The Design Is Murder (Murders By Design) Read online




  The Design is Murder

  By Jean Harrington

  Book five of Murders by Design

  Interior designer Deva Dunne should be focusing her attention on buying a new home with Lt. Victor Rossi. But in typical Deva-style, she’s got her mind on everyone else’s abodes. Keeping her busy are her two newest clients, who have a lot in common. They both live on Whiskey Lane, and both were involved with the same woman. Coincidence or competition?

  James Stahlman believes Stew Hawkins moved into the house across the street to terrorize him after he became engaged to Kay, Stew’s ex-wife. But Stew is over it. He’s remarried—and to someone much younger. When both women are found “accidentally” dead weeks apart, Deva thinks there’s something afoot on Whiskey Lane. Coincidence or murder?

  Deva can’t stay away...as much as her protective fiancé would like her to. And it’s becoming clear that someone thinks Deva’s seen too much. With the list of suspects growing, and Deva and Rossi that much closer to becoming homeless—really, where are they going to live?—she’ll have to sift through the clues herself, or there’ll be no happily ever after.

  71,000 words

  Dear Reader,

  Welcome to the November 2014 edition of the Dear Reader letter. This month, Carina Press and I share an anniversary: five years since we joined Harlequin! Harlequin has been an amazing home for both of us, showing support, enthusiasm and offering a team environment for both the business and for authors. I’m thrilled to have seen Carina Press and our authors grow to great success in sales, reviews, careers and awards in the five years since we opened our doors, and we believe things can only get better from here.

  In honor of the holiday season, two authors bring us holiday novellas. First, in Shannon Stacey’s contemporary romance, Her Holiday Man, two people, both wounded by love in the past, are brought together by a widow, a child’s joy, and the spirit of Christmas. Later in the month, star-crossed lovers Gabe and Cat meet again at Christmas after five years apart—just a week before she’s set to marry another man, in the historical romance A Christmas Reunion by Susanna Fraser.

  Lauren Dane is back with the third installment in her urban fantasy series, and this one is more romantic than ever! Don’t miss Rowan and Clive in Blade on the Hunt.

  As a follow-up to his incredibly popular romantic suspense Fair Game, male/male romance author Josh Lanyon brings us Fair Play, in which ex-FBI agent Elliot Mills must figure out who is willing to kill to keep his former ’60s radical father’s memoirs from being published.

  In Tempting the Player by Kat Latham, a rugby player’s extreme fear of flying keeps his career from taking off—until a sexy pilot tempts him into her cockpit to help him overcome his phobia...of planes and commitment. Joining Kat in returning with a contemporary romance is Stacy Gail with Where There’s a Will, the much-anticipated story of Coe, who won reader’s hearts in Starting from Scratch. This is one hero who will steal your heart, all because of the milk!

  Designed for Love by Kelsey Browning is also in our contemporary romance lineup in November. A former Houston socialite is out to prove she’s more than a blonde bobblehead by managing a huge construction project. When an environmentalist mucks up Ashton’s plans, she must rely on the blue-collar contractor who can either help her build her dreams or crush them.

  Last, but not least, of the fantastic contemporary romances is male/male romance In the Fire, the second part of the In the Kitchen duology by Nikka Michaels and Eileen Griffin. After spending the last eight years apart, chefs Ethan Martin and Jamie Lassiter have to decide whether to face the fire to get what they want or live a lifetime apart. Don’t miss the chemistry and emotional angst between Ethan and Jamie in this explosive duology.

  Two murders in two mansions in two weeks—what’s going on in Naples’ most glamorous neighborhood? For cozy mystery fans, Jean Harrington’s Murders by Design series should not be missed. Pick up her newest release, The Design Is Murder, or catch up with Designed for Death, The Monet Murders, Killer Kitchens and Rooms to Die For.

  This month we’re thrilled to welcome Edie Harris to our publishing team with Blood Money, her romantic suspense series that follows the lives and loves of a family of spies. In Blamed, A Blood Money Novel, we meet the first of the siblings. Beth Faraday, a former assassin who wants nothing more than to stay retired, finds her new life turning anything but normal when sexy British spy and ghost from her past Raleigh Vick shows up in Chicago, determined to protect her from the bounty that’s been placed on her head.

  Coming in December: Leah Braemel caps off her sexy cowboy romance trilogy, new author Caroline Kimberly is back with her sophomore historical romance, Michele Mannon concludes her knock-out MMA trilogy, and so much more!

  Here’s wishing you a wonderful month of books you love, remember and recommend.

  Happy reading!

  ~Angela James

  Editorial Director, Carina Press (Five years and counting!!)

  Dedication

  To each and every friend of Deva Dunne, whoever you are and wherever you may be.

