Dangerous Ground
February 18th, 2020Synopsis:
A Murder Among Friends âŠ
Everyone is anxious to connect with actor Ryan Malloy when he returns to town for his 15-year high school reunion. Everyone except crime writer Leah Nash. She doesnât have many fond memories of Himmel Highâs golden boy. But it turns out sheâs not the only one who isnât a fan. Before the weekend is over, Ryan Malloy is murdered.
The hard-headed but soft-hearted Leah is unwillingly drawn into investigating his death by the pleading of Ryanâs terminally ill mother. She soon discovers that Ryanâs self-absorbed journey through life trampled on the dreams of a number of people. His old girlfriend, his best friend, his own brother, a local businessmanâthereâs no shortage of suspectsâor secrets. But the solution eludes Leah, until the past and the present collide in a dangerous confrontation that threatens one life and ends another.
Book Details:
Genre: Mystery
Published by: Himmel River Press
Publication Date: November 19, 2019
Number of Pages: 364
ISBN: 1698530994 (9781698530994)
Series: Leah Nash Mysteries, Book 6
Purchase Links: Amazon | Goodreads
ISLAND BREEZES
Leah Nash. There are times she makes me feel like a competent adult. Then she turns around and makes me feel as if I’m just bungling through life.
Sometimes she has it all together during her investigations. Then there are times she’s really out in left field.
I figured out who was the murderer before Leah — at least three different times. I was wrong every time.
Leah eventually figured it out. I never did.
Thank you, Ms Hunter. How soon can you get the next Leah Nash book out for us? Maybe next week? Well, how about next month? You left me with some things to mull over until I can read what comes next.
***Book provided without charge by PICT.***
Read an excerpt:
Chapter 1
I parked my bike just inside the cemetery gates. It took only a few steps down the tree-lined path for the heat and humidity of a mid-summer Wisconsin day to slide away into the cool dark shade. Overhead, the soft murmur of thousands of leaves stirring in the light breeze accompanied me as I walked slowly toward my sisterâs grave. Both of my sisters are buried in the cemetery just a few miles outside of Himmel, Wisconsin. My father is as well. But today it was Annie Iâd come to visit.
My heart beat a little faster as I neared the gravesite. Iâm not afraid of the dead. Itâs the memories they leave behind that haunt me. Quiet Annie with her soft voice and big blue eyes, too shy to join the other laughing, shouting kindergarteners at recessâbut the first to run over to comfort a little boy struggling not to cry on the first day. Imaginative Annie, commandeering our wide front porch as a sailing ship for her and her cat, Mr. Peoples, to travel around the world. Kind-hearted Annie, sharing her Halloween candy with me when Iâm forced to surrender my own treats as penalty for talking back. Sweet, brave, compassionate, eight-year-old Annie, who ran into a burning house to save Mr. Peoples twenty-two years ago, and never came back.
Over all the years since, peopleâmy mother, my aunt, my therapist (yes, I went that route once), my best friendâhave reassured me that her death wasnât my fault, that I was just a child. But, I was older. I should have been watching over her. I should have seen her slipping back to the house after weâd all escaped. In my deep heartâs core, I canât ever forget that.
Now and then, and always on her birthday, I go to the cemetery to see her. I know that she isnât really there. But her grave is an anchoring spot for me. I catch her up on the good, the bad, and the ugly happenings in my life. She knows what hurts me, and she knows what frightens meâsecrets I donât share with anyone else. I tell her what our mother is up to, and how others she knew in life are doing. I say all the things to her that I would if she were still here. I try to make up for the fact that Iâm alive, and she isnât. But, of course, I never can.
When Iâm talking to her at the cemetery, it feels as though she can really hear me. And I know that she answers. Not right there, at the grave, but later, in unexpected ways. Sometimes, I hear Annie speak to me through a chance remark a stranger makes, or a phrase that leaps out at me from a book, or a sudden flash of insight on a problem Iâm wrestling with. I donât share that belief with very many people. If I did, I might be forced to resign my membership in the Doubting Thomas Society, to which all good journalists should belong. But I canât accept that those occurrences are just coincidental. I really canât.
So, on the anniversary of her birth, once again I sat down on the bench in front of her grave and told her how sorry I was that she had died. That I hadnât saved her. That I still missed her. And then I told her what was really going on in the seemingly successful life of Leah Nash, former small-town reporter, current true crime author, and soon-to-be business failure.
***
When I say I talk to Annie, I mean that literally. I have a one-sided, out-loud conversation with her, though only when Iâm sure Iâm alone. Some people already think Iâm crazy. No need to give them additional proof. On this particular day, I had a serious problem weighing on my mind.
