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  Ghost Busting Mystery

  Shady Hoosier Detective Agency Series

  Book 1

  Daisy Pettles

  Copyright © 2018 by Vicky Phillips

  All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced in any format, now known or to be discovered, except for brief extracts for the purpose of book reviews or critical analysis. Contact Hot Pants Press, LLC for information on reprint rights and licensing of this work.

  The Ghost Busting Mystery (Shady Hoosier Detective Agency Series, Book One) is a work of fiction. All references to people, locations, and events are understood as a part of the fictive process. All characters and events in this crime comedy book series are the product of the author’s imagination. Nothing in this novel is real, other than the great state of Indiana.

  First Print and ebook Editions: November 2018

  Hot Pants Press, LLC

  Underhill, VT 05489

  Distributed by Smashwords

  Ebook formatting by www.ebooklaunch.com

  ISBN: 978-0-9815678-2-2 (Print)

  ISBN: 978-0-9815678-3-9 (Ebook)

  Website: https://www.DaisyPettles.com

  Email: [email protected]

  Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/daisy.pettles.author

  Twitter: @DaisyPettles

  Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Book 2 Excerpt

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Chapter One

  Dode Schneider wasn’t right in the head even before that snowplow hit him. That was probably why no one paid him much mind when he started rattling on about ghosts. “They are hanging in the apple orchard, over at the Wyatt mansion, right regular.”

  “What are they doing?” asked Boots Gibson, Pawpaw County’s sheriff.

  “Well, gosh darn, if I knew that, I wouldn’t be here jawing at you.”

  It was late Spring, but Dode, a bachelor farmer, was dressed in a long-sleeved plaid flannel shirt buttoned in a choke hold around his scrawny neck. Tiny dots of white tissue paper stuck to his chin where he’d nicked himself shaving. His eyes were moist, runny with pollen. He pulled a red handkerchief out of the pocket of his bibbed overalls and dabbed at his nose before honking into it. “You gonna do your job, or what?” he asked Boots.

  “For crying out loud, Dode, that mansion is abandoned,” said Boots. “The Wyatts all died off years ago. Place is falling down. No one goes there no more.”

  “Well, I know that. The way I see it,” Dode leaned forward, “them ghosts are trespassing. Can’t you arrest them for that?”

  Boots stretched out in his chair and planted the heels of his cowboy boots firmly on the lip of his desk. He crossed both arms across his chest. He looked like a flustered Santa Claus in blue jeans. His white beard was neatly trimmed. His face was bright red, partly from farming on the weekends, but mostly from trying to reason with Dode.

  We were all sitting together in the sheriff’s office: Dode Schneider, Boots Gibson, and me. My name is Ruby Jane Waskom—RJ to most—and I’m a sixty-seven-year-old, detective-in-training with the Harry Shades Private Detective Agency, the best—okay the only—PI agency in Knobby Waters, Indiana. Knobby Waters is a small town, big enough to make it onto the map, but small enough that it is barely a pimple of a speed bump in the asphalt on State Road 235. We don’t get much excitement, so I, for one, was eager to hear more of Dode’s ghost story.

  Boots, on the other hand, had been trying all week to dissuade Dode from filing a formal police complaint against the ghosts. He didn’t like paperwork. What he liked was fishing down at the catfish honey hole off Greasy Creek, and Dode was seriously eating into his fishing time. The old geezer was determined to see his tax dollars in action. Boots had called me in to calm Dode down and take charge of the case.

  Dode wrinkled his nose. “I’m telling you, them ghosts are up to something. Somebody ought to do something before they bust into town. Start pestering the whole lot of us.”

  I was trying to keep an open mind. Living people could be pretty annoying. Why should the dead be any different?

  “On second thought,” Dode leaned forward, whispering like he feared someone might be listening, “maybe it ain’t ghosts. Maybe it’s aliens. How’s a fella to tell the difference?”

  I thought that was a darn good question.

  “Like I told you Dode, this here seems like a job for a private agency,” Boots announced as he leaned back in his swivel chair. “I represent Pawpaw County. We don’t do ghost busting. We police the living, not the dead. If you’re being pestered by dead people, you’re on your own. Your tax dollars don’t cover that.”

  “What about if it’s aliens?”

  “Dang blast it, Dode. My jurisdiction doesn’t extend into outer space either. Aliens would be federal, FBI.”

  I leaned over and whispered in Boots’s ear. “You’re just tired of dealing with the old coot.”

  “That too,” he grunted.

  Dode’s eyes slid back and forth, taking in both of us. “You’re in on it. The both of you. Ain’t ya?”

  “In on what?” I asked.

  “The conspiracy.”

  Boots snorted. “The conspiracy? What in the Sam Hill?”

  I cleared my throat. “Who you think is conspiring to do what, Dode?”

  Dode’s eyes spun. “You trying to confuse me, missy?”

  “Nope. You said there was a conspiracy. What are the ghosts conspiring to do?”

  “I dunno. That’s why I’m sitting here consulting with the law. I want you all to find out. I just think them ghosts are up to no good. I can feel it in my bones. My busted hip has been acting up. I can divine things in my bones, you know. It’s a gift I got from my mother’s people.”