  Acknowledgments

  To my legal guide and friend, Attorney Carolyn Alden; to handwriting analysts Andrea McNichol and M. N. Bunker, who was the founder of the International Graphoanalysis Society. To the Naples Daily News for its ongoing coverage of the python infestation now attacking the Florida Everglades; to Naples Detective Mike Haburjak of the Collier County Sheriff’s Office, Financial Crimes Bureau; to my steady and insightful critique partners and fellow writers, Brenda Pierce and Joyce Wells. And of course, to super editor Deborah Nemeth, who improves my manuscripts with unfailing patience and skill.

  Also, although the State of Florida prison system does not provide a furniture construction program for inmates, other prison systems in the United States do, and this book borrows on that fact.

  Contents

  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

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Chapter Forty

  Chapter Forty-One

  Chapter Forty-Two

  Chapter Forty-Three

  Chapter Forty-Four

  Chapter Forty-Five

  Chapter Forty-Six

  Chapter Forty-Seven


  Chapter Forty-Eight

  About the Author

  Copyright

  Chapter One

  I slit the envelope with my Colonial pewter-handled letter opener, slid out a thin sheet of lined paper and read,

  To Mrs. Deva Dunne,

  My name is Number 24601. I’m also known as Mike Hammerjack, a guest of Florida State Prison. I’m in for embezzlement, 10 to 20, with time off for good behavior. After a few detours you don’t want to hear about, I’m trying to do my best. That’s why I’m writing to ask a favor, not for me, for my fellow inmates. Like me, most of these guys don’t belong behind bars, but that’s another story.

  As a reward for cooperation, some of us work in the carpenter shop, making custom-designed furniture—chairs, benches, tables, desks—mostly out of pine, in different finishes.

  Here’s where you come in. Everything we make is up for sale at very reasonable prices, with the money going to prisoners’ families. Little kids, exes, etc. I read an article about you in Design Magazine and hope you can use our pieces in some of your projects.

  If you’re interested, contact Warden Bill Finney here at Florida State, and he’ll send you pictures and info about our products.

  You won’t be sorry.

  Sincerely yours,

  Mike Hammerjack, President

  Help-a-Con Program

  Written in a tight, crabbed hand with fancy flourishes, the letter wasn’t easy to read, and I had to wade through the squiggles twice to understand it. Despite the poor handwriting, the letter was obviously the work of a focused person and, for some reason, I believed Number 24601 was sincere in writing to me. Then again, I tend to root for the underdog. I’m from Boston originally, and the Red Sox are my beleaguered team. Though they seldom make it to the Series, I love them anyway. As for a guy in prison reaching out to help his fellow cons, he deserved a break, didn’t he?

  “Of course, he does, darlin’,” echoed in my head. Dear Nana again, though she’d been gone for fifteen years now. “Help the lad, if you can.” Gone but not silent.

  I put the letter on my desk with a sigh. God only knew what prison-made furniture looked like. Clumsy most likely. Knocked together by big, rough hands. Still...

  The Yarmouthport sleigh bells on the entrance of my interior design shop suddenly did their job, jangling like mad as the door opened, admitting a distinguished middle-aged gentleman. What else would you call a silver-haired man cradling a Maltese puppy in his arms, and wearing a silk suit and cravat on a hot July day in Southwest Florida?

  I rose from behind my desk to greet him.

  “Are you Ms. Dunne?” he asked without preamble.

  “Yes, I’m Deva Dunne. How may I help you?”

  He took a step forward and said, “Do forgive me for not offering my hand, but Charlotte won’t let me put her down.” He caressed the dog’s head. “Will you, dearest?”

  The dog licked his fingers. I guess that was a no.

  “She’s adorable,” I said, sort of meaning it. A tiny white scrap of a pooch, Charlotte didn’t look like she’d ever heard of “paws on the floor,” or “stay” or, perish the thought, “roll over.”

  “I’m sure she’s easy to indulge, Mr....”

  “Stahlman. James Stahlman.”

  I gulped. Hard. His name wasn’t one easily forgotten, not after being plastered all over the Naples Daily News for days on end. That had been some months ago, yet the cloud hovering over him then still lingered. Had he, or had he not, killed his wife?

  Chapter Two

  “I’m about to be married,” James Stahlman said. “As a surprise for my bride, I’m planning to give my house a fresh new look.”

  “The entire house?”

  “I don’t believe in half measures, Ms. Dunne.”

  “I see.” Standing straighter—when I don’t slump, I’m five-six—I said, “May I ask where your property is located?” A rhetorical question. I knew. Whiskey Lane.

  “I’m at 590 Whiskey Lane,” he said, stroking Charlotte softly. “I want you to see the house, and after that we can discuss any changes you deem appropriate. By the way, it may please you to know you come highly recommended.”

  Well, you don’t, I wanted to retort, but there I went again, jumping to conclusions. Mr. Stahlman hadn’t been convicted of murder, or if so, only in the court of public opinion. The official conclusion was that his wife, Marilyn, had accidentally drowned while cruising the barrier islands on her husband’s yacht.

