The August long weekend is upon us and the island is about to get inundated with visitors, which is great for the tourism industry. The highlight is the Victoria Day Symphony. It takes place on the water in the inner harbour and finishes with a fabulous lightworks display.

I’ve been fighting flu-like symptoms the past few days, so I don’t think I’ll make it downtown, but we can see the fireworks from here.
Do you have big long weekend plans?

The Race is on to find a Killer in the heart of Kentucky horse country
Detective Augustus Grant is faced with his most baffling case to date. Well-respected race horse breeder, John Jorgenson, is murdered in his den days before the Kentucky Derby and the list of suspects is growing.
Complicating matters, Gus’ ex-girlfriend is the last person to have seen the victim alive.
Rebecca Hayes owes the Jorgenson family her loyalty. They gave her a new life after a disastrous affair leaves her alone and pregnant.
With all the evidence pointing in Becky’s direction, will Gus do his duty?
Or follow his heart?
Free for a limited time!
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/41560041-the-lady-said-no
BookBub: https://www.bookbub.com/books/the-lady-said-no-augustus-grant-mysteries-by-jacquie-biggar
Excerpt
Gus followed the stiff-necked manservant to the door of the den, though his emotions were tugging him back to Rebecca like a starved man to a banquet.
He couldnāt believe how beautiful sheād become. Sheād always been pretty, but now there was an added maturity to her features that suited her face. The tomboy figure he fondly remembered had become hills and valleys he ached to explore. Theyād been best friends, then lovers, then enemies. Itād been his fault, that was the worst of it. Heād let his drive for a career ruin the only good thing in his life. He could tell himself heād done his part. After getting his degree and returning to Bourbonville he had tried to find her. But she was right, he hadnāt tried hard enough.
Their relationship had already been floundering; it had seemed easier to let it die a natural death. He regretted that now. One glimpse of her had brought back all the old feelings. Memories of happier times.
Ernest reached for the door knob and was stopped by the officer on guard.
āSorry, only trained personnel are allowed.ā
Ernest glared at him. āIāve worked in this household for years; I believe I am trained.ā
The sergeant exchanged a helpless glance with Gus. āIām sorry, sir. Those are the rules.ā
Gus stepped between the two men before a full-scale war broke out. āItās okay, sergeant.ā He flipped open his badge. āIām Detective Grant. Theā¦ā He waved a hand toward the butler.
Ernest lowered his brows. āManservant.ā
Gus nodded. āManservant, was just showing me the way to the crime scene.ā
The officer checked his badge, then reached back to open the door. The stench of death was immediate, a toxic mix of human waste impossible to forget. Gus turned his head to draw one last clean breath and met Rebeccaās anxious gaze.
That look gave him pause.
Why was she worried? Just how well did Rebecca know the owner of Balmoral?
āComing, Detective?ā The sergeantās voice interrupted his musings. Gus shrugged off his misgivings and followed the man into the room, sliding past the grim-faced Ernest.
Nancy knelt by the victim, her hands covered with white gloves and booties on her feet. She glanced up when he walked in and pointed at his shoes. Gus dug through his coat pockets until he found his booties, put them on, nodded to the sergeant, and made his way over to her side.
āItās a bad one,ā she said, turning attention to her preliminary findings. āSingle shot to the temple, through and through. Near as I can tell, time of death was sometime between midnight and three a.m., no sign of defensive wounds.ā She stopped and gazed at him with world-weary eyes. āWho would do this, Augustus?ā
Gus observed the brain matter splattered on the leather tufted chair and rich, red Aubusson carpet and his stomach churned. His first thought was crime of passion. There had been some effort made to set the scene up as a suicide. The gun rested in the victimās open hand, finger wrapped around the trigger. A cut crystal tumbler lay on its side nearby, a stain wetting the carpet. Gus touched the wet spot and sniffed, rubbing the tips of his fingersābourbon. The good kind. Not something a man bent on ending his own life would let go to waste.
āIām not sure, Nancy, but I do know the brass will be all over this one, so take your time, okay? We donāt want to miss anything.ā
She huffed out an indignant breath. āYou telling me how to do my job, now?ā
He held up a hand to halt her blistering tongue. āThe Jorgensons are big news, thatās all Iām saying. Donāt they have a horse in the Derby this year?ā
The sergeant, who had remained by the door, and watched their exchange with interest, piped up. āForever Humble. Lots of money riding on that colt.ā His face became animated. āYou ever see him race, Detective? Heās some kind of fast. Likes to run the outside track. Gives me a heart attack every time.ā
Gus smiled. āYou a betting manā¦?ā
āFish, sir. Everyone calls me Fish.ā
Nancy chuckled and the young manās neck turned brick red.
āIām not a gambler, no sir, but I admit I like to spend a Saturday now and then down at the track. Itās some exciting. You ever been, Mr. Grant?ā
Gus shook his head. āNo, canāt say as I have. Not that fond of horses, though I guess thatās the wrong thing to say in this house.ā He admired the landscape watercolor on the wall, rolling hills with a herd of wild horses barreling straight at him, eyes crazy and manes flying as though they were about to burst the confines of paint and canvas.
āAugustus, thereās something you need to see.ā Nancyās voice was muffled as she stretched, shapely butt in the air, to reach something under the leather chair. She grunted and tugged until a bronze sculpture came into view. When she stood it on the carpet, he saw it was about twelve inches in height, a warrior on a horse, raised arm carrying a spear.
āThereās blood and hair fragments,ā she said, turning it carefully to inspect the evidence. āI canāt be sure until I get it to the lab, but this looks like a match to our vic.ā
Well, that explained why there were no defensive wounds. The poor sop probably didnāt know what hit him. Gus looked around until he found the suspiciously empty spot on the desk. He gave a wide berth to the corpse, conscious of Nancyās critical gaze. The desk was one of those massive claw-foot affairs, mahogany maybe, rich and elegant instead of simply functional. He pulled a linen handkerchief out of his pocket and checked the drawers. An assortment of papers greeted him, some on household expenses, most on Jorgensonās passionāthoroughbreds. Nothing that looked like a cause for murder.
Gus was about to replace the documents when a slip of yellowed paper lodged in the back of the drawer caught his eye. He reached in, using the hankie, and retrieved the handwritten note.
Do what I told you to do, or the truth will destroy you
The threat inherent on the scrap of paper chilled his blood. There was trouble brewing in the Jorgenson household, and Gus was afraid Rebecca was somehow involved.
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Devon Lyon has the perfect life. With childhood friend Mike Saint, they follow a long line of Saints into the fire academy, including Mikeās uncle who is the battalion chief. After graduation, Mike meets the love of his life, nursing student, Aisling Murphy. The last thing she has time for is marriage, so she talks Mike into living together. Then, right before fire season, she finally agrees to marry Mike, and the worst wildland fire in California history changes life for Devon and his best friends, the Saints.



