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A
series here to stay: McManus's first book, The Blight Way, took off and
hit a few bestseller lists along the way. It didn't take long before readers
were clamoring for the next installment. The success of The Blight Way
has paved the road for a long-lasting Bo Tully mystery series.
A page-turning mystery
filled with mirth and misadventure: In Avalanche, beloved Sheriff Bo
Tully is on his way up to West Branch Lodge, a fancy resort, to investigate a
missing persons case. When an avalanche thunders down the mountain, Tully
resigns himself to spending some extra time at the lodge. However, nothing can
ever be relaxing for Tully, and he soon finds himself in the middle of a murder
investigation, not just a missing persons report. Throw in Tully's old flame
who's staying at the lodge (but without her husband), and Avalanche falls into
place as the perfect second book to this witty series.
AVALANCHE
By Patrick F. McManus
Chapter One
He
stood at the window studiously watching the large snowflakes fill up his
mother's backyard. Rose, seating herself at the dining room table behind him,
said, "Honey, I wish you'd do something besides stare at the snow. Maybe you
need a hobby."
Staring at the snow is my hobby," Blight County Sheriff Bo
Tully replied. He was forty-two years old, with thick brown hair and a thick
brown mustache, both beginning to show signs of gray. "In January anyway."
Rose set a flat carton on the table. "Come help me eat this
pie. It's from Crabbs. They make the best pie. Oh, not their coconut cream or
their banana cream. They're all right, but they don't put enough coconut in
their coconut cream. Maybe coconut is too expensive. They put something in their
banana cream I don't like. It's probably to keep the bananas from turning
brown."
Tully sighed. "You plan to eat the whole pie right now?"
"Goodness no, not the whole pie. I offered you a piece,
didn't I?"
"I guess," he said. He walked over and sat down across the
table from her. Her hair had been freshly done that day and appeared to have a
silvery tint he hadn't noticed before. Her bifocals had slid down onto the tip
of her elegant nose. She peered sternly out over the top of them, her ash-blue
eyes closing to mere slits.
"I prefer you not wear your gun at the table," she said.
Tully sighed again. He took off his shoulder holster and hung
it on the chair next to him. His mother frowned. He lowered the holster to the
floor.'
"That's better."
"So, what kind of pie is it, if not coconut or banana cream?"
"Peach. Of course they use canned peaches this time of year,
but sometimes in the summer they have fresh peach. It's heavenly."
She cut a piece of pie, placed it on a saucer, and handed it
to him.
"Looks good," he said. "You got any ice cream to go with it?"
"In the freezer. I thought you were on a diet."
"I am. The pie-and-ice-cream diet. You want a scoop?"
She handed him her plate. He went out to the kitchen and
returned with a scoop of vanilla ice cream on each piece of pie.
She said, "Have you seen the monster lately?"
"Yeah, I saw Pap yesterday as a matter of fact. Stopped by
his mansion on the hill. I'm sure you know he has a young and beautiful new
housekeeper.
"Housekeeper my eye! Yes, I know all about Deedee. She's a
nice girl, actually. Why she has anything to do with that old man is a mystery
to me."
"He's rich, for one thing," Tully said. "He used to be
corrupt and rich but now I think he's only rich. By the way, he seems to be
shrinking."
"Good. Maybe he will get small enough a cat will eat him"
"I don't think he will get that small, but he used to be
about two inches shorter than I am. Now, I doubt he's much over five ten, if
that. You sure he's my father?"
"Pretty sure. Why do you ask?"
"As far as I can tell, we don't have a single thing in
common, except for the surname."
"You should be thankful. When he was sheriff, which was
practically forever, everyone in the whole county was scared to death of him.
They probably still are. Blight County was wide open back then, with gambling
and prostitution everywhere you looked, and Pap getting a cut of everything
illegal and even some things that were legal. Drinking and dancing and carousing
every night all night! It was wonderful! Oh, the fun we had in those days!" For
a brief moment, a devil-may-care look flashed across her face.
Tully still had childhood memories of his mother as a flashy
young woman. He had heard old men talk about her as the most beautiful girl in
all of Blight County.
"Is that where he made all his money, getting a cut off the
prostitution and gambling?"
