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Authors: Anna Celeste Burke

Cowabunga Christmas

BOOK: Cowabunga Christmas
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Cowabunga

Christmas

Corsario Cove Cozy
Mystery #1

 

Anna Celeste Burke

Copyright
© 2015 Anna Celeste Burke

http://www.desertcitiesmystery.com

Published by Create Space

All rights reserved.
No part of this work may be
reproduced without written permission of the publisher except brief quotations
for review purposes.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters,
businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the
author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual
persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

 

Cover Design by Anna Celeste Burke

Photo by Nadezdha1906 Dreamstime.com

 

ISBN-13: 978-1517347789

ISBN-10: 1517347785

 

Books by Anna Celeste Burke

 

Cowabunga Christmas,
Corsario Cove Cozy
Mystery #1

Gnarly New Year
, Corsario Cove Cozy
Mystery # 2 [Out Soon]

 

A Dead
Husband
Jessica Huntington Desert Cities Mystery #1

A Dead
Sister
Jessica Huntington Desert Cities Mystery #2

A Dead
Daughter
Jessica Huntington Desert Cities Mystery # 3

A Dead
Mother
Jessica Huntington Desert Cities Mystery #4 [Out Soon]

~~~~~

Love A Foot Above the Ground
Prequel to the Jessica Huntington
Desert Cities Mystery Series

DEDICATION

 

 

To all of us, out there every day, just trying
to catch a good wave!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

 

 

To my husband, surfing life’s tides beside me
for decades.

Cowabunga, Baby!

To friends and family in deep water with us on
the wild ride to who knows where?

Hang on!

To my sister, gratitude, for another furious
round of editing! I don’t know how she finds the time and energy to take this
on with all she has to do!

A special thanks to friends who suggested we
meet for dinner at a restaurant, in an out of the way cove, on California’s
glorious coast.

1 Surf’s Up!

 

 

T
he
sound of pounding surf woke me at the crack of dawn. Why not? We had left the
doors to the veranda open. We felt safe in our suite up on the sixth floor and the
sound of the waves was pleasant at night.
That wasn’t all that was pleasant
,
I thought as I slipped out of the oversized bed. That bed was a dream, decked
out in soft, silky sheets and a plush comforter in creamy colors mirroring the sea,
sand and sun. I grabbed a waffle weave spa robe I had tossed casually on a
chair near the bed when we returned from a midnight dip in the hotel pool.

Resort
staff locked the gated area at 10:00 p.m., but no matter. Brien climbed over the
fence and then opened the gate from the inside, bowing gallantly as I entered
carrying champagne and crystal flutes. The gesture was sweet—a side of Brien
that made it almost impossible not to love the guy. He had just violated
several resort rules, however, and probably a law or two. He ought to know,
given he’s licensed in security and has his ‘guard card’ as the State of
California calls it.

As I
slipped the robe on, I padded in bare feet out onto the lavish balcony that
spanned the length of our two-room suite. The sunrise was glorious; molten
colors spilling over the rolling waves. The sea air felt brisk, normal for mornings
this time of year on California’s Central Coast. Despite the chill, warmth
crept over me as I tightened the belt on my robe and sank down on a comfy
chaise.

My robe
had not been tossed casually, but frantically as Brien and I lunged at each
other the moment we returned to our room after sneaking that swim. We were
giggling and out of breath when we burst into our suite and shut the door
behind us. Our leisurely moonlit soak had come to an abrupt end as we ran for
it before hotel security could catch us. The entire evening had been like
that—bouncing wildly between deliriously romantic and breathlessly sexy;
moonlight and surf vying to set the mood.

Not
that unusual for a honeymoon, I suppose. I looked at the rings on my left hand,
almost in disbelief. What had I—what had
we
—done? Me, Kim Reed, a
married woman! Kim Reed-Williams if I went along with Brien’s idea to add the
hyphen. A little over a year ago, if asked, I would have described myself as a
loner, down-and-out. Worse, I had been swimming for my life in murky,
shark-infested waters. That all changed when murder and mayhem put the
celebrated music producer I worked for in prison. When he had found me on the
street years before, I was grateful—that was before I knew what it meant to be
‘discovered’ by
the
Mr. P.

What
I’m grateful for now is the chance for a do-over. I’m getting a fresh start, thanks
to my new bff Jessica Huntington. Brien owed her a lot, too. That included this