  “Thank you,” I said, keeping my voice politely noncommittal.

  He seemed innocuous enough, standing in the middle of the shop, patting Charlotte’s topknot and taking care not to disturb her perky pink bow.

  At the time of Marilyn Stahlman’s death, how such a champion swimmer could drown so mysteriously in the middle of the night had been the cause of much speculation. It still was and no wonder. Her body had never been found.

  Anyway, I hoped what I was thinking didn’t show on my face.

  Apparently not, for he said, “So shall we make an appointment for you to tour the house? How does tomorrow at two strike you?”

  For the second time that morning, the sleigh bells jangled, and I glanced past Mr. Stahlman toward the front door. An unshaven teenager lurched in, his knees popping out of his jeans, his eyes popping out of his head.

  I froze. A Beretta aimed at your face would do that to a person.

  Finger shaking, I pointed toward the doorway. “Look!”

  Mr. Stahlman swiveled around, spotted Bug Eyes and in his shock dropped Charlotte—boom!—to the floor, probably for the first time in her fluffy little life.

  “Don’t move,” our intruder said. As if we could.

  “What do you want?” I asked, my voice as shaky as my knees. “I just opened up. There’s no money in here.”

  “Quiet.” He waved the gun at Mr. Stahlman. “Drop your wallet on the floor. Then slide it over to me. No fast moves.”

  James Stahlman reached inside his breast pocket and slowly withdrew a leather billfold. Bending down, he placed it on the floor, and with the toe of his polished loafer sent it sliding across the room.

  To Charlotte, that meant party time. As the wallet skittered across the floorboards, she pounced, grabbed the leather in her teeth and, happy with her new toy, scampered around the shop, dodging between chair legs and swooping under the round table skirts.

  The mugger followed the dog with his doped-up eyes and the muzzle of his gun. “Get the damned wallet, fast, or I’ll kill that mutt.”

  “Mutt!” The word tore from James Stahlman’s lips. Finding the insult too grievous to ignore, he drew himself erect. “She came in second in the Westminster Dog Show.”

  “Who gives a shit?”

  As the Beretta ominously followed Charlotte’s every move, the morning sun glanced off the dull barrel. Dull? Ah! The gun was a plastic fake. Mr. Tough Guy Mugger was playing Cops and Robbers. He wasn’t even armed. I was sure of it—well, pretty darned sure. My father had been one of Boston’s finest and taught me everything he knew about weaponry. But the price of a mistake could be fatal. While I tried to decide what to do, Charlotte did the deciding for me.

  The mugger approached her, gun cocked and aimed. She took one look at him and dropped the wallet. A five-pound ball of fluff with the body of a crumpet and the heart of a lion, she leaped for his hand and sank her perfect little teeth into it.

  He howled, and with Charlotte clinging to his flesh, he raised his arm. Swinging her around like a furry slingshot, he flung her through the air. She sailed across the shop, landing with a
squeal on the zebra settee, a dazed expression on her face, her bow at a nutty angle.

  Forgetting all danger to himself or to me either, Stahlman rushed to his darling and picked her up, murmuring sweet nothings into her ears.

  Our mugger grabbed the wallet where the dog had dropped it, flipped it open and removed what looked like a hefty wad of cash. He threw the raided billfold on the floor, and with a final menacing wave of his pistol, yanked open the front door and disappeared down the alley to a rousing chorus of sleigh bells.

  “My brave girl,” Stahlman said. “My dear, brave girl.”

  He sure wasn’t speaking to me, but that was all right. Charlotte had been terrific and deserved the praise. All I’d done was stand frozen in uncertainty. Now that the danger was over, I thawed and sprang into action.

  “I’m calling the police.”

  “No! No police.”

  Cell phone in hand, I stared at him, dismayed. “You’re kidding me.”

  “Not at all, Ms. Dunne.”

  “Actually it’s Mrs., but after what we’ve just been through together, do call me Deva.”

  “Of course.” He stroked Charlotte’s fur and kissed her yet again. “And I’m James. But no police, Deva.”

  The phone clutched in my sweaty palm, I said, “Why not, for heaven sake? You’ve been robbed.”

  Cradling Charlotte in one hand, he bent over to pick up his wallet.

  “Don’t touch that,” I yelled. “Fingerprints!”

  Despite my warning, he pocketed the billfold.

  “You shouldn’t have done that,” I said. You’ve just destroyed evidence.”

  “The money is negligible. My important papers are intact. That’s what matters.”

  “But—”

  He held up a single finger for silence, so I put the phone down on the sales desk, and without saying any more, waited for his reasoning.

  He cleared his throat. “I’m assuming you read the local newspaper.”

  “Every day. As a small business owner, I have to. It keeps me informed as to what’s going on locally.”