Wilmington, NC 04 - Murder At Wrightsville Beach

Wilmington, NC 04 - Murder At Wrightsville Beach by Ellen Elizabeth Hunter

Book: Wilmington, NC 04 - Murder At Wrightsville Beach by Ellen Elizabeth Hunter Read Free Book Online
Authors: Ellen Elizabeth Hunter
house blessed after I'd restored it and I thought it a good idea to recommend that Kelly do the same. Let the house start a fresh chapter in its life just as the residents might do. To that end, I measured and photographed, and made many notes in the legal pad, singing an old tune under my breath, Where Have All the Flowers Gone, my favorite anti-war song. From my dad I'd inherited an eclectic collection of fifties, sixties, and seventies music.
    As the heat grew more intense I hurried through my examination of the second floor, scouting the rooms for a place to install a second bathroom. If we gutted two closets that backed up to each other, we might just carve out space for a small bathroom.
    My tee shirt was sticking to my back, and I lifted it to get some air. It was then that I heard sounds coming from the first floor. Someone was down there, walking around. I'd left the front door standing open to allow some fresh air to enter the house.
    I went to the top of the stairs and called down. "H-e-l-l-o? Kelly? Somebody down there?"
    Only eerie silence met my ears. I grabbed up the box containing the dress patterns and drawings from the bed and hurried down the stairs with it. I made a tour of the first floor but there was no one there. I locked the front door carefully behind me. Had someone in the neighborhood walked in? Maybe a nosy neighbor? But why then hadn't he or she responded when I called down? Or waited to speak to me?

8

    "I'll have the Crab Melt Sandwich," I told the waiter at the Oceanic Restaurant.
    Our gang had overslept and we were having brunch at the oceanfront restaurant. I'd called Jon and he'd met us so there were six of us then Gordon Cushman showed up and he made seven. It turned out Melanie had invited him. "I'm so glad you could come, Gordon sweetie," she cooed. Melanie was up to something. She doesn't get mushy over people unless money is involved.
    The day was hot and hazy. Our table was positioned at the window on the top floor and overlooked the beach, the ocean, and the pier. Outside everything was blue: blue water faded into blue sky and the horizon was a blur. Strollers on the beach moved slowly, and even the waves seemed sluggish, not pounding the sand forcefully, just laboriously rolling ashore.
    Mickey was in a sullen mood but that seemed to be habitual so nothing new there. Kelly was quiet as was Devin. Gordon Cushman seemed more nervous than usual. I caught him watching Mickey when Mickey wasn't looking.
    Melanie was hyper, as if as hostess to this merry little band she had to make up for everyone else's lack of vitality. Thank goodness I had Jon; without him I might have set fire to my hair and run out of the building screaming.
    Hot coffee and iced tea restored us. Kelly complimented Melanie on her outfit, a colorful cotton shorts and halter set in a tropical pattern. "It's a Tommy Bahama," Melanie said, "that I picked up at Redix . I've got to take you there, shug . They've got everything. And great sales."
    Jon's omelet arrived and smelled and looked so good I almost lifted it off his plate. But then the waiter set my crab melt in front of me, and I forgot all about eggs. Pale yellow cheese oozed between slices of grilled rye bread. I picked it up and took a greedy bite.
    "I like a woman with an appetite," Devin said.
    There he goes again, I thought.
    "You know what they say, a woman who likes food likes sex too."
    "Give it a rest, will you?" Jon said testily. Poor Jon. He was usually so easy going but Devin was really getting on his nerves. And mine.
    Gordon glanced at Mickey warily then said to Melanie in a rush, "I want you to sell my house for me." Gordon was a fashion plate himself in his khaki shorts that rode low under his belly and his white athletic socks with stripes at the tops.
    "Which house? Your beach house or the town house?" she asked and didn't seem a bit surprised.
    She knew this was coming, I realized. My sister's antenna had been quivering for days in response to

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