Happy Mother's Day to all the mothers and those who are like mothers to us.
I'm sharing snippets from the 4th Alex O'Hara cozy mystery, The Case of the Wedding Wrecker. If you haven't read the previous Alex O'Hara mysteries, I should point out it takes place in West Michigan, along the Lake Michigan shore. The Dutch settled in Michigan starting in the 1830s, most heavily on the west side of the state. My Dutch relatives settled in the area north of Detroit. I had fun using family names for some of my characters.
This snippet immediately follows last week's. It ended with Todd's mother saying, “There’s a witness.”
BTW, since this is a work in progress, suggestions are always welcome.
Snippet:
Wait. A witness?
A commotion at the entrance made me turn around. Pieter and Hans
Bogardus walked in. Rather, Pieter shuffled, using a cane. I hadn’t seen him in
a couple of weeks. His usual spry step was gone, replaced by a halting gate. He
appeared almost gaunt, his normally sharp blue eyes clouded. Hans held his arm
then helped him sit in the wooden chair next to the dispatch desk before
approaching us.
“Frank, Tony,
Maria, Lexie.” He nodded to each of us, shaking hands with Pop, Tony, and Maria.
I’d grown up
playing at the Pops’ office, next door to his dad’s law office. He’d gone off
to college then law school while I was still the kid in pigtails. I guess he
didn’t know I’d changed my name.
Hans clasped my
hand with both of his. “I should’ve said Alex. Dad talks about you all the time.
How are you holding up?”
I shrugged. Everything was catching up with me. Nick’s
arrest. Todd’s worry about his mother. Her accusations. I needed to talk to
Nick. I knew he couldn’t have killed Mike Amerson. But I needed to hear him
deny it.
“I have to talk
to Nick,” I told Hans.
“Is there an
office I can use to talk to my clients?” he asked Jenny.
She ushered us
around the corner into a bare room. The sign on the door said, “Interview
Room.” Hah. Interrogation Room was more like it. She and Hans grabbed
chairs to add to the three already in the room. Belatedly, Pop and Tony helped.
After everyone
was seated, Hans said, “Tell me what you know.” He looked to me to start.
“Not much of
anything,” I said. “Dawg—Deputy Dawson arrested Nick at the altar, in front of
God and everybody and hauled him off in handcuffs.” Tears streamed down my
cheeks, and my throat closed up. I knew if I talked any more, I’d blubber. Damn
it.
Maria put her
arm around my shoulders and handed me a tissue.
Hans looked at
Tony. “Pardon my attire.” He indicated his denim overalls over a white T-shirt.
“I was working in the yard when you called my dad. He said Nick was arrested
for murder?”
Tony nodded.
“That’s as much as we know. The deputy out front, the one who brought us in
here—Jenny—she won’t talk. Says she can’t.”
“All right. You
all wait here. I’ll find Chief Hoesen.”
As soon as he
left, Maria said, “What a nice young man.”
“I’d rather
have Pieter,” Tony groused. “Look at him. Couldn’t even change his clothes.”
That last line says a lot about Tony. Tweeted.
ReplyDeleteLOL It does. He's so old school.
DeleteI don't think his clothes matter as much as whether he can help Nick get out of there. Nice snippet!
ReplyDeleteRight. Sometimes, Tony misses the big picture.
DeleteI love how fixated people are on clothing - it's a subtheme LOL. Enjoyed the snippet, these feel like real people to me. Fun details you shared about the names!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Veronica. I share that at the beginning of each book. First impressions sure mean a lot.
DeleteI can feel everyone's disconnect with normal. Poor Alex. Dawg is such a jerk. And I'm being kind. :-)
ReplyDeleteDisconnect is a great way to describe everyone's feelings. Such a jolt to what should've been a happy occasion. I have some choice words for Dawg, too. LOL
DeleteIt's an odd time for him to be fixated on clothes. He really is old school.
ReplyDeleteSorry. Forgot to sign it. Elaine Cantrell
DeleteThanks, Elaine. Some people see the forest, others focus on the trees. Maria sets him straight.
DeleteGreat snippets. I always love character interactions, seeing how they reveal themselves.
ReplyDelete