Bike Week Blues
Praise for Mary Clay’s
DAFFODILS* Mysteries
*Divorced And Finally Free Of Deceitful, Insensitive, Licentious Scum (TM)
“Witty and hilarious...”
Midwest Book Review
“ ... a crisp pace with plenty of humor ...”
Romantic Times BookClub
“The Ya Ya Sisterhood meets The First Wives Club. A cleverly done light mystery that’s a rare find ...”
The Examiner (Beaumont, Texas)
“The Turtle Mound Murder is light and accentuated with the familiar mannerisms of Southern women. ... A fun book.”
Southern Halifax Magazine
“Bike Week Blues is one of the funniest capers this reviewer has had the privilege of reading.”
Harriet Klausner, #1 Reviewer, Amazon.com
“Sometimes we just need something fun to read. The DAFFODILS Mysteries fit the bill.”
The DeLand-Deltona Beacon
* * *
DAFFODILS Mysteries
written as
Mary Clay
The Turtle Mound Murder
Bike Week Blues
Murder is the Pits
New Age Fiction
written by
Linda Tuck-Jenkins aka Mary Clay
Starpeople: The Sirian Redemption
* * *
A DAFFODILS* Mystery
*Divorced And Finally Free Of Deceitful,
Insensitive, Licentious Scum(TM)
Bike Week Blues
Mary Clay
An IF Mystery
An Imprint of Inspirational Fiction
New Smyrna Beach, Florida
All Rights Reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Published by IF Mystery, an imprint of Inspirational Fiction
P. O. Box 2509
New Smyrna Beach, FL 32170-2509
www.inspirationalfiction.com
Cover Design: Peri Poloni, www.knockoutbooks.com
Quotations from The Book of Answers by Carol Bolt reprinted by permission of Hyperion. Copyright 1999 Carol Bolt
This is a work of fiction. All places, names, characters and incidents are either invented or used fictitiously. The events described are purely imaginary.
Smashwords Edition
ePub ISBN 978-0-9710429-1-9
Copyright © 2009 Linda Tuck-Jenkins
* * *
Chapter 1
“Duck—a bombing run!”
Penny Sue’s screech pierced me like a dagger. I yelped and bolted from my chair, sloshing coffee down the front of my robe.
“Cover your drink!”
I turned slowly to face Penny Sue, my terry cloth robe steaming in the cool morning air. She stood in the doorway of the beachfront condo, staring up at a V-formation of pelicans flying south from their feeding grounds at Ponce Inlet. Locals dubbed the birds B-52s for their annoying habit of gorging on fish parts at northern marinas, then lazily sailing down the coast ... relieving themselves willy-nilly. No doubt, the birds were the inspiration for the Predator drones the CIA used to hone in on terrorists with missiles and smart bombs. Nothing was safe from the pelicans’ foul, fishy projectiles. Penny Sue discovered as much back in college. A group from the sorority was on the deck, where I now stood dripping coffee, when pelicans passed overhead. Bamm! A big splat on Penny Sue’s head that slopped into her wine; hence, the dictum: “Cover your drink!”
Dabbing at the Colombian droplet on my chin, I stared at Penny Sue. “Cover my drink?” I motioned to the stain on my robe. “It’s a little late for that. Geez, Penny Sue, I was meditating. You scared me to death.”
She pursed her lips. “I know that. You had your head tilted back and your eyes closed. Why do you think I said something? If I hadn’t been here, you might have gotten a nasty load right in the face.”
“What in the world is going on?” Ruthie, wearing nothing but a bath towel and a look of fright, appeared in the doorway.
“A bombing run,” Penny Sue replied over her shoulder. “If I hadn’t said something, Leigh would have gotten it right in the kisser.” She brushed past Ruthie to the kitchen and returned with a roll of paper towels. She handed me a wad and ripped off a long strip that she dropped on the deck and patted with her toes. “You didn’t burn yourself, did you?” she asked sheepishly.
