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Darkness at Foxglove Corners: A Foxglove Corners Mystery, #1
Darkness at Foxglove Corners: A Foxglove Corners Mystery, #1
Darkness at Foxglove Corners: A Foxglove Corners Mystery, #1
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Darkness at Foxglove Corners: A Foxglove Corners Mystery, #1

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The tornado that sent Jennet Greenway to a new home in Foxglove Corners unearths a secret journal that has the power to destroy the life of her neighbor, Camille.

Fleeing from an abusive marriage and a memory of murder, Camille becomes the target of a mysterious avenger—and Jennet becomes involved.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 1, 2023
ISBN9781597051101
Darkness at Foxglove Corners: A Foxglove Corners Mystery, #1

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    Darkness at Foxglove Corners - Dorothy Bodoin

    One

    The sky was too dark for five o’clock in the afternoon, and the sultry air stalled outside the kitchen window held a threat of rain. A little water would be good for the grass and flowers, but unfortunate for Coach Adam Barrett’s end-of-school barbecue.

    I took the last sheet of oatmeal cookies out of the oven, set them on the counter to cool, and glanced outside. A storm was definitely on the way. Adam would have to use the broiler instead of the gas grill and move the party indoors.

    I had an hour to bathe and dress, after which I’d pack the cookies in the car and drive across town to Adam’s house. Everything was nicely under control, except for the weather. It was growing more ominous every minute, and I thought I could hear a faraway rumbling, but nothing else. For a Friday afternoon, it was unusually quiet in the neighborhood.

    It was time to bring my collie, Halley, inside. The thunderstorm wouldn’t scare her, but she wouldn’t like getting her thick black coat wet when it began to rain.

    I pushed the three trays of cookies I’d already baked to the center of the table and moved quickly through the house to my bedroom and the adjoining porch at the back, where the air trapped between the screens made this outside space almost as hot as the kitchen.

    Halley was there before I could call her, front paws on the second step, dark eyes bright and alert as she peered inside, waiting for me. As soon as I opened the door, she dashed past me into the bedroom and jumped up on the bed.

    Belatedly it occurred to me that I should listen to the weather report. Since May there had been numerous warnings and watches, but storms seldom reached Oakpoint, Michigan, when they were supposed to; and I no longer took them as seriously as I should. Today might well be different.

    Halley sprang off the bed and followed me into the living room, padding along close behind me, panting heavily. She ran to her toy basket and then to the kitchen table, where the oatmeal-cinnamon scent was strong and enticing, but the cookies were beyond her reach. With a plaintive little whine, she dashed to the front door, then back to the porch again.

    Clearly she didn’t know where she wanted to go. Her antics usually amused me, but now they added to my growing sense of apprehension.

    I pressed the television power button, and the picture came into sharp focus. The funnel cloud logo at the bottom of the screen and the sight of a grim-faced weather forecaster confirmed what I already suspected. He was standing next to a map of Michigan and pointing to a red arrow that zigzagged its way from Maple Falls down to Oakpoint.

    As the sudden blare of the siren drowned out the audio, I turned up the volume and quickly registered crucial information. At four-thirty a tornado had touched down about three hundred miles north of Oakpoint in Maple Falls, leaving at least four confirmed dead. Tornadoes were forming all over the state. One was moving rapidly toward Oakpoint, and a funnel cloud had already been sighted only a mile west of my street. My house was right in its path.

    "We repeat: A tornado warning is in effect for a large part of Michigan, including Oakpoint. Take cover in a basement..."

    For Halley and me, this wasn’t an option because she’d always refused to go down the steep stairway, and I wouldn’t leave her upstairs alone. I reached down and felt through the long white fur on her neck for her chain.

    Everybody should take cover immediately.

    Hastily, allowing myself no time to think, I grabbed her leash from the hook in the kitchen, attached it to the last link of her chain, and dragged her with me toward the back of the house. Since we couldn’t go downstairs, the safest place for us to shelter from the tornado was the small narrow hall between the two bedrooms, with the doors closed, away from the windows.

    Halley, Sit! I said. Stay!

    She obeyed me but within seconds was up again, straining on the leash, trying to go back into the kitchen, where her crate was. I pressed down on the top of her shoulders, repeated my command, and slipped the leather loop over my wrist up to my elbow. Then I sat down beside her and said as calmly as I could, That’s a good girl. It’s all right.

    The siren was still wailing, drowning out every other sound in the world, except my dog’s heavy breathing and the pounding of my heart. As I stroked her head, she trembled, or perhaps it was my hand shaking. My fingers were numb and cold in spite of the heat. Not even the soft fur could warm them.

