But as I proceeded to the Community Events room, I was startled by a noise—something had bumped against one of the metal folding chairs in the darkened room.

For a split second I wondered if it was the ghost of Jack causing some sort of poltergeist mischief, as he had been prone to do when I first opened the new wing of the store over a year ago. I moved to snap on the lights. But before I could feel the switch in the darkness, a callused hand clapped over my mouth and a strong arm encircled my waist. A man’s voice hissed in my ear.

“Don’t scream.”

I didn’t. I stomped down with all my might on the intruder’s toe instead. He howled and released me. Stepping backward, he threw his hands up in surrender.

“Mrs. McClure! . . . It’s me . . . Johnny Napp!”

I flattened myself against the wall next to the light switch, flicked on the lights. It was Johnny all right, blinking against the sudden glare. Beneath an open grease-stained denim workshirt, he appeared to be wearing the same baggy blue jeans and black T-shirt he’d worn to Angel’s reading the night before.

“How did you get in here?” I cried, unable to suppress the hysteria in my tone.

“I jimmied the lock on the back door. I thought nobody would come back until morning.”

“Your uncle is looking for you.”

I realized Johnny was at least as rattled as I was. “My uncle Bud isn’t the only one. I tried to get home, but spotted a State Police car staked out around the corner, another in the alley behind my uncle’s hardware store. They’re out to get me again!”

“Yes, they’re looking for you. But they only want to ask you some questions—”

Johnny violently shook his head. “The last time cops ‘asked me questions,’ they grilled me all night and roughed me up in the process. They want to pin Angel Stark’s death on me, Mrs. McClure, just like they tried to frame me for Bethany’s murder!”

“You heard about Angel?”

He nodded. “On the pickup truck’s radio. They talked about Angel’s books and said her death appeared to be a homicide. When I heard the news, I turned around and came right back. I knew Uncle Bud would help me figure out what to do. But then I saw the police, and I was scared they’d grab me before I even got a chance to talk to my uncle.”

The kid’s in a panic. Tell him to take a breath.

“Calm down, Johnny. Okay? If you’re innocent, you have nothing to fear.”

Johnny’s look made me feel naive, and I realized that if I were arrested for a murder I didn’t commit, I probably wouldn’t have much faith in the system either.

“My uncle’s the only guy who believed in me. He’s the only person who ever stood up for me.”

“It’s up to a jury to decide who’s guilty or innocent. That’s why we have a justice system,” I replied, even though I knew it probably sounded like a platitude to Johnny.

I closed my eyes and took a deep breath. “Jack?” I silently asked. “What do I do here?”

You said it yourself. It’s up to a jury . . .

“What are you saying?” I silently asked. “Turn him over to the cops?”

No. Your little gang of cornball yahoos. Have him tell his story to them. See if he’s believable. Get a whiff of how his case’ll play out on the witness stand.

I met Johnny’s scared, brown eyes. “Listen,” I told him, “you have your side of these events, right?”

“Yeah . . . ,” he replied warily.

“Then I want you to tell it.”

“But the cops—”

“Not to the police—not yet, anyway. You uncle is on his way over here. I want you to tell your side of events to him, Sadie, me, and a few other people whom he trusts.”

Johnny looked doubtful.

“Just think of us as a jury of your peers . . .”

“I OBJECT!” BELLOWED Seymour Tarnish, jumping to his feet.

Fiona’s eyes narrowed. “You object to what? I haven’t said a word.”

“I object to getting the wobbly folding chair. You got another one stashed around here, Pen?”

“Sure, Seymour.”

“That’s what you get for showing up last,” said Milner, who was busy with wife Linda, setting out Cooper Family pastries around the coffee urn.

I dragged out several more chairs—deciding we needed one or two near the wooden podium, as well. Earlier, I had set up more chairs than a typical meeting would require, but this was certainly not going to be a typical gathering of the Quindicott Business Owners Association. Usually the subject of our merry band of bold commercial entrepreneurs was the town’s parking woes. Lately a popular topic has been the draconian sanitation rules imposed by the city council, along with the tickets that go with them—the newest ploy by the municipal zoning witch (don’t ask) to squeeze Quindicott’s small business owners just a little bit drier. But no matter what issue was on the table, within an hour the conversation usually veered into a spirited discussion of the pastry of the evening, politics, books, or just local gossip shared over coffee.

But not tonight. Tonight, by mutual consent, we would decide whether or not to turn a young man over to the authorities who would undoubtedly pin a murder rap or two on him—maybe even three. To my relief, everyone had agreed with my plan to hold a mock trial and decide if Johnny Napp should go to the police and turn himself in, or if we had enough evidence to believe Johnny innocent, and hide him away until—hopefully—the real culprit’s identity would be revealed.

Before the meeting even started, I’d been on pins and needles waiting for the Quibblers to arrive. A few minutes after my aunt came downstairs, Fiona and Brainert appeared, followed by Milner Logan and his wife, Linda Cooper-Logan.

Like his wife and her shades-of-Annie-Lennox spiky hair, Milner had held on to some fashion trends of his own youth—albeit a decade before Linda’s. He wore a small gold hoop in his left ear and his hair in a long ponytail, now more wiry salt-and-pepper than midnight black. Milner was quarter-blood Narragansett Native American, and he frequented our store for crime novels, noir thrillers, and the occasional front-list Tony Hillerman. Linda preferred her big best-selling authors like James Patterson and Stuart Woods, but she was also game for reading anything Sadie or I might recommend.

Mr. Koh and the newest addition to our club—his eighteen-year-old daughter, Joyce, who had graduated high school in May and was helping him run his store for one last summer before college—showed up with a ten-pack of soft drinks. Bud Napp showed his face just as the meeting was scheduled to start, and Seymour, typically, arrived fifteen minutes late.

As soon as Bud called the meeting to order, I moved we postpone all outstanding business. Brainert seconded the motion. Then I told them everything I knew about Angel Stark’s death, Victoria Banks’s possible abduction, and the disappearance of Johnny Napp. Despite protestations from Bud, I also revealed Johnny’s identity, his felony conviction, and his connection—rightly or wrongly—with the Bethany Banks murder.

While the Quibblers were digesting that vast array of facts, I went to the office where I’d stashed Johnny until I could make my case. I knew that the true test of how things would go would be the Quibblers’ reaction when I sprang Johnny on them—and told them my plan. The look of relief on Bud Napp’s grizzled face when he saw Johnny made it all worthwhile. The shock, surprise, and consternation on everyone else’s face when they saw Johnny was not as comforting, however.

Then I told them my plan to hold a mock judicial hearing to determine Johnny’s immediate fate. “Bud and I are both heavily involved, so we’ll be witnesses. Brainert will take to the podium as presiding judge. Johnny can present his case and we can weigh the evidence.”

“Let me defend the kid,” said Bud. “I know he’s done nothing.”

“But you’re too close to the case, Bud,” Milner pointed out. “You’d do better as a character witness.”

“How about a prosecutor?” said Linda Cooper. “We need a prosecutor.”

I scanned the room, focused in on Fiona Finch and the predatory peregrine falcon pin she wore on her blouse. “How about Fiona? She’s read enough true crime novels to channel Vincent Bugliosi. And she’s read Angel Stark’s

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