Welcome to my stop on the Murder on Spyglass Lane Tour. Brought to you by Innovative Online Tours. For your treat today, you get to read the entire first chapter!
Murder on Spyglass Lane (The Sarah McDougall series)
Available at Amazon in ebook and
paper
Chapter One
Eerie owl hoots echoed across the thirteenth
green. A full harvest moon spilled its golden glow across the golf course. I
walked Sparky on our nightly stroll along the cart path. We were near Spyglass
Lane, the cul-de-sac where I lived. My house loomed in the shadows a short
distance away.
I was new to the
neighborhood, and my unsettled state of mind left me wondering if the move was
the right one.
Frequent stops were the order of the late evening
as Sparky, my pudgy Bassett Hound, investigated everything he came across. I
glanced to the right when something caught my eye. Sparky turned in the same
direction and waited. I could have sworn a shadowy figure dodged behind a
cluster of trees. Was it my imagination or a trick of light and dark?
The eerie hooting continued and I was
spooked. With a light tug on the leash, Sparky turned from the shadows and
scooted across the crunchy Florida grass, pulling me off the green and along
the side of my house, to the front door. I was more than anxious to get inside.
My heart thudded against my ribcage.
Pale, creepy images bore into my mind,
blurring my vision. Sensations spun in my head. Not again. Knowing what was to come, I sagged against the wall of
the portico and tried to brush aside the unwelcome imagery. I angled further
into the stucco entryway ‘til the front door was before me. I unlocked it with
moist, shaky hands. When I stooped to unhook Sparky’s leash, sensations niggled
at me again.
I slumped to my knees, aware a car swept into
the driveway across the street. I made an effort to thrust the feelings away.
A car door slammed and distant footsteps
pounded toward me. Sweat prickled my skin as ghostly forms swam before my eyes.
I used the bottom of my T-shirt to wipe my face until my vision cleared. I
struggled to breathe normally.
A rich, masculine voice echoed through my
consciousness. “Are you all right?”
Sucking in deep breaths, I pushed myself off
the ground and stood on wobbly legs. Before me was a man who, in any other
circumstance, would have set my pulse racing. But since it was already in race
mode, I couldn’t credit him with that. His dark gaze and lazy slouch reminded
me of a pirate holding his balance on the deck of a sloop. My mind wandered.
“Yes, I’m fine... thanks. I-I stumbled,
trying to get the dog unleashed.” Good Lord, that’s pretty lame. But I can’t
tell him I have visions. Nobody else can know. Not ever.
Overhead lights illuminated the small
portico. I watched his eyes narrow as he took in my appearance from head to
toe. True enough, I didn’t look like I’d just stepped from Elle Magazine, but it was
late. I was tired and, as an artist, I generally dress in whatever comes to
hand.
“If you’re sure everything is—“
“I’m fine, really.”
My heart thumped hard in my chest for fear
he’d see more than I wanted him to. I turned toward the door and opened it for
Sparky. With a glance over my shoulder, and a half smile, I murmured goodnight
to the handsome devil who didn’t appear to believe me, and closed the door,
locking it behind me.
I knew that look so well. After all, I’d been
doubted, ridiculed, and suspected before.
Sparky bounded into the foyer and raced
across the room. Well, bounded might be too strong a word, speed-waddled might
be more apt. Yeah, he definitely waddled as he made his way across the
screened-in patio of the softly lit pool. His short legs and elongated body
made him scrunch and stretch like an inchworm with a purpose. Sparky’s long
snout snuffled over the surface in vacuum-cleaner fashion. I wondered what new
scents he found that hadn’t been there earlier.
With a final snuffle and grunt the dog sank
to his haunches next to the screen. That particular noise passed for a bark, in
Sparky’s case, and that always caught my attention. Long, floppy ears pitched
forward, and his imperious schnoz pointed toward the golf course. Being a
sensitive guy, he seemed to have picked up on the tension I’d felt earlier when
we’d walked on the path.
A disturbing inkling prickled my senses once
again. Quickly skirting the swimming pool, I reached the dog as he peered into
the darkness. We both stared toward the golf course for a brief time.