We hope you manage to win the battle of the germs, Jacquie. At least you can watch the fireworks without any effort on your part!
Have a peaceful weekend…
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Thank you, Anita and Jaye. I think it may be from a spider bite, it sure knocked me for a loop.
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OMG… how big was the spider?
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Not sure if it was a spider or maybe a tick? I have a large purple-hued rash on the side of my knee and can’t seem to get over the flu-like symptoms. If it’s not better by tomorrow, I guess I’ll go into the doctor.
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Good idea, Jacquie. Sounds more like a spider bite and they can be nasty…
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Hope you feel better, Jacquie. Enjoy the fireworks no matter where you watch them.
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Thank you, Mary. I love fireworks, brings out the inner kid, lol
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It does!
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Jacquie, I hope you feel better soon. Even though you won’t get downtown, I hope you enjoy the fireworks.
And many thanks for another freebie Friday!
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Thanks, Mae. I’m thinking I might have to get up the courage and go to the doctor- tomorrow. š
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Oh, no. When you’re thinking doctor that definitely means you should go. I normally put it off too, but sometimes that’s what it takes. Feel better!!! {{hugs}}
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I hope you feel better soon. It looks like a great celebration.
So nice of you to have done the Freebie Friday again. I have this one on my Kindle already. Stupid long TBR… I’ll get to it!
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Yes, my TBR is crying for help, lol
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Hope you are feeling better soon. Jacquie. We had the bug go through the family and its attempting a lighter repeat. Enjoy your long weekend and fireworks! We have a wedding and lots of family:)
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Weddings are so exciting! I hope the flu doesn’t ruin it for you {{hugs}}
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Thanks for a wonderful sounding book Jacquie. Don’t mess around, if that bite gave you a rash get it checked ASAP, especially if it might have been from a Tick.
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Thanks, Carla. I’ll go in tomorrow. Hopefully, it’s nothing serious.
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I hope you are feeling better soon, Jacquie! Thinking of you! Go to the doctor! ā„ļø
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Thank you, Jennifer, I will! Sorry I haven’t been keeping up to your blog. Hope to be back on track, soon. {{hugs}}
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Aww, Jacquie! I was feeling like I wasnāt keeping up with you- no worries at all! Just focus on feeling better! ā„ļø
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š
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I can’t read your website on my phone. It’s way too dark to read. This is what it looks like:
On Fri, Aug 2, 2019, 3:04 AM Jacquie Biggar-USA Today Best-selling author wrote:
> Jacquie Biggar posted: ” The August long weekend is upon us and the island > is about to get inundated with visitors, which is great for the tourism > industry. The highlight is the Victoria Day Symphony. It takes place on the > water in the inner harbour and finishes with a fabulous ” >
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I’m sorry, SK Kelly. Mind if I ask what type of phone you use? My Iphone shows it with a white background- easy to read.
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I am sorry to hear that you are fighting the flu Jacquie! I hope you’ll get better soon!
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Thanks, my friend!
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Thank you! This is the start of my reading since I am now retired.
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Yay! Thank you, Diane!
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