Checking out crime

Laurie Cass

Book - 2021

"Minnie and her rescue cat Eddie can often be found out and about in their bookmobile near Chilson, Michigan, delivering great reads to grateful patrons all over the county. But they always brake for trouble, and when Minnie sees a car speeding away down the road, and soon comes upon a dead bicyclist, she assumes she just missed seeing a hit-and-run. Minnie is determined to discover who was behind the wheel, but it soon turns out that things are far more complicated than they seem and there's more to this case than meets the eye. Luckily, this librarian is ready to read the killer his rights."--Publisher.

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MYSTERY/Cass Laurie
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Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Cozy mysteries
Published
New York : Berkley Prime Crime, published by Berkley, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Laurie Cass (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
340 pages ; 18 cm
ISBN
9780593197714
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

As bookmobile librarian Minnie Hamilton and her assistant, Julia, are returning from a board meeting in the late September dusk on a two-lane road in northwest Michigan, they are nearly sideswiped by a speeding car. Moments later, they screech to a stop, barely avoiding a dead body on the road. While the women answer questions for the police, Eddie, Minnie's adopted tabby cat, who rides along in the bookmobile, escapes. With his signature "mrr," he calls everyone to an abandoned bicycle in the woods. Initially, Minnie leaves the investigation to the authorities, but it's a small town where people talk, and, intrigued, she soon joins forces with Tabitha, the lead detective's wife, to make inquiries of their own. When a second cyclist is found dead, their sleuthing becomes more urgent, and more deadly. Ninth in the series, this will appeal to fans of Lilian Jackson Braun, both for the rural Michigan setting and for Eddie, who, like Braun's Koko and Yum Yum, observes and points but does not talk.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A crime-seeking Michigan bookmobile driver pairs with an equally curious friend to find a killer in an attempt to distract herself from her fiance's jewelry shortfall. While trying to recruit her fellow library employees to share in the work and love of her bookmobile project, Minnie Hamilton sees a speeding car driving erratically and knows there must be trouble since little Chilson isn't known for daredevil drivers. Things go from suspicious to terrible when the driver apparently hits a cyclist in the path. The poor man dies in spite of Minnie's best efforts at CPR, and Minnie feels a responsibility to figure out what happened, especially when she learns that the dead man, Brown Bernier, was a friend of her fiance, Rafe Niswander. Anyone who's a friend of Rafe's at least deserves a solid murder investigation. The detectives on the case feel confident they'll find the killer, but a chance meeting between Minnie and Detective Hal Inwood's wife, Tabitha, leads the two women to form a dream team to solve Brown's murder themselves, ably assisted by Eddie, Minnie's rescue cat. Meanwhile, Minnie has another mystery to solve: Why hasn't Rafe given her a ring? Minnie, not usually the type to go gaga over jewelry, can only hope the lack of bling isn't indicative of some greater lack. Digging into Brown's murder with Tabitha is the perfect excuse to keep her from obsessing over whether something more is wrong between her and Rafe. A cozy whose main distinction is that the dead guy's a sweetie, not a baddie. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 When we're children, we have all sorts of expectations. We expect to go to school. To learn things. Make friends. Memorize locker combinations. We also expect that someday we'll do things. Maybe great things. That we'll go forth and conquer. Be successful. Marry. Have children. Travel. For me, the husband and child predictions had been a bit fuzzy, but my career expectations had been specific. At the ripe old age of seven, I decided I wanted to work in a library because then I'd be able to read all day and no one would order me to put my book down and go outside and play because otherwise my eyes were going to get stuck and I'd have to wear progressively stronger glasses the rest of my life. In due course, I followed through with my decision and was now, at age thirty-five, the happy assistant director of a library in Chilson, Michigan, a lakeshore town in northwest lower Michigan. What I hadn't expected was that I'd be living on a houseboat and driving a bookmobile with a cat as my copilot. But it was an adorable houseboat, running the bookmobile program was tremendously rewarding, and the cat . . . well, he somehow made everything shinier. Most of the time, anyway. It was a fresh September morning. Birds were singing, the sun was shining, and I was humming to myself as I tidied up after breakfast, when my feline companion started making troubling noises. "Eddie," I asked, "what are you doing?" Catlike, he didn't say a thing. Which could have been because he was busy trying to get his nose into the tiny gap at the back of the houseboat's dinette seats. More likely, he didn't feel like responding. And, since he was a cat, whatever he didn't feel like doing, he didn't do. "There are days," I said, "that I wish I were more like you." Eddie's yellow eyes flicked in my direction, then away. For once, reading between the kitty lines was easy. "Yes, I know that anyone with any sense wishes to be a cat in general, and you in particular, but not everyone has sense, now, do they?" My black-and-white tabby abruptly abandoned his efforts, jumped to the floor, and bumped the