dance floor, hors d’oeuvres, and drinks.

The guests’ meals were included in the weekly resort fee, but the food and drink for the wedding and reunion party were extra and needed to be itemized, a task that fell on her shoulders. She sent up a quick prayer that the wedding would go off without a hitch.

Scanning through her lists to see what still needed to be checked off, she realized she hadn’t spoken to the resort’s chef after Marolyn’s last menu change.
Harriet had discovered early on that the best way to work with Chef was to simply tell him what she needed and then leave him alone, which suited them both just fine. Chef’s food was always a notch above superb and a major draw for the resort. She had featured his food in several ad campaigns, although the chef himself refused to be videoed.

“My food speaks for me. You don’t want my damned face in your ads,” Chef grumbled. She had tried to talk him into doing an ad focused on his standing as one of the world’s few five-star chefs, but he flatly refused. “I don’t want my ugly puss plastered all over the ass end of a bus.”

Harriet suspected that Chef’s gruff exterior hid a shy reserve, so she hadn’t pushed, even though she could have told him she never ran ads on buses – their ass ends or their sides. Bus ads did not appeal to their upscale demographic.

She was about to cut the call when Chef answered. Chef Lebrecque, a tall, portly figure with silvered, dark hair worn slicked back into a ponytail and a loud baritone that filled the room from one end of the kitchens to the other, ruled his domain with an iron fist. She would be shocked if he said he needed help, but she felt obliged to ask.

“Chef. I’m calling to see if there are any last minute items you need help with for the reunion party and wedding.”

He narrowed his shrewd, dark brown eyes at Harriet. “If the Packard woman has changed her mind again, it is too late. The food is mostly prepared.”

“She tried yesterday,” Harriet admitted, “but I told her it was too late to get in three hundred baby octopi.” She couldn’t help herself; she grinned at the expression on Chef’s face.

“Baby–” Chef spluttered a few choice swear words. “The woman is insane.”

“That seems to be the general consensus. So you’re all set? I’m checking last-minute items off my lists.”

“The food is set. No more changes.”

“Agreed. Thank you, Chef.” Harriet ended the call.
It would be a miracle if no one took out the mother of the bride before the week was up.

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