Cremas, Christmas Cookies, And Crooks - Book cover

Cremas, Christmas Cookies, And Crooks

Harper Lin

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Summary

From USA TODAY Bestselling Author Harper Lin: the popular culinary cozy mystery series set in a charming beach town!

It’s almost Christmastime in Cape Bay, and another murder has everyone in town talking. A despised new drama teacher at the local high school is killed in the school’s parking lot. The police arrest a beloved teacher, Mrs. Crowsdale, but everyone else thinks she is too nice to murder anyone. Mike, however, says they have solid evidence that proves she did it. Sammy is particularly devastated. Mrs. Crowsdale was her favorite teacher and still her hero. Sammy begs Fran to find the real culprit. Fran isn’t so sure. Mike would be angry with her for butting in on another case. And what if more danger befalls her? After all, there are some pretty dangerous people in town…

Includes 3 special holiday recipes!

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Chapter 1

My heels clip-clopped on the linoleum floor as I made my way toward the principal’s office. I was anxious about being in the hallway in the middle of a school day without a hall pass, but I had no reason to be. It wasn’t as though they could suspend me. I’d graduated more than fifteen years ago.

At the office door, I felt the same rush of nervous energy I’d felt when I’d been a student. It didn’t matter why I was going to the office—to drop off a stack of freshly printed school newspapers, to pick up the lunch that I’d forgotten, to be taken home early because I was sick—I was always nervous. It was as if I was afraid I’d committed some infraction that they’d decided to only mention if I happened to wander in for something else. Ridiculous, I know.

I swallowed down my nerves and opened the door. The receptionist looked up at me. Smiling, I walked over to her to introduce myself. “Hi, I’m Francesca Amaro—”

“Of course you are, dear! I’d recognize you anywhere! Alice! Come look! Franny Amaro’s here!”

If she hadn’t been saying my name, I would have been sure she had me confused with someone else.

A woman who I assumed was Alice came from somewhere in the back. “Franny! It’s so good to see you! I was so sorry to hear about your mother. How are you doing, dear?”

“Um, I’m fine,” I said. “How are you?” I had no idea who these women were, but they sure seemed to know me.

“I don’t think she remembers us, Marian,” Alice said to the receptionist. “You don’t remember us, do you, Franny?”

I searched my brain for these women. Friends of my mother? My grandmother, maybe? They were old enough that they could have been. “Um, no, I’m sorry—”

“I’m Mrs. Bayless, dear,” the receptionist said. “And this is Mrs. Crawford.”

I looked from one to the other, repeating their names in my head. They sounded familiar. Then I looked at Mrs. Bayless’s nameplate in front of her and back at her. I glanced around the room, then at the nameplate, then at her, then at Mrs. Crawford, then back around the room, and suddenly everything clicked. “Oh, Mrs. Bayless! And Mrs. Crawford!” I blushed. “I am so, so sorry!”

“Oh, don’t be sorry, dear!” Mrs. Bayless said.

“We’re certainly not the spring chickens we used to be!” Mrs. Crawford said.

“No, it’s not that,” I said. “It’s just that I don’t think I expected anyone to still be here who was here when I was a student.”

“She’s just saying that to be nice,” Mrs. Crawford stage-whispered to Mrs. Bayless. “She doesn’t want to say that she thought we’d be dead by now.”

Mrs. Bayless laughed as if it were the funniest thing she’d ever heard.

It wasn’t far off from the truth, though. Mrs. Bayless and Mrs. Crawford had been the school secretaries back when I was a student. In my young eyes, they’d been old enough to retire back then, but now I realized that they’d probably only been middle-aged. They didn’t actually look all that much different than they had. Their faces had a few more creases, but their hair wasn’t even grayer. Hair dye doesn’t stop working just because you get older, after all.

“Oh, well, I’m sure you didn’t come here just to give us a bit of a laugh, did you, Franny? What can I do for you?” Mrs. Bayless asked, still chuckling a little.

Before I could answer, a door behind Mrs. Bayless opened and a blond teenage boy walked out, followed by a dark-haired man about my age.

“Mrs. Bayless, could you give Brett a note to get back into class? And, Brett, think about what we talked about,” he said. He looked at me and nodded before going back into his office and closing the door. The plaque on it read Marcus Varros, and under that, Principal. So at least I knew that my old principal, Mrs. King, was gone.

Mrs. Bayless tapped at her computer then printed something and signed it. She handed the paper to the boy. “I’ve said this before, but I hope this is the last one of these I have to sign for you, Brett.”

The boy looked at her for a second then sighed. “Whatever.” He brushed past me and pushed through the door, letting it slam behind him.

“Sorry about that, Franny. Now what can I do for you?” Mrs. Bayless asked.

“I’m here to see Veronica Underwood,” I said.

She and Mrs. Crawford exchanged a glance.

“It’s about selling some refreshments during the school play.”

“Of course, dear. Just sign in right there, and I’ll print you out a name tag,” Mrs. Bayless said, gesturing at a clipboard on the edge of her desk.

“I understand Veronica is the drama teacher?” I asked as I wrote my information on the form. Something about that look between them made me wonder if there was something they knew that I didn’t.

“Yes, dear. She took over from Gwen Blarney this year. But I don’t think Gwen was here when you were, was she?”

