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Dangerous Secrets




  Dangerous Secrets

  Leah Nash Mysteries Book 4

  Susan Hunter

  Copyright © 2017 by Susan Hunter.

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  Severn River Publishing

  www.SevernRiverPublishing.com

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

  ISBN: 978-1-951249-69-4 (Paperback)

  Contents

  Also By Susan Hunter

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Love Reading Mysteries & Thrillers?

  You Might Also Enjoy…

  Thanks for Reading

  Next in Series

  DANGEROUS FLAWS: Prologue

  DANGEROUS FLAWS: Chapter 1

  DANGEROUS FLAWS: Chapter 2

  DANGEROUS FLAWS: Chapter 3

  DANGEROUS FLAWS: Chapter 4

  DANGEROUS FLAWS: Chapter 5

  Read Dangerous Flaws

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Discussion Questions

  Also By Susan Hunter

  Leah Nash Mysteries

  Dangerous Habits

  Dangerous Mistakes

  Dangerous Places

  Dangerous Secrets

  Dangerous Flaws

  Dangerous Ground

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  Dangerous Dreams: A Leah Nash Novella.

  For my favorite brothers, Jim and Tim—

  who both know how to tell a good story.

  1

  The late-afternoon sun shone with a fierce light that set the autumn reds and yellows of the leaves on fire. I had passed the construction and congestion around Madison, and I was almost home on that almost perfect October day. I rolled down the car windows, turned up the music, and sang my heart out to Adele, Aretha, and yes, it’s true, the Backstreet Boys. Don’t judge.

  I was eager to get back to my small-town home—Himmel, Wisconsin, after a pretty grueling two weeks in Michigan. I had been thrust into the role of primary caregiver for my Aunt Nancy, after she took a tumble from the stage during an energetic dance number in her local theater group’s production of Grease. Normally, her husband, or my mother, or her daughter would have stepped in. But Uncle Jeff was on a fishing trip at some remote camp in Canada, and Aunt Nancy refused to ruin it for him. My mother was on a cruise, and my cousin Rowena was giving birth in Texas.

  Enter me, Leah Nash, devoted niece, former reporter, current true crime writer, and unlikely home health care aide. I love my Aunt Nancy, but, sadly, I don’t have a big reserve of tender-loving care to draw from. And Aunt Nancy, it turns out, doesn’t have a big reserve of patience for forced immobility, cabin fever, and a steady diet of grilled cheese, Honey Nut Cheerios, and spaghetti. When I tried to vary the menu one night by making Cornish game hens, a favorite of Aunt Nancy’s, it just underscored my domestic deficiencies. They were in the oven a little long—well, maybe, a lot long. After I served them, Aunt Nancy started calling me “Baby Jane,” and asking me where her parakeet was.

  When Uncle Jeff finally got home, both she and I were relieved. I flew out the door on a flurry of hugs, kisses, thanks, and don’t-mention-its almost before he set his suitcase down. My tour of duty in the wilds of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula was over. Himmel may not be a metropolis, but at least we don’t have wolves in our backyard. And bears. I don’t even want to talk about the bears.

  The thought of sleeping in my own bed, in my own apartment, made me giddy as I neared home. If I had known it was the last time I’d feel unfettered joy for quite some time, I would’ve reveled in it more.

  “Leah! When you get back?”

  “Hi, Mrs. Schimelman, just now. I’m starving, so you’re my first stop. What’s good today?”

  Clara Schimelman owns the Elite Café and Bakery just a short distance from my apartment. She’s a friendly, gray-haired woman in her late sixties. Her large, comfortable frame is testament to the delicate pastries and delicious sandwiches she serves. The Elite, with its rickety old tables, squeaky wooden floor, and uncomfortable small chairs, is a Himmel favorite.

  “Is all good,” she said with justifiable complacency. “I make you döner kebap. Is a new menu item I bring back from Berlin. Pita bread, roasted turkey, lettuce, tomatoes, onions, cabbage, chili flakes, garlic-yogurt sauce. It’s the bomb.” Mrs. Schimelman, a fixture in town for more than 30 years, still retains a strong German accent, but she loves her American slang—though she generally runs a few years behind.

  “Sounds perfect,” I said. “So, what’s been going on?” I asked, as she turned to assemble the sandwich.

  Over her shoulder she answered, “You haven’t talked to no one?”

  “No. Most of the time I couldn’t get a signal on my phone, and my aunt’s internet connection was so slow, I couldn’t stand it. I texted a couple of times with Coop and Miguel, but that’s about it. Why, did something happen?”