Nothing. With a heavy sigh, I tried to get rid of the
feeling of doom and gloom settling over me. There was nothing to be seen, and
though the moon was bright, deep shadows yawned around the edges of the golf
course.
I was turning away when I caught the tiny
flicker of light that flashed and quickly disappeared, like a firefly. Does Florida have fireflies? My heart
thumped, a shiver slid down my spine, and my nerves tingled with electricity.
Sparky lay at ease and I was left with the impression that maybe the threat was
gone. If there ever had been one. Dogs – mine especially – have a nose for news
and find interest in anything.
Sparky rose and followed close at my heels
as I walked inside. I slid the heavy glass doors closed and locked them.
Exhaustion crept over me. Since I’d moved
into my new house, life had been chaotic between work and getting settled and I
had no idea where all the time went.
I wandered into the bedroom and prayed sleep
would come soon. After all, tomorrow would be another day on the golf course –
with an early tee off – the first tee of the day actually.
In pajamas, I slid under the light covers
and pushed my anxiety aside. I listened to the night sounds in an effort to
relax. It was pleasant to be in a balmy atmosphere as was so often the case in
Florida during autumn. So different from
New England. It was like the weather in each was at an opposite end of the
spectrum.
Such thoughts tumbled around in my head as I
lay in the soft confines of my bed, weary but wide awake. Crisp autumn nights in New England smell wonderful. Those smells
were some of the things I missed most. But, there would be no going back.
Sparky lay on the floor next to the bed,
emitting short snores from his snout. At least one of us could sleep. The clock
on the bed stand clicked over, and I realized it was midnight, the witching
hour. With that thought, I groaned, turned on my side, closed my eyes, and
prayed for oblivion.
The
prayer must have been answered because later, while it was still dark, an odd
sound from outside woke me. Shwish,
shwish, shwish it went – like a
corn broom against concrete. The not-so-distant noise came from the golf
course. Not metal against metal, but metal against something.
Tossing the covers aside, I
slipped across thick pile carpet to stand before wide windows that overlooked
the thirteenth green. Darkness prevailed while the moon hid behind a cloud. I
couldn’t see a thing and knew better than to go investigate in pitch darkness.
I headed back to bed but a bout of
dizziness caught me. I clutched the nearby chair with unsteady hands. My mind
was clouded by images of a shovel sinking into sand. As usual, my breath caught
in my throat. Breathe deeply. I
worked hard to summon the strength to do so.
No, not again. Not
again, please. Would it never end? When the blurry mist cleared, I sank,
weak-kneed into the chair I’d been holding onto with a white-knuckled grip.
Tears of frustration sprung forth and rolled, unchecked, down my face.
Trepidation filled my soul.
While I rested my head in my hands, my
elbows propped on my knees, replayed images of a quaint New England village
crowded my thoughts.
The murder of the old woman had changed life
as I’d known it – forever. Memories of Lena Farrell’s death, and that of her
killer, were etched in my mind for all eternity. At thirty-three years old, I,
Sarah McDougall, wanted nothing more than to live in a quiet neighborhood and
lead a simple life with my dog. But that wasn’t to be – even though I’d found a
quiet neighborhood – and the realization left me uneasy.
The grandfather clock in the hall chimed
three – a sure bet that I was up for the day. I’d be absolutely useless on the
golf course, but decided I’d go play a round with the ladies anyway, just to
get away from these feelings and images.
My flighty next-door neighbor, a nosy woman
whose husband seemed to work all the time, had invited me to go golfing when
I’d first moved in. I was uninterested in close friendships so I hardly knew
the neighbors. Still, it was smart to socialize a bit, instead of living my
life cloistered inside the house. After all, I’d moved away to start over.
After I’d accepted Jill’s offer, I found her
prying most annoying. Now, I tried to avoid her without being rude and never
committed to a golf game with her.
The country club was a small affair and the
membership was reasonably priced. After joining, I met a group of retired women
who instantly swept me into their golf game. They were kind and most willing to
take me under their wing as a newcomer.
