https://bookswelove.net/calder-susan/ |
I am BWL Publishing Inc. author Susan Calder. I've published three
mystery/suspense novels, which you can view and purchase by visiting my BWL Author Page.
Here’s Paula with the novel’s prime suspect, her murdered friend's husband. He’s invited Paula to
lunch to learn what her friend had told her about him.
Paula would reassure him and make it clear her friend had told her nothing. He would be on
guard, but, perhaps, less guarded than he’d be with a cop. There was a chance he’d
slip.
“I can do lunch tomorrow,” she said. “Where? What time?”
She thought of a nearby restaurant.
“Do you know Lily’s CafĂ©?”
While writing A Deadly Fall,
I realized that an insurance adjuster would make a good series detective.
Adjusters are skilled in investigative work. They visit accident and crime
scenes, interview witnesses and study forensic evidence to determine what really
happened. Insurance claims could also reveal cover-ups for murder. Was the
building fire an accident? Did an arsonist set the blaze to collect the building
insurance? Or to kill a person sleeping inside?
Stampede Parade |
Belly dancers, in halters and pantaloons, whisked guns out of
their holsters. They twirled the pistols around their fingers and shot
imaginary bullets into the air.
“A blend of the old and new Calgary,” Paula said to her mother, who was
seated on the lawn chair beside her. Over the past few years, Paula had noticed
more and more newcomers’ floats and acts in the Stampede Parade. Today, Asian,
Muslim and Caribbean communities would march with descendants of the original
pioneers.
Her cell phone rang. Brendan Becker.
“Great of you to call,” he said. “I’ve been bugging my sister Cynthia to
contact the insurance company.”
The belly dancers moved on. A bow-legged man wearing riding chaps bounded
toward Paula and her mother. He moved his arms in circles.
“Cynthia refused –”
“YAHOO,” the cowboy shouted.
“YAHOO,” the crowd answered.
“YEE-HAW.”
“YEE-HAW.” Paula’s mother joined in.
“You sound like you’re at the parade,” Brendan said against a backdrop of
trombones.
“You too?” Paula said.
While working on his second mystery novel, I got an idea for a different suspense/mystery story. Calgary engineer Julie Fox travels to California to search for her mother who abandoned Julie when she was a child. This novel, To Catch a Fox, would alternate between five
viewpoint characters. As the story progressed readers would understand the harm and danger the two 'bad guys' plan for Julie.
My husband Will and I
researched setting descriptions on two holidays in Southern California. Yes,
writing can tough sometimes. Julie stayed in the Airbnb apartment Will and I
rented in Santa Monica. All of us rented bicycles from a shop on the boardwalk.
Julie questioned a clerk in the shop.
Julie hesitated, feeling foolish to hope the clerk could provide any information about her mother; yet how wonderful, how easy would it be if he did.
He looked up, his eyes bleary red, and asked what type of bike she wanted.
From her waist pouch, Julie pulled out the three pictures of her mother she’d brought. “I’m looking for this woman, who once worked in a bike shop in Santa Monica.”
“This shop here?”
“I’m not sure. It was in the late 1980s. Was this place operating then?”
The man’s grin revealed a gold front tooth. “Beats me. I only bought the joint two years back.” He picked up the pictures.
“Could you put me in touch with the previous owner?”
“Not likely. He’s dead.”
Bike shop on the Santa Monica boardwalk |
After BWL published To Catch a Fox in 2019, I returned to my
mystery series. I’m currently working on the third Paula Savard book, Winter’s
Rage. Paula investigates a hit and run collision that killed a woman and
seriously injured her husband. Was it an accident? Or a pretext for murder? The
insured vehicle owner, an eighty-five-year old man recovering from heart
surgery, insists he wasn’t driving.
“I can’t tell you
more than what I told the police,” he said. “Them showing up at my door
yesterday was the first I’d heard of anything.”
“Our insurance
perspective is different from that of the police.” Paula had explained over the
phone that she was the independent adjuster assigned to the claim, but
repeating that could insult him, and rightly. So far, he’d impressed her as
being mentally on the ball.
He leaned forward,
lines flaring from his nose bridge. “When they talked about my car being in an
accident, you could have knocked me down with a feather. I haven’t driven for
two months. Doctor’s orders.” He rapped his chest with his gnarled hand. “I was
sitting right here, reading, that whole evening until I went to bed.”
“At what time?”
“About 9:30, my
usual these days.”
“It was your
birthday,” she said.
“At my age, that’s nothing to celebrate.”
Every book publication is something to celebrate. BWL has scheduled Winter’s
Rage for publication in February 2021. After the celebrations, I'll move on Paula Savard mystery
# 4, which will be set in spring, the season of hope.
My front yard this spring |
How different we can be from out heroines. Keepwriting
ReplyDeleteAnd the same, in small ways. Keep writing too.
ReplyDelete