  I wanted to say it was more likely a gift of that head-on collision he’d had with the county snowplow, but I was trying to be professional.

  Boots bit his bottom lip. “These ghosts, are they making any noise? Disturbing the peace? Coming onto your land?”

  “No. They ain’t unruly ghosts. But they are odd; not normal ghosts, you might say. They have big lights on their butts. They look like giant fireflies swinging their butts under the apple trees.” Dode held out his gnarled hands. He threw them wide apart. “Really big lightning bugs.”

  He was so excited I thought his eyes were going to pop out of his head. Clearly, he was seeing something, and it had him riled up.

  Boots picked up the police report. He rattled it. “Ghosts with big lighted butts? Do you hear yourself, Dode? Do you? Cause if you heard yourself, you’d be hearing a crazy man. I can’t file this. You, me, the whole county, we’d be a laughing stock.”

  Dode chewed one littl
e fingernail, and then the other. He’d come all the way into town to file a police report, and clearly, he wasn’t giving up. “What if it’s aliens, not ghosts? Everybody would want to know. Right? I mean, aliens could vaporize the world. Puff! No one wants to be puffed out of existence, now do they, eh?”

  Boots shoved back from his desk. He strutted out of the office. “All yours, Ruby Jane,” he spat over his shoulder as he headed toward the coffee room. “I got some real policing to do.”

  “The sheriff can’t help you, Dode. Maybe I can. The Harry Shades Detective Agency, where I work, it’s a private firm. You understand? We require payment up front. A retainer. You got to pay us.”

  “I understand. I ain’t addled. Figured I might be needing to grease someone’s wheels before anything would happen. Lucky for you, missy, I got heaps of money. Follow me.”

  I got up and stretched my bad knee. I ambled out the door to the back parking lot in hot pursuit of Dode’s worn-denim backside. He moved at a mighty speed for someone so old. His right hip had been busted, so he walked a tad sideways like a crab, but he moved fast.

  We stopped alongside the back tailgate of his cherry-red ’57 short-bed Ford. He dropped the gate and pointed to a pair of five-gallon glass jars wrapped in moldy newspapers. They looked like something the Jolly Green Giant would use to store moonshine.

  I recognized the jars from the sixties, when the Bold Mold Plastics Factory had come to town. Bold Mold used the jars to transport the acid used to clean the plastic auto button molds. In the seventies enterprising folks lugged the jars out of the town dump. Sawed off the tops. Made terrariums. Terrariums were big in the early seventies. People were gaga over earthy things. Ferns in bottles were big. My cousin Betty had a craft barn down in Orleans. She hit the jackpot turning those jars into bottle gardens with teeny plastic gnomes living inside. She sold the whole kit and caboodle to some hippie college students from Vincennes University back in ’73. Got enough to retire to a trailer park in Hollywood, Florida. She mails me Christmas cards with palm trees. And she always writes the same darn thing inside: “Eighty degrees here. You enjoying the snow? Ha! Ha!” That Betty always was a smart ass.

  Dode pointed at the jars. “Dug ’em up last night in my springhouse cellar. You’re working for me now, ain’t ya?”

  I peeled back moldy newspaper and inspected the jars. The outsides were smeared with clay and dirt. Inside, they were stuffed with coins, or what looked to be coins, mostly quarters and dimes, some pennies, floating around in greenish water.

  “Been storing these in my cellar. First National Bank of Dode. Saving them for the crash.”

  I knew by “the crash,” he meant the next Great Depression. He wasn’t the only farmer in town who didn’t trust banks. Lots of old timers buried the family silver in their cellars or slid silver coin money under the barn floorboards. “How much is in them two jars?” I asked.

  He shrugged, wiped the back of his hand under his nose. He took a pinch of chaw from the pocket of his overalls and poked it expertly into one jaw. “Don’t rightly know,” he said, after sucking the chaw for a moment. “Maybe thousands. Them coins have silver and copper. They don’t use real silver no more. Coins today are made up out of allow-u-minimum. Might as well be lead.” He spat.

  I contemplated the jars. They were full. I contemplated the Shades’ Detective Agency bank account. It was empty. We had no other clients. And I’d been holding my paycheck all week because I knew it’d not clear the bank. “Sold,” I said as I took hold of a jar and started monkey-walking it to the edge of the tailgate.

  Harry Shades, my boss, wasn’t going to be happy about this. He’d been perturbed to the point of spitting a couple of months back when Veenie Goens, my best gal pal and fellow sleuth-in-training, had accepted a lifetime pledge of free eggs from Ma Horton in exchange for our sleuthing services. I figured Harry would take the cash, though. He’d said more than once that the Shades agency ought to represent everyone. “Everybody’s money is green,” was his big motto. Thanks to all the corroded copper pennies, Dode’s money couldn’t have been any greener. It was dirty money, but I figured Veenie and I could launder it up.

  “You’re working for me now, ain’t ya?” Dode asked again as he helped me roll the second jar onto the tailgate.