In the kitchen, the button on the coffee
maker lit as I set it to brew. I wandered through the hall to the studio where
I viewed various works of art in progress – until I swayed. I closed my eyes
for a moment, again reaching for something to steady me. I clenched the art
table. I visualized vague images of blond tresses and diamonds before they
faded.
In the mirror across the room I recognized
pale skin, sea green eyes, a short nose, full lips and determined chin on my
oval face. My cropped, spiky, dark hair tipped with blond, made me look as
though I’d recently had a bad scare. My fear-filled eyes gave me a haunted
appearance.
I scribbled the details of the episode on a
scrap of paper and headed to the kitchen for coffee. I could tell something was
afoot. I intended to resist the pull to become involved, with all the strength
I could muster. But, if past experience was any indicator, I knew that might be
futile in the end.
I waited impatiently for the drip to stop. Finally. Rich brew streamed into the cup
as I poured it. I took the mug with me and settled in my favorite comfy chair
by the front window. Though the chair had seen better days, it was an old
family treasure. I couldn’t bear to part with it, so I’d had it refurbished and
hauled it with me when I moved. At the sound of tires on pavement, I peered
though the lace-curtained window.
A sleek car swung into the pirate’s driveway
across the street. As I sat, folded comfortable into my old overstuffed chair,
I wondered about the handsome stranger.
Cool air filtered through the open crack of
the window. The curtains swayed – seemed as restless as I was. I leaned forward
and watched the man leave his vehicle. He glanced around the cul-de-sac, paused
a moment when he faced my house, hesitated, and then turned away. Just my luck to have another super-snoop for
a neighbor. Why the hell I cared, I didn’t know.
No one here in Florida knew about me, or my
peculiar affliction, and they never would if I had any say in the matter.
I watched the tall, rangy figure stretch as
he stood by his open car door. The vehicle’s interior lighting silhouetted his
body. I noticed muscled arms when he bent to retrieve something from the front
seat. His cell phone jingled, jarring the silent neighborhood. When he answered
the call, I could see him stiffen for a moment. He turned toward my house and
then turned away. I could hear the rich timber of his voice, but not the words
he spoke.
The light flickered a second and went out
when he closed the car door. Locks clicked in the silence. His call didn’t last
long, and he headed toward his front entrance with a long-legged stride.
Overhead motion-sensor lights in the arched
entryway illuminated him once more. Again, he turned to gaze toward my house
before entering his own. Suddenly, the outside lights went off.
What I’d seen of him in the night cemented my
earlier impression. Lean and fit, he walked with a pirate-like swagger.
Lights flicked on as the dark stranger
wandered through his house. Wide, curtainless windows showed his movements
along the hallway.
I’d never seen anyone around his house,
which had begged the question: Who lived there? Now I knew. I leaned my head
against the soft chair and imagined what he’d look like in daylight and
wondered if a Mrs. Pirate lived with him.
Homes in this neighborhood appeared solemn
and most seemed deserted. It came as no surprise that I hadn’t seen the pirate
before and Jill had never mentioned him. I considered what his true occupation
might be.
Mind your own business. I lectured
myself on a regular basis. Stay aloof and life will remain simple. Make
waves and life will never be the same. I often gave myself these little
warnings – especially since Lena Farrell died. Her sudden and brutal death had
rushed my senses and left me quaking in my shoes. Before the woman’s murder hit
the newspapers, I’d been confounded by the visions. Afterward, I’d ignored them
sheer strength of will. My conscience pushed me to share my visions with the
homicide squad. That was my first mistake – I sought out the detective in
charge of Lena’s homicide. His reaction had weighed me down.
It hadn’t been the first time I’d had
visions, but it was the first time my visions were so intense, or revealed a
death.
All my life I’d been the recipient of what I
considered strange coincidences, scenes that presented themselves in a misty,
ethereal fashion. My mother regularly dismissed them as daydreams and fantasies
of an only child.
When I was young and innocent I believed her.
I wasn’t so sure when I grew older.