top of his head against the back of my leg. Since Eddie is a good-sized cat, this popped my leg forward against the kitchen cabinet. "Ow!" I tossed the dish towel onto the tiny counter and rubbed my knee. "That's proof. Washing breakfast dishes is hazardous to my health." "Mrr." "A bowl of cereal and a glass of orange juice is the definition of breakfast, my furry friend. At least for all five feet of Minnie Hamilton." I eyeballed myself from toe to shoulder. Other youthful expectations of mine had been that I'd grow taller than my mother and that my freakishly curly black hair would magically straighten. I'd given up on the height thing, but there was always a chance my hair would fix itself someday. "Ready, Freddie?" I opened the door of the cat carrier. Eddie trotted inside, flopped onto his soft pink blanket, and glared at me. "Giving me The Look won't get us there any faster," I told him. "Mrr," he said, and kept on saying that as I carried him into my car, as we pulled out of the marina parking lot and drove past the house where I'd soon be living, and the entire time we drove through downtown Chilson and to the library. Downtown, with its mix of old and new buildings, some made with wood, some with brick, and a few made with stones hauled years ago from nearby fields, was a complex delight every time I remembered to look around. Today, however, my noticing capacity was limited because Eddie kept distracting me with a running commentary I had no chance of understanding. After we reached the library, he mrr'd as I ran through the preflight bookmobile checks. He mrr'd as I carried him inside and strapped the carrier to the floor of the passenger's side, and he mrr'd at Julia Beaton, my outstanding part-time bookmobile clerk, as she bounded up the stairs. "And a good 'mrr' to you, too, Mr. Eduardo," she sang out. I squinted at her. "Do I detect a new accent?" "My dear assistant library director, there is no such thing as a new accent." What she'd said sounded familiar, but only sort of. "Did that start as a Mark Twain quote? About ideas?" "Ideas, accents." She waved a suddenly languid hand. "What's the difference?" I grinned. It was going to be one of those days, in which the only thing to expect was the unexpected. Julia was in her mid-sixties and had spent years onstage in New York swooping up suitcases full of awards. When the roles started to dry up, she convinced her husband to move back to her hometown of Chilson, where she grew increasingly bored until my aunt Frances mentioned that I was looking for part-time help. Five minutes after we'd met, I made up my mind to hire her. This decision was confirmed her first day on the job when she started to talk to Eddie just like I did, pretending that he understood every word. This was important because Eddie was a fixture not only in my life, but also on the bookmobile. He'd stowed away on the vehicle's maiden voyage, and though I'd tried to keep his presence a secret, Eddie wasn't big on secrecy, and even less big on staying in the cabinet I'd tried to hide him in. Keeping my then boss, Stephen the Stickler-for-Rules, from knowing about Eddie's presence had kept me in anxiety for some time, but it had worked out in the long run and these days I couldn't go anywhere without someone asking how Eddie was doing. I settled into the driver's seat and glanced over at my furry friend. Two and a half years ago, Eddie had attached himself to me when I'd gone for a walk on an unseasonably warm April day. The fact that this attachment had happened in a cemetery, next to the final resting place of Alonzo Tillotson, born 1847 and died 1926, should have meant that the cat's name would be Alonzo. But Alonzo is a very long name to call a cat, especially since they never come when called, and the name Eddie just fit. He was a very Eddie-like cat. "Nothing yet?" Julia asked as she buckled herself into the passenger's seat. "More specifics, please." I started the engine, dropped the transmission into gear, and eased the thirty-one-foot-long vehicle out of the library's back parking lot. "Nothing as in nothing ventured, nothing gained?" I started warming to my theme. "Wasn't it Maya Angelou who said 'Ain't nothin' to it, but to do it'? And don't forget Emily Dickinson's poem that 'Saying nothing sometimes says the most'? Or-" Julia flung out her long arm and pointed in the direction of my hands. "As in no engagement ring." I looked at my naked finger. "Oh, that." "Yes, that." Fun fact: When a Broadway actress wants her tone to be sarcastic, the sarcasm is so thick it's almost visible. "How long ago did he propose?" She tsked at me. "Without a ring, can you trust the man?" I thought for a moment, then gave a heavy sigh. "That's a good question." Julia's head whipped around fast enough to send her long strawberry blond braid flying. "It is?" Her mouth dropped open. "Well, no," I said. "Rafe is the most trustworthy man on the planet. But it was fun to see that shocked look on your face." "Huh." Julia's feet tapped the top of Eddie's carrier. "Did you hear that, my fine feline friend? Minnie caught me by surprise. Who would have thunk it?" "Mrr." The two of them carried on a conversation that didn't include me, so I started thinking about Rafe Niswander, my fianc. He'd proposed just over a month ago, but we hadn't taken any steps toward the actual wedding since then. This was mostly because Rafe was a middle school principal and right now, at the beginning of the school year, he was busy with zillions of meetings, which left him with little time to think about how and when we wanted to get married. "See that?" Julia asked, nodding in my direction, but still looking at the carrier. "She's thinking about Rafe." "Mrr?" "How can I tell? Soft eyes, goofy smile, warm heart. All of that." "Mrr." "I absolutely agree," Julia said. "She's