My ire dissolved. It was hard to stay mad at a slightly chubby, middle-aged woman dressed in a pink silk kimono, whose hair looked like it had been chewed by a dog. “No harm done; the robe will wash. You startled me—that’s all.”
Besides, the condo belonged to Penny Sue’s father, Judge Warren Parker, who’d graciously allowed me to use it after my house in Roswell, Georgia sold as a part of my divorce settlement. I’d been in Florida for a little over four months, gathering my wits and will to start life anew. New Smyrna Beach had turned out to be the perfect prescription for a trampled ego and broken heart. Of course, the stay got off to a rousing start when Penny Sue, Ruthie, and I were stalked, threatened, and kidnapped by an assortment of undesirables. Something like that puts your life in perspective. A two-timing husband seems trivial when you’re stumbling over dead bodies.
Though I’d made new friends and found a part time job at the Marine Conservation Center, I was delighted to see my sorority sisters again. There’s a certain comfort in being with old friends. You don’t have to explain, sugar coat, or make excuses because you’ve been through most of the bad times together and love each other in spite of warts and blemishes. Not that any of us had real warts—a few zits, maybe, but certainly no crusty, virus laden skin eruptions.
Like the old joke about menstruation and menopause, most of our troubles over the years involved men. Besides being college sorority sisters, Penny Sue Parker, Ruthie Nichols, and I—Rebecca Leigh Stratton—had one thing in common—we were all divorced. I was the newest member of our small, but growing, group called the DAFFODILS (Divorced And Finally Free Of Deceitful, Insensitive, Licentious Scum).
Ruthie’s split came early—her ex was a two-timing, heartless cardiologist. Penny Sue’d been around the altar three times. Her first husband, Andy, was the well built, but dumb, captain of the football team. Her second, Sydney, was rich, artistic, and bisexual. The bisexual part didn’t sit well with Judge Parker, who took that divorce very personally. Penny Sue is quite wealthy today as a result of the huge settlement she got from that parting. Her last, Winston, was the judge’s choice. Daddy orchestrated that pairing, convinced Penny Sue didn’t know a good man when she saw one. Apparently, Judge Daddy didn’t, either. It was the judge himself who caught Winston in a compromising position with a legal assistant. Winston doesn’t practice law in Georgia anymore.
Despite her dismal track record, Penny Sue was always on the prowl for her soul mate, one of the reasons my friends had driven down from Atlanta two days earlier. Though Ruthie was in town to celebrate her birthday as well as attend a conference on Ayurveda, an ancient healing system from India, Penny Sue’s motives, aside from the birthday, were romantic. Her newest love, Richard Wheeler, was a motorcycle enthusiast who’d come for Bike Week. He was staying at the Riverview Hotel, an ironic twist—and long story—considering our last visit. Naturally, Penny Sue had recommended the Riverview to Rich because it was close to our condo. After our last visit, she could also drive there blindfolded.
I had to say that this man looked promising. Recently widowed—his wife passed from cancer—Rich was a good-looking, gentle guy who seemed to genuinely care about Penny Sue. He also appeared fairly normal, in stark contrast to Penny Sue’s
prior loves, which is why I gave this relationship a chance. Though Penny Sue usually equated normal to average, emphatically insisting, “I am not normal!” (God’s truth), an ordinary person was actually what she needed. According to Ruthie, our metaphysical expert, Penny Sue’s Leo penchant for drama and the limelight meant stormy relationships with men whose egos were similarly inclined—the exact type she usually went after. A challenge thing, I suppose. But, this romance did, indeed, appear to be a match made in heaven. Penny Sue and Rich had been inseparable for the last two days, when she’d left early and come home late with smudged lipstick and a smile so wide her gums showed.
“Let me buy you another cup of coffee,” Penny Sue said, a clear peace offering. Grinning, she nudged me with her elbow. “Watch this.” She squinched her toes and lifted the paper towels she’d use to blot up the coffee spill. “Prehensile toes,” she said smugly.
Like a monkey, I thought wryly. “I’ll bet your blood is Rh positive.”