When Lena was murdered, the horrific pictures
surrounding her death dominated my life. I couldn’t escape them. I realized
they weren’t fantasies or daydreams, but a horrible reality for me – and her.
***
Day
broke as I sat there thinking and the first glimmers of gray light filtered
through the window. Sparky tap danced in place, his toenails clicking against
the tile floor. He wagged his tail in anticipation of our early morning jaunt.
I left the comfort of my chair and changed
into shorts, a Red Sox T-shirt, and sneakers for a ramble around the golf
course.
Absent-mindedly I grabbed a plastic bag and
tucked it into my pocket for doggy-do pick up.
We strolled along the side of the house
then onto the golf cart path – Sparky’s favorite place to ramble. His tail
swished in excitement whenever he had the opportunity to scare the daylights
out of egrets and cranes. I smiled as they high-stepped over the greens to
escape him.
We hadn’t gone far when Sparky deviated off
the path and scrambled onto a sand trap. His long nose snuffled over the smooth
surface. Then he turned his woeful, brown-eyed gaze toward me and moaned.
I ignored him and said, “Do your duty and
let’s get back to the house. I look like the wreck of the night and—”
My voice trailed off as my body began to sway
back and forth. Moisture prickled my skin, and I realized I’d likely pass out
soon. I took a squat position, leaned forward, lowered my head past my knees,
and gulped in breaths of air. Why is this happening here?
Without warning, I slumped forward, my hands
and knees pressed into the sandy surface.
My vision fogged while blond tresses and
diamonds became crystal clear in my mind. Concentrating hard, I shook my head
free of the fog, and scanned the ground and mound of sand. Mound of sand? Sand traps are
smooth. Damn. I peered at the
surrounding area. The rest of it held a swept appearance.
The dog strained against the leash wrapped
around my wrist – his enthusiasm dragging me forward. The heels of my palms dug
deeply into the hump of sand. That was when the unbidden vision returned.
Bolder. Clearer. It revealed blank staring eyes.
I gasped. My fingers clawed into the moist,
gritty ground. My anxiety mounted. Something cold touched my skin as my hands
sank further in.
Holy
shit. That brought me
around. I scrambled backward, crab-like, on all fours.
A choking noise and low moan from Sparky’s
throat pulled me back to reality. The entangled leash was too tight around
Sparky’s neck.
I reached out and loosened the leash, then
patted the dog’s head – the whole time uttering an apology for my brutish
behavior. His sad, droopy stare was trained on me with understanding. At least
I hoped so. The dog snuggled closer. His long, warm body curved against me as
he licked my cheek. His affection calmed my strained nerves.
Shaken, I rose to my feet. Without hesitation
I urged Sparky toward home. In a whisper, I told him to keep up, and we slowly
jogged back toward the cul-de-sac. I hurried the dog into the house and watched
him settle near the pool, his gaze upon me.
I stayed within the safe confines of the
house and paced the floor. Back and forth. Back and forth I went, all the while
considering different courses of action. What if I called the police and there
was no body? Then I’d be viewed as a nutcase... again. On the other hand, if
there was a body, I’d take the
position of suspect numero uno. Not a great choice in my opinion.
Across the street, the pirate’s house lay
as silent as the rest, though a single light glowed from within. It seemed to
call to me and it seemed right that I tell someone what I had found. Why I
chose this stranger as a confidant, I couldn’t say. I just knew that I didn’t
want to discuss this experience with the ditzy woman next door, or the police.
The visions were certainly too strong to
ignore. If I didn’t share my knowledge, things would worsen. I’d learned that
lesson well – in other circumstances. This
is no time to be a chicken. Bucking up, and walking over was my only course
of action.
I smoothed down my frantic hair, wiped the
rivulets of sweat from my face, took a deep breath, and headed across the
street.
Once I was past his car and on the
doorstep, I hesitated a fraction of a second. Fear and a bad case of nerves
vied for space in my gut. Courage had never been my strong suit, but my vision
showed there was a body in the sand trap and someone had to know. Surely this
man wasn’t an idiot who’d jump to wrong conclusions. At least I hoped not. That
hadn’t been my first impression, anyway. Strength, power, and somewhere within
him, I had sensed caring, though he emanated an aura of danger too.
