CHAPTER 1
Melanie MacDonald woke that morning with a start. Maybe it was a bad dream that had caused it or just the mysterious workings of her subconscious, but the second she opened her eyes a terrible certainty clutched at her heart: Fossett—the town she loved best in all the world—was dying. Blinking back tears, her heart pounding, she groped toward the foot of the bed where her border collie, Shep, was sleeping. As he lifted his head and nuzzled her hand, Melanie took a deep breath and felt the constriction in her chest begin to ease.
“We can’t let it happen, boy,” she whispered. “We’ve got to find a way to save this place.”
A glance at the clock told her she’d beaten the alarm by twenty minutes—something Melanie would ordinarily have spent on some extra shut-eye—but sleep would be impossible now. Better to get up than to lie there in the darkness and fret, she thought. Plus, it would give her time to think before she headed in to work. There was still time to save her little town, she told herself. The only question was: How?
The brisk October air made her face tingle as she opened the back door for Shep. It was her favorite time of year, a period of growing anticipation between the enervating heat of summer and the first snowfall. Songbirds were emptying her feeders as fast as she could fill them, and in spite of Shep’s best efforts the squirrels had already buried an orchard’s worth of nuts in her backyard. Down in the river, the last of the late-season Chinook were racing upstream, and the pumpkins she’d planted in July would be jack-o’-lanterns before long. If only other people could see the town the way she did, Melanie thought as she headed back inside, Fossett’s problems would be over.
Shep continued to romp in the backyard while Melanie made breakfast. She stood at the kitchen window, watching him zigzag across the lawn, guiding his soccer ball around a stile and into an upturned orange crate. The border collie’s previous owners had given him away when he refused to stop herding their small children around like sheep, and she’d made it a priority to channel those instincts toward something less objectionable. Much as she enjoyed having him with her at work, Melanie knew that being inside all day was hard on a working dog and letting him tire himself out a bit first made life at the coffee shop easier for everyone.
When her toast came up, Melanie sat down at the table and began racking her brain once again for ways to save Fossett from extinction. The town’s troubles weren’t news to anyone; its residents had already spent time and money trying to improve its fading prospects. The old Fossett House, a Victorian mansion built for a railroad baron’s mistress, had been remodeled into a bed-and-breakfast, money had been raised to modernize the school, and Main Street had undergone a complete overhaul with fountains, bubblers, and wrought iron benches for people to enjoy during their shopping trips. But in spite of those improvements, folks were still moving away and the future seemed bleaker than ever. If something drastic wasn’t done, Fossett would soon be nothing but a historical footnote.
She hung her head and fought the urge to cry. Had moving back there been a mistake? It was so easy at times like that to start second-guessing herself. It wasn’t just that she’d sunk her life savings into the coffee shop; she’d given up everything else, too: friends, a good job, even her marriage had fallen to the wayside. Melanie had bet her entire future on making things work in her hometown. If they didn’t, it wouldn’t just mean that her business had failed; it would also mean she’d sacrificed everything for a foolish dream. She didn’t think she could face that.
Melanie looked up and frowned; Shep was pawing anxiously at the front door. He must have let himself in while she was brooding, she thought, but what on earth was he so worked up about? Then she glanced at her watch.
“Oh, my gosh, look at the time!”
She grabbed her coat and the two of them ran out the door.
* * *
Ground Central was in the heart of Fossett’s downtown, one of a dwindling number of shops still thriving on Main Street. Even as other businesses closed, Melanie had managed to hang on, a fact she attributed to Shep. As the shop’s official greeter, he made everyone who walked through the door feel welcome.
Melanie turned on the television and started filling the two large coffee urns while Shep walked through the dining area, nudging chairs into place around the tables. The constant drone of entertainment news hadn’t been part of her original plan when she opened Ground Central—she’d been picturing more of a quiet coffee bar like the ones they had in Portland and Seattle—but resistance on the part of Fossett’s populace and the need to meet her financial obligations had convinced her that compromise was necessary to her survival. As frustrating as it felt sometimes, she could at least console herself that Ground Central had achieved its main purpose: to become an informal neighborhood gathering place.
The smell of coffee brewing filled the air as Melanie made a last pass through the shop, refilling stir sticks and sweetener packets while Shep waited patiently for Walt Gunderson to arrive. Walt was the owner of Gunderson’s, the grocery/hardware /feed store that had been the heart and soul of Fossett for five generations, and his wife, Mae, made the baked goods that Melanie sold in her shop. Walt had been both mentor and father figure to her the last four years, and as owner of one of the few thriving businesses in town, he was as keen to find a way of improving Fossett’s prospects as she was. He was also, as Shep knew, a soft touch when it came to giving out his wife’s homemade dog treats.
When Walt’s truck arrived, Shep’s ears pricked up. Licking his chops in anticipation, he trotted toward the front door to greet his benefactor and, with his head lowered obligingly and his bottom wiggling, Shep stretched his upper lip into an unmistakable doggie grin. Melanie scolded him as she hurried over to unlock the door.
“Shep,” she said. “Don’t be a beggar.”
