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“But Harvey was going to fix it for me. I knew my mother wouldn’t notice it for a while because my aunt was using the truck, and she really doesn’t notice things like that,” Margo told them quickly. “And for the record, I didn’t hit anyone. I turned the corner a little wrong and scraped the bumper on a parking barrier.”

“I hadn’t gotten the chance to fix it before Dr. Peltz’s accident,” Harvey admitted, drawing their attention back to him. “I was going to do it quietly when I started the insurance work on the truck.”

“Where were you when the bumper was scraped?” Holt asked Margo.

“At the yacht club,” Margo told them. “Of course, Victoria Morrison came rushing out and scolded me like I was an eight-year-old who had just thrown up on her shoes.”

“You did that,” Harvey reminded her with a grin.

“I know,” Margo said. “It was funny even though I felt so awful.”

“Victoria saw the accident?” Holt had stiffened, and Margo noticed the look that passed between him and June.

She was about to ask, but the thought dissolved when the full implications of what was going on hit her, and her head shot up. Her eyes darted from June to Holt.

“Do you think whoever did this did it to frame my mother for Dr. Vernon?” Margo breathed.

“Margo…” Harvey looked at her steadily. “I don’t think they did this to frame your mother or your aunt.”

“What?” Holt, June, and Margo said in unison.

“Then who do you think they are trying to frame for Judy’s attempted murder?” Holt asked.

Harvey’s eyes darkened with worry as he looked at Margo.

“Margo, do you remember what day and time of day your aunt Lacey was run off the road?” Harvey’s voice was soft.

“What’s significant about the day or time?” Holt frowned, looking between Harvey and Margo.

Then it hit Margo. The breath left her in a rush.

“Oh no,” Margo breathed, and her eyes widened as her mouth went dry. She whispered, “Delivery day and time.”

“Margo?” June looked sharply at her. “What does that mean?”

Margo’s heart started to pound painfully in her chest.

“The day and time my aunt was pushed off the road in my mother’s truck was my delivery day,” Margo said, swallowing hard. “I sell my baked goods and jams at Henderson’s farm, and that’s the day and time I take them.”

“Like clockwork,” Harvey added.

The roaring started in Margo’s ears.

“To finish my theory, I don’t think Dr. Tanner is who someone was trying to set up for Dr. Vernon’s attempted murder.” Harvey’s voice came from a distance now, though she knew he was right in front of her.

Margo looked at the truck. At the bumper. At the shape of a plan that had not been aimed where any of them had first believed.

She thought about her routes. Her deliveries. Her regular timing. Her habit of going out in her mother’s truck often enough that everyone in town would have noticed. She thought about Teacups burning. About being trapped inside it. About how often people assumed she would be where she usually was.

Her heart kicked so hard it hurt.

“Me,” Margo said. “They were setting me up.”

8

JUNE

By the time they stepped out of Harvey’s repair shop, the Florida sun felt too bright for the conversation they had just had.