deluxe honeymoon. Neither of us could have afforded anything close to a real honeymoon
after paying for our small, Christmastime wedding. Jessica Huntington—as in the
Huntington Beach Huntingtons—would gladly have paid for the wedding too. One thing
I got back, though, when freed from indentured servitude to a scum bucket, was
my pride. So, I set limits on Jessica’s largesse. That’s not always easy to do.
She’s sneaky generous and her lawyer skills give her great persuasive power.

“Yo,
Kim!” my sleepy guy called out from the bed. “Where are you?” His voice grew louder
as he got up and walked closer. “Oh, wow, there you are!”

I
looked up to see the buff, blond beach-boy I had married standing there wearing
a grin and a towel. The man is built, that’s for sure. To be honest, physical
attraction accounted for a lot of my initial interest in him. That attraction
wasn’t strong enough to overcome what I considered to be immaturity and a lack
of smarts—at first. Lots of people see Brien that way. Perhaps it’s all that
unbridled brawn. Like I said, he’s built! Or it could be the surfer-dude-what-me-worry
persona he often hides behind. I was wrong and so are they.

The real
Brien, the man I married, is a sweet, guileless guy. A little immature, true, but
what 25-year-old man isn’t? It could be my California dude is too laid back for
most people. It’s also possible there’s something odd going on in the frontal
lobe—a missing filter or switch that should keep him tuned in better to the
world. Who knows? Who cares? Turns out, dumb he is not, and he’s a hard worker
when he makes a commitment. Like working out the disciplined way he does to
keep that body of his in such ‘righteous’ shape, as he would say. There is a
kind of simplicity about him I find appealing. I’m sure he’d be content to live
in a shack on the beach, workout, surf, listen to music, take in the sunset
with a

brewski,’ and eat, of course. My surfer boy can put it away.

Now
I’d have to add ‘hanging with me’ to that list of the things that make the
light shine in Brien’s eyes. Still, a lot comes out of his mouth he should
think about first, or keep to himself altogether. I like him that way—I never
have to worry about what he’s thinking. I always know where I stand. At least
after I sort out what he means. He’s prone to malapropisms and uses tons of
surfer lingo.

Me, I’m
not so verbose and can go for long stretches without saying a word. Talk about
yin and yang. I’m darkly moody. He’s pathologically optimistic and upbeat. I trust
no one, he trusts everyone. He’s blond and has brown eyes with specks of gold
in them. In contrast, my hair is black and my eyes are dark as coal. He’s big—not
all that tall at about 5’8”, but muscled. Me, I’m petite. The differences go on
and on. Opposites attract, so they say.

“Morning,
Dude.”

“Surf’s
up,” he said, holding onto the smile, but dropping the towel.
Sometimes our
moods match
, I thought, as I let him pull me up out of the lounge chair and
into his arms. I laughed as he swept me off the floor and carried me back to
bed.

 

 

 

 

2 Honeymoon Posse

 

 

P
ounding
woke me up again. This time it wasn’t the surf, but the sound of banging on the
door to our room. Brien, I had already learned, could fall asleep anywhere and
sleep through just about anything. I shook him as I yelled at the jerks making
all that noise this early on Christmas Eve.

“Just
a minute! I’ll be right there.” Shaking Brien again, more urgently this time, I
also spoke to him. “Brien, wake up. Someone’s at the door.” Just then the phone
in our room rang. The pounding on the door continued. All the commotion finally
got Brien up on his elbows.

“Uh,
I’ll get the phone. Go see who’s at the door. Don’t open it until I get there,
okay?”

“Sure,”
I said, hustling into my robe and hollering once more at whoever was hammering
away at the door. “Hang on, hang on! I’m on my way.”

I
glanced at a clock on the gorgeous mantle in the sitting room of our suite. It
was a few minutes past nine a.m. on Christmas Eve. Not as early as I thought,
but who could be calling on us at any hour? This was day three of our
honeymoon. We’d hardly ventured out of our room, so it wasn’t likely we were
being invited to a party. The knocking didn’t sound friendly, either.

“So
much for ho-ho-ho,” I muttered as I reached the door. “Who is it?” I shouted,
hoping to be heard through the closed door.

“It’s
hotel security and the police,” Brien said, as he rushed to join me. “That
phone call was from the front desk. Let me check first, though, okay?”

“Be my
guest.” I backed away from the door. He unlocked the dead bolt, but did not
remove the security chain. A sinking feeling took hold. Hotel security and the
police, shoot! We must have been nabbed at the pool for trespassing.

