A Taste of Murder. Virginia Smith

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spread her sheet music on the stand and snorted. “You think? I’d be a screaming lunatic if I’d found a dead body in a bathtub.” She shuddered. “I may never take a bath again.”

      Jazzy closed the latches on her violin case quietly. “I am a little spooked,” she admitted. “I keep wanting to look over my shoulder, you know? Trying to catch somebody watching me.”

      “Well…” Caitlin stepped around the center chair and seated herself, a worried expression on her normally cheery face. “There is a murderer running around town. I have to admit, I’m not feeling all that comfortable myself.”

      “Oh, hogwash.” Liz positioned her cello between her knees. “You heard the cops. That guy was a local big shot. He probably got on some country boy’s bad side, and Bubba did him in. The killer is no threat to three out-of-town musicians. We’re perfectly safe.”

      Jazzy wanted to accept Liz’s no-nonsense logic. But why couldn’t she shake the feeling that something was wrong, that somebody was watching?

      Moving shadows at the side of the church drew her attention, and she gave a startled laugh. Her friends looked up.

      “No wonder I feel like somebody’s watching me. Look at that.”

      She nodded toward the thick panes of crystal-cut glass lining one long side of the sanctuary. No doubt on Sunday mornings the sunlight shining through those panes sent prisms of light dancing over the worshippers, but right now the windows were darkened with the silhouettes of passersby on the sidewalk—dozens of them. Several faces pressed close to the glass to see inside, most of them at child height. Jazzy caught a glimpse of several adults standing close enough to gawk at the activity inside the sanctuary, too.

      Liz groaned. “More kids. Is the average age in this town like twelve or something?”

      Caitlin laughed at her. “I’ll bet they’re some of the same kids we saw at the hotel. We’re only a few blocks away, and the street outside is part of the festival route. They’re probably out with their mothers getting the lay of the land.”

      “Okay, let’s head out to the narthex.” Emily’s voice cut into their conversation. “We need to run through it from the top.”

      Jazzy straightened in her chair. “Oops. We’d better get tuned.”

      She positioned her violin and played an A. Having perfect pitch definitely helped in the tuning process, but at times the gift felt more like a curse. Especially when she attended her cousin’s middle-school band concerts. Caitlin and Liz tuned their instruments to match her tone. After a few minor adjustments, they were ready to begin.

      Caitlin gave the count with a subtle nod. Jazzy’s and Liz’s feet caught the pace for their selected number, Handel’s famous “Air for Water Music.” They came in together with the ease of many hours of practice. This was one of Jazzy’s favorites, and she closed her eyes to let the music wash over her. Thoughts of bodies and murderers and possible sinister watchers faded as she gave herself over to the intricate harmonies of the piece.

      The processional progressed until the bridal party was lined up at the front of the sanctuary. Then the doors at the back closed, and after an appropriately dramatic pause, Caitlin cued them to launch into the bridal march. This time Jazzy kept her eyes open. When the doors parted to reveal Chelsea standing there, arm-in-arm with Derrick, she felt a tickle at the back of her eyes.

      She was such a sap. No matter how many times she played this, the music still made her cry.

      

      Standing at the entrance to the sanctuary, Derrick placed his left hand over Chelsea’s on his arm, and squeezed. The grin she directed up at him melted his heart. This whole wedding thing had seemed so unreal until now. Lots of talk and plans and Mom’s house stuffed full of doodads made out of pink satin and white lace. But that music had a way of jerking a guy into reality. This was really happening. His kid sister was about to marry the love of her life.

      “Okay,” Emily said. “Walk real slow. Step, pause, step, pause.”

      They started down the aisle, and Derrick noticed that Mom, standing in her place in the front pew, was dabbing at her eyes with a tissue. She’d be all alone when Chelsea moved out. He’d have to make sure to stop by the house more often to keep her company. Let her feed him home-cooked meals. Encourage her to get out more, too.

      “They’re really good, aren’t they?” Chelsea whispered. “I’m glad you found them.”

      She was staring ahead. Derrick looked that way and caught sight of Jazzy. No longer puffy with tears, her eyes seemed dreamy now, and her smile tender. Her body swayed with the music, her arm moving smoothly as she drew her bow across the strings of her fiddle. She handled the thing like it was an extension of herself.

      She wasn’t married, or at least her online profile stated that she was single. Was she seeing anybody? He’d looked through-her blog posts and hadn’t seen any mention of a boyfriend. A bunch of guys on her friends list, but what pretty girl with gorgeous green eyes wouldn’t have a ton of guys sending her Friend invites?

      “Yes,” he managed. “They are good.”

      Step, pause. Step, pause.

      “Oh, good. Mr. Kirkland just got here.” Chelsea nodded toward a pew in the front. “He’s here to find out how we want the chairs and stuff set up for the reception. I wonder if Mom saw him.”

      “Kirkland?” Startled, Derrick looked where Chelsea indicated. A fiftyish guy with short, silver-streaked dark hair had just entered and chosen a seat on the far side of a pew in the center of the sanctuary, watching the musicians. Josh Kirkland’s brother. Obviously he had not yet been informed of his brother’s fate. “What’s he doing here?”

      Chelsea shrugged. “The regular groundskeeper is on vacation. Reverend Evans heard that Mr. Kirkland does this sort of work for the hotel all the time, so he hired him to fill in.”

      Derrick hesitated. The guy needed to be told about his brother, but Derrick didn’t think such terrible news should come from him. They were nearing the front of the sanctuary, where Quinn and Reverend Evans stood waiting, when they heard a commotion behind them. Loud static from a two-way radio cut through the music, and Derrick turned to see Sheriff Maguire stride through the doorway, the various tools of his trade jingling on his police belt. His head swiveled as he looked around the sanctuary, and then his gaze settled on Les Kirkland.

      “Thank goodness.” Derrick was off the hook. The sheriff was far more qualified to deliver the news.

      “What’s going on, Derrick?” Chelsea asked.

      He squeezed her hand hard against the bad news he was about to deliver. “That guy who was killed over at the Executive Inn? It was Josh Kirkland.”

      “Oh, no!”

      Chelsea released his arm to cover her mouth with her hand at the same moment Sheriff Maguire reached Mr. Kirkland.

      “I’ve been looking all over the place for you, Les.”

      Derrick heard those words clearly, then the sheriff leaned over and whispered for a few seconds. The other man, eyes fixed on the sheriff’s face, jerked backward in the pew.

      “No.

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