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Tapped Out: Maple Syrup Mysteries

Emily James




  Tapped Out

  Maple Syrup Mysteries

  Emily James

  Stronghold Books

  Copyright © 2017 by Emily James

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the author. It’s okay to quote a small section for a review or in a school paper. To put this in plain language, this means you can’t copy my work and profit from it as if it were your own. When you copy someone’s work, it’s stealing. No one likes a thief, so don’t do it. Pirates are not nearly as cool in real life as they are in fiction.

  For permission requests, write to the author at the address below.

  Emily James

  [email protected]

  www.authoremilyjames.com

  This is a work of fiction. I made it up. You are not in my book. I probably don’t even know you. If you’re confused about the difference between real life and fiction, you might want to call a counselor rather than a lawyer because names, characters, places, and incidents in this book are a product of my twisted imagination. Real locales and public names are sometimes used for atmospheric purposes. Any resemblance to actual people, living or dead, or to businesses, companies, events, and institutions is completely coincidental.

  Editor: Christopher Saylor at www.saylorediting.wordpress.com/services/

  Cover Design: Deranged Doctor Design at www.derangeddoctordesign.com

  Published October 2017 by Stronghold Books

  Ebook ISBN: 978-1-988480-11-4

  Print ISBN: 978-1-988480-12-1

  Contents

  Free Book Offer

  Also by Emily James

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Bonus Recipe: Stacey’s Maple Syrup Popcorn

  Bucket List: Maple Syrup Mysteries Book 8

  Letter from the Author

  About the Author

  Free Book Offer

  Sign up for the author's mailing list and get a free copy of Sapped, the prequel to A Sticky Inheritance.

  Click here to get started or visit www.authoremilyjames.com

  Also by Emily James

  Maple Syrup Mysteries

  Sapped: A Maple Syrup Mysteries Prequel

  A Sticky Inheritance

  Bushwhacked

  Almost Sleighed

  Murder on Tap

  Deadly Arms

  Capital Obsession

  Tapped Out

  Bucket List

  End of the Line (coming February 2018)

  For Christine. When I think of what it means to be a true friend, I think of you. I also think about you playing a piano in the back of my pick-up truck in the street.

  Who lies for you will lie against you.

  Bosnian Proverb

  1

  The look on Erik’s face said that whatever he’d come to talk to me about wasn’t good.

  So did the fact that he’d cleared his throat three times in the last minute. We’d been friends long enough that I knew what that particular tic meant. He was nervous.

  I nudged the cup of coffee I’d made him across my kitchen island and waited.

  He wasn’t in uniform, so at least I knew this wasn’t official police business. No one was dead, and I hadn’t somehow gotten myself into trouble without realizing it.

  For a second, I considered clearing my own throat. The silence was getting uncomfortable, but Erik wasn’t the kind of man you rushed. He’d tell me when he was ready.

  “Do you want some maple syrup popcorn?” I asked. “I’ve been testing recipes for Stacey’s baby shower.”

  Stacey Rathmell, Sugarwood’s bookkeeper and all-around fix-it woman, was due to have her first baby in a little over a month. I was throwing her a shower, and she’d decided she wanted maple-syrup themed favors, but not something we sold in the shop because she didn’t want me expending Sugarwood resources on her. I’d have gladly spent the money on tiny bottles of maple syrup or bouquets of maple syrup candy if it got me out of my kitchen.

  Erik looped a finger through the handle of his coffee mug, but didn’t bring it any closer to him. “I’m not hungry.” He cleared his throat again. “I need advice about Elise.”

  Was he thinking of proposing already? Erik and Elise started dating after Mark and I did. I thought they weren’t considering marriage yet—especially since most people waited longer than Mark and I had to get engaged. But maybe I’d been wrong. If he needed help planning a proposal Elise would love, I could give him some great ideas. I had to be better at planning a proposal than planning a baby shower. Or a wedding. Without Mark’s mom, I’d have been lost.

  I didn’t want to come straight out and ask if that were it, though, and embarrass Erik even more. “Is something wrong?”

  I casually popped a couple kernels of maple syrup popcorn into my mouth. This batch was only marginally better than my first attempt—it practically glued my jaw shut, it was so sticky.

  “Maybe. She’s keeping something from me, and I’m not sure what to do about it.”

  Crap. That was the opposite of where I hoped this conversation was going. It fell more into the I’m not sure this relationship is going to work category.

  He’d probably come to me because, as far as I knew, I was his only female friend, but asking me for relationship advice was like asking a toddler to quiz you for a spelling bee.

  “I’ve only had two serious relationships. One was a borderline psychopath who murdered his wife and tried to kill me. The other was Mark. Maybe Mark or Quincey would be a better choice to talk to this about.”

