Mystery Bones Murders (Book 1: Franke Shep Mystery Series) eBook
Mystery Bones Murders (Book 1: Franke Shep Mystery Series) eBook
š Read the Synopsis
š Read the Synopsis
They say you canāt outrun your past, and Iām living proof of that. Iām Frankie Shep, a rancher with a heavy heart and a dark secret. I thought I could hide away with my animals, away from the world and my own guilt over the deaths of my husband and son. But fate has a cruel sense of humor.
It started with a storm, a vicious one that tore through my land and unearthed a boneāa human bone. Seventeen years of trying to forget shattered in an instant. As more bones surfaced, my nightmares bled into reality, dragging me into a deadly game with a serial killer.
When my father went missing, I knew it wasnāt just coincidence. Someone was stalking me, threatening to rip apart what little peace I had left. Now, itās a race against time to uncover the truth and bring the killer to justice before I become the next victim.
Mystery Bones Murders is my storyāa tale of digging up the past to save the future. If you love strong heroines, twisted plots, and eerie settings, youāll want to join me on this perilous journey. Buy Mystery Bones Murders and help me unearth the secrets that could save my life.
š Chapter 1
š Chapter 1
The howl of a wolf pierced into Frankieās end-of-the-workday stillness. Alarmed, she lifted her feet from the table she kept on her wrap-around porch. By the time the animal howled a third time, Frankieās skin prickledāwith both concern for her animals and the gut-wrenching reminder of how alone life had left her.
She walked to the big oak door of her Wyoming ranch house. When she swung it open, the doorās hinges creaked. The tinny sound mingled with the darkness inside the house to taunt Frankie about her isolation.
But the momentās mission didnāt leave time to dwell on self-pity, so she did what she always didā¦ shoved her heartache into the wasteland her insides had become in the last five years.
She reached into the house and flipped up the light switch. Her four-year-old German ShepherdāLexi Princess Warriorārose from her bed near the fireplace on the far wall of the great room.
Lexi barely contained her excitement as she sat at Frankieās feet with a smile on her lips and love in her dark eyes. She wagged her tail against the wood floor, and it swept an arc into the hair the dog had shed during the week.
Frankie knelt to caress her best friendās jaw. āI have to go find Diesel,ā she said.
Lexiās ears perked up at the mention of the calf they had befriended.
āYou canāt go this time, girl. The wolves are out tonight. I couldnāt bear to lose you, too.ā She hugged Lexi and lingered for a just a beat against the dogās warmth.
When Frankie stood, Lexi lumbered toward the fireplace and plopped onto her bed with a thud. She frowned at Frankie as she dropped her head onto her feet and gave a disappointed groan.
Frankie moved to the coat closet near the door. She slipped into a heavy jacket, gloves, and a warm hat. At the gun cabinet, she opted for the rifle instead of her Glock handgun. Just to be safe, she stuffed wolf repellent into her pocket before blowing Lexi a goodbye kiss. She stepped out onto the porch and stood at the top of her five slate steps to massage a painful knot in her back.
A distant violin ās soulful tune turned her attention to the fading dusk. She looked past the silhouette of her pickup truck that was parked beside hay bales she and her ranch handāColeāhad stacked earlier.
Was the music coming from the abandoned Collins ranch? It didnāt matter. There was no time to linger on the question.
Still, she lifted her arms and pretended her husband was still alive to waltz her down the steps to her enclosed front yard, where her pet cow Rosie stood six feet away.
Another wolf howl sent Rosie into an excited bellow. The ruddy brown animalās white head faced the snow-tipped Rocky Mountains. Her tail swished faster than usual. She darted to the gate in the picket fence, then back to Frankie. The whites of her eyes bulged.
āDonāt worry, Rosie,ā Frankie said as she squinted into the distance. āIāll find your baby.ā
She lifted the collar of her denim shirt to shield her neck from the October wind. The air smelled of rain. āDiesel?ā Frankie turned her ear toward the corner of her acreage where she had last seen the calf. She heard nothing but the fiddle music.
The musician now played a haunting ballad that stabbed Frankieās heart with memories of the love she had lost. Images from long ago floated through her brain. But they were too painful to face. Yet.
She tuned out the fiddler and yelled across the field. āDiesel, please donāt make me go looking for you.ā She sent a stronger plea for mercy into the universe. It was not a night to roam the ranch. But it seemed she had no choice.
āBe right back with your boy, Rosie.ā She patted the cowās behind. āCome on. You should wait in the barn.ā
Rosie followed Frankie toward her and Dieselās stall.
As Frankie approached the barn, she noted the sliver of moon rising over the structureās two-story profile. White oak. Covered paddocks on both the east and west sides. Cedar trees to block the south and north winds. All nestled beneath Wyomingās Rocky Mountains.
She loved this place. And wouldnāt it be nice if Diesel ambled around the corner right about now? āCome on, Diesel. Let me get back to that almost-good orange chicken I left cooling beside the microwave seconds before I heard the wolf.ā
When she entered the barn, earthy and leathery smells hugged her. Good smells.
