Blueberry Muffin Murder. Joanne Fluke

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Blueberry Muffin Murder - Joanne Fluke A Hannah Swensen Mystery

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these,” correctly. “I’ll take the flyers to the inn for you. I have to go out there at noon to meet Connie Mac.”

      Andrea swallowed her bite of cookie in a rush. “You’re meeting Connie Mac?”

      “That’s right. Mayor Bascomb’s tied up with a meeting and he asked me to give her a tour of Lake Eden.”

      “You have all the luck!” Andrea sounded envious. “Let me go with you. Please, Hannah?”

      Hannah remembered Tom Sawyer and the whitewashed fence. Andrea would be a big help on the tour, but she didn’t want to seem too eager. “I don’t know. I’m supposed to do it alone. Are you hoping to run into Janie?”

      “Janie won’t be there. She told me she’d be out at the mall most of the day, helping Mr. MacIntyre with the boutique. But I’d just love to meet Connie Mac. I’m her biggest fan, and I can help you give the tour. You know how good I am with people.”

      “True,” Hannah conceded. Andrea had the knack for turning a stranger into a friend in five minutes flat. It was one of the reasons that she was so successful as a real estate agent.

      “Can I, Hannah? I’ll do something for you, I promise. Anything you want.”

      Hannah began to smile. The expression on Andrea’s face was the very same one she’d worn in sixth grade when she’d begged to wear Hannah’s pearl confirmation earrings to school. “Well…I guess so.”

      “Oh, thank you, Hannah!” Andrea glanced down at her red plaid jacket and tailored slacks. “I wonder if I should dash home and change clothes.”

      “You look fine,” Hannah said, averting what would surely turn out to be an hour of primping. “We have to leave in thirty minutes, and we don’t want to be late.”

      Andrea glanced at the clock that hung over the sink. “You’re right. We certainly wouldn’t want to make Connie Mac wait for us. Maybe we should leave now.”

      “Half an hour,” Hannah insisted, amused at her sister’s eagerness. “It only takes twenty-five minutes to drive out to the inn.”

      “All right, if you think so. Maybe I should drive.”

      “Good idea,” Hannah agreed quickly. She’d been meaning to clean out her truck for weeks, but she hadn’t gotten around to it yet. Andrea’s car was always pristine because she used it to transport her potential buyers.

      There was a knock on the back door, but before Hannah could get up from her stool, Delores opened it herself. “Oh, good. I’m glad you’re here, Andrea. Now both of you can see the Ezekiel Jordan House. Put on your coats and come right over. And use the front door so you can get the full effect.”

      The door closed again and Andrea looked amused as she turned to Hannah. “Nothing’s changed. Mother still orders us around like she did when we were kids.”

      “I know,” Hannah said, getting up to grab her parka. “But it’s not just us. Mother orders everyone around.”

      “I can’t believe Mother put the whole thing together in less than a month,” Andrea commented as they emerged from the back door of the Ezekiel Jordan House and walked across the snow to her Volvo.

      Hannah waited until her sister had unlocked the doors and then she slid into the passenger seat. “I’m just as impressed as you are.”

      “It’s bound to be the highlight of the Winter Carnival.” Andrea started her engine and pulled out into the alley. “Especially since she’s got Ezekiel Jordan’s original rosewood desk. What I wouldn’t give for a desk like that! The gold inlay is just spectacular.”

      Hannah thought about the re-creation they’d just seen as they drove down the alley. Delores had a real knack for arranging period furniture for display, and despite her concern about Abigail Jordan’s kitchen utensils, Hannah had found only two out of place. “I liked the parlor the best. It looked so authentic, I could just see Ezekiel and Abigail sitting on their horsehide sofa watching television.”

      “Television?” Andrea turned to give her a sharp look, but then she noticed the grin on Hannah’s face. “Stop teasing me, Hannah. You know they didn’t have television a hundred years ago!”

      “That must be the reason they had so many children. No electricity. No television. There was nothing else to do at night.”

      Andrea did her best to appear disapproving, but she blew it by laughing. “You’re incorrigible.”

      Hannah leaned back in her seat and enjoyed the ride through town. The streets were bustling with activity today. Everyone was getting ready for the Winter Carnival.

      “You should have told me that Norman was going to take period portraits in Ezekiel’s parlor,” Andrea said, pulling out on Old Lake Road and picking up speed. “I could have signed up early.”

      “I didn’t know. I haven’t talked to Norman for a week or so. It’s a great idea, though. I love those old sepia-toned pictures.”

      “Mother told me that Norman’s going all out for the Winter Carnival. He hired another dentist to fill in for him at the clinic, he’s taking all those portraits to raise money for the historical society, and he’s even judging a couple of the contests. Norman’s really a wonderful man.”

      “It sounds like Mother converted you.”

      “What do you mean?”

      “She’s been singing Norman’s praises to me all week. I think she sees a potential son-in-law slipping away.”

      Andrea took her eyes off the road for a moment. “Why? Is Norman dating someone else?”

      “Not yet. Watch the road, Andrea. There’s an icy patch up ahead.” Hannah waited until her sister had turned her attention back to the road. “Carrie told Mother that Ronni Ward’s been having her teeth cleaned too often.”

      “Ronni Ward and Norman?” Andrea thought about it for a moment. “That’s not quite as crazy as it sounds. Norman makes good money, and Ronni always said she wanted to marry a doctor.”

      “Norman’s a dentist,” Hannah pointed out.

      “But people still call him Dr. Rhodes. That’s all that matters to Ronni. She always wanted to be Mrs. Dr. Somebody-or-other.”

      “Maybe she should concentrate on Reverend Knudson. He’s a doctor of divinity.”

      Andrea laughed, and Hannah knew she was imagining their dour Lutheran minister with Lake Eden’s three-time bikini queen. “Maybe you should call him to remind him that you’re still available.”

      “Reverend Knudson?”

      “No, Norman.”

      “I will. But I thought you were rooting for Mike as a brother-in-law.”

      “I adore Mike; you know that, and so does Bill. Bill says that he’s the best partner he’s ever had. But it’s like Mother always says: Don’t put all your eggs in one basket.”

      “So

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