Diner Impossible, page 1

About Diner Impossible
After shunning her overbearing parents' wealthy lifestyle, waitress and part-time college student, Rose Strickland, is drawn back into their world when she tries to prove the impossible: the innocence of the town's crooked police chief. He's suspected in the gruesome death of Delia Cummings, his secretary and mistress, and all the evidence points to him. While she tracks down clues with the aid of her anime-loving bestie, Rose's pal, Axton, and his Klingon gang are feuding with their Starfleet rivals. Things get hairier than a pile of well-fed Tribbles, so Rose gets involved. In between interrogating Trekkies and quizzing socialites at high tea, she discovers the secrets Delia Cummings took to her grave. Suspects abound, but when Chief Mathers threatens to bring down Rose's criminally mischievous and maybe boyfriend, Sullivan, she makes it her mission to find the real killer before Sullivan finds himself in prison.
Diner Impossible
A Rose Strickland Mystery
By Terri L. Austin
Table of Contents
Title Page
Praise for Terri L. Austin’s Diners, Dives & Dead Ends
Books by Terri L. Austin
Copyright
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Epilogue
Thank you
Praise for Terri L. Austin’s Diners, Dives & Dead Ends
“Austin’s debut kicks off her planned series by introducing a quirky, feisty heroine and a great supporting cast of characters and putting them through quite a number of interesting twists.” – Kirkus Reviews
“This traditional mystery captured my attention from the opening pages to the exhilarating finale...this was an enjoyable read in this debut series and I look forward to more adventures with Rose and the gange for years to come.” – Dru Ann Love, The Cozy Chicks Blog
“I predict this will be a long and successful series...I strongly recommend picking a copy up to read this summer. I know I am looking forward to reading more books by this author. FIVE STARS OUT OF FIVE.” – Lynn Farris, National Mystery Review Examiner at Examiner.com
“What a blast! Diners, Dives & Dead Ends is a fast-paced mystery loaded with wonderful wit and humor that had me laughing and loving every page. Terri Austin will hook you right away and keep you riveted until The End. I want more!” – Ann Charles, Award-Winning Author of the Bestselling Deadwood Mystery Series
Books by Terri L. Austin
The Rose Strickland Mystery Series
Diners, Dives & Dead Ends
Last Diner Standing
Diner Impossible
Diners Keepers, Losers Weepers
Diner Knock Out
A Null For Hire Paranormal Mystery/Romance Series
Dispelled
Disheartened
The Beauty and the Brit Romance Series
His Every Need
To Be His
His Kind of Trouble
His to Keep
Copyright
Diner Impossible
Copyright © 2021 Terri L. Austin
Originally published in 2013 by Henery Press
All rights reserved.
No parts of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the author’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser. Under no circumstances may any part of this book be photocopied for resale.
This is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and situations within its pages and places or persons, living or dead, is unintentional and co-incidental.
EBook ISBN: 978-1-946066-08-4
Paperback ISBN: 978-1-946066-09-1
Chapter 1
They say you never forget your first time, but of course some firsts are more memorable than others. A first kiss. A first car. That first disastrous sexual encounter with a prom date because you figured what the hell, might as well see what everyone’s talking about. Turns out, they were talking about something completely different than what James Palmer and I did, fumbling around in the back of a white limo. The point is this: life’s chock full of first times. Some good, some bad, but all of them are turning points, dividing lines separating your life into befores and afters.
My name is Rose Strickland and tonight I racked up two more firsts. A clandestine meeting with a cop and a visit to a restaurant called Bob’s Fine Italian Cuisine. I still wasn’t sure if agreeing to meet with my nemesis was wise, but Bob’s definitely fell under the bad idea category.
Situated on the edge of Huntingford, Missouri and the county line, Bob’s wasn’t fine. The only lighting came from drippy white candles placed at all twelve tables and the darkened interior sucked me in, left me a little disoriented, able to make out only vague shapes and silhouettes spread throughout the small room. What it lacked in illumination it made up for in odor. Overpowering garlic and the stench of fish that had not only gone bad but had turned downright evil. In fact, if I could have seen two feet in front of my face, I’m sure I would have been horrified at Bob’s lack of fine. Either this was the best place in town to bring a mistress or they didn’t want customers to notice the numerous health code violations.
Thrusting my hands in my coat pockets, I hunkered down and glanced through the deep gloom, searching for Officer Andre Thomas, or as I liked to call him, Officer Hardass. Somewhere in his early thirties, he was built tight, with long, lean muscles and chiseled features. His dark, wavy hair was cut so short it was just a whisker shy of buzzed and his café au lait skin accentuated his hazel eyes. Those sharp eyes watched the world from behind frameless glasses and didn’t miss a thing. Smart, handsome, observant. Unfortunately, he also had a stick shoved so far up that firm ass, I wasn’t sure how he managed to sit down.