“It’s fine,” Walt said, holding the box aloft. “Hold on, boy. Let me put these down and we’ll see what Mae’s sent for you today.”
He set the box on the counter and reached into his pocket as Shep swallowed dramatically.
“Well, well. What’s this?” Walt said, holding the bone-shaped biscuit to his nose. “Smells like peanut butter.”
Shep whimpered and squirmed impatiently.
“Oh, all right. Here you go.”
He tossed the treat into the air.
Shep leaped, grabbed the proffered treat in his mouth, and hurried over to his bed in the corner to enjoy it in peace.
Walt laughed. “I think that’s the highest I’ve ever seen him jump. Mae will be pleased.”
Melanie poured Walt the cup of coffee he took in exchange for a discount on the baked goods and pushed it across the counter.
“So,” she said, indicating the box on the counter, “what have you brought me today?”
“Blueberry muffins and oatmeal scones.”
She lifted the lid and felt her mouth form an o in surprise.
“What are those?”
“Selma’s latest creation. She asked me to include them in this week’s deliveries.”
Selma Haas was the manager of the newly renovated Fossett House B and B. With business slower than expected, she spent her time thinking up ways to enhance the enjoyment of her imaginary guests.
“She calls ’em Beavertails.”
Melanie poked one with her finger. “But what are they?”
“Brownies. She told Mae she cooks ’em in a muffin pan and then flattens ’em with a spatula while they’re still warm.” Walt pointed. “That’s what gives them their crisscross pattern.”
“And . . . they’re supposed to look like a beaver’s tail?”
“Something like. She thinks they’ll give the tourists ‘an authentic Northwest experience.’”
“Assuming we ever get any tourists around here.”
Walt nodded. “The woman’s got an imagination; I’ll give her that.”
A slow smile spread across Melanie’s face.
“Maybe we should call them Eaverbay Eeltays.”
The two of them shared a guilty chuckle. Selma had been hired as manager of the B and B on the strength of her claim that she was bilingual. It was only later that anyone discovered the “foreign language” she spoke was pig Latin.
The moment of levity passed, leaving Melanie as dispirited as she’d been when she woke up that morning. She sighed and slumped against the counter.
“Oh, Walt, what are we going to do? I’ve been cogitating till my brains are scrambled, trying to figure out how to save this place.”
He shook his head. “I’m not sure there’s anything we can do. At the moment, my plan is to wait till Social Security kicks in, then close up shop and move to someplace warmer.”
“You can’t mean that.”
“Why not? This place has broken my heart too many times, Mel. There comes a time when a man has to admit defeat.”
She shook her head, unwilling to adopt his pessimistic attitude. There had to be a way, Melanie thought. She just hadn’t found it yet.
Walt reached across the counter and patted her arm.
“I know how you feel, but at this point, I’m not really sure this place is salvageable. Look at the folks we’ve lost: professionals, small-business owners, families with children—the people a town needs to build a foundation on.” He looked askance at the Beavertails. “Aside from the two of us and the guy who owns the bar, the most successful people in town are a pet psychic and the gals with the pot farm.”
Melanie held up a hand in protest.
“Okay, first of all, it’s not a pot farm; they grow medicinal marijuana.”
Walt rolled his eyes as she continued.
“And sure, Fossett’s got its fair share of oddballs—maybe even more than its fair share—but that’s just local color. People like Jewell Divine add a dash of whimsy that’s charming,” she said. “We just need to find a way to attract some normal people to Fossett, to sort of... dilute the ones that are already here.”
Walt wasn’t buying it.
“People don’t want to live around a bunch of weirdos,” he said. “I’m sorry, but short of a miracle, I don’t think Fossett’s got a chance in hell.”
The morning breakfast crowd started arriving as soon as Walt drove away, and it was almost ten o’clock before the place emptied out again. Someone had cranked up the volume on the TV set and with no human voices to cover the sound, the reporter’s voice was giving her a headache. She grabbed the remote and was about to turn it down when she saw the headline at the bottom of the screen:
English Town Elects Cat to Local Council
“This is Chad Chapman, reporting to you from the tiny English village of Croton-by-the-Sea, where its single seat on the county council has been given to Reginald, a ten-year-old tabby cat belonging to Miss Pansy Suggitt.”
The camera angle widened to show an orange-and-white tabby, lying on a pillow in what appeared to be a tobacconist’s shop. A man with a microphone stood next to him, facing the camera.
“Since his election, ‘Reggie’ has become something of a celebrity in his little town. Dozens of tourists arrive by bus each day, hoping to meet the new ‘councilfeline.’”
Dozens every day? Melanie thought. A shiver of excitement passed through her.
“Cards and letters addressed to ‘Councilman Reggie’ quickly overwhelmed the local postal authorities, who have had to bring in extra help to handle the overload, but few people are complaining, as sales of merchandise with the tabby’s likeness have boosted the local economy and put this sleepy little hamlet on the map.”
Melanie’s heart was racing. This was exactly the sort of thing that Fossett needed: a bold move that would get people excited again. They might not have a town council, but they could figure something out. All they really needed was the right animal to fill the position. And that, she thought, glancing over at Shep, would be easy.