Penny Sue wadded the paper into a ball. “Yeah. What does that have to do with anything?”
I motioned to her toes. “Rh stands for rhesus monkey.”
Still standing in the doorway half-naked, Ruthie choked down a chortle.
Penny Sue curled her lip at me and huffed inside, stopping abruptly when she reached our friend. “What in the world is that smell?” She looked Ruthie up and down.
Ruthie backed away, pulling her bath towel tighter. “Sesame seed oil. Massaging with sesame oil is one of the best ways to balance the humors—you know, Pita, Vatta, and Kapha.”
Penny Sue leaned forward and took another whiff. “Honey, I think your pita patta’s outa whack-a.”
“Not pita patta. Pita, Vatta. Come on, Penny Sue, this is serious. Ayurveda is an ancient science that dates back over 6000 years. Almost everyone would benefit from a sesame oil massage. The modern lifestyle, with fast travel, television, junk food, and computers all tend to cause a Vatta imbalance.”
Penny Sue made a face. “If everyone smelled like that, we’d all have bad humors.” She dashed behind the kitchen counter to avoid a swipe from Ruthie.
“You wash it off, silly. Which, I would have done, if you hadn’t caused such a ruckus. I almost had a heart attack. The last time I heard Leigh scream like that, she’d tripped over a body.”
Penny Sue hung her head with mock contrition. “You’re right; I’d forgotten about that. Anyway, I was only kidding. Deepak Chopra recommends sesame oil massages, and you know how much I like him. Take your shower, and I’ll make bagels with cream cheese and Jalapeño jelly. How’s that?” A devilish grin stretched her lips. “Or, I could squeegee you off and do a stir fry.”
It took everything I had to keep a straight face.
Ruthie shook her finger at Penny Sue. “You’re awful. See if I help when you get sick. I won’t lift a finger.” She turned on her heel and headed for the shower.
I went to the bedroom to change out of my soggy robe. When I returned, I found a steaming cup of coffee and bagel waiting for me on the kitchen counter. I hopped on the stool and sipped the brew, watching Penny Sue smear cream cheese on more bagels. “What time did you get in?” I asked casually.
“Late,” she said without looking up. I couldn’t help but notice her chest heave in a satisfied sigh.
“I take it that things are going well with Rich?”
Penny Sue stopped what she was doing and smiled broadly. “He’s the one, Leigh.” Ruthie joined us at that moment. Penny Sue gave her a cup of coffee and set the plate of bagels on the counter. “Three husbands, lots of boyfriends, yet I’ve never met a man quite like Rich. He’s kind and gentle and strong, but vulnerable.”
Vulnerable. Penny Sue’d always had a weak spot for the underdog. In college she was constantly bringing stray cats, injured dogs, and troubled men back to the sorority house.
“How did you meet him?” I asked.
“Ruthie was with me the first time. We were having dinner at that new restaurant on Roswell Square. Rich was sitting alone at a table by the wall. He seemed so troubled, I couldn’t take my eyes off him.”
The fact that Rich was handsome in a rugged way, no doubt helped. He was about six feet tall, brown hair, with very green eyes. I’m sure Penny Sue’s radar locked on him instantly.
She canted her head at Ruthie. “Our waitress told us he’d recently lost his wife and ate there a lot, always alone.” She tittered. “Naturally, I started having dinner there more often. We eventually struck up a conversation and a friendship developed. Rich really loved his wife. Her death was quite a blow.”
“How long has it been?” Ruthie asked.
“Over a year, I gather.”
“What does he do for a living?”
“I’m not sure. He may have been with law enforcement or the courts in some fashion. He doesn’t talk much about his past. Too painful, I suppose. I know he quit his job to take care of his wife. She went through a living hell of surgeries and chemotherapy. The experience tore him up—she was in a lot of pain. Even with painkillers, she suffered tremendously.” Penny Sue shuddered. “Gives me the creeps to think about it. Anyway, he’s come into some money—maybe from his wife’s life insurance—and is looking to start a new life. He wants to invest in a motorcycle dealership in Georgia. He’s down here to talk to people and do market research.”
