BURIED IN PARADISE (PAPERBACK)
BURIED IN PARADISE (PAPERBACK)
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BURIED IN PARADISE: BOOK #4 OF THE DESTINATION DEATH COZY MYSTERY SERIES WITH AMATEUR SLEUTH HARRIET MONROE. PAPERBACK
Everyone working at The Island Resort pitches in to help make Harriet’s pilot program for young female orphans a smash success. The media gives the program rave reviews and companies are lining up to fund it.
When the latest group of orphans discovers a body, Harriet teams up with the resort's security director to find the murderer before word gets out and kills the new program. But the search for the murderer only brings up more questions. What did the dead man have to do with pirates, treasure maps, and buried treasure? Who else is involved? More importantly, can Harriet find the answers before one of her girls gets hurt?
For fans of Death in Paradise, Agatha Raisin, and Jude Devereaux’s Medlar mysteries.
PAPERBACK |
252 Pages |
ISBN |
978-1-945856-72-3 |
DIMENSIONS |
5 x 0.63 x 8 inches |
PUBLISHER |
Timberdoodle Press |
PUBLICATION DATE |
January 15, 2021 |
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FAQs: SHIPPING INFORMATION
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BURIED IN PARADISE
Chapter 1
“Mizz Mun-row, look at me!”
Harriet Monroe, public relations director for the Island Resort, smiled and waved enthusiastically at the young girl as she rode by on her gaily painted lion. Hayley was part of the second group of orphans Harriet had brought to the island from stateside.
Generous corporate sponsors and private donations were making her pet project of giving orphans a break from the often crowded and bleak conditions of the country’s orphanages a rousing success. They had already collected enough monies to fund the project through the end of the year. Even better, the orphan’s scholarship fund was keeping pace, guaranteeing a solid education for every child who desired one in the field of their choice.
Harriet took a deep breath filled with the spicy perfume of exotic flowers and let it out on a contented sigh. Ocean breezes kept the beautiful island at a comfortable eighty degrees. The Island Resort was a true paradise and she was grateful to be working there, despite some recent difficulties.
“Whee!” Happy laughter filled the air. Along with her best friend, Solomon Hayes, and two other resort employees, Harriet had taken time from her other duties to escort ten of the group’s twenty orphans to the resort’s amusement park. She was minding three of the little girls who were riding the park’s famous merry-go-round for the third time that morning.
The orphans were spending an entire week on the tropical island that was owned by the wealthiest man on the planet–her employer, the mysterious Douglas Wade. A man Harriet owed much to, but had yet to meet.
The resort hadn’t been open long but was already booked solid for the next two years. Despite that, Wade had managed to make room for Harriet’s orphans. She didn’t know the particulars of how he had managed the feat–nor did she want to–because she’d probably feel guilty.
She imagined a few people had been told that their reservations had been cancelled due to overbooking, or some other plausible excuse. However Wade had managed it, Harriet added the orphans to the growing list of things she kept in her head that she owed her employer for.
“Mizz Mun-row!” Hayley came around again, waving madly and bouncing on her lion’s back.
Harriet smiled again and waved back. She never tired of seeing the happy expressions of her orphans. This particular little girl was a real cutie with expressive brown eyes, buttery smooth caramel skin, and a gap-toothed smile that seemed undimmed by her lot in life.
One of the hotel staff had taken time from her own busy day to plait Hayley’s stiff black hair into dozens of braids that stuck out all over her head like sea urchin spines tipped with bright pink ribbons. From the way Hayley kept touching her head Harriet knew no one at the orphanage had taken the time to help the little girl with her hair.
“They look like they’re enjoying my merry-go-round.”
Harriet turned to look up at the man standing at her side. Even though she stood nearly six foot in bare feet, Harriet had to tilt her head back to see into Braxton Holliday’s smiling green eyes.
“They love it, Brax. How could they not? You did an exquisite job restoring and painting the animals. Every child we’ve brought here through the orphan program gravitates to the merry-go-round for a ride, and most of them ride it every day.”
Braxton’s fleshy lips stretched into a pleased smile. At seven foot and three hundred fifty pounds, with a gleaming shaved head and large, meaty hands, the amusement park manager looked more bear than human, but Harriet knew he had a core soft as pudding.
The merry-go-round was Braxton’s pride and joy. Over three hundred years old, it had taken him years to locate and restore the animals and other parts, and it was now the only merry-go-round in operation anywhere in the world. Harriet had recently featured it in a video ad for the resort, one of her favorite ads so far.
