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In Deep
Voodoo
by Stephanie Bond
ISBN
0060820578


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START WITH BAD MOJO...
There's something strange afoot in the small town of Mojo, Louisiana. Yet even as the annual voodoo festival gets underway, Penny Francisco, who runs a health food business, refuses to believe in black magic. Her mind is on celebrating her divorce from her lying, cheating husband Deke.
ADD A PINPRICK OF REVENGE...
Fueled by run-ins with her ex-mother-in-law and Deke's busty mistress, Penny is eager for the "emancipation party" her friends plan. When she receives a Deke voodoo doll as a gag gift, she sticks it with a pin as a joke. But when Deke winds up fatally stabbed, the police aren't laughing.
AND WATCH THINGS BOIL OVER...
A junk-food junkie P.I. offers his services, and although Penny is wary of the sexy Cajun's motives (and his diet), she's desperate. Dodging a media sideshow and a looming murder rap, Penny realizes that somehow she's landed herself IN DEEP VOODOO.
CHAPTER ONE
“I could kill Deke for this,” Penny
Francisco said, peering through the mini-blinds
covering a window of her health food store, The
Charm Farm.
The normally sleepy two-lane Charm Street
bustled with early traffic for the annual Voodoo
Festival. But in between the passing cars, Penny
had managed to get a good look at the Victorian
house heavy with ornate wrought ironwork that she
had bought, refurbished, and lived in with Deke
Black, attorney-at-law, until their explosive
breakup a few months ago. A painting crew was
methodically covering the rich color of Vanilla
Milk that she had lovingly chosen from thousands
of paint chips with what looked to be Pink
Nightmare.
She ground her teeth until her jaw ached.
“Just look at what he’s doing to my house!”
“Let me guess,” Marie, her quirky employee of
six months, said from behind the juice bar where
she refilled canisters of vitamin additives.
“He’s painting it.”
Penny looked at the woman suspiciously—many
people in town had insinuated that eccentric Marie
Gaston with the electric blue hair had a “third
eye.” “How did you know that?”
“I saw Lou Hall’s painting van pull up as I
was coming in this morning.”
Penny frowned and looked back to the window.
“Deke’s not just painting my house—he’s painting
it puke pink.”
“But it’s his house now.”
“Still. I can’t believe the historical
society would allow him to paint my house pink.”
“It helps that his mother is mayor,” Marie
offered dryly. “And it’s his house now,
boss.”
“But I have to look at it every day.” Penny
jammed her hand into her coarse auburn curls as
frustration billowed in her chest. Moisture
gathered in the corners of her eyes, but she
quickly blinked it away—no more tears over Deke
Black. “He did this just to annoy me.”
“Probably.” Marie cleared her throat.
“Although, I heard down at the Hair Affair that,
um, Sheena was planning to redecorate.”
Penny stiffened, pain knifing between her
shoulder blades. Deke’s mistress. Girlfriend.
Tart. Practically everyone in the town of Mojo,
Louisiana knew about Deke’s fooling around…the
fact that he had moved litigious Sheena Linder
into the home they had bought together was the
ultimate humiliation. “I can’t believe that I
have to live over the doughnut shop, and that
woman will be living in my house.”
“You live over a beignet shop. And
it’s his house, boss.”
“The bastard could have waited until the ink
was dry on the divorce papers.”
“Uh-huh. Well, maybe Sheena will fall in the
shower and sue him. Lord knows she’s sued almost
everyone else in town.”
“And Deke defended her the last few times she
allegedly injured herself.”
“If it’s any consolation, I heard she slipped
on a spilled Yoohoo in the Quickie Mart last week
and is laid up again.”
“As if the woman needed a reason to be on her
back,” Penny muttered, her blood boiling.
The soaring pin oak tree that had first drawn
her to the Victorian on Charm Street was ablaze
with deep red foliage typical for early October.
The glorious ruby color clashed horrifically with
the vicious pink hue the painters were rolling
onto the wood siding—another insult. The last
time the leaves had been red—this time last
year—she had been happy…mostly.
Last summer had been fraught with stress as
she had debated whether to clear the land they
owned behind The Charm Farm to plant an organic
vegetable garden. Deke had been vehemently
opposed to the idea, saying he had other plans for
the empty half-acre lot, but Penny had had the
distinct feeling that her husband was trying to
undermine her business that he had pooh-poohed
from the beginning. When she’d first suggested
that they convert the small rental house across
the street inherited from his father into a retail
business, Deke had made her feel foolish.
“A health-food store in Mojo?” He’d laughed
until his eyes had run. “Maybe a fish and chips
joint. In case you haven’t noticed, honey, the
deep south really means the deep fried
south.”
Hurt, but determined to put her rusty
nutrition degree and homeopathic know-how to good
use, Penny had persisted and, after a rocky start,
her enterprise had taken off. As it turned out,
the residents of Mojo preferred home remedies to
fancy doctoring, and The Charm Farm’s inventory of
roots, herbs, and vitamins fit the bill nicely.
But while her business had grown steadily, the law
practice that Deke had taken over from his father
had started to slide. Two of his big
manufacturing clients had jumped to more tony law
firms in nearby New Orleans. Deke had begun to
supplement his client list with personal injury
cases, and supplement his diet with bourbon.