  At that moment, the bell over the door tinkled and a frazzled looking mother with three rambunctious little boys came through the door.

  “Coffee, just a really dark, really big cup of coffee, please, Mrs. Schimelman. Boys, one cookie choice. And don’t forget please and thank you.”

  “Hey, Lanette, how are you?”

  Lanette Howard is my mother’s across-the-street neighbor.

  “Leah, hi. Sorry, did we just barge in on your order? Dylan, don’t lick the display case. Marcus, stop pinching Arlo.” As she spoke, she deftly separated two of her children and swiped at the remains of Dylan’s tongue print on the front of the case. “I’m so sorry, Mrs. Schimelman. If you have a cloth and some spray, I’ll wipe that off. And please, go ahead, get Leah’s order.”

  “No, that’s OK, you go ahead. I’ll just take a look at the paper and catch up.” A copy of the Himmel Times Weekly sat on the counte
r, and I grabbed it and moved to a nearby table.

  “Thank you. It’s probably better for everyone if we get out as quick as possible. How’s your aunt doing? And when’s your mother due back?” The boys, having made their selections, were vibrating with anticipation as Mrs. Schimelman reached into the display case with practiced hand and scooped up their choices in thin, white bakery tissue paper. There was a moment of buyer’s remorse while one changed his order, and the other wailed because his brother was “copying.” Lanette sighed and said, “I know, sugar is a bad idea, but I had to have a coffee and I couldn’t bring them into this divine bakery and not let them have a cookie.”

  “Hey, you’ll get no argument from me. Aunt Nancy is doing pretty well. Mom will be back Tuesday or Wednesday. I can’t remember which. Anything going on in the old neighborhood?”

  She looked surprised for a second and said, “In the neighborhood? No, but—Marcus, that’s it. Hand over the cookie. You may be able to get it after dinner, if you can ride home without picking at your little brother. I’m sorry, Leah, I have to get these monsters out of here.” She managed to pay Mrs. Schimelman, grab her coffee, and wrangle her crew out the door without spilling, dropping, or losing anything—or anyone. I stand in awe of Lanette’s multitasking skills.

  I half-expected Mrs. Schimelman to share her views on parenting with me after they left. She’s as generous with her opinions as she is with her portions, but she was busying herself slicing turkey and getting out condiments. I opened the paper and scanned the headlines. Trick or treat hours had been set by the city council; a car had fallen into a sinkhole on Maple Street; a potbellied pig was used to assault a man in a domestic dispute; and Mrs. Hanson’s first grade class had participated in a trip to the zoo in Madison. A busy week, indeed.

  I turned to the inside pages and checked the obituaries. It’s an old habit I can’t seem to break. My first assignment at my first newspaper, which happened to be the Himmel Times Weekly, was to write the obituaries. I’d envisioned covering police news, or at least a lively city council meeting—not dull, dead people stuff. When I had balked, my boss brought me up short.

  “Every obituary is the story of a person’s life. It’s their final story. It’s something their families keep, and reread, and pass on. It’s a marker for their memories. It’s not a throwaway job. You need to do it right, and you need to can the attitude. Understand?”

  I did. Ever since then, I’ve never been able to put aside a newspaper without at least scanning the obituaries as a small way of paying respect to all those life stories. As I looked through them, one notice surprised me. I put the paper aside and saw that my sandwich was ready.

  “Mrs. Schimelman, what happened to Duane Stanton? It says he died suddenly. Heart attack?”

  “Oh, ja. Terrible that was. No heart attack. He fell from that bird-watching place. Watching birds. It’s crazy.” She shook her head.

  “That’s awful. He was a quirky guy, but I got a kick out of him. What do I owe you?”

  “$4.50. And I give you pumpkin walnut cookie for free. Welcome home.”

  I pulled into the parking lot behind my apartment and was just hauling my suitcase out, when a familiar voice called to me.

  “Leah, what are you doing here?”

  “I live here, Courtnee, remember?”

  “I thought you were fishing in Canada with your grandma.”

  It was typical of Courtnee Fensterman, a self-absorbed blonde who never really pays attention to anything that doesn’t center on her, to mash half-heard information into her own particular version of fake news.

  “I was in Michigan taking care of my aunt.” I yanked the suitcase out and shut the door. Then I pulled the handle up, ready to head inside the back door to my loft.

  “Aren’t you even going to ask me what I’m doing here on a Saturday?” Her pretty but vapid face had taken on a frown, and her blue eyes held reproach. I noticed then that she had a cardboard box in her arms.

  “OK, I’ll bite. What are you doing here?”