High-pitched screams pierced the air as a short train of roller coaster cars clanked and hummed over Harriet’s head. Designed by Aldous, a friend of Douglas Wade’s and the world’s foremost authority on historic amusement parks, the roller coaster track towered over the entire park, climbing and winding and dropping through the other rides and amusements. The coaster’s high points stood so far above Harriet’s head that it hurt her neck to look up at them.
With its steep climbs and stomach rolling drops it was easy to see why the coaster was a favorite with older children and adults alike.
Harriet refused to step foot on it.
Years before, when she and Solomon had been teenagers living on the streets of Portland, Maine, they had hitchhiked to a nearby beach town to eat salty potato fries and watch the amusement park rides. They had been dirt poor runaways at the time and couldn’t afford to go on any of the rides–filling their bellies being much more important at the time–but Harriet never forgot the excitement and sounds of that park.
She could only imagine how exciting Braxton Holliday’s park must look to the resort’s visitors. The colorful park had something for everyone no matter what age. In addition to bumper cars, the park had a speedway track that circled the park’s perimeter.
The cars had magnetic fields that automatically fluctuated to prevent crashes, either into the low walls surrounding the track or another car.
There were gentle rides for the very young, and wild, whirly rides for older children and thrill seeking adults. Rides that whipped a person in dizzying circles and even one that dropped the brave from a hundred foot tower, only to be snapped back in a series of jerks from a thick bungee cord attached to their feet.
A soft breeze carried the scent of potato fries and grilled seafood from the food court on the edge of the park to Harriet. A resort guest could spend the entire day at the amusement park riding and eating, or they could simply relax on one of the many benches scattered through the park and watch others at play.
The merry-go-round’s cheerful music wound down as it slowed to a halt. Hayley and her two companions climbed off their mounts and ran to Harriet.
“Did you see me, Miss Mun-row?” Haley asked, tugging on Harriet’s hand.
Harriet placed her hand on the child’s thin shoulder and gently squeezed. “I sure did. You looked magnificent riding that lion. Like the Queen of the Desert. What would you girls like to do next?”
The number of guests allowed at the resort at any one time were limited. That prevented crowding at any of the resort’s attractions. No matter what the girls decided to do, there would be no waiting in long lines.
“I want to go down the water slide.” Dorian, pale and freckled with violent red hair piped up in a thin, reedy voice.
“Yeah, water slide!” Hayley and Amber Lee, the third of the trio of friends, grabbed Harriet’s hands and pulled.
“How about we grab a lemonade on our way there?” Harriet said hopefully. She was thirsty but took her duties as child-minder seriously and hadn’t wanted to leave the girls unattended to get something to drink.
“I luuuuv lemonade,” Hayley assured her.
Five minutes later Harriet and her three charges made their way over the path of crushed white shells that wound through the rides, happily sipping on ice cold, tart-sweet lemonades. She listened to the young girls chatter about the merry-go-round animals as if they were live beasts and smiled to herself. Ah, to be that young and imaginative.
The roller coaster train made a brief appearance, darting out of a thick, green grove of something Harriet couldn’t identify and disappeared again. She thought she spotted Solomon’s pale blue shirt in the middle car. He had volunteered to take three of the older children on the roller coaster when they begged Harriet to go with them.
She would owe him for that. And knowing her friend, he would be sure to collect. Solomon never let her get away with anything.
A frown crossed her face as she thought about her friend. She hoped he wasn’t overdoing it. It wasn’t that long ago since Solly had almost died when he’d stepped between her and the stream from a stun gun wielded by a desperate guest.
Most of the damaged nerves and muscle tissue in Solly’s back left shoulder had been replaced. Fortunately the stream from the gun had missed any vital organs. Physical therapy had worked its magic as well, but her friend still wasn’t back to one hundred percent.
Solly never complained, but Harriet knew her closest friend inside and out. She could tell he still felt the effects of the injury. He also still had scar tissue, but he had decided to wait on plastic surgery, joking that the scars made him look like a badass.
And wouldn’t he read her the riot act if he knew she still worried about him?
Harriet forced her thoughts back to the present. Small flowering shrubs covered in brilliant red and orange blossoms and rough-barked palm trees edged the wide path, screening it from the various rides.
Tiny, colorful birds flitted through the greenery. Brilliant green geckos darted around the palm trunks looking for prey, bobbing up and down, their bright eyes missing very little. Iridescent green and blue insects gathered pollen from large showy hibiscus blossoms.
Her little group came to a fork in the path. One fork led to the water slide, the other circled back through the park to the entrance. Wooden signs identified the paths.
“Can anyone tell me what the signs say?” Harriet asked. She dropped her empty lemonade cup into one of the park’s many discreetly placed trash receptacles.