The downturn in his business had coincided
perfectly with a midlife crisis. One day he had
driven home a new fire-engine red two-seater Lotus
Elise. That was about the same time she’d found
brochures for hair transplants in his briefcase.
Penny had tried to head off what seemed to be an
inevitable affair with new lingerie and lots of
TLC, but in the end, terminally tanned and
ferociously feminine Sheena Linder had been too
much for a simple man like Deke to resist.
Penny and Sheena weren’t complete strangers.
The women had met once when Penny had visited
Sheena’s Forever Sun tanning salon and asked that
she give her customers a flyer on the dangers of
tanning so they could make a more informed
decision before roasting themselves. Sheena had
called her the “c” word and had thrown her out of
Forever Sun, threatening to sue for trespassing
and mental anguish. Penny found out later that
her trip to the tanning salon had prompted Sheena
to see Deke about possibly filing a lawsuit
against some crazy woman named Penny Black.
Apparently Deke had overlooked Sheena’s inability
to figure out that her new attorney and her
intended defendant shared the same last name and
might be related, or in this case, married.
Thankfully, Deke hadn’t filed a suit against Penny
on Sheena’s behalf. Instead he’d started porking
Sheena, and Penny’s last name was no longer Black.
Life was nothing if not ironic. Penny had
secured a barracuda of a divorce attorney from the
city and after much legal wrangling, Deke got the
Victorian and the property it sat on, Penny got
The Charm Farm and the property it sat on. When
the final papers had been signed earlier in the
week, Penny had staked out the premeditated garden
with pink flags. Those flags symbolized her own
growth and filled her with a sense of purpose.
And she also gained satisfaction in knowing
that one day, Sheena Linder would crawl out of one
of her tanning beds looking like a
dried-apple-head doll. Penny’s skin, on the other
hand, would still be lily-white and unwrinkled…but
lightly veined…and…freckled. She frowned
suddenly, trying to remember why she had felt so
victorious.
Across the street, a faded green sedan pulled into
her former driveway behind Lou Hall’s painting
van. Probably another workman hired to do
something else unconscionable to her beloved
house. She started to turn away when the car door
opened and a tall man she didn’t recognize climbed
out. Even from this distance, she could tell he
was long-limbed and well-built. Unbidden, a spark
of appreciation flared in her stomach. The man
was dark-haired, dressed in boots, brown leather
coat, and faded jeans that he tugged higher as he
approached the steps leading to the front porch of
the house.
Penny’s tongue lodged firmly in her cheek.
What was a handsome man doing at the house at an
hour when Deke was at his office and Sheena was
purportedly indisposed? Maybe Sheena was already
bored with Deke’s fumbling foreplay and dense back
hair and had decided to call in reinforcements.
The fact that the thought cheered her
immensely proved just how much the nasty divorce
had changed her—before she wouldn’t have wished
evil on anyone, no matter what they had done to
her, but now…well, now she had fantasies about
Deke getting his comeuppance in a manner worthy of
a regional headline. She glanced toward the phone
and seriously toyed with the idea of calling Deke
and inventing an emergency to bring him running
home. How fitting if Deke walked in on Sheena
doing the nasty with another guy in the same bed
in which she had caught Deke and Sheena
going at it like two greased pistons.
She would probably never be able to get that
horrific image out of her head. Now, ten months
later, the detail she remembered most vividly was
that the bottoms of Sheena’s feet (stuck up in the
air) were dirty, and the fact that she was
sullying Penny’s organic cotton sheets in the
process of shagging her husband was just…well,
unforgivable, really.
Penny pressed her face closer to the window,
her mind spinning gleeful scenarios, all of them
ending with Deke crawling back to her—not that it
would do any good, but oh, the sweet satisfaction.
The stranger’s body language was definitely
suspicious as he climbed the steps, stabbed the
doorbell, and waited in the shadows of the covered
porch. He looked from side to side, his gaze
seeming to catch and linger on the antique metal
glider that she had painstakingly stripped of
countless layers of peeling paint and refurbished
for the porch. His good taste in furniture
apparently did not extend to women, Penny thought
sourly. The door opened and Sheena stood there in
a pale, voluminous peignoir, a la Zsa Zsa Gabor,
her orange skin glowing like a jack-o-lantern,
nary a back brace nor neck cast in sight.
Penny waited for the man to scoop Sheena into
his arms, or for her to flash him some leg—or an
orange boob. Instead, his posture went rigid and
he appeared to say something she didn’t like.
Sheena’s blond head tilted and her hip cocked
saucily, her face contorted. Then she tried to
close the door, but the man wedged his foot in the
opening long enough to add something. When he
withdrew his foot, the door closed and Penny
imagined the thwack of the deadbolt turning
as she had turned it many times herself.
The man retraced his steps to the car, every
footfall exuding anger. She couldn’t get a good
look at his face as he swung into the driver’s
seat. Exhaust blasted out of the tailpipe when he
started the car engine, then he backed out of the
driveway onto Charm Street and sped away in the
direction of downtown Mojo. For some reason,
though, she doubted the man was in town for the
Voodoo Festival.
Penny’s pulse spiked—who was the mystery man
to her ex-husband’s shack-up honey? A relative?
A debtor?
A lover?
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