"Not all his money. He and that rascal buddy of his, Pinto
Jack, sold their gold mine for a fortune, two fortunes in fact. They had this
thin little vein of gold they'd been working and somehow persuaded a greenhorn
from Pennsylvania that it would get bigger all the time. And it did! The
greenhorn made a ton of money out of that mine. Pap was furious with Pinto, for
talking him into selling. Pinto is lucky to be alive."
"Pap hasn't mellowed much." Absently, Tully picked up the
linen napkin beside his plate and wiped pie and ice cream from his mustache.
His mother cut the point off her second piece of pie, placed
a dab o ice cream on it, and forked it into her mouth. A dreamy expression came
over her face. "Perfect," she said.
Even in her sixties and a little plump, his mother was still
beautiful.
"You always were a pie person," he said.
"One of my many vices."
Tully licked his fork clean and pointed it at two watercolors
on the wall across from him. "I like what you did with the paintings."
"Yes, well, it cost me a fortune to get them properly mounted
and framed. They're very expensive museum mounts. My son painted them, you know,
so I had to go first-class. Why he wastes his time being sheriff I have no
idea."
"The main reason is I sell only about four or five paintings
a year, and I like to eat at least every other day."
I can remember when you and Ginger built your log cabin out
on the eighty. You both figured the place would be self-sustaining, and you
could spend your lives being starving artists, you a painter and she a potter."
"I remember."
"What's it been, almost ten years since she died? I remember
how she used to follow you around when you went out hunting those little birds."
"Quail," Tully said. He remembered, too. Ginger hated hunting
but she went along anyway, just to be with him. She would hold the dead birds
and pet them before putting them in the game bag. Sometimes she would get tears
in her eyes. He would think to himself, she doesn't have to come. He liked that
she did, but she didn't have to, just to be with him in the hills and fields
that both of them loved. Well, maybe she did have to come.
His mother was silent now, concentrating on her pie. Tugging
on a soggy corner of his mustache, Tully watched her, Katherine Rose McCarthy
Tully O'Hare Tully Casey. One of the last three husbands was dead, with Tim
Casey maybe still alive but whereabouts unknown. Had his whereabouts been known,
he too probably would be dead. He was one of those persons Pap said deserved
killing. Pap would have been happy to oblige, if he had ever found him. Maybe he
had found him, Tully thought. That would certainly explain Tim's disappearance.
"How come you married that old man twice?"
"I was crazy," she said.
One of the things Tully liked most about his mother was her
talent for focusing totally on a single thing in a single instant, in this case
the piece of pie she was eating, each bite of peach achieving its own
individual; identity. For this single moment, her world was peach pie. Tully
could eat two Big Macs, one after the other, with no recognition of the
fact before, during, or after the operation itself. Perhaps, he thought, that
explained the ten pounds he had gained since hi last Atkins. He stared down at
his pie plate. The pie and ice cream were magically gone. Man, I've got to stop
doing this.
Rose looked up from her plate. "So, are you taking the night
off, Bo? You should. You look tired."
"Nope, I've got to get over to the office and shake up the
troops."
"I know you think you can never replace Ginger, but you
should start seeing other women."
"I do see other women."
"I mean women who aren't already married!"
"Yeah, that can be a problem, married women. It's just they
can't help themselves. They love me. I don't sleep with them, though. I hope you
know that."
"Oh yes, I know that. I did hear about that pretty medical
examiner you took on a camping trip up on the West Branch. She isn't married."
"I don't want to talk about it!"
"I thought it was foolish the first time I heard about it.
Taking a woman camping in a tent in November!"
"I said I don't want to talk about it!"
The phone rang. Rose got up and answered it. "Oh, yes,
dear...No, he isn't. Could I give him a message, if I see him?...Really! My
goodness!"
"Is that Daisy? Let me speak to her."
Rose shook her head and turned away. "Yes yes, dear, I'll
tell him...What was it?...And she doesn't know how or where?...Just disappeared
like that? I'll tell hi, dear, if he stops be...You're welcome, dear."
Tully's eyes closed and his chin sagged down onto his chest.
"What?"
"That was your perky little secretary."
"I know. What else?"
"It seems Mike Wilson has gone missing up at the West Branch
Lodge."
Tully slipped back into this shoulder harness, then put on
his three-quarter-length black leather coat and his gray Stetson. "Now that you
got all the information out of Daisy, Ma, maybe you'd like to go find Wilson."
"I probably could. But not until I finish this pie."
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