    Don’t be afraid, Halley. Nothing’s going to happen.

    I didn’t believe what I was saying, and I knew I was communicating my fear to her, but couldn’t hide the panic that was closing in on me. I was the one in need of reassurance. I had lived all of my life in Michigan, yet still I thought a tornado would naturally touch down elsewhere and was foolish enough to act as though I were invincible. Today I’d ignored nature’s signals and left my dog outside in the backyard, while the deadly funnel cloud whirled its way toward my house.

    I should have turned on the television when I first became aware of the strange, oppressive heat and the darkening sky, but, at this point, recrimination was futile. Here in the hall, we were as safe as we were going to be. Now, what else could I do? I tried to concentrate, but my thoughts were running together like wax melting down into a saucer.

    I remembered my mother’s tradition of lighting a blessed candle during a severe storm. There was a box of them somewhere in the house. I supposed I’d packed it with the rest of her possessions up in the attic after her death.

    You don’t want anything burning. Stay calm, and maybe it’ll miss us. Think about something else.

    There was a composition I used to assign to my English students. Sometimes I did it along with them. If the world was going to end, and you could save only twelve things, what would they be? I’d choose my family photograph albums. But now I realized that, as they were scattered throughout the house with mere minutes remaining until the tornado arrived, they might as well be on another planet. My old-time mystery books were in the basement, along with my diaries and journals, the years of my past preserved on paper. They were equally inaccessible.

    My jewelry case was only a few feet away on the dresser, behind the closed bedroom door, but I could buy more necklaces, pins, bracelets, and rings. There was only one thing I couldn’t replace, and I was holding on to her right now.

    The tornado will be in Austin at five-fifteen, in Deer Lake at five-thirty, in Oakpoint...

    As the power failed, the newscaster’s voice was cut off in mid-sentence, and we were plunged into a deep and deadly silence. It wouldn’t be long now. I wrapped my arms around Halley’s body and buried my face in her warm fur.

    There was a roaring sound like that of a thousand winds or trains bearing down on me, gaining in intensity, until the only reality was the great spiraling cloud of blackness. It was a force beyond my comprehension. I couldn’t see it, but I felt the power of its presence as it slammed into the earth.

    But I still had Halley. We were together.

    Overhead a tremendous crash split the ground apart. An uprooted tree fell through the roof, and a shower of shingles and splinters rained down on me. Walls collapsed like partitions in a cardboard dollhouse, leaving a portion of the interior exposed to the elements. Thick, punishing sheets of rain and jagged objects battered me. I heard the shattering of glass in the living room as the picture window burst, each individual shard mixing with the flying debris.

    I held on to my dog. She was crying in terror, almost screaming, and struggling to free herself from her restraint. The loop of the leash bit into my flesh, leaving searing bands of pain on my arm. She almost pulled me off balance, toward the damaged bedroom, where the door tottered, secured by only one hinge. With a great effort, I brought her back to me, to the center of the hall.

    I thought the worst was over now, and in the brief time of quiet that followed, I kept repeating her name and petting her. Gradually, her body relaxed. My heartbeats slowed, but I was still cold; and the rain was falling, slanting in through the broken section of roof.

    I leaned against the wall and tried to summon the energy I was going to need. I felt as if the tornado had picked me up and hurled me down again, draining my body of its essence. One of Halley’s long hairs stuck to my lower lip, and I brushed it away. Then with my hand, I swept aside bits of plaster and wood, pieces of my house.

    It’s all over, girl, I said.

    The funnel cloud had touched down and passed by, leaving us alive. I wasn’t going to ask for more. In a minute, I’d thank God for sparing my life, assess the damage, begin the clean up, and go on, in that order. That’s all I could do.

    Setting my hand firmly on the doorknob of the linen closet, I pulled myself up, taking Halley with me, and forced myself to look beyond the broken door at the wreck that had been a cozy bedroom and spacious living room.

    It was the giant poplar in the center of the yard that had fallen, pushing down walls, squashing furniture in its path and filling the space with silvery trunk, deadwood, and bright green foliage, most of it still attached to branches. Our safe place in the hall had spared us from a similar fate, but if we’d been a mere six feet closer to the bedroom, we’d have been trapped under the tree now, or maybe dead. Since the eastern half of the house had escaped major damage, the situation was bad but not hopeless.