  “I can’t talk to either of them. They’re both county employees.”

  Erik was so by-the-book sometimes that he made me want to color outside the lines just to be contrary, but he’d lost me this time. “You’re going to have to be a bit less cryptic if you want my help.”

  He sighed and finally took his first sip of coffee. “Elise has been suspended, and she won’t tell me why.”

  Even if he’d let me guess, that wouldn’t have crossed my mind as a possibility. Elise wasn’t quite as strict as Erik, but she was a good police officer. “You’re sure this isn’t a mistake?”

  He shook his head. “I asked her about it. She didn’t deny deserving the suspension, and she said that it’s not something I needed to worry about.”

  If I had to make a guess about why she was keeping this from Erik, I’d have said it was one of two things. The first was that she didn’t want him getting in trouble trying to help her. The second seemed more likely. “Maybe she’s embarrassed. It was probably an innocent mistake, and Chief McTavish had to give her a slap on the wrist.”

  “I asked the chief,” Erik said. “He wouldn’t tell me what was going on either, and he suggested it’d be better if I left it alone.”

  That explained why he felt he couldn’t go directly to Quincey or Mark, e
ven though Mark was the county medical examiner and not a police officer like the rest of them. If Chief McTavish found out that Erik continued to dig even after he’d shut Erik down, Erik and whoever he went to could be in trouble. Besides, if Erik didn’t know the truth, it wasn’t likely Quincey or Mark would, either. Mark wasn’t a police officer, and Erik outranked Quincey.

  It also sounded ominous, like this was more than a small disciplinary action.

  Erik had to be thinking what I was now thinking. Fair Haven’s former chief had been involved in all kinds of cover-ups. Chief McTavish came here in part to uncover whether the corruption stopped with the former chief or went deeper. If he’d suspended Elise and warned Erik off, it could be because he suspected Elise of being dirty.

  No way was Elise a dirty cop. “You know she’s not—”

  “I know.” He pushed his cup back away from him. “It’s not that I think she’s actually involved in any of the things the chief’s investigating, but that doesn’t mean circumstantial evidence won’t point to her. That could end her career.”

  Or at least end her career here in Fair Haven, where the court of public opinion sometimes mattered more than the actual law. Even if she was cleared in the end, it could mean she’d have to start over somewhere else. Leaving Fair Haven meant leaving her family behind, and I knew how close the Cavanaughs were. One of the items in the con side of the list Mark and I were making as we tried to decide whether to move back to DC after we got married involved leaving his family behind.

  And then there was Erik’s job. Would they even be able to get employment in the same county, or would a forced move for Elise mean the end of their relationship?

  I dumped my half-finished cup of coffee in the sink. “I’ll go talk to her. Maybe it’s not as bad as we think.”

  I decided not to call ahead and give Elise a chance to say no. The whole drive, my parents’ voices yelled in my brain about how rude it was to show up unannounced. Fair Haven had that small town drop by anytime attitude, so hopefully Elise wouldn’t be too annoyed.

  Or, at least, not annoyed by me showing up on her doorstep. Based on what Erik had told me, she wasn’t going to love me poking into her private situation.

  But that’s what family did. In a few months, I’d officially be a Cavanaugh, and Elise would be my cousin-in-law.

  I parked behind Elise’s car in her driveway. The high-pitched squeals of happy kids playing drifted from the backyard.

  Elise’s kids were young enough that she’d probably told them she was on vacation rather than that she’d been suspended. She wouldn’t tell me anything around them. If I wanted the truth, I’d have to draw her away.

  I detoured from my path to the backyard and rang the doorbell instead.

  Elise answered a minute later, her dark hair pulled back into a ponytail rather than the ultra-strict bun she wore for work.

  She scrunched her lips together. It wasn’t quite a scowl, but it came close. “He told you.”

  I didn’t see a point in playing dumb. As soon as I tried to come around to the topic of her suspension, she’d know I’d been lying. “He did, but coming here was my idea.”

  She lifted her eyebrows in a way that seemed to say I wasn’t born yesterday.

  I crossed my heart. “I offered to come. I was worried, too, once he told me what’s going on.”

  An expression flickered across Elise’s face too quickly for me to figure out what it was or what caused it. “You mean you came because I wouldn’t tell him what was going on.”

  Ouch. That made it sound like I was simply being nosy. No denying an abundance of curiosity was one of my flaws, but it hadn’t entered my motives this time.

  I felt like I was back talking to the Elise I’d met when Noah, Sugarwood’s groom and mechanic, was attacked. The rumors floating around Fair Haven about me had made her more than a little confrontational. We’d moved past that once she realized rumors were all they were, but all her barriers were firmly back in place now.

