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Blurb
Traveling
with your family can be murder.
One
wedding party + one estranged mother = another vacation that goes array for
Naomi.
Naomi
is off on another international vacation. She thinks traveling with her mother
will be the most difficult part of her trip until she meets the rest of the
tour group—a wedding party. It only gets worse when she finds the groom dead.
Everyone’s a suspect on her Icelandic tour of this stunning country.
Excerpt
NÆSTA MORGUN {NEXT MORNING}
I had only one thought at breakfast.
How did a young man die on vacation? There was no accident, no trauma, no
nothing. He was fine one moment. Dead the next. It didn’t make sense.
I looked at my phone. I did the
quick math. It was the middle of the night for Charlotte. I still considered
calling. Awake Charlotte or just woken up Charlotte would give me the same
answer—I had lost my mind. Just woken up Charlotte would be more angry about
it.
I could hear her saying that it was
ludicrous that I had found a dead body on vacation. Again. But this wasn’t a
murder.
Milo’s death had to be what it
appeared to be. A tragic accident. He drowned. The police were doing their due
diligence in the unexpected death. An autopsy would reveal an accident. I could
return to enjoying my vacation, with my mother.
Or at least trying to.
“What are you doing?” I asked my
mother when I returned to the room after breakfast.
She was writing in a notebook, as if
she were journaling. It had to be her latest fad.
“Recording my recollection of the
event,” she answered.
“Didn’t the police take your
report?” I asked.
“Yes.” She put her pen down and
closed the book. “But this is for Dateline.”
“For what?” I asked
“For the investigation show. You
have to know it. I watch every weekend.”
“And why would you need notes?” I asked.
“Because I’m sure we’ll be called
in.” There was an excitement in her voice that was disturbing. “We were
eyewitnesses. You pointed it out to that guide.” She seemed oddly proud of
that.
“Sigi,” I told her.
“Yeah, the guide. They’ll probably
want to talk to him too. But maybe his company won’t let him talk to the press.
It’s not really the publicity the touring company would want, right?”
I ignored her question. “Did you see
something useful?” I asked.
“Not that I know of. But these shows
would want to talk to anyone who could give them any perspective. I had a
bird’s-eye view of all of you. You were only a few feet away. You flirted with
the dead man shortly before his death.”
“I did not flirt with the groom,
Mother.”
“I’m not judging,” she retorted. “He
was a good-looking guy. You’ve done worse. Do what you want on vacation. Anyway,
the shows won’t care.”
“Shows?” I asked.
“Definitely. There’s 48 Hours, plus
the ID Network has a bunch of shows. We would do them all.”
This was not the mother-daughter
bonding I had envisioned. Not that I had ever envisioned mother-daughter bonding
for us.
She didn’t note my horror and
continued, with even more excitement. “New groom dies on vacation. That’s a big
story. Plus, he’s handsome. They always love when the handsome ones die.”
“Mother!” I rebuked. “He drowned.
Why would Dateline or any of those shows do a story on a drowning?”
“Because he was murdered! Had to be.
Who drowns snorkeling in clear calm water? I Googled it. No one has died there
before. You heard the police. They told us to stay in town.”
“Considering our return flight isn’t
for several days, I think we’re good.” I went into the bathroom but then
stopped. “What do you mean you Googled it?” My mother was not good with
technology. That was more her mother’s area of expertise. “Let me see this
Google search.”
She handed me her phone. The
detective had told me others had died there. I couldn’t imagine he would be
wrong. Or worse, that my mother was right.
I hit her internet browser and
pulled up her last search. “Death at Thingamajig.”
I handed her back her phone. “We
were at Thingvellir yesterday, Mother. Not at ‘Thingamjig’.”
“Close enough,” she said, dismissing
me.
I didn’t bother Googling deaths in
Iceland for her. We still had a few more days on vacation and I wanted to leave
the hotel again.
I glanced at my watch. “We have two
hours until our tour.”
“What tour?” she asked.
“Check the itinerary. I’m going to
walk around Reykjavík.”
The hotel was at Old Harbour with
the city center only a few blocks away. As I exited the hotel, I took in the
harbour’s pier with the many fishing and tour boats docked. The pier was lined
with large teal buildings, housing restaurants and touring services. Mount Esja
was in the distance.
I took a deep breath of the clean
air. No smog here. Other than spending time with Pops as a child, I could not
remember ever breathing air as fresh.
I read the harbor’s sign about the
touring companies stationed there. Whale-watching options were plentiful. I’d
have to check back later on pricing when they opened.
My phone rang as I walked up the hill
toward the city center. I almost didn’t check it, assuming it was my mother,
asking where we were going later. I was surprised when I saw Charlotte’s name
and face appear.
“What is it with you and finding
dead bodies on vacation?” she asked when I accepted the video call.
“I didn’t find a dead body on this
vacation,” I answered.
“That’s not what Mom said.”
I closed my eyes and took a deep
breath. I shouldn’t have been surprised my mother had told Charlotte. I should
be surprised that I didn’t get this phone call last night. “Okay, technically,
I found it. I noticed it before anyone else and I pointed it out to the guide.
But the guide really found it.”
She smiled. “You certainly found
your travel partner on this one, didn’t you?"
“What do you mean?” I asked.
“Mom! She’s keen on the whole murder
thing.”
“The man drowned. It’s a shame.
Tragic, really. But not murder.”
She huffed. “Ooh. I get it.”
I didn’t like her tone. I didn’t
know what it meant, but I knew it wasn’t good. “What is that supposed to mean?”
I asked.
“Mom thinks it’s a murder, so you
think it’s an accident. You always have to take the opposite side from her.”
A
R Kennedy lives in Long Beach, New York, with her two pups. She works hard to
put food on the floor for them. As her favorite T-shirt says, ‘I work so my dog
can have a better life'. She’s an avid traveler. But don’t worry. While she’s
away, her parents dote on their grand-puppies even more than she does. Her
writing is a combination of her love of travel, animals, and the journey we all
take to find ourselves.
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