She put Rosie away, turned toward the horse side of the structure, and approached her American Paint gelding. Concho was white with large brown spots. He greeted her with a pulsating nicker and an affectionate nuzzle on the shoulder.
She rubbed the kink in her lower back before stroking Conchoās silky nose. āI know we worked hard with the cattle today, but we have to find Diesel.ā
Concho nodded, gave another whinny, and mouthed the bridle hanging on the wall beside him. Frankie took that as permission to slip the bit into his mouth. The horse relaxed, one back leg cocked in rest, while she threw a blanket and saddle across his back.
Outside the barn, Frankie heaved her five-seven aching body onto the saddle.
At the intersection of her half-mile-long driveway and the dirt road that circled her property, Concho carried her past the cement bench facing a dozen family gravesites. She watched the granite headstones of her husband and son, killed together in a freak car wreck on the way home from a soccer game. Then she glanced at her momās gravesite, where friends and family buried an empty casket after the search party stopped trying to find her.
The guilt of still being alive when her family had died carried more weight this time. Why couldnāt she picture her husbandās face anymore? She had no right to forget Jason, not after what she had done.
A drop of water landed on her nose.
āDiesel!ā She pulled a rubber poncho from the saddlebag. As she dragged the hood over her hat, the wind blew cold sleet over her. She leaned forward and down to tuck as much of herself under the rain gear as possible.
Concho could use his senses to find the calf. Frankie needed to stay dry and sort of warm.
As the downpour eased, Frankie heard Dieselās high-pitched bawl on the other side of a rise. The one she and her friends used to sled down as children.
When she found the calf, Rosieās baby was struggling against a thorny gooseberry bush beside a birch tree. Concho seemed skittish as they approached.
āHow did you get here, little guy?ā Frankie dismounted and propped the reins over the saddle horn. Another wolf howl convinced her to slip the rifle from the scabbard attached to Conchoās saddle. She checked the repellent under her rain poncho and guided her horse behind a fallen log that was under a birch tree.
āStay here, Concho.ā
He snorted and pranced around something brownish white, nudging it with his nose.
Frankie set the rifle next to her knee and avoided thorns as she reached in to untangle Diesel. The calf was too panicked. He struggled against her, causing a bruise and a muscle cramp in her forearm. As she pulled back, barbs tore the skin on her wrist. She sucked on the deepest wound while returning to Concho to retrieve a rope and a utility knife from the saddlebag.
Back at Diesel, she wrestled with the calf to loop the rope around his neck. She cut the branches that pinned him to the bush and pulled on the rope. Diesel kicked and fell, then bawled and tried to run. When he realized he was freed from the bush, he stood still, panting and shivering.
Frankie wiped water from her eyes while inspecting a cut in the calfās left hind leg. It wasnāt so serious to keep him from walking home before she doctored it. With a grunt, she pulled on the rope and led Diesel toward Concho.
As they approached, the horse pranced and snorted like crazy. Frankie caught Conchoās reins and rubbed his nose. āWhatās wrong with you?ā He stood still long enough for her to secure Dieselās rope to the saddle horn, then returned to his dance.
His hoof clicked against the thing she had seen sticking up from the ground earlier.
āWhat did you find?ā She knelt and dug dirt and mud away from a bone.
āConcho, did we find an ancient guyās campsite? Is that what has you so spooked?ā
As kids, Frankie and her friends had often daydreamed about finding a nomadic Native American tribeās village on the ranch. But where they sledded every winter?
āCool.ā She moved more dirt until she could pull the bone from the ground and examine it.
The bone seemed small for a man. Her former friend, Harbin Williams, now a professor in the anthropology department at the University of Wyoming, could confirm her exciting suspicions. Butā¦
She couldnāt force herself to attend his sonās funeral five years ago. Their kids died together in the accident her husband caused. She had isolated herself in her struggle to heal her grief, and she couldnāt face helping her best friends with their recovery.
A growl jolted her attention from the bone to the bared teeth of a gray wolfāten feet from her.
The rifle lay six feet away, behind the fallen log.
She hopped over the log and took a fighting stance between her animals and the wolf, and then rushed to pull the repellent from under her rain poncho.
The predator stepped closer. Saliva dripped from its huge teeth.
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Love and danger spar in this thrilling inspirational romantic suspense.
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āāāāā "A gripping mystery with well-developed characters and an unexpected twist. Frankie Shep's journey through the dark secrets of her past keeps you on the edge of your seat." - Linda M.
Mystery Bones Murders
āāāāā "Mystery Bones Murders delivers a thrilling blend of suspense and emotional depth. The intricate plot and relentless pace make it impossible to put down. Highly recommend for mystery lovers!" - Robert J.
Immerse yourself now in this action-packed story of overcoming danger and inner struggles to reclaim faith and a second shot at love.