known the man for how long? More than twenty years? And now she's suddenly all goo-goo about him? I mean, he's the same guy he was when she got the library job and moved to Chilson permanently. Why the lovefest now, and not then?" Another good question, and one I'd pondered myself. Rafe, tallish, darkish, and handsome-ish, had indeed not changed a bit since I'd first met him on Chilson's city beach, the first summer I'd been sent north to stay with my aunt Frances. That was the same summer I'd met my best friend, Kristen Jurek, so maybe the two-girls-against-one-boy element had something to do with the delayed love. Or maybe it had taken me this long to recognize that Rafe's annoying habit of pretending to be far dumber than he was would never change and I might as well get used to it. Or, far more likely, I simply hadn't been ready. Rafe had recently confessed that the gorgeous old house he'd been renovating for three years had been for me all along, and he'd almost given up hope I'd ever come around to loving him. Every time I thought about that, I shivered. "Timing is everything," I said to Julia. "Huh." She flopped back against her seat. "Truth in three words. But I still want to see a ring." So did my mother, sister-in-law, and oldest niece. My dad, brother, nephew, and younger niece were more concerned with making sure we picked a wedding date that didn't interfere with the play-off schedules of multiple sports teams. "What kind of ring would you like me to have?" Julia perked up. "I get to pick?" "No. But before you slump, all exaggerated and actor-like, I'd be happy to hear your ideas." "Nothing normal," she immediately said. "There's nothing average about the two of you, so your rings should reflect non-normality." I wasn't sure "non-normality" was a word, but I let it go. "You made 'ring' into a plural. How many are we talking about?" I wiggled my empty fingers against the steering wheel. "I'm not used to wearing any." Long ago, I'd had a high school class ring, but that had been lost after my junior year when I'd jumped into Lake Michigan on Memorial Day after being dared to by Kristen. Every part of me had shrunk from the frigid water temperature and my ring had slipped off into the sandy bottom, lost forever to the vagaries of water and wind. Julia held up her left hand, three fingers extended. "One engagement ring for you. One wedding band for you. One wedding band for Rafe." "Sounds normal. I thought normal was out." "You have to maintain some semblance of normalcy to function in society," she said severely. "All three rings need to match, but they can't be overly matchy-matchy. That's cutesy and I can't recommend that in this case. You're too short to do cutesy." "Or inclined," I said. "What? Never mind. Doesn't matter. Now, as I was saying, the style of all three rings needs to match." "Why?" Julia sighed. "Have you not been paying attention to wedding fashions? No, don't answer that. I'm sure you have not, in spite of both Kristen and your aunt Frances getting married this year, so it's a good thing you have me to help out." "So lucky," I murmured. "Yes, you are. Now. The engagement ring is the first step in your forever relationship. This ring symbolizes everything the two of you have done to date and everything that will happen in the future." Since we'd come to a stop sign, I felt free to raise my hand. "Question. Isn't that a big burden for a hunk of metal and rock?" "Can't quite hear you over this noisy engine," Julia said, unnecessarily raising her voice. "You might want to have that looked into. But rings are important," she went on more moderately. "Every day for the rest of your life, there they are. Every waking hour you'll notice them on your hand. Make a bad choice, and you'll regret the decision forever." I glanced over, trying to remember the kind of rings Julia wore. "Voice of experience?" "You tell me." She pointed at the tiny diamond and narrow wedding band on her left hand. "We were young and poor and bought the cheapest rings in the store. All we could afford, see? We could buy something fancy now, but we like to remember those early years." I smiled. Julia had a streak of sentimentality in her. Who would have guessed? "Now," she said, settling back into her seat. "Let's talk rocks. Big ones, because you deserve it." So we did-or at least she did-the rest of the day. And since it was a very long day, my interest in talking about rings, weddings, receptions, and honeymoons had waned hours before we finally turned toward home. Even Julia's deep well of imagination must have been running dry because her final attempt was weak. "You could," she said, "have your engagement ring match your wedding. Wait, I have it! An emerald ring and a Wizard of Oz theme. Wedding gown like Glinda's dress, put Eddie in a basket like Toto, and the three of you can leave in a balloon." The idea was ludicrous and I was about to say so, when Eddie did it for me. "MrrRRR!" Julia sighed. "Sorry, Edmeister. I know that one was stupid. I'm tired, that's all." She looked over at me. "We're not going to do this kind of day again, are we?" I hadn't wanted to have such a long day in the first place, but my boss, Graydon Cain, director of the Chilson District Library, had asked us to try it. Though he was a decent guy, he'd only been director for a few months, and I wasn't sure enough of our relationship to say a flat-out "no" when he asked if the bookmobile would be willing to attend a township board meeting in the farthest-flung corner of Tonedagana County. "It's a night meeting," he'd said, "but it starts at seven and the township clerk says their meetings hardly ever run more than an hour. The days up here are so long you'll be back before sunset." Excerpted from Checking Out Crime by Laurie Cass All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.