While I considered it important to tell him
of my discovery, I considered I might have read too much into the ‘caring’ part
of my impression. I rang the doorbell and waited.
When he didn’t answer right away, my small
reserve of courage began to ebb like the tide, so I jabbed the doorbell a couple
more times.
The door swung open with force. The pirate
stood before me, an extreme look of annoyance on his sharp, handsome features.
Tousled black hair fell over his forehead and a faint whiskered shadow covered
his square jaw. Dark eyes glared, and his face held an attitude that should
have sent me packing.
My gaze wandered over his body and heat
rushed to my cheeks. Courage waned further as I responded to his tight grimace.
“I-I’m sorry to wake you, but, I have a
dilemma.”
He crossed his arms over his bare,
well-muscled chest. His eyes honed in on me and his face seemed like the
devil’s personified. Ragged denim shorts were slung low on his narrow hips. His
thick brows hiked a notch as he returned my stare. Rugged features brooked no
nonsense. I quaked in my shoes while he waited.
My task proved more difficult than I’d
anticipated. I hedged a bit while his glare hardened.
I summoned the last reserve of courage, and
asked, “Remember me? We met earlier, and well, during the night I heard odd sounds
coming from the golf course.” I wrung my hands. “When I took my dog out just
now, we came across a mound on the sand trap.”
A tad impatient, he said, “Maybe sand traps
have mounds, miss.”
It was apparent he wasn’t a golfer. Though he
spoke softly, his irritation was evident. His dark glance strayed toward other
homes on the street. I figured he realized no one else was up yet. Either that
or he searched for the spaceship that had dropped me off.
Hands spread wide, I said, “Well, no, they
don’t actually. I think there’s something buried under the mound.”
When he stepped back and gave a sweep of
his hand to motion me inside, I envisioned a fly invited onto a sinister
spider’s web. What am I doing? Just spit the story out and take flight.
That would work wouldn’t it? I stepped into the foyer of his home. Okay, so I’m out of my mind. What else is
new?
The pirate walked ahead. That offered me a
great view of his tight, lean body. A sweet sight, and though brief, I relished
the scenery. As we neared the kitchen, I noticed his clothes draped over a
chair. A holstered gun lay on the table. Startled, I wondered how I could be so
stupid to come into the home of a man I didn’t know, or was I just a sucker for
punishment? Interesting.
He sauntered into an adjacent room and closed
the door. Why am I here? The man had a gun. What else did he have?
I was uneasy, but waited to see if he’d
return, or leave me standing there like a fool. If he didn’t show up soon, I’d
skulk away from the house – never to be seen in public again.
Several moments later he hadn’t appeared so I
tiptoed toward the front door. Before I turned the knob, I heard his soft voice
behind me.
“Leaving so soon? You have more to tell me,
don’t you?”
Hunching my shoulders, I stopped and
turned. I shuffled from one foot to the other and stared at him while he stood
there looking great, in his bare feet and wearing jeans.
He tilted a brow and crooked a finger toward
me. I slowly returned to the kitchen.
Agitated, I ran a hand through my
sleep-spiked hair and balanced my elbows on the top of the chair he’d pulled
out for me. All the while I wondered where this would lead. Once I explained my
suspicions about what lay buried on the golf course, this rakish brute would
toss my butt out the door. I was sure of it.
I’d been treated with doubt and hypocrisy in
the past, followed by accusations and threats. Suddenly I was filled with a
sense of dread and reluctance, and sunk into the chair. My microscopic speck of
bravery fled as I stared at the man who waited, not so patiently, to hear the
story.
I didn’t speak while he perked coffee. He
turned and spoke in the same soft voice he’d used earlier.
“Let me introduce myself. My name is Raven
DeVille, and you would be?...”
As a pirate, the name Raven fit him
perfectly. Maybe because his hair was raven black like his eyes, and those eyes
could see right through me. Made me nervous as hell.