“Badge,
please.” Brien opened the door just a crack. A black wallet was passed through
that opening and Brien looked it over. Then, without giving it back, he shut
the door, took the chain off, and opened the door wide. We both stood there in
our bathrobes and bare feet, bleary-eyed; needing a shower, coffee, and food.

“And a
hairbrush
,
too,” I added under my breath, catching a glimpse of myself
in a mirror hanging above the side table near the door. I self-consciously
reached up and used my fingers as a comb, trying to make my bob give up the
fright-wig look.

A
parade of people marched into our room, looking around as they filed in. A
couple guys wearing disposable gloves, one with a camera, made a beeline for
the bedroom. I followed them and cringed when I spotted a pair of underwear on
the ground. Mine. A sexy pair, too. I gave them a little kick and nudged them
under the bed.

The
whole room was unsightly. The bed was in disarray. All the exquisite, high
thread-count linens were more off the bed than on it. Two empty champagne
bottles that had been filled with the really good stuff lay on the floor. That
champagne was only one of the many surprises doled out by the hotel, courtesy
of our benefactor Jessica Huntington. Like I said, Jessica is sneaky generous. I
spotted one crystal champagne flute, but couldn’t quite remember where the
other one could be.

One of
the guys, Camera Guy, snapped a couple photos of the disheveled room, focusing
on those champagne bottles. The shorter, older, balder of the two men picked up
one of the bottles and bagged it. Then, he put the champagne flute in another
bag and marked them both. He stopped for a moment on the other side of our
super-sized bed. Baggy Guy leaned over and with the pen he had been using to
mark the bags, picked up a lacy white teddy I had worn for about two minutes the
day before.

“This
yours?” he asked.

“Of
course, it is,” I snapped, stretching across the bed to snatch it from him.
“Brien couldn’t fit into that!”
Down girl
, I told myself. Regardless of
what this was about, it wouldn’t help to go into smartass mode. I felt like
smacking the grin right off Baggy Guy’s face. Meanwhile, Camera Guy moved on
out to the lanai and snapped a photo or two out there.

“You
need a souvenir?” I blurted out before I could stop myself. As far as I could
tell, there wasn’t anything out there besides a million-dollar view of the ocean
and comfy lounge furniture to sit in and gaze at it. The sunset had been
spectacularly romantic.

Camera
Guy ignored me, came back inside and strolled into the marble-clad bathroom.
The tub surround was lined with burnt candles in votives and strewn with rose
petals. Wet towels were on the ground where we had tried to sop up the mess
left behind by our exuberant couples’ bubble bath in the large Jacuzzi that
occupied the middle of the room—a shrine to extravagance. He snapped a photo or
two in there and tsk-tsked as he stepped over a pile of towels and out of the
bathroom. I could not believe it!

“Hey,
if you guys had told me you were going to crash our honeymoon I would have
called the maids in sooner.”

“That’s
what we were afraid of, Ms...uh, uh... ” a guy in a suit stuttered, joining us
in the bedroom. The huge room began to feel crowded.

“Ms.
Reed—Reed-Williams soon, I hope,” Brien interjected. Brien and Suit Guy must
have been drawn into the room by the tone of distress in my voice as I chewed
out Camera Guy. The volume had risen too.

“What
is going on,
uh, uh
, Mr. Suit? Why is Camera Guy taking pictures and his
sidekick, Baggy Guy, fondling my lingerie?” I waved the lace teddy at Mr. Suit
as I spoke.

“This
is Detective Mitchum, Kim. He’s a
real
detective. Not one of the hotel
dicks. Uh, sorry,” Brien said in a loud voice, responding to a harrumph from
one of the men milling about in the sitting room of our suite. “No offense, I’m
a security dude myself.”

As
Brien spoke, he did one of the things that always buckled my knees. He slung
his head back so the shock of blond hair that had fallen into his eyes fell
back into place. The blazing smile that went with that gesture drove all the
bad girl right out of me. Okay, all of the in-your-face, on-your-guard nasty
bad girl anyway. I gave Brien a ‘come hither’ look with a smile of my own that,
as I had already learned, rattled him.

“Just
why are these men here, Brien? Will they be going soon?” I gave the teddy I was
still holding a little twirl as I asked that question. Brien gulped and a flush
rose in his face.

“How
about it guys? You ready to give us a little privacy? You’ve had a look around.
It’s a little messy in here, but it’s no crime scene.” I snapped to attention
at those words, so fast I heard my neck crack.