  “Well.” She paused and shifted the box, then handed it to me. “Could you hold this for a minute? It’s really heavy.”

  Reflexively, I grabbed it, looked down and saw that it appeared to contain the vast make-up collection Courtnee kept in her desk drawer, along with some framed photos, at least half of the pens owned by the Himmel Times Weekly, and several boxes of Junior Mints.

  “What are you doing, moving out?”

  “Duh. Yes. Keep up, Leah.”

  “Wait, what?” Courtnee leaving had long been my dream when I still worked at the Times. It seemed unfair that it should happen after I left.

  “Rebecca is just so mean. I’m not, like, her personal slave. ‘Courtnee, you’re late! Courtnee, this message makes no sense. Courtnee, you can’t close the office to get your hair highlighted. Courtnee, the conference room isn’t your personal party place!’ Like anything is ever a party around here. My mom said I shouldn’t have to take that kind of thing. So, I finally quit.”

  I wasn’t shocked that Mrs. Fensterman seemed to share Courtnee’s view that slavery on the job consisted of performing duties in a timely, accurate and professional manner. She had to develop her skewed vision somewhere. But it did surprise me that her mother had encouraged her to leave a paying position. It’s not like Courtnee’s job skills would open the door to many careers.

  “Wait, wait, wait. You quit your job? What are you going to do?”

  She tilted her head and rolled her eyes the way she does when she thinks I’ve said something especially lame.

  “I’m already doing it. I’m a secretary or something in the Public Safety department at Himmel Tech. My Uncle Lou got me the job. Rebecca didn’t even give me a goodbye party or a gift or anything. And then she calls me today and says to come and get the rest of my stuff because the new girl needs the drawer space or something. Like, I’ve been busy, right? You’d think getting married might make her feel happy and be a little nice. But no. She’s still a biatch.”

  I felt a fleeting frisson of sympathy for Himmel Technical College, but I was more interested in the last bit of information Courtnee had dropped in. I handed the box back to her, then leaned my face in close so she’d have to focus on me. I had to see if this was real news, or fake. “Courtnee, are you saying Rebecca is married? Who to?”

  Rebecca Hartfield and I had clashed at our first meeting, and things had gone downhill from there. She was dispatched by A-H Media, the hedge fund that had bought the Himmel Times a year or so ago, to bring their latest purchase into line. Which, as far as I could see, meant squeezing every drop of profit out of the paper until A-H Media shut it down or sold its dried, dead husk. There’s a reason I refer to it as Ass-Hat Media.

  “Well, Coop, of course. They got married last week.”

  2

  “Leah, you’re pinching my arm!”

  “Oh, sorry. Sorry.” I released my grip. “Look, I have to go. Bye.” I turned away and grabbed my suitcase, ignoring Courtnee’s indignant assertion that she wasn’t done telling me about herself.

  Coop and Rebecca, married? I shook my head. She had to have it wrong. Coop has been my best friend since we were 12 years old. He’s a lieutenant in the Himmel Police Department. He wouldn’t get married without telling me—and definitely not to Rebecca.

  When he had started seeing her, I had tried to warn him about her, but all that did was create a major rift in our friendship, and force me to listen to my mother sing “When a Man Loves a Woman” every time I mentioned it. So, I backed off. A couple of months ago, he found out for himself just how bad she was, and he dumped her. And now they were married? That just couldn’t be right.

  My apartment is on the third floor of a downtown building that houses the Himmel Times on the first floor. The rear doors for both the newspaper and my loft are in the same back entryway. Mine is on the right. The entrance to the Times is straight ahead as you walk in.

  I could see Rebecca through the glas
s door. She was standing in the hall with her back to me. Her tall frame blocked my view of the person she was talking to, but judging by the amazing mane of red-gold hair that I could see, it appeared to be a woman. Their conversation looked pretty animated. Rebecca was shaking her head. I hesitated for a minute, then saw movement that seemed to indicate her visitor was leaving. I put my suitcase in front of my door. As I pushed through the entrance marked Himmel Times, the strawberry blonde was still there. I hung back to let them finish.

  Rebecca said, “Kinmont isn’t anything I want to remember.”

  “I’ll never let you forget.” The redhead laughed then, and walked down the hall without looking back. Rebecca continued to stand with her back to me.

  When I heard the front door close, I said, “Rebecca!” my tone loud and curt.

  She whirled around, a startled look in her eyes. I enjoyed the moment. It’s not often Rebecca is taken unawares. Then she recognized me. She smiled coolly, her composure restored. When she spoke, it was in the patronizing tone she always affected with me—or anyone else she wanted to intimidate.