    Still holding on to Halley, I made my way across a high barrier of wood into the living room, walking where I could. The sofa, coffee table, television, and my favorite chair were smashed. The heavy mahogany buffet, beyond the path of the poplar, had survived, although the delicate crystal lamp and Royal Doulton figurines I kept on top were fragments strewn on the carpet. Miraculously, my mother’s antique crystal candelabrum was still there. Probably the oldest and most fragile object in the house, all it was missing was one candle.

    In the kitchen, the chairs were overturned, and the floor was littered with acrylic trays and oatmeal cookies, some whole, others broken in chunks or reduced to crumbs. Sniffing something delicious, her recent terror forgotten, Halley lunged forward and began to gobble cookie bits scattered among pieces of broken glass. This fresh source of danger to my dog brought me abruptly back to reality.

    No, Halley, leave it!

    Quickly, I pulled her away, and she came reluctantly, licking her chops; but then she spied her crate in the corner and began whining.

    That’s a good idea, I said.

    I unsnapped her leash, and she crawled inside, turned around once and lay down, with her front paws crossed, secure in her own sanctuary. Through the broken glass of the kitchen window, I saw my white Taurus in the driveway. Although its body was splattered with fallen leaves and twigs, it was still intact. I would have transportation. That was one more reason to be thankful.

    In the living room, I touched the wall in search of the lost connection. A house can stand for many lifetimes or fall apart in minutes. Although the power was out, the cuckoo clock was still on the wall and running. It was five forty-five.

    I opened the front door, stepped out onto the front porch, and stood under the awning. It was raining lightly now, and the thunder was in the distance, toward the east. The top of my poplar, so high that I hadn’t seen it in years, had come to rest on my front lawn, its uppermost branches blocking the sidewalk. I wasn’t the only one on Elmwood to lose a tree. Across the street, a five-forked maple had fallen across three cars parked at the curb, flattening them into tin silhouettes. My house appeared to be the most seriously damaged, except for the four new Victorian style condominiums on the corner. They were gone.

    The neat lawns and sidewalks and even the street were littered with an eclectic collection gathered by the tornado on its rampage of destruction. Branches, lawn furniture, trashcans, a concrete fawn, a doll, a tricycle, an empty pizza box, and the ‘For Sale’ sign from my neighbor’s yard lay where the wind had flung them, in flowerbeds and on paved walks.

    There was a handmade birdhouse on the brick path that led to my car. Years ago, my father had nailed it to the tree. Time passed, the poplar grew, and countless birds made their nests inside. I picked it up and held it, wondering why I didn’t hear a single twittering or cawing. Come to think of it, where were the squirrels and the family of wild cats that lived in the overgrown yard behind my house?

    Up and down the street, other people were coming out of their houses, some running, others standing, as if in a stupor, as I suppose I was. Somewhere a child was crying, and I heard a dog barking. It was Halley, shut inside her crate, not wanting to miss any more of the action.

    A siren blared, a fire engine this time, and as I looked down the street at the intersection, I saw that the Oakpoint Police Department had arrived. Three squad cars blocked the area where the condominiums had been. Above in the sky whirred the Channel Five Storm Chopper that until now I had only seen on the television screen.

    Today we were the news.

    MY GOD, JEN! IT’S LIKE a war zone around here.

    My friend, Leonora, stared at the scene in horror. I didn’t realize the extent of the devastation yet, even though I must have been looking at it for a long time. She’d materialized in the drizzle a few minutes ago, her clothing damp and her short blonde hair curling in a way she normally would never allow. So far she hadn’t said much, only variations of the same theme.

    When I saw those condos—that pile of rubble, I mean—I didn’t know what I’d find...

    I didn’t know what anybody could say or do to improve the situation, but having Leonora with me made a great difference. A fellow English teacher at Marston High School, she could be counted on as a supportive and cheerful person who would bring her own brand of optimism to any crisis.

    I hope nobody was killed there, I said. I haven’t seen any ambulances on the street. Maybe the people were away.

    I wasn’t used to seeing space where the condominiums were. Last year, two grand old Victorians on deep double lots had been demolished so that the condominiums could be built on the property. At first I’d deplored the so-called progress but eventually had to admit that the interlopers were attractive and imaginatively landscaped. Then the tornado came and blasted them into sawdust.

    I lived only eight houses away from the corner, but I didn’t want to think about that now.

    Where did you leave your car? I asked.

    I walked. I was worried about you and couldn’t call. Don’t even try to use the phone or drive. There are downed trees and power lines everywhere. They’re saying that Oakpoint was the hardest hit, after Maple Falls. That was the worst. Four people are dead there.