He’d stopped by Ma’s Diner earlier today where I’d been serving pancakes and coffee—lots of coffee—to a table of young moms surrounded by strollers and screaming babies. When the bell jangled over the door, I glanced up, surprised to see him march inside, looking highly official in his starched police uniform, and working an even starchier attitude.
He waited until I was through plopping down plates and syrup amidst the sippy cups and teething rings. Then he nodded a greeting. “Miss Strickland, I need to speak with you.”
I strained my brain, but I couldn’t think of a single law I’d violated lately—and by lately, I meant the last couple months. Maybe he was here for my past offenses. If so, I could be in big trouble.
I nervously led him past my boss, Ma, and Roxy, my blue-haired bestie, to the small office in the back. I shut the door behind me and parked my butt on the edge of the dusty, faux wood desk. Determined not to talk first, I waited him out.
He glanced around the room, his eyes sweeping over the metal shelves filled with cleaning supplies and paper products. When he got tired of staring at gallon bottles filled with off-brand Formula 409, his gaze found its way back to me.
“I’d like to have dinner with you this evening, Miss Strickland. There’s something I need to discuss.”
Whoa. Didn’t see that one coming. Usually, he read me the riot act, threatened to lock me up for some lame reason, or interrogated the crap out of me.
“Um,” I said.
“I’ll meet you at Bob’s, an Italian place off Junction County Road. Seven o’clock. It’s a private matter, so discretion is important.” Then he nodded again, pivoted like he was performing a military exercise, and left.
Stunned, I sat there for a couple of minutes and wondered what he could possibly want to discuss with me. And why the need for secrecy? It niggled at me for the rest of the day, like an itch between my shoulder blades I couldn’t quite reach.
So now here I was, at seven on the dot, trying to find him through the dark, stinky cavern of Italian Fineness.
“Miss Strickland.”
A tall figure waved from the back of the room. With mincing steps, I made my way toward it, bumping into the corner of a table with my hip. “Sorry,” I muttered to the shadowy occupants and kept moving.
When I reached him, Hardass held out a chair and handed me a menu before taking his place across from me. Oh my God, did he think this was a date? That possibility never occurred to me.
“You’re probably wondering why I asked you here this evening,” he said.
I was wondering why he’d ask anyone to come here. Unless he wanted me to contract food poisoning. “I don’t think I mentio
“Ha.” That was the extent of his laugh. I could barely make out his features by the stingy light of the candle, but the small grin he wore betrayed his amusement.
“Why is that funny?” I asked. “I’m a very datable person.”
“You’re not my type, Miss Strickland. Besides, I would never bring a date here. However, this place affords privacy, and since we can’t be seen together, it’s a perfect meeting place.”
“You’re not doing much for my reputation either. Officer.” Seriously? This was what I’d waited for all day, to be insulted? Feeling like an idiot for even showing up, I grabbed my purse and pushed back my chair, ready to blindly stumble out in a huff.
Hardass reached out and touched my shoulder. “Stay where you are, Miss Strickland. As I said this morning, I have something to discuss with you and to be honest, this is rather difficult for me. So please. Stay.”
The man actually said please. It didn’t make up for the snarky I-can’t-be-seen-in-public-with-your-ass comment, but that ‘please’ and my insatiable curiosity had me sitting back down.
“Fine. Spill.” I crossed my arms and leaned back, giving him my coldest stare, which was entirely wasted due to the lack of light.
“I have a favor to ask—”
He was interrupted by a waiter who brought a basket of bread and two glasses of water. I ignored them both. I wouldn’t put my lips on that glass if you paid me in Snickers bars.
When the waiter left, Officer Thomas leaned forward and kept his voice low. “As you may have heard, Martin Mathers’ secretary, Delia Cummings, was murdered five days ago.”
Of course, I heard about it. It was all over the news. A young woman knifed to death in her own home. The world was a scary place.
As far as Martin Mathers was concerned, the Chief of Police was crooked. Although I’d never met the man in person, during my previous sideline endeavors, I knew he had more vices than a high school shop class.
The chief enjoyed illegal gambling a little too much. And judging by the size of his debt to the biggest criminal in town, he wasn’t very good at it. He also had a penchant for strippers and sexing women who weren’t his wife. No matter how you looked at it, Martin Mathers was a bad apple.
I uncrossed my arms and placed my elbows on the table, bending toward him until Hardass and I were face to face. “What about it?”
“As you may remember, Martin was my mentor.”
“Was?” I asked. I never understood the connection between the two men. Mathers and Andre Thomas were polar opposites. Where Mathers blatantly disregarded the laws he was supposed to enforce, Thomas was a straight arrow who never met a jaywalker he didn’t want to arrest.
