Destination: Maui
90 pages
English

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90 pages
English

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Description

The last thing Samantha Powers expected to do on her first official trip as a travel writer was help solve a murder.


Samantha (“Sam”) Powers, a 34-year-old investigative reporter, has returned to her hometown of Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, to take care of her ailing father, the town’s former police chief. At the urging of a family friend, she takes a job as the new travel columnist for Carmel Today, a local lifestyle magazine.


After a few months of writing about area hotels and restaurants and navigating the office dynamics at her new position, Sam sets out on her first big press trip to a luxury resort on the Hawaiian island of Maui. There she meets her fellow travel writers and the resort representatives hosting the trip, all of whom become suspects when one of the writers—someone almost everyone had a reason to want to kill—is found dead in his suite. Sam’s detective skills come in handy as she helps the handsome (and, yes, single) Maui detective solve the crime.


“Destination: Maui” is the first in the Destination Murder Mystery series, which combines exotic locales and a behind-the-scenes look at the travel industry with the twists and turns expected from a good mystery.

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Publié par
Date de parution 07 janvier 2022
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781644504314
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0350€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Table O f Contents
Dedication/Acknow ledgements
C hapter One
C hapter Two
Cha pter Three
Ch apter Four
Ch apter Five
C hapter Six
Cha pter Seven
Cha pter Eight
Ch apter Nine
C hapter Ten
Chap ter Eleven
Chap ter Twelve
Chapte r Thirteen
Chapte r Fourteen
Chapt er Fifteen
Chapt er Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapte r Eighteen
Chapte r Nineteen
Chap ter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
About The Author
Discov er More...





Destinati on: Maui
Destination Murder Mysterie s Book 1
Copyright © 2021 Ann Shepphird. All rights re served.


4 Horsemen Publicatio ns, Inc.
1497 Main St. S uite 169
Dunedin, FL 34698
4horsemenpublicat ions.com
info@4horsemenpublicat ions.com
Typesetti ng by MC
Editor Jen Paquette
All rights to the work within are reserved to the author and publisher. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise, except as permitted under Section 107 or 108 of the 1976 International Copyright Act, without prior written permission except in brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. Please contact either the Publisher or Author to gain per mission.
This book is meant as a reference guide. All characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. All brands, quotes, and cited work respectfully belong to the original rights holders and bear no affiliation to the authors or pu blisher.
Library of Congress Control Number: 20 21948562
Print ISBN: 978-1-644 50-432-1
Audio ISBN: 978-1-644 50-430-7
eBook ISBN: 978-1-644 50-431-4



T hank you to all who helped bring this book to life, especially my partner, Jeff Wolf, who first inspired the notion of a series involving a mystery-solving travel writer. Years ago, while on a press trip that included a train ride from NYC to Montreal, I called him from the Algonquin Hotel and told him that one of the other writers on the trip was particularly difficult. From his response— “So, if there’s a murder on the train, we know who it will be”—the idea was born.
Additional thanks go out to the friends and family who read the various versions of the manuscript and have encouraged me along the way, especially Amy Akiona, Jill Bastian, Lisa Furfine, John Shepphird, Jordan Weiner, and Jan e Woodson.
Finally, I would like to dedicate this book to my beloved aunt, Ann Reynolds, whose belief in the project meant the wo rld to me.