    So I heard, before the power went out. How are things in your part of town?

    Not as bad as they are here, but there are a lot of branches down around my house. At the school, the gym and cafeteria were damaged. Thank heavens it’s summer vacation. A few kids were in the building, but nobody was hurt. Can we go inside now? Is it safe, I mean?

    I’m sure it is, but we can only use one side of the house.

    She followed me into the kitchen, and I set the birdhouse down on the counter. The rooms smelled of oatmeal and cinnamon, air and fresh, damp earth.

    Oh, what a mess! she said.

    My cookies for the party. For the first time since the tornado touched down, I felt like crying. Three dozen cookies baked, cooled, carefully arranged on trays, and covered with plastic, and the last batch to come out of the oven, my contribution for a party that wouldn’t take place—they were all trash on the floor.

    I have to feed Halley, I said. I’ll just give her dry dog food today.

    While you’re doing that, I’ll start cleaning up.

    Don’t. I can do it later.

    But she found the broom and dustpan and began sweeping, and I didn’t stop her.

    I didn’t realize that tree was so enormous, she said.

    It was one of those fast-growing poplars. I always thought there was something strange about it because it had maple leaves, too. There was so much deadwood that I wanted to have it cut down, but they were going to charge me twelve hundred dollars, so I left it. That was a bad decision.

    Yes; well you didn’t know what was going to happen. You can’t stay here tonight, Jen. They’re predicting more rain. Come home with me. You, too, Halley girl, she added, tapping the top of the crate lightly.

    Thanks, but I can’t leave my house. Everything I own is here. Besides, I don’t intend to sleep tonight. I’m too wired.

    That was one way to explain what I felt. There was another reason for my reluctance to accept Leonora’s offer. Along with the sirens and occasional shouts drifting in from the street, I kept hearing the sound of the most powerful wind I’d ever experienced and the crash of the great tree as it toppled down on my life. If I left now and didn’t deal with what had happened, I thought the noise would never go away.

    Rest for a while then, she said. This has been a shock. Adam said to tell you that he’ll be over in the morning to help you with whatever you need. He’ll bring some of the men with him. I’d say chopping up that wood is a top priority.

    Yes, and calling my insurance company, finding a contractor, and seeing what I can salvage. There’s so much to be done. Whatever was in the kitchen and basement should be all right. I can’t remember everything I stored in the attic.

    Here’s one of your candles next to Halley’s crate, she said. I’m so glad your candelabrum didn’t break. I’ve always loved it.

    So have I. It’s one of the few things I have that belonged to my mother.

    I was on the verge of tears again, and I didn’t want to be. I had my dog and many precious objects. An hour ago, I’d been grateful to be alive. Other people had come through the same tornado and undoubtedly endured great losses. Then there were those in Maple Falls who were dead and the people who lived in the new condominiums, if they had survived the tornado. I had to remember that.

    You can have your house put back together again, but it won’t happen overnight, Leonora said. Everybody’s going to be trying to hire contractors.

    It won’t be easy, and I know it’ll take time, but I’ll manage.

    In the meantime, what will you do? she asked.

    I’m going to look for a house to rent, take what I can with me, and replace the rest. I’ve wanted to make a change, and there’s no better time than now to do it. I’d like to live in a place that’s always quiet and peaceful and safe.

    In Oakpoint?

    No, I said, in Foxglove Corners, where I bought Halley."

    Two

    Iset the sandwiches and blueberry muffins from the Hometown Bakery on a tray, and Leonora took two sodas out of the freezer.

    These should be cold but not frozen, I hope, she said. Now that the dishes are unpacked and the kitchen is organized, you’ll feel more at home.

    I already do. The realtor told me this place would be perfect for me, and she was right.

    Actually, I’d fallen in love with the Victorian style farmhouse on Jonquil Lane at first sight. Painted a soft shade of green and trimmed with gingerbread, it had a stained glass window between double gables and a wide front porch with spindle ornamentation on the railing and posts. These were the exact embellishments I would have chosen.

    I’d rented it with an option to buy and planned to purchase it as soon as my previous house was repaired and ready to be placed on the market.

    I have a fireplace, a sunroom, and plenty of space for Halley, along with a second floor; that’s something I always wanted. I feel as if I’m living in one of those old-time mysteries I collect, I said.

    Leonora looked puzzled. I don’t understand.

    After fleeing a deadly storm, a girl finds mystery and romance in a strange and haunted place.

    Well, it may happen like that, but Foxglove Corners is pretty isolated. I haven’t seen any people all afternoon, let alone an attractive man. Are you sure you’ll be safe living alone out here alone?