“It says . . .” Dorian scrunched her face and pointed. “That one says wa-ter-sl-ide. Water slide! That way to the water slide! Come on!” She grabbed Hayley and Amber Lee’s hands and all three girls took off down the path, their thin legs flashing in the sun.
Harriet picked up the girls’ dropped cups and added them to the trash bin. She knew she should scold them but decided now was not the time. She would bring up the subject of littering later and gently remind them that they needed to pick up after themselves.
She had discovered with her first group of orphans that it was difficult for them to grasp the degree of freedom they had on the island. They were used to a strictly regimented, austere life with more scolding than encouragement and few joys. As far as Harriet was concerned this week was all about bringing more joy into their difficult lives.
She set off down the water slide trail after the girls at a fast walk. Each attraction or ride at the amusement park had two employees monitoring it so Harriet wasn’t worried about their safety. Other than the occasional murder, the resort had yet to lose a guest.
Most of the resort’s employees had volunteered to watch over the orphans so the children wouldn’t have to stay together. The extra volunteers meant a child could do whatever they wanted during their week’s stay. The island had much to offer in addition to the amusement park.
The marina with every water sport toy known to man and the Angel Brothers Circus were popular destinations, as was the pristine beach that ran along the southern half of the western side of the island. Most of the orphans came from inner city neighborhoods and had never seen an ocean, let alone a beach of fine white sand. They were understandably giddy with the discovery that there was more to the world than what little they had experienced in their short lives.
Rounding a corner of lush vegetation, Harriet suddenly popped out of the jungle into a sunny clearing. The large water slide, with its labyrinth of twisting, open and covered camouflaged tubes, was part of a natural waterfall. The waterfall fed into a clear lagoon that had been altered only slightly to create shallower landing spots for the slides.
Water droplets from the waterfall’s spray shimmered and sparkled in the sunlight, fracturing into miniature rainbows that formed and disappeared and formed again. Tiny lizards and birds, vibrant with color, darted through the lagoon’s surrounding jungle.
The water slide was the one place in the park where the roller coaster didn’t invade. The lush growth surrounding the lagoon drowned out the noise from the rest of the park and created a peaceful oasis set with well spaced benches for sitting.
Harriet waved to the water slide attendant sitting at the base of the waterfall, his feet dangling in the lagoon. The girls were already scrambling up the subtly stepped rocks to the left of the natural waterfall. Another attendant waited for them at the top to help them into the slide.
Harriet chose a bench where she could help keep an eye on the girls and made herself comfortable. The waterfall made a dull roar as it hit the lagoon, sending up a spray of fine mist. Birds sang and insects buzzed. The gentle tropical breeze rattled palm fronds over Harriet’s head. The combination of mountain water and lush jungle kept the sunny spot comfortably cool.
“Mizz Mun-row! Watch me!” Hayley shouted down from the top of the waterfall. Dorian and Amber Lee waved from the openings of the two remaining slides. It looked as if the girls were going to race to the bottom.
Harriet knew that even though the three chutes criss-crossed each other several times, they were well separated at the bottom so all three girls could shoot out at the same time without fear of landing on top of each other.
“I’m watching!” Harriet shouted back. She gave a double thumbs up sign and settle back to wait for the girls to reappear at the bottom.
Amber Lee and Dorian popped up in the lagoon several minutes later but there was no sign of Hayley. Harriet jumped to her feet. The lagoon attendant was on his feet, wading towards the spot where Hayley should have appeared.
“Do you see her?” Harriet called. Fear clutched at her heart. She knew the water in the slide was shallow, making drowning difficult. But what if Hayley had bumped her head somehow?
“No.” The attendant shook his head. “She should have popped out by now, unless she deliberately stopped herself. The kids do that sometimes. The slide is clear until it reaches the last ten feet, so you feel like you’re inside the waterfall. It’s pretty cool. You should try it.” The attendant didn’t sound worried at all.
Harriet relaxed slightly. There wasn’t anything in the slide to hurt Hayley. The attendant most likely had the right of it, Hayley had spread her hands and feet to stop her slide down the tube.
“I wonder how long she can hold herself up there?”
The attendant shrugged. “She’s young so probably not more than a few minutes. There’s a sharp curve on a fairly level section of the tube that’s a little slower. My guess is that’s where she is. I’ll go–” he stopped talking abruptly.
“What is it?” And then Harriet saw for herself. An adult-sized body had popped out of the end of the slide, followed immediately by a scowling Hayley.
“That man blocked my slide,” she complained as she waded toward the edge of the lagoon. “I had to push him to make him get going. I want to go again.”
Harriet barely heard her. She was staring in horror at the body floating face down in the lagoon. A body with a massive dent in the back of its head.
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