“Crime
scene, what does that mean?”

“We
found a champagne bottle just like that one down at the hot tub,” Detective
Mitchum said, pointing at the one Baggy Guy held. “If I’m not mistaken, the
mate to that lovely crystal flute, too.”

“So?
We went for a midnight, moonlight swim. It’s our HON-EY-MOON.” I emphasized
each syllable of the word since it seemed to be a foreign concept to these
guys. “We’re sorry. We trespassed and weren’t tidy in our hurry to get out of
there, but I don’t think that warrants bringing a posse after us.”

“Why
the hurry?” Detective Mitchum asked, as he meandered around the bedroom. He
walked over to a corner of our bedroom where two surfboards leaned against the
wall. Brien was planning on surfing, and giving me another lesson or two.

“I
already told them... ” The detective held up a hand and interrupted before
Brien could finish his sentence.

“I
want to hear her version of events. Do you mind?” Brien looked puzzled.

“Well,
I mind and I don’t mind... ”

“Stuff
it, Mr. Williams. That was a rhetorical question,” Detective Mitchum barked,
shaking his head as he planted himself back in front of me. The puzzled look on
Brien’s face grew deeper.

“Uh,
I’m sorry, but you’re not going to get very far if you ask questions you don’t
want answered. ‘Stuff it’ is bogus, too, Detective. It’s just plain rude, Man.
I mean... ”

“Will
you
please
shut up? Does he always go on, running his mouth like this?
Don’t answer that,” the detective said, before I could say a word. It was a
good thing, too. If I had answered that question I might have unleashed a few
choice words of my own about it being none of his frigging business.

Brien
muttered under his breath, “There he goes again, answer this, don’t answer that...
” The detective’s hand went up again. Right in Brien’s face! I felt like going
dark and silent, but I wanted to get this over. I decided to move things along.
Besides, I was curious.

“Detective,
we were in a hurry to get out of there because we knew we were breaking the
rules. When we heard someone coming, we presumed it was security making a
routine check or following up on a report that people were in the pool after
hours. This has all gotten way out of hand. Isn’t it a bit over the top to be
checking out our room as a crime scene because of something so minor?”

“Hardly
Ms. Reed, or is it Reed-Williams? Not unless you regard a dead body floating in
a pool as minor.” My mouth dropped open, but nothing came out. No problem,
Brien was at the ready, never at a loss for words.

“I
know. Weird, huh, Kim? Jessica isn’t even here! She’s our really good friend,
Detective. We call her a calamity magnet. Jessica’s usually the one who gets
mixed up with the dead bodies. She gave us this great honeymoon, but she’s not
even around here, so it can’t be her magnetism. Wow, unless it’s like long
distance magnetism... ” The detective’s mouth was hanging open now, as he tried
to make sense of the torrent of words streaming from Brien.

“Stop!
Just stop, okay? Are you telling me, Ms. Reed, you didn’t hear or see anything
last night that might explain how it happens you were swimming with a dead
guy?”

“Ew! That’s
not what happened, Detective. There was no one in that pool, or the entire pool
area besides us.” I reviewed events in my mind. I had gone back and forth a
couple times from the pool to the hot tub, admiring the view and soaking up the
ambiance, as they say. We’d had a good bit of the bubbly by then, but we
weren’t drunk, so I trusted my memory.

“We
were
alone
, Detective. I’m sure of that, and for almost an hour. Then we
heard voices, saw beams of light bouncing around and coming down the pathway
pretty fast. We took off, heading through the gate and really poured on the
steam when we heard a big splash behind us.” That put the detective on point.

“A big
splash? Did you hear that, too, Mr. Williams?”

“Yeah,
I figured the security guys were right behind us and knocked something into the
pool,” Brien said.

“I bet
that’s when your dead body dropped in, Detective,” I offered. Detective Mitchum
was rubbing his chin, thinking about it. The bushy mustache on his lip wiggled.

“Whoa,
you’re right, Kim. It was a lot like the sound you make when you do a cannonball
in the pool. It could have been a body, but where did it come from?”

“It
was too dark to see much last night, but there are balconies off all the rooms
in this wing of the hotel. Some are directly above the pool area. Am I right,
Detective?”

“Yes,
but if you two are telling us the truth, it means security got a call about a
dead body being found in the pool before it ended up in there.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

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