  “Reckon I am,” I said.

  “Hot diggity!” screeched Dode. “Just wait ’til them ghosts get a gander at you. Bet they never met a real live ghost hunter. This is just like hiring one of them Hardy boys, except you’re a lady, and all.”

  It wasn’t the ghosts I was worried about. It was the boss, but I figured ghost busting was as reputable as most things he got us into. Veenie and I had been outwitting the living citizens of Knobby Waters, Indiana for a while now.

  How much smarter could the dead be?

  Chapter Two

  Yep, Harry was not happy.

  Veenie, on the other hand, was bouncing around the office like a balloon someone had let the air out of. Veenie—Lavinia Goens by birth—had always wanted to be a professional ghost buster. Veenie is four feet, seven inches and weighs one hundred fifty pounds. She is seventy-one years old and has white hair she wears swept up kewpie doll style. When she bounces, it makes an impression.

  That day she was wearing her customary poncho—this one was hot pink with purple tassels—with fetching yellow capris and a pair of secondhand Wonder Woman Crocs. She’d snatched up the entire ensemble for five dollars in the chubby girls’ department at Goodwill.

  Veenie and I have been best pals since we worked side by side on the auto button line at the Bold Mold Plastics factory back in the sixties, when we were both still in high school, before the EPA decided that pouring plastic waste into White River was a doo-doo of an idea. These days, jobs are scarce out here in the country, which is pretty much how Veenie and I came to be working for Harry.

  Harry was sitting at his desk looking disgusted with the both of us. “No,” he said, all sour-faced. “Absolutely not. No ghost busting.” He tilted his brown fedora hat back on his head. Unsatisfied that he’d made enough of a statement, he tossed the hat on the desk. He made a sound with his lips like a motorboat.

  “Why in tarnation not?” I had to ask.

  “Because, for starters, ghosts don’t exist.” He ran a hand through his pewter-colored hair and straightened his stubby wide tie. He was wearing his customary three-piece suit. He was a trim guy, on the right side of sixty, with a penchant for the married ladies. He’d just grown a moustache and liked to chew on it when he got upset. He was all right mostly but was always trying to class up the business and romance the womenfolk of Pawpaw County. Since no one in Knobby Waters cared much for class, let alone romance, he was pretty much as frustrated as a sick squirrel most of the time.

  Veenie had calmed down and was inspecting the money jars. She had a tea towel and was wiping off the moldy newspaper and clay dirt. We’d both officially retired awhile back, but the economy being the way it was, we’d taken a shared job as detectives-in-training with Harry. Pay wasn’t much, but it helped. Veenie and I didn’t have any 401(k)s or IRAs, or any of those other fancy financial things, but we still had our wits about us. Veenie was a born snoop, delighted at long last to have her natural talents recognized at a professional level. Veenie and I shared a house and a car (’6o Chevy Impala, turquoise). Like me, she was used to living on a budget. The thought of spending the afternoon cleaning the corroded money didn’t bother either of us. We were used to working for our money.

  “How much you reckon is in them jars?” Veenie asked.

  “Dode says thousands.”

  Harry sighed. “Dode also thinks there are aliens with big butts hanging out in his neighbor’s apple trees.”

  “Or ghosts,” I said. “He hired us to determine which. And to make sure they weren’t up to no good.”

  Veenie’s little cornflower-blue eyes shone over the top of her Coke bottle glasses. She had some macular degeneration but wasn’t about to let that slo
w her down. Her desire to snoop won out over every infirmity God tossed her way. “I bet it’s them Wyatts, come back to haunt the town.”

  Harry, who was a transplant from up north—South Bend to be exact—asked Veenie why the Wyatts would want to haunt anyone in Knobby Waters.

  “They were a bunch of ne’er-do-wells. That’s how they got that mansion in the first place.”

  “What mansion?”

  “The Wyatt mansion,” said Veenie. “The abandoned one, across from Dode’s farm.”

  Harry snorted. “That thing looks like something the Munsters wouldn’t live in. I’d not call that a mansion.”

  “Well,” said Veenie, “it’s been empty since the twenties. It’s old. Place needs to be gussied up a bit.”

  I dove into the history of the Wyatt family for Harry. “Jedidiah Wyatt was one of the founding fathers of Knobby Waters. Came up from the South after the Civil War. He operated the first ferry that crossed over from old Fort Vallonia to the Knobby Waters bottomlands. Built the first bank to trade animal pelts and tobacco, stuff like that. From there on he pretty much ruled the roost, back in the late 1800s.”

  The southern part of Indiana is mounded with hills, shot through with creeks and rivers that bleed south to the Ohio River. You could get on a raft in Knobby Waters, ride it all the way down to Louisville, then hang a right to catch the Ohio River. Once on the Ohio, you could row west toward the mighty Mississippi. Once on the Mississippi, you could shoot straight down to New Orleans. You’d eventually get spit out into the Gulf of Mexico. Most folks these days never left the state, though. It was the river highways that made Knobby Waters a natural trading post with a rich river bottomland suited to tobacco and corn farming back in the day.