Not long before, I had made what seemed, at the time, like a brilliant decision. The Himmel Times Weekly, the paper where Iâd started out in journalism, and where Iâd found a home again after a self-inflicted career injury, was closing. I decided to buy it. I asked a wealthy, community-minded, local attorney, Miller Caldwell, to invest with me. And then I asked a lot of other peopleâreporters, an editor, stringers, office and sales staffâto work very hard, for very little money, in the hope that together we could keep the Himmel Times alive.
It was exhilarating at first. But it had become an increasing source of anxiety for me. Just as we were getting off the ground, Grantland County Online, a digital-only news site (and I use the term ânewsâ loosely), had gotten a major infusion of capital and a new publisher. Now GO News, as itâs more commonly known, was kicking our butt.
âThe scariest thing, Annie,â I said, âis that weâre barely keeping our heads above water, while GO News keeps getting bigger. They donât have the expenses we doâno print edition, no delivery costs, and they donât spend a lot of staff time fact-checking. Plus, they started Tea to GO. Did you know that the cool kids say, âspill the tea,â when they mean âwhatâs the gossip?â
âTea to GO is full of âWhat married school official was seen in Milwaukee with a very attractive staff member last Thursday night? Did we say late, last Thursday night?â That kind of garbage. Itâs almost all blind itemsâthe better to avoid lawsuits, my dear. But people are eating it up. Every time you go into the Elite CafĂ©, someone is trying to figure out who the latest gossip is about.â
I paused for a bit of a wallow in self-pity. It wasnât as if I hadnât tried to shake things up at the Times, to get us moving ahead, but so far nothing Iâd done had made much difference.
âWe have a good team. Miguel is much happier since he gave up the managing editor job. He really didnât like bossing people. And Maggie McConnell is doing great in that spot. Sheâs got the instincts, the skills, and forty-five years in the news business behind her. If she could only spin straw out of gold, sheâd be perfect. But since she canât, weâre making do with a budget so lean it might as well be made out of turkey burger.
âI gave Allie Rossâyou remember, I told you about her. Sheâs the high school kid weâve been using as a stringer. Anyway, I gave her a part-time job for the summer in the office. Sheâs doing the routine stuff, obits and inside pages copyâweddings, anniversaries, club news. Sheâs got promise, but sheâs only fifteen. Troy, the other reporter besides Miguel, is a little bit of a suck-upâand his news judgment isnât quite there yet. Still, heâs a hard worker. The stringers are a pretty mixed bag.
âNow, hereâs a twist I bet you didnât see coming. I hired Mom to take April Nelsonâs place as office manager. I know, I know, itâs a dicey move. But sheâs smart, and efficient, and she gets the job done. Plus, she comes cheap. Itâs been a little challenging, I admit. Remember when I used to get mad at her and say, âYouâre not the boss of me!â and sheâd send me to my room?
âWell, now Iâm the boss of her, only I donât get to send her to her room. Yes, OK, Iâm not supposed to be doing the day-to-day. Thatâs Maggieâs job. I understand that. But I canât just hide away in my office and write my next book if the paper is falling apart two floors below me, can I?
âEverybody took a leap of faith when we reopened the Times, and everyone is putting everything they have into it. I canât let them down. I have to find a way to keep us afloat. I just didnât know it would be so hard, Annie.â
I paused for a breath before I wrapped things up.
âAnd then thereâs Gabe. I donât know. I like him as wellâno, probably better thanâanyone Iâve gone out with in a long time. He makes me laugh, and heâs really smart. And he likes strong women who speak their minds. In my experience, a lot of men donât. So whatâs the problem, right? Well, itâs not exactly a problem. Itâs more that Iâm afraid a problem might be coming. Lately, it feels like heâs pushing me a little, like for a commitment or something. Canât we just enjoy each other? Canât we just be without getting all serious, and defining things, and making plans? I donât want to change things. Thatâs when things go bad, when you try to change them.â
I slumped back against the bench with a sigh. Usually, when I lay everything out to Annie, it makes the issues seem a little more manageable. This time it all still felt overwhelming.
Then, a voice spoke.
***
Fortunately for my mental health, it wasnât Annieâs. I turned and looked behind me.
âCoop! How long have you been standing there?â I asked, trying to remember exactly what Iâd said out loud. Itâs not that Coop and I have major secrets. Heâs my best friend, after all. Still, I donât tell him everything I tell Annie.
âLong enough,â he said with a grin that didnât offer me much comfort. I tried to move the conversation away from my chat with Annie, particularly the Gabe part.
âWhat are you doing here?â
âYour mom said you were here. I called your cell, but it didnât go through.â
âYeah. Itâs a dead zoneâpun totally intendedâin the cemetery, except for the hill. What did you want?â
âNothing. I brought something for Annie.â
I looked down at his right hand and saw that he carried a small pot of pink flowers. Pink was Annieâs favorite color. Tears sprang to my eyes. I quickly blinked them away.
