Mummified Meringues

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Authors: Leighann Dobbs

Tags: #Mystery: Cozy - Bakery - Amateur Sleuths

BOOK: Mummified Meringues
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Contents

Copyright

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Chapter Twenty-Two

Chapter Twenty-Three

Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Five

Chapter Twenty-Six

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Meringue Cookies Recipes

A Note From The Author

About The Author

This is a work of fiction.

None of it is real. All names, places, and events are products of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to real names, places, or events are purely coincidental, and should not be construed as being real.

Mummified Meringues

Copyright © 2014

Leighann Dobbs

http://www.leighanndobbs.com

All Rights Reserved.

No part of this work may be used or reproduced in any manner, except as allowable under “fair use,” without the express written permission of the author.

Cover art by:
 
http://www.coverkicks.com

Chapter One

Lexy Baker-Perillo took a bite of the chocolate meringue cookie and let the carefully crafted confection melt in her mouth.

Needs more sugar
, she thought, as she looked around the basement of the 1950s ranch-style home where she and her husband, Jack Perillo, were sorting through the decades of accumulation that cluttered every inch of the small area. They’d been working on organizing the items off and on for months and it seemed like they’d barely made any progress.

But, they needed to get a move-on because Jack didn’t want to put the house on the market until the basement was cleaned out and Lexy dearly wanted to sell the house soon so she could pay back the loan her parents had given her to start her bakery,
The Cup and Cake
.
 

“Why can’t we just sell the house with all this stuff in it?” Lexy asked.
 

Jack looked up from the box he’d been digging in and straightened, his head almost brushing the low ceiling. He rubbed his hand down his stubble-dotted chin and turned his velvety brown eyes on Lexy.

“Because,” he said as he walked toward her. “No one buys a house that comes with a basement full of stuff.”


You
did,” she pointed out as she watched him pick a meringue cookie from the plate.
 

Jack’s lopsided grin made her smile. He leaned over and placed a gentle kiss on the tip of her nose that made her heart flutter. “That was just so I could get close to
you
.”

Jack was joking, of course. He hadn’t known she lived behind him when he bought the house, but the memory of their first meeting warmed Lexy’s heart. She’d bought her house from her grandmother, Nans, who had decided she’d have more fun living in the new retirement center in town where most of her friends were. The house was right behind Jack’s, with backyards separated by an old fence.

One night, Lexy’s Shih-Tzu poodle mix, Sprinkles, had slipped through a gap in the fence and proceeded to do her nightly business in Jack’s neatly manicured shrubs. Much to Lexy’s embarrassment, Jack had come out to see who was skulking around in his garden and that’s how they’d first met.

Of course, she’d had no idea Jack was a homicide detective or that she would soon become his number one suspect in the murder of her ex-boyfriend, but thankfully, things had eventually worked out and now they were married with neighboring houses. They’d decided to take up residence in Lexy’s house since she had so many childhood memories there and Jack’s was going to be put up for sale … that is, if they ever got the basement done.

Jack bit into the cookie and headed back into the maze of boxes.

“These need more sugar if you expect to win that dessert contest,” he shot over his shoulder as he disappeared from view.

Lexy tapped her finger on the top of the box she was supposed to be sorting. The dessert contest was a yearly event in Brook Ridge Falls. Each year the town held a contest based on a certain type of dessert or dessert ingredient. One year it was chocolate, and another year it was pecans. This year, it was meringue.
 

Lexy sighed and plucked at the folded-over lid of the box. She’d much rather be in her bakery perfecting her meringue cookie recipe and thinking up interesting variations than in here, looking at more than fifty years of old stuff that was left in the basement by the previous owner. Winning the contest could give her business important publicity.

“Woof!”
 

“Sprinkles, come here.” Lexy craned her neck in the direction of Sprinkles’ bark which, near as she could tell, came from the far corner of the room.

“Woof!”
 

Scratch, scratch, scratch.

“What is she doing?”

“Probably just exploring.” Jack’s muffled voice came from inside a box he was inspecting, and then he added, “Hey, check this out.”

Lexy looked up to see him holding up a vintage, jadeite green triple-head milkshake mixer. “That’s kind of neat. Does it work?”

“Don’t know, but this place is full of retro kitchenware.”

“And other stuff,” Lexy mumbled as she flipped up the lid. Leaning to look in, her shoulder length, mink-brown hair fell across the side of her face and she shoved it behind her ear impatiently. A pungent whiff of mildew drifted into her nostrils as she peered in at a box full of musty linens.

“It’s a treasure trove of nostalgia.”

“Woof!”
 

Scratch.

“Nans said all the items might add to the appeal of the house for a new buyer.” Lexy waved her hand around the room. “They could practically outfit the whole house with everything they need just from the items in here.”