I stammered for a second until I got
rolling. His soft voice should have relaxed me, but it didn’t. I thought I’d
come unstrung any second.
“I-I’m Sarah McDougall. As you know, I live
across the street with Sparky. My dog.” I plucked at a dog hair on my shorts.
He must have realized I was nervous because he poured the coffee and slid a cup
toward me, then set out a jug of milk and a bowl of sugar.
I sipped the brew to kill time, but it
didn’t work. Instead the coffee scalded my mouth, and I choked. Good show. I watched a grin tip the
corners of his mouth and his even white teeth gleamed in the soft light. The WOW
smile transformed him from an irritated man with a gun, into a human being.
“Now, if you’re finished postponing the
inevitable, I’d like to hear why you think there’s something buried in the sand
trap.” He shook his head and continued, “I must admit, it’s an unusual place to
dump something, but I’m open to your theory, Miss McDougall.” He slouched
casually in the chair though his stare never wavered.
“Sarah,
please. I know it sounds weird, but, like I said, I took the dog out and we
ended up on the sand trap. When Sparky stopped short to investigate, I lost my
balance and fell. The sand shifted under my hands, and I felt something
irregular underneath it.” I lied, because I was afraid I’d be viewed as a nut
ball.
Skepticism filled his eyes, though they
also held a glimmer of what I recognized as interest... or possibly, curiosity.
Raven studied me over the rim of his coffee cup. I couldn’t read his face, or
thoughts, and that unnerved me.
With a thud, I set my cup down and rose to
leave. He snaked his hand out, encircled my wrist, and stopped me in my tracks.
He released me and asked, “So what did this
irregular something feel like?”
“Maybe a hand? I’m not sure.” My mouth
dried like parched desert sand. I tried to swallow, but couldn’t.
“A hand?” A tiny smirk lingered around his
tempting mouth.
Disbelief
widened his eyes.
With a shrug, I said, “That’s what it felt
like to me. I didn’t dig deep or wait around to check it out. I came here
instead.”
“Why here?” Raven’s eyes took on an
inquisitive gleam.
My patience snapped like a taut piano wire.
“Look, will you help me or not? I didn’t imagine this.” I stood up from the
chair to walk away. Again, he stopped me short.
“So if it is a hand, maybe there’s a body
that goes with it?” His skeptical gaze never left mine, though a tone of
interest entered his voice. “Would you show me where this supposed body is?”
Maybe he believed me, maybe he didn’t, and
maybe he’d just taken my story with a grain of salt. When someone – especially
a stranger you just met – talks murder or death in any form, it’s not always
taken seriously. Unless you happen to be a cop, of course.
Is
this guy a cop? Oh, great.
It suddenly occurred to me that he had gotten home late. Perhaps he’d been
looking around the neighborhood. Worse than being a cop, maybe he was the one
who buried the body in the sand trap.
Nervous because of that thought – more than
the fact that a dead body lay so close to home – I swallowed hard. Our eyes
met. I had the feeling he could read me. I glanced away, then mumbled something
about minding my own business.
“Do you want to go now, before people start
playing golf?” I finally asked the question and stood up, struggling against
the urge to flee.
“It’s only six o’clock, Sarah. I highly
doubt anyone will be teeing off now. Perhaps you’ll be good enough to wait
until I put some shoes on.”
I nodded.
Raven sat opposite me while he slipped the
sneakers onto his feet. He tucked his cell phone into his pocket before we
strode across the street onto the golf course.
Mist covered low-lying areas. Dew topped the
crisp, lush grass. In no time, we’d hiked the short distance to the sand trap.
Dog tracks and my prints had disturbed the ground.
I could see where my hands had gouged into the sand. I envisioned the body
underneath the surface and a shiver rippled down my back. My head buzzed,
dizziness descended, my legs weakened. I reached out and grasped Raven’s arm
for support.
“What’s the matter?” Raven asked as his
hand encircled my arm.