âThatâs so nice. Why?â
He shrugged. âI know what today is.â
Iâm all about keeping my tough outer shell polished, but I was so touched, I couldnât keep up the facade. âYouâre a pretty great friend, you know that?â
He smiled, but he looked embarrassed, and tried to cover it by moving to put the flowers next to Annieâs headstone.
âDid you really come just to put flowers on Annieâs grave?â
âNo, not just for Annie. I took some to Rebecca, too.â He was kneeling, positioning the flowers, with his back to me. I couldnât see his expression.
âOh.â
Rebecca had been Coopâs wife and my nemesis until she was killed last year. I wasnât happy that Coop had lost someone he loved, but I couldnât pretend I was sorry she was gone. Sheâd done everything she could to break up our twenty-year friendship and came close to succeeding. I couldnât think of anything nice to say about her. So, I employed the Thumper rule, and didnât say anything.
Coop apparently didnât want to get into the subject of Rebecca either, because as he stood and turned to me, he said, âIâll walk out with you. Iâve got my truck. We can throw your bike in the back and you can ride home with me.â
âYes, please. I didnât realize it was so hot. I just about sweated to death pedaling out here.â
âYeah, I can see that,â he said, taking in my damp, bedraggled hair, slipping from its hair clip, and the beads of moisture coalescing into a river of sweat running down the side of my forehead. âYou kind of look like you just took a shower.â He sniffed the air, âExcept you donât have that shower-fresh scent.â
âShut up,â I said. âIâm a head-sweater from way back. Deal with it.â I smiled though, because thereâs something very nice and very easy being with a person who really doesnât care how you lookâor in the present situationâsmell.
We walked together in companionable silence, until Iâd decided he hadnât heard any of my one-sided conversation with Annie. That dream died in the next minute.
âSo, whatâs going on with you and Gabe? Heâs a nice guy, Leah. Youâre not getting ready to toss him overboard, too, are you?â
âNo. Why would you say that? And what do you mean by âtooâ?â
âYou really want to go there?â He cocked an eyebrow. Itâs a not very funny running joke between Coop and my mother that I always find a reason to cut my romances short.
âNo, I donât. I thought you didnât believe in illegal surveillance, and what do you call lurking around cemeteries where people are having a private conversation? Itâs nothing. Really.â
He looked at me for a second, but all he said was, âOK.â
Our conversation was cut off as a tall woman in her fifties, her hair pulled back and hanging in a long, gray braid down her back, appeared and abruptly crossed the path in front of us.
âHello, Marcy,â I said.
She looked up as though surprised we were there.
âLeah. Coop.â She nodded but didnât stop to talk. We knew where she was going. To the top of the hill on which sat a small granite building that resembled an ancient Greek temple. The family mausoleum held Marcyâs grandparents, her own mother, and Marcyâs baby daughter, Robin. One day, it would hold Marcy, too.
We watched in silence as she reached the building, pulled a key out of her pocket, unlocked the door, and slipped inside, like a ghost gliding through a wall. It had been sixteen years since Marcy Whiteâs baby had died, and she still came every week. People said she brought a different book each time and read it to Robin. They said it like it was something weird, or even crazy. Not me, though. I understood why she did it.
âYou know what, Coop?â I asked, as we continued on down the path.
âWhat?â
âIâm calling bullshit on death.â
***
Excerpt from Dangerous Ground by Susan Hunter. Copyright 2019 by Susan Hunter. Reproduced with permission from Susan Hunter. All rights reserved.
Author Bio:
Susan Hunter is a charter member of Introverts International (which meets the 12th of Never at an undisclosed location). She has worked as a reporter and managing editor, during which time she received a first place UPI award for investigative reporting and a Michigan Press Association first place award for enterprise/feature reporting.
Susan has also taught composition at the college level, written advertising copy, newsletters, press releases, speeches, web copy, academic papers, and memos. Lots and lots of memos. She lives in rural Michigan with her husband Gary, who is a man of action, not words.
During certain times of the day, she can be found wandering the mean streets of small-town Himmel, Wisconsin, looking for clues, stopping for a meal at the Elite Cafe, dropping off a story lead at the Himmel Times Weekly, or meeting friends for a drink at McClain’s Bar and Grill.
Catch Up With Susan Hunter On:
LeahNashMysteries.com, Goodreads, BookBub, Instagram, Twitter, & Facebook!
Tour Participants:
Visit these other great hosts on this tour for more great reviews, interviews, guest posts, and giveaways!
Â
Enter To Win!!:
Â
Â
This is a rafflecopter giveaway hosted by Partners in Crime Virtual Book Tours for Susan Hunter. There will be 1 winner of one (1) Amazon.com Gift Card. The giveaway begins on February 17, 2020 and runs through March 21, 2020. Void where prohibited.
Â