    Leonora wasn’t the first to ask this question. I gave my stock answer. I have Halley, my formidable guard dog. Shall we eat our lunch outside on the porch?

    Hearing her name and one of her favorite words, my black collie came quietly into the kitchen and checked to see if any tasty treats had been set out for her. Finding none, she lapped water from her pail. She hadn’t shed her winter coat yet, and temperatures in the week following the tornado were in the low nineties.

    Leonora said, You should adopt another dog. You have the room, and you need protection now that you’re living in the country. Your little Lassie loves everybody.

    She softened the implied criticism with a friendly pat, and Halley wagged her tail.

    Collies aren’t aggressive, but Halley would defend me, I think. Besides, I’m sure I’ll be all right. If anybody suspicious or dangerous comes along, I’ll say I have a friend living with me.

    A live-in? How unlike you, Jen.

    Besides, I’m more afraid of snakes and bats than intruders.

    I had never been a victim of violence or crime. While I knew a criminal could find Foxglove Corners on the map as easily as I could, I thought it unlikely that I’d ever encounter one; but then I never imagined I’d be caught in a tornado either.

    I gave Halley a large biscuit from the Lassie canister and fresh water. Then I took the tray and followed Leonora out to the porch for a late lunch and short rest. We’d been working hard all morning.

    With the help of Leonora and my friends from Marston, I’d moved from Oakpoint to Foxglove Corners in three days, leaving the damaged furniture behind. My new house was more than twice the size of my former one. It seemed to absorb my possessions, leaving vast empty stretches of space in every room.

    There was a new oak table with six chairs in the kitchen and a brass bed upstairs. With a television set and VCR/DVD player recorder awaiting set up, I was ready to begin my new life. The last six boxes were still on the porch. They would serve as temporary seating for our lunch today, but as soon as I could, I planned to buy the white wicker furniture I’d seen in Garden Gate’s window.

    I’m famished, Leonora said. Food always tastes better when you eat it outside.

    The French bread was freshly baked, and our sandwiches were filled with Canadian bacon, homegrown tomatoes, and lettuce. I intended to rely heavily on the Hometown Bakery during the next few days while I unpacked clothes, books, and incidentals.

    She added, This air is so incredibly fresh. It smells of newly mowed grass, water, and something else—mint, I think. Wherever you look, it’s lush and green and quiet, just what you wanted.

    I found peppermint growing wild along the side of the house, I said.

    That’s my favorite herb. With all this land, you could plant a small vegetable garden.

    It’s too late in the growing season, but I may do it next spring. I’d like to start with flowers.

    I was so enchanted by the beauty of my new surroundings that my thoughts hadn’t yet progressed to landscaping. I only wanted to savor what was already here.

    The woods across the lane are for sale, I said. I wish I could afford more land.

    Good heavens, Jennet! You already have ten acres.

    Whoever buys the property will probably clear the trees for a building site.

    Yes, but he might built a grand and beautiful house like that Queen Anne Victorian down the lane.

    Maybe, but if I’m lucky, he won’t come around at all.

    I knew that everything changes, but I couldn’t help wishing it would be different in Foxglove Corners.

    From every room in my house, I had a breathtaking view. Each window was a separate rural landscape. The previous owner had sowed grass seed around three sides of the house and planted young trees several yards away from it, but the rest of the property was uncultivated. Wildflowers covered the rolling fields, and rocks in stunning shapes and colors hid among the tall weeds and under the ground. My land was a canvas that I could fill or leave in its natural state.

    East of the wooded acreage was a vintage yellow Victorian with a wraparound porch, encircled by perennial beds that contained the tallest flowers I’d ever seen. It looked like an illustration in a child’s storybook. Beyond the farthermost edge of the garden, the lane curved and continued, with privately owned forest on either side.

    On my west were the other seven houses on Jonquil Lane. Built in various nineteenth century styles, not one of them was more than five or six years old, and all were nicely removed from my space on ten-acre parcels of their own.

    If I hadn’t come to Colliegrove Kennels to look at a champion-sired litter of collie puppies last year, I would never have discovered this green and wondrous place, for it was the locals’ best kept secret. Still, I never considered moving until it became necessary. In a sense, the tornado had blasted me out of my complacency and slightly unsatisfactory life and set me down in the middle of the most beautiful county in Michigan.

    But I’d taken my last terrifying memories with me. As I ate, every now and then I glanced at the sky in search of ominous signs. There weren’t any.

    I missed the weather report today, I said,

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