I thought for a second. “The name doesn’t ring a bell.” I smiled. “But it took me a minute to recognize your name too.”

“I think Ann Crowsdale would have been the drama teacher back when Franny was here,” Mrs. Crawford said.

“Ah, yes, that’s right,” Mrs. Bayless said. “She only teaches English classes now, but she still codirects the play. Are you meeting with her too?”

“I’m not sure. I was just told to ask for Veronica.”

“Why am I not surprised?” Mrs. Crawford muttered.

Alice,” Mrs. Bayless said sharply then smiled at me. “Veronica has been trying very hard to make her way here, and it’s rubbed a few of the staff the wrong way. We get used to things being a certain way, you know. Even when someone has the best of intentions, it can be hard to adapt to new ways.”

“I certainly understand,” I said and smiled back at her. I was getting the sense that there was more to it than she was telling me, but couldn’t imagine that it was anything I needed to get involved with. I was just there to work out the details of selling some coffee and baked goods. I didn’t need to concern myself with school politics.

“Here you go, dear,” Mrs. Bayless said, handing me the sticky-backed name tag she’d printed out with my name on it. “You don’t need us to keep you here, prattling on. Do you remember where the drama room is? It’s straight down the hall and down the ramp. You’ll go through two sets of double doors and then turn left.”

“Thank you very much,” I said. “It was nice seeing you again!”

I made my way out of the office and down the hall. The school had been renovated and added on to at least once since I graduated, but it still felt like the same place. And I didn’t know how, but it even smelled the same. Either the old building just had that distinctive odor, or the aroma of teenagers and school lunches hadn’t changed much over the years.

The drama room was right where I remembered. The door was open, so I poked my head in. “Veronica?”

“It’s Ms. Underwood, and you need to knock.”

I was startled for a second but then realized she must have thought I was a student. I stepped into the room. “I’m sorry. I’m Francesca Amaro from Antonia’s Italian Café. I’m scheduled to meet with you.”

She looked up from her desk with unmasked irritation on her face. “This is my planning period. You need to ask before you come into my classroom.”

“I’m sorry,” I repeated. “May I come in?”

She waved her hand at one of the desks and looked back down at the papers in front of her. I started to pull the desk closer to hers, but she stopped me. “Leave it where it is. It took me a long time to get this room set up, and I don’t appreciate people messing it up.”

I pushed the desk back into place and sat down. Not wanting to risk irritating her further, I decided to wait until she was finished with whatever she was looking at. Apparently, I decided wrong.

“Well?” she said a few seconds later without looking up.

I took a deep breath and tried to remind myself that teaching is a stressful job. This woman dealt with hormonal teenagers all day, and it was probably enough to make anyone a little testy. All I needed to do was stay calm and be reasonable, and she’d probably warm up to me in a few minutes. And it wasn’t as if she was the first less-than-friendly person I’d ever dealt with. In my former life as a public relations representative, I’d dealt with more than a few celebrities who acted as though they were doing me a favor by letting my firm represent them. Most of them had at least made an attempt at being civil, though.

“As I said, I’m Francesca Amaro from Antonia’s Italian Café here in town. I’m here to talk to you about setting up a refreshment stand during the play next weekend.”

“Right,” she said, tapping her pencil eraser on her papers and finally actually looking at me. “All the proceeds go to the drama club, and we’re not paying for anything. You’re donating it all.”

I stared at her. They were the terms I had been planning to offer, but my plan had been to come across as exceptionally generous by declining to take any kind of payment. I had almost collected myself enough to respond when she added her next requirement.

“And you’ll need to staff it.”

My mouth fell open slightly. Her presumptuousness was astounding.

“If that’s a problem, we’ll find someone else.” Her pencil bouncing had stopped, and she stared at me as if she was daring me—whether it was to accept or decline, I didn’t know.

I wanted to say no. I really did. But Antonia’s had been a part of Cape Bay for going on seventy years. We’d sponsored school activities, raised money for charities, and donated our food for more events than I could count. As much as I wanted to walk out of that classroom just to spite her, it would be entirely counter to the ideals my grandparents had established from the time they first opened the café. So I smiled. “That’s exactly what I was going to suggest. I’m so glad we’re on the same page!”

“The play opens Friday night. I’ll expect you to be set up and ready to sell an hour before showtime.” She looked back down at her papers.

“That sounds great!” I said, still trying to sound cheerful. “Is there anything in particular you’d like us to serve? I brought some samples of our baked goods for you to try if you’d like.” I reached into my oversized bag for the plastic container I’d loaded up with tasty pastries.

“I really don’t care. As long as it sells. We need the money. I don’t know what the old drama club sponsors were spending their money on, but everything we have is crap and needs to be replaced.”

“Okay then.”

“Is there something else, or can you go now? I have things to do that I can’t get done with you sitting there.”

“No, I think that’s more than enough.” I stood up and slid my bag over my shoulder. I waited a moment for her to say something, but when she didn’t, I decided I didn’t want to encourage her to since nothing she’d said yet could be described as anything more than barely civil. Still, I couldn’t bring myself to be equally as rude. “I’ll see you next week, then. If you decide there is anything in particular you’d like us to serve, please let me know. We’ll be happy to do whatever we can.”

She still said nothing.

Deciding that meant I was dismissed, I happily left the room. If I never saw that woman again after the play, I couldn’t say I’d be sorry.

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