I was unable to answer, so gripped him
tightly. A thin sheen of sweat broke over my skin. A sharp image of the woman’s
body broke through my defenses. I began gasping like a dying fish because I
couldn’t breathe. This is the worst yet.
I slumped to my knees and leaned forward in
an effort to drag oxygen into my lungs. My body shook. Darkness crowded in, and
I knew that, at any moment, I would drown in it.
When Raven shook me hard, I started breathing
normally and felt my eyeballs roll back into place.
“Sarah, snap out of it.” Raven’s voice came
from far away, and he dragged me to my feet.
“I’m here, I’m here. Stop rattling my
bones.”
“You nearly passed out. If this is too much
for you, go home. But before you do, I need to know where you think the body
is.”
“She’s buried there.” I pointed toward the
disturbed sand. With a cautious step, I kneeled onto the surface and swept a
couple scoops aside to reveal the fingers of a woman’s hand. Diamond-set bands
circled the third finger. I sat back on my heels. These were the gems I’d
envisioned. I knew she’d have long blond hair.
“Step away from there, Sarah. I want you to
go home and call the police. Have them respond without sirens. Give them your
address. Got that?”
Raven’s serious, all-seeing eyes scanned my
face as he spoke. His strong hands clutched my shoulders tightly as he stared
at me.
I figured he thought I’d land flat on my
face in a dead faint. I couldn’t tell him how I really knew the body was there,
other than the fact that I’d fallen and felt her under the sand. He’d just
think of me as a lunatic and who needed that? I’d already suffered through that
once, thank you very much. I nodded and stumbled across the grass toward the
house, reluctant to be the one to alert the authorities. I glanced over my
shoulder.
Raven was talking on his phone, but I
couldn’t hear the conversation. He glanced at me and then turned away. I kept
moving.
Bio
JM Griffin grew up in the Maine countryside. Inspired by the Nancy Drew mysteries, JM wrote her first story at age twelve.
With 5 books written and more in the works, JM's first book in the Vinnie Esposito series published in February of 2009. The first and second Vinnie Esposito novels have been re-released through Lachesis Publishing. The third novel in the series, Dead Wrong, was released in ebook format in October 2010, and in paperback in April 2011. Stay tuned for more of the Vinnie Esposito series.
In addition to the Esposito series, JM has written a mystery featuring faeries, pixies, murder, tea and cupcakes. Lyrical Press, Inc. presented the ebook on August 16th of 2010. The paper edition was released in June 2011 and is available at www.amazon.com.
Murder on Spy Glass Lane, a novel filled with the antics of Sarah McDougall, a psychic artist, her Bassett hound Sparky, and their swashbuckling pirate-like neighbor was published as an ebook in January 2012. The paper version of this book will be available January 1, 2012 on http://tinyurl.com/82rs8s7.
JM and her husband John reside with two crazy cats who rule the roost in New England. Their home is surrounded by a forest, a nearby reservoir and natures creatures.
Bio
JM Griffin grew up in the Maine countryside. Inspired by the Nancy Drew mysteries, JM wrote her first story at age twelve.
With 5 books written and more in the works, JM's first book in the Vinnie Esposito series published in February of 2009. The first and second Vinnie Esposito novels have been re-released through Lachesis Publishing. The third novel in the series, Dead Wrong, was released in ebook format in October 2010, and in paperback in April 2011. Stay tuned for more of the Vinnie Esposito series.
In addition to the Esposito series, JM has written a mystery featuring faeries, pixies, murder, tea and cupcakes. Lyrical Press, Inc. presented the ebook on August 16th of 2010. The paper edition was released in June 2011 and is available at www.amazon.com.
Murder on Spy Glass Lane, a novel filled with the antics of Sarah McDougall, a psychic artist, her Bassett hound Sparky, and their swashbuckling pirate-like neighbor was published as an ebook in January 2012. The paper version of this book will be available January 1, 2012 on http://tinyurl.com/82rs8s7.
JM and her husband John reside with two crazy cats who rule the roost in New England. Their home is surrounded by a forest, a nearby reservoir and natures creatures.
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