“When I joined the force ten years ago, he took me under his wing, showed this rookie cop the ropes. Even encouraged me to get my master’s degree. There’s talk going around the station that he’s guilty of killing Delia Cummings. And I can’t touch this case.”
“Why not?”
“I’m a uniformed officer. I don’t have the authority to investigate a homicide, especially a high-profile case like this. Delia was one of our own. If I go sniffing around, I’ll lose my job.”
The candlelight flickered and reflected off his lenses. It was too dark to read any emotion in his eyes, but his voice was matter of fact.
“Do you think he did it?” I asked.
He hesitated for a moment. “I don’t believe so. But I want to know what really happened. While your methods are unorthodox, you defy rules and laws, you surround yourself with oddballs, and you seem to know a lot of criminals—”
“Hey,” I said, rapping my knuckles on the table. “Is this going somewhere?”
“You have a knack for uncovering the truth. I’m not a stupid man, Miss Strickland. I know Martin isn’t a clean cop, but if he’s innocent of murdering Delia, I don’t want to see him railroaded. So, I’m asking you to look into this. I’ll help you behind the scenes in any way I can, but if you get caught, I’ll claim no knowledge of your investigation. Is that clear?”
I scoffed. “You’re assuming I’ll say yes. That guy’s not just a dirty cop, he’s eyebrow deep in shit. What do I care if Martin Mathers is under suspicion?”
“Maybe I have it wrong. Maybe you don’t care about the truth at all.”
Maybe I didn’t. The way I saw it, the truth was usually ugly and a tad overrated.
I drummed my fingers on the table. “Since when did you start caring so much about the truth?” In the last six months, I’d stumbled my way into a couple of criminal tangles. The first was a missing person case—my pally, Axton, being the person missing. In the second, my study buddy, Janelle, had been accused of bashing her ex on the head and landing him in a coma. “You didn’t give a rat’s ass about Axton. He was just another stoner who’d taken off, right? And let’s discuss my friend, Janelle. If I recall, you slapped the cuffs on her yourself. Where was your concern about the truth then?”
He thrust his face even closer to mine. Another inch and we’d rub noses. “Unlike you, Miss Strickland, I go by the book. I follow where the evidence leads. I have to; it’s my job. That’s why I’m asking for your help. You can work outside the system I’m sworn to uphold.”
The prospect of finding justice for the dead woman battered at my conscience. And despite myself, I was intrigued. Curiosity was my weakness—well, one of them anyway. Once I sniffed out a mystery, I couldn’t stop. I got a rush from learning all the players, searching for clues, placing that final piece in the puzzle. Still, I wasn’t sure if I wanted to entangle myself in another mystery.
I tilted away from him to give myself a little breathing room. “Tell me about this Delia woman.”
He folded his hands as though he were getting ready to pray and bowed his head slightly. “Delia wasn’t well-liked. She thrived on gossip, used it like a commodity, and took everything she learned back to Martin. She was his eyes and ears. She only had one friend that I know of, Randa Atherton, a clerk at the station. I often saw them with their heads together over lunch. Rumor also has it that Delia was pregnant when she died.”
I swallowed the lump in my throat. That piece of information added a horrific turn to the story. “Who was the father? And why is suspicion falling on Mathers?”
“It’s common knowledge Mathers and Delia were having an affair. Talk at the water cooler says Delia wanted to keep the baby and threatened to tell Mathers’ wife, Annabelle. He killed her to keep her quiet.”
“Sounds like a good motive to me. If by some crazy chance Martin Mathers isn’t guilty,” I said, “who do you suspect?”
“I know nothing about her personal life. Like I said, Delia didn’t have many friends at the station. People were afraid of her. She loved finding their weak points—used them as currency. If a person got on her bad side, she had the ammunition to hurt them. Just a few weeks ago, Delia took a dislike to a new dispatcher. A very young, pretty girl. She traded risqué pictures with one of the officers, which is a violation of the morality clause in our contract. Delia wasn’t fond of him, either. They were both terminated.”
I squinted at him in the darkness. “And you think Delia orchestrated that?”
“All I hear are rumors and innuendo. But where there’s smoke, there’s fire.”
Nibbling on my lower lip, I ran through the story in my mind. A person like Delia must have had countless enemies. Finding the one who actually killed her would be a challenge. “She sounds like a real bitch,” I finally said.
“She was. But she didn’t deserve to be killed for it.” He waited a beat. “So, are you interested?”
I didn’t want to be pressured into a hasty decision. I needed time to think, even though I could already feel that familiar tug of interest pulling at me. “I’ll get back to you tomorrow. Dare I call you at the police station?”
He ignored my sarcasm. “No. Call my cell.”
I dipped my hand into my purse and scrounged around for my phone. He gave me his number and I added it to my contacts.
“You may not hold any respect for Martin, Miss Strickland, but his family is being affected by this, too.”