“Is that what y’all have been doing to the wee hours of the morning?”
“Basically, we’ve been sitting on the deck at the Riverview Hotel, rocking, and talking.”
“About...”
“Our childhoods, my husbands, philosophy, Harley-Davidsons—which reminds me, my new bike is going to be delivered today.”
“Your what?” Ruthie and I said in unison.
“My new Harley.” She lifted her chin regally. “It’s being delivered to the New Smyrna dealership. It came in yesterday, but they had to prep it. I bought one of the Centennial bikes, a white pearl Fat Boy.”
I gritted my teeth for control. A white pearl Fat Boy! Though we’d packed on a few pounds over the years (all except Ruthie, who was still disgustingly slim), Penny Sue had gained the most, much of it in her posterior. In college, she’d been a buxom beauty with slim hips; now she was buxom with hips to match—an hour glass figure with a slightly larger bottom than top, which made the thought of her riding a Fat Boy ironic or—to be kind—synchronistic, as Ruthie might say. “Penny Sue, motorcycles are dangerous. Do you know how to ride one?”
She rolled her eyes. “Please, give me and Harley-Davidson some credit. They have a rider education course. I took it at the dealership in Marietta.” She sipped her coffee with a smirk. “I finished at the top of my class.”
I should have guessed. The last time we were together at New Smyrna Beach, Ruthie and I discovered that Penny Sue had taken a terrorist avoidance driving course. We also learned she carried a gun and could shoot the wings off a fly (her words). So, why did a motorcycle surprise me? Especially since Penny Sue had money to burn and her new soul mate was a Harley devotee.
“I bought some really cool biker clothes. Want to see them?”
Ruthie and I nodded tentatively. “Can our hearts take it?”
“Of course. Don’t be silly.”
We followed Penny Sue into her bedroom where she pulled one of her largest Hartmann suitcases from the closet. Who knew what the thing cost—had to be over a thousand—it was big enough to hold a body.
“I was going to spring this on y’all later, after I got the bike. But ...” Penny Sue swung the suitcase onto the queen-sized bed.
Though I’d lived in the condo for over four months and been instructed to “use it like it was my own,” I’d never had the nerve to move into the master bedroom. I’d chosen the second bedroom, with twin beds, the one that Ruthie and I shared on our first visit, and shared now. Somehow, the master suite had Penny Sue’s name all over it. Not to mention, she was such a sloppy, disorganized person, no one—especially Ruthie—could stand sharing a room wi
th her.
“Now, turn your heads,” Penny Sue instructed before opening the suitcase, a sure sign something sexy or devilish was about to appear.
Ruthie and I did as instructed. We could hear her rustling stuff in the background. A minute passed—geez, how much was there?—then two.
Finally, Penny Sue sang, “Ta da!”
Ruthie and I turned around and gasped. White leather covered the bed. At the bottom, closest to us, lay a pair of white, leather, thong underwear. (I shuddered at the thought of a slim leather strap bisecting my butt. These biker people must be a lot tougher than me.) Directly above it was a white, strapless bustier—a throwback to saloons in the Wild West—complete with lacing up the front. A pair of fingerless gloves, a white leather jacket, and a red, white, and blue leather vest with Harley-Davidson emblazoned on the chest. Centered above it all was a black and silver open face helmet with a Harley emblem on the front.
Awestruck by all the white, Ruthie and I couldn’t speak.
“What do you think?” Penny Sue finally asked.
“There are no slacks or shorts,” I observed.
“It’s all white,” Ruthie said incredulously. “You’re going to wear white before Memorial Day?”
Penny Sue folded her arms defiantly. “That tradition is strictly passé. The old stuff about wearing dark clothes in the winter and light clothes in the summer made sense in the olden days. People needed dark clothes to absorb sunlight in order to stay warm in the winter, and light clothes to reflect the heat in summer. But, this is Florida. It’s warm year round, so light clothes work any time.”