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Blejz Klement - The Cat Sitter And The Canary

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Blejz Klement The Cat Sitter And The Canary

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This time out, Dixies got a furry partner-in-crime, an irascible Lhasa Apso named Charlie. Theyve just arrived at the home of one of Dixies regular clients to check in on Franklin, a mackerel tabby with avocado-green eyes and a luxuriant coat the color of dried beach grass. Despite a couple of bumps in the road (Franklin seems to be hiding in one of his favorite cubby holes, and Charlie scratches up the parlor door trying to get to the other side), everything else is perfectly normal. That is, until the next day, when Dixie discovers a dead body on the other side of that parlor door, along with a note that seems to suggest she had something to do with it. Soon, theres another victim, and then another note, and Dixie quickly finds herself caught in a maze of mystery and danger, where all the clues have her name written all over them, and where she must find the murderer. . . before he finds her.

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Begin Reading Table of Contents About the Authors Copyright Page Thank you for - photo 1

Begin Reading

Table of Contents

About the Authors

Copyright Page

Thank you for buying this

St. Martins Press ebook.

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The author and publisher have provided this e-book to you for your personal use only. You may not make this e-book publicly available in any way. Copyright infringement is against the law. If you believe the copy of this e-book you are reading infringes on the authors copyright, please notify the publisher at: us.macmillanusa.com/piracy.

For Mom

Acknowledgments

As always, my deepest gratitude goes first to my editor, Marcia Markland (this time perhaps a little deeper, if thats even possible), for her guidance and patience; thanks also to the rest of my team at St. Martins Press/Minotaur, including assistant editor Quressa Robinson, senior marketing manager Martin Quinn, and copy editor Angela Gibson. Thanks also to Dana Beck for saving the rabbit from a certain death-by-celery; to Hellyn Sher for preventing me from rearranging the Florida Keys; to William McNeil for the title; to David Urrutia for his perseverance; to Detective Chris Iorio and the men and women of the Sarasota Sheriffs Department; to Al Zuckerman, my agent, for offering to loan me money; and finally to all of Dixies fans and readers, whove welcomed me with hearts wide open.

Hope is the thing with feathers

That perches in the soul,

And sings the tune without the words,

And never stops at all

Emily Dickinson

1

I dont like surprises.

In fact, Im a lot happier when things are downright predictable boring I guess is the right word. Not that Ive always been like this. Once upon a time I was as carefree and breezy as the next idiot, rolling with lifes punches like a champion fighter. But a girl can only take so many hits before she starts to go a little nuts, so if youd prefer to stay on my good side, dont jump out of the closet and scare me, dont surprise me with a birthday party, and for the love of God, dont come knocking on my door without calling first.

Im Dixie Hemingway, no relation to you-know-who. I live on Siesta Key, a little tadpole of an island that shimmies off the shore of Sarasota, about midway down the west coast of Florida.

In summer, when the sun drapes herself over our shoulders like a bear rug, weve got fewer than six or seven thousand permanent residents. But in season, while the rest of the country is avoiding overhanging roofs for fear of falling icicles, were wearing flip-flops and drinking cervezas down on the beach. Thats when our population swells to more than twenty thousand. We call them snowbirds. They come (with pets in tow) from all over the world to warm their weary, frost-nipped wings and relax with a daiquiri or two (or three) on one of our world-famous beaches.

Its hard to imagine how our little island stays above water with all that extra weight, and us locals like to complain about the traffic and the tourists stepping out into the road like they own the place, but in truth it keeps our economy in the black. Besides, weve got a constant sea-kissed breeze floating through the palm fronds, dolphins playing in the clear blue ocean, and blooming bougainvillea scenting the air with just the slightest hint of honeysuckle. Who could ask for more?

I always say Im a cat sitter because thats how it started, but really Im a whatever sitter. Ill happily take care of whatever youve got: dogs, hamsters, parrots, fish, ferrets, iguanasall Gods creatures, great and small.

Except snakes. If somebody calls up with a pet snake they need looking after, I try to keep my voice at a normal volume and politely refer them elsewhere. Its not that I hate snakes, theres just something about dropping little squirming mice into a snakes open mouth that gives me the creeps. Plus, Im not so sure it was God that came up with the whole idea of snakes in the first place.

I used to be a deputy with the Sarasota Sheriffs Department. I wore a gun on my hip and a five-pointed star on my chest. I patrolled the streets in my cruiser like a blond badass. Or at least thats what I told myself. In those days, things were pretty quiet around here. We had our share of criminals (what tourist town doesnt?), but all in all, it was a pretty quiet life.

Its funny, since I left the force and became a cat sitter, things havent always been so quiet

* * *

The sun was starting to set by the time Charlie and I turned down Old Vineyard Lane and rolled to a stop in front of Caroline Greavers house. Charlie is a nine-year-old, fluffy-faced Lhasa apso who thinks hes a much bigger, more athletic breedlike a greyhound or a German shepherd. Charlies humans, Otis and Deborah Weber, are a retired couple from Ontario who live on Bird Key, our smaller, fancier sister island just north of here. Theyre big-time animal lovers, so the first thing they did when they moved here was drive over to the local pet shelter and ask for the dog nobody else wanted.

Thats how they got Charlie.

Hes a good boy, but before the Webers came along hed been adopted seven times, shuttled in and out of seven different homes, with each new owner telling the shelter that he was just too destructive to be left alone. The Webers were volunteering at the Womens Exchange, a giant consignment shop that donates all its proceeds to local charities and art programs, so Charlie was accompanying me on my rounds for the day.

Just as I reached into the backseat to unhook his harness, Charlies back went stiff as a board, and he let out a low, rumbling growl. I looked up to see a woman two houses down. She was untying a couple of balloonsone forest green and the other bright yellowfrom the lamppost in front of her house, but then I realized it wasnt the woman Charlie was growling at.

There was a man standing at Carolines front door.

He was tall and broad-shouldered, in an expensive-looking three-piece suit and tie, holding a giant suitcase with one hand and a slim black briefcase in the other. I got out of the car and shut the door before Charlie jumped into the drivers seat and barked in protest.

I said, Hi, can I help you?

The man flashed a big-toothed smile and then ambled down the driveway, dragging his big suitcase behind him.

He said, Ingrid?

No, Im the cat sitter.

Oh. He frowned. Theres nobody home. I tried to call ahead but there was no answer.

He had a thick Scottish brogue, so thick in fact that it took me a second or two to understand him. He was obviously speaking English, but what hed said sounded more like, Eh troy to cull a hate, bother was naw ants uh.

He was as handsome as a clich: late thirties or early forties, with curly, unkempt hair, dark brown except for an even sprinkling of premature silver, and eyes a deep black. The first thing I thought was that if they held a Mr. Scotland beauty contest somewhere, hed be the winner in a heartbeat.

Do you know if shes home?

I glanced up at the house. Caroline was away with her new boyfriend on a boat tour of the Florida Keys.

I said, Was she expecting you?

Uh-oh. He pulled a piece of paper out of his breast pocket and deftly unfolded it with one hand, holding on to his briefcase with the other. I think Ive made a mistake. Is this 17 Old Vineyard Lane?

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