Jack wrinkled his brow at her. “I’m not sure what’s with Nans. She told me that, too, but the real estate agent was pretty clear that having the basement full like this would make the house hard to sell. Besides, some of this stuff is valuable. We could sell it and make even more money.”

Scratch, scratch, scratch, scratch.

“Woof! Woof!”

“Sprinkles, cut it out!” Lexy felt a tingle of nerves.
 

What was that dog into?

Jack brought a box up to the front of the room where they’d decided to pile up the ‘sellable’ items. Space was at a premium in the tightly packed basement and he had to shuffle sideways to get past her and into the designated area.

“You’re going to have to go a little faster if you want to finish this any time soon,” he said.

“Right.” Lexy closed up the box and slid it over to the ‘trash’ area—the linens were too musty to be of any good to anyone. “It’s just that it takes so much time to go through this stuff, I’m not sure it will be worth it.”

“Woof! Woof!”

Lexy spun around, trying to hone in on Sprinkles barks. “Can you see where she is? I hope she isn’t stuck somewhere.”

Scratch, scratch, scratch.

“It sounds like she’s down in the back corner.” Jack started toward the corner.

“Woof!”
 

“Sprinkles. Come to Mommy.” Lexy tried to coax her out into the open. “We may never find her in this mess.”

Scratch, scratch, scratch.

“I’m sure we can lure her out with a treat.” Jack yelled the last word to catch the dog’s attention but Sprinkles didn’t stop digging.
 

Lexy’s anxiety grew as Sprinkles’ digging took on a feverish pace and she followed Jack toward the sound.

“Sprinkles, stop!”

“Woof!”

Scratch, scratch, Smash!

“Yipe!”

Lexy’s heart stuttered when she heard the dog’s yelp and she frantically shoved boxes aside to get to Sprinkles.

 
Jack got there first, and by the time Lexy cleared the last box, she found him staring at a hole in the wall. Chunks of cement lay at his feet. Sprinkles looked up at them as if she’d just accomplished some sort of intricate trick and was awaiting her reward. The dog’s white fur was covered with gray dust and Lexy might have laughed if she wasn’t so concerned about the hole in Jack’s foundation wall.

“Sprinkles!” Lexy admonished the dog, then put her hand on Jack’s arm. “Jeez, Jack I’m sorry about that hole. I don’t know what got into her.”

Jack bent down and looked into the hole. “This isn’t right.”

“I know. Sprinkle’s has never done anything like that.” Lexy gave the dog a sharp look, her heart melting a little at the dog’s obvious pride in her destructive work. “I’ll pay to get it fixed right away.”

“No, not that.” Jack reached out and pulled another chunk of cement away. “This should be the foundation wall with dirt behind it, but it looks like there’s a space behind here.”

Lexy furrowed her brow. “A space?”

“Yeah.” Jack stood and looked down the length of the wall, then up at the ceiling, then turned and looked around the basement. “I never really looked around down here, but it seems like this wall is a bit shy of the outer edge of the house and there’s another section behind it.”

Lexy’s eyes swept the length of the wall. “But there’s no door or anything.”

“That’s what’s so strange about it. It’s all sealed to make it look just like the other walls.”

“Like a secret room?” Lexy asked.

“Exactly.” Jack bent down and pulled at a loose chunk of cement, then peered through the hole again. “It’s dark in there. Can you get the flashlight?”

The sounds of Jack breaking away bits of cement accompanied Lexy as she wove her way through the boxes to the front to retrieve the large flashlight they’d left by the steps.

“Why would they have a secret room in here?” Lexy asked as she made her way back. She crouched down beside him and handed him the light.
 

Jack had worked a two-foot opening in the wall. He shined the light inside to reveal a narrow space, about two feet, wide running the length of the wall.
 

“I have no idea,” he said as he poked his face into the hole and played the light slowly down the entire length of the space.

Lexy stuck her face in beside his and the smell of must, dry earth and something else she couldn’t quite place tickled her nose. She felt a pang of disappointment—the room appeared to be empty. And then the flashlight revealed something in the far corner.

Lexy grabbed Jack’s arm. “Wait. What’s that?”

“What?” Jack aimed the beam of light into the corner.
 

“Oh, it’s just a sack of old, rotted potatoes,” Lexy said as she looked at the bottom of the brown sack laying like a lump in the corner. Some potatoes must have fallen out and were lying in small, dirty lumps around it.

“Wait a minute …” Jack angled the flashlight on the sack and Lexy realized the brown, leathery form was too long to be a sack of potatoes and not only that, it appeared to be wearing a pair of shorts, a wife beater t-shirt and one red flip-flop on its right foot.

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