CHAPTER ONE
A ppearances, as they say, can be deceiving. I had learned this more than once in my ten years as a crime reporter in Los Angeles. I was coming to understand the concept again after returning to my hometown of Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, and taking a new job as the travel columnist for Carmel Today magazine. And I was about to discover it yet again when someone turned out to be a murderer on my first press trip to a luxury resort on the Hawaiian islan d of Maui.
I realize there’s a lot to unpack. Yes, I’m starting with a travel pun, but I really had been doing a lot of unpacking lately, both physically and mentally. I guess that’s what happens when you don’t expect to return home and make a career transition at the ripe old age o f 34, huh?
Let me explain: My name is Samantha Powers—but everybody calls me Sam—and I returned to Carmel when I got the call from my Uncle Henry that my dad was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s-related dementia and psychosis. Talk about your appearances: The diagnosis was something seemingly no one had seen coming, and yet the truth is the clues had been there for a while for anyone really paying attention.
It wasn’t just that the clues were somewhat subtle; it’s that no one—especially me, who had avoided visiting or, really, even calling very often after the death of my mom a decade earlier—had taken the time to put them together. The thing is—my dad would have put them together. Solving mysteries—criminal and otherwise—was something he did better than anyo ne I knew.
But not the rest of us. I mean, we maybe should have figured it out when Uncle Henry told me that my dad had been waking him up at 3 o’clock in the morning to discuss the crossword and adjusting the thermostat in the family home the two brothers shared to abnormal temperatures. Or when my dad called to wish me a happy birthday a month early and then spent a good 15 minutes arguing with me over the date. There had also been reports of him being spotted wandering all over town, but as the former police chief, that wasn’t completely out of the ordina ry either.
We all chalked these new and strange occurrences up to his ongoing grief after losing my mom and his retirement from the force. And since I was more than 300 miles away and the two of us had always had a somewhat prickly relationship on the best of days, I will admit I brushed a lot of it off. Maybe I wanted to. Maybe I was dealing with my own messes (spoiler alert: I was) and a little nervous he would put the clues together that my life wasn’t exactly as it seemed.
Then, one day, Uncle Henry couldn’t reach my dad from his office at the Monterey School of Law. He rushed home and found him lying on the bathroom floor talking to invisible people. That’s when I got the call that I should drop the seemingly successful life I had built in Los Angeles and come home, at least temporarily, to help Uncle Henry hand le it all.
My first month home was kind of a blur. At least it was a scenic blur from our home looking out over Carmel River State Beach—a much better view, I will say, than my studio apartment overlooking an alley in Venice Beach. Each morning, I would wander out from the studio my dad built for me above the garage when I was in high school to the kitchen in the main house to fix myself a cup of coffee. On the kitchen table, I would find the mound of documents and notes Uncle Henry had left of things for me to tackle while he was off teaching his law students.
Most days, I would ignore the mound, take my coffee, look out at the ocean, and mentally thank my great grandparents for choosing this gorgeous (and large by Carmel standards) spit of land to build their house. In those days, the area was considered the boondocks, based on the old picture hanging on the wall of their groundbreaking, which was surrounded by open space. While the lots had filled in since then, we still had one of the best view s in town.
The sight of the happy people on the beach and the sound of the waves always helped soothe me. That and the garden that framed my view. My mom’s garden. If it was warm enough, I would take my coffee out and sit on the bench in the succulent garden my mom created and ask her just what I was supposed to do with the rest of my life. The answers were about as clear as those I got from my dad when, later in the day, I would visit him in the memory care facility Uncle Henry and the very nice social worker at the geriatric psych ward had found for him before I came home.
Typically, our visits would start with him scrutinizing me like I was one of his suspects from when he was the police chief. Then, as the realization of who he was talking to would dawn, he would start with the usual question.
“Followin g a case?”
Our way of communicating tended to involve sharing whatever cases we were working on, whether it was me telling him about the story I was working on where the soon-to-be-ex-wife of a famous actor had died from a mysterious fall down the stairs at their house up in the Hollywood Hills (“The husband did it,” we would say in unison) or him regaling me with the tale of a billionaire who had gone missing from his oceanfront home (“The wife did it,” we said for that one). For the record, we were right on both occasions.
But now, neither of us was working on a case. So, I would wait a bit after answering “no” to his question. Then he would furrow his thick gray brows and squint his eyes as another glimmer of recogn ition hit.
“So, you ’re home.”
“ I’m home.”
“Why?”
“For you, Dad.”
“I don’t need y our help.”
“Ya kinda do, Dad.”
“What wil l you do?”
“That’s what I’m trying to fi gure out.”
“Good luck w ith that.”
Yeah, good luck with that. What was I going to do? I could go back to Los Angeles and come back to visit on the weekends, but the truth is, I wasn’t sure that’s what I wanted. I had hit a wall in Los Angeles, both personally and professionally. My on-again, off-again relationship with a manipulative asshole (I believe that’s the technical term) had finally, really, for sure, ended after the sixth attempt. At least, I hoped it was over. He had an unsettling ability to draw me back in time and time again against my own best interests. Being back up in Carmel would help solidify the split as now I had those more than 300 miles between us instead of having to walk past him at the sports copy desk every day like I did at the newspaper.
That was another place I was ready to take a break from. I was a little (okay, a lot) burned out from writing 3-4 short pieces a week about the darkest underbelly of society. I had originally loved the idea of being an investigative reporter, so getting the job at the Times after finishing college at UCLA was a dream. Exactly what I said I wanted. But working the crime beat at a daily newspaper ultimately ended up being a lot of writing stories about people at their worst—and that can be really depressing, you know?
So, I hit a wall. As we all know, if you hit a wall often enough, it hurts, which made my return home and the open-e

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