  This time I had the upper hand. We weren’t strangers now. We were close enough that she was standing up in my wedding in a few months. Plus, I had insider knowledge. I knew those barriers came up when she was scared or trying to protect someone she cared about.

  “It’s not about curiosity,” I said softly. “It’s about people who love you wanting to have your back. Erik’s worried this is about Chief McTavish’s investigation and that you’ll be blamed for something you had no part of.”

  That same expression crossed Elise’s face again. “And what if I tell you that it’s none of your business, either, and close the door in your face?”

  It almost felt like she was testing me. “August in Fair Haven is close to the perfect temperature for me, and I ate enough popcorn in the past 24 hours that a fast wouldn’t hurt me. I can probably wait you out.”

  One corner of her mouth twitched. She stepped out of the doorway and motioned me in. “I don’t want the rest of the family to know.”

  I tripped on the doorstep and caught myself. The Cavanaughs were a family where privacy was practically a swear word. We’d both be in bigger trouble for keeping a secret than we would for whatever Elise had done to get herself suspended. Mark’s mom still brought up how Mark and I had fudged the number of times I’d almost been killed.

  I straightened up, kicked off my sandals by the door, and scurried to catch up with Elise. “It’s a small town. They’ll find out eventually.”

  She stopped so suddenly I almost rear-ended her. “Not this time. I asked the chief if we could keep it quiet.”

  That put a whole new spin on things. Erik assumed the chief warned him away for his own reasons. Elise made it sound like she’d asked for discretion.

  “They’ll know you were suspended, though. It’s only a matter of time, and then they’ll want to know why.”

  Elise was shaking her head before I finished. “Chief McTavish said he’d tell anyone who asked that I needed to take some personal time. The only other person who knows—knew—was Erik, and clearly I shouldn’t have even told him.”

  She had every right to be miffed. I would have been too if the roles were reversed and Mark went running to Erik about something I’d told him in confidence. That explained why Erik had seemed so conflicted and had sat in my house for a long time before telling me what was going on. But—

  Elise raised a hand. “I can see what you’re thinking. I don’t need to be told he only did it because he’s worried and he cares.”

  At least she’d forgotten about getting an actual promise from me about not sharing this with the family. Though, given how betrayed she already felt by Erik’s breach of confidence, I might have to work on convincing her rather than telling Mark behind her back. First I needed to figure out exactly what was going on.

  “Is this about Chief McTavish’s investigation?”

  Elise leaned backward and glanced over her shoulder, as if checking that the kids were still outside. “Not directly. He said he had to suspend me to keep me from coming under suspicion. Besides, if he didn’t, it’d look like favoritism and then all the work he’d done could come into question.”

  This was getting cloak-and-dagger enough that maybe I didn’t want to know more until I knew I wouldn’t be pressed into keeping it a secret from Mark. “I know you don’t want the whole family to know, but I’m going to have to tell Mark whatever you tell me.”

  Elise pulled a face that made her look eerily similar to her five year old. “Only Mark. And if I tell you, you have to promise to help me.”

  2

  As soon as Elise wanted a promise from me, I knew I wasn’t going to want to agree to whatever she was about to ask. That was the only reason she’d want a promise ahead of time. If the help she needed was something I wouldn’t normally object to, she’d have had no reason to insist on a promise up front.

  But I also knew Elise well enough to know she wouldn’t ask me to do anything immoral or illegal. Whatever she wanted might make me unco
mfortable, but it wasn’t likely to get me arrested.

  I’d promise, with one caveat. “I promise I’ll help as long as it doesn’t require me to lie to Mark.”

  Elise’s lips narrowed to the point where they almost disappeared. She hadn’t wanted her family to know anything about what was going on, but she’d also hated me when we first met, in part because she thought I’d mistreated Mark. She couldn’t hold it against me that I wasn’t going to lie to my future husband about whatever she was bringing me in to.

  Her lips relaxed. “Fine. It’s not something you’d be able to hide from him anyway.”

  She didn’t reiterate her request that I keep this a secret from the rest of the family, so hopefully she’d given up on that idea as well. Fair Haven was too small a town to expect anything to stay top secret for long anyway.

  “What do you need me to do?” I asked.

  “Mom?”

  Elise spun around, and I leaned sideways to see past her. Arielle bounced on her toes through the kitchen doorway, hair plastered against her face and a limp towel around her shoulders.

  “Hi, Aunt Nikki.” She waved at me, then turned her attention back to her mom. “Can we have popsicles?”

  Elise’s expression softened. It was almost like magic, watching her with her kids. All the hard lines in her face disappeared, and she always looked ten years younger.