The Slip of a Rib - Robin Brande - E-Book

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Robin Brande

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Beschreibung

A Winnie Parsons Mystery Single.

Wealthy animal lover Mrs. Penny Bristol left her estate to the local animal shelter. She also left instructions that the shelter should hire Dr. Winifred Parsons if they ever need to solve any of the animals’ behavioral issues.

Dr. Parsons is more than a retired psychology professor. Winnie Parsons is clairvoyant.

What begins as a good deed to help the shelter animals find new loving homes, soon leads to a mystery that only Winnie can resolve.
As other criminals have learned, it doesn’t pay to mess with Winnie’s friends.

And that includes her friends with four legs and fur.

Don’t miss the newest full-length Winnie Parsons Mystery Novels, THE SECRET JUROR and THE TRUTH CHAMBER.

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2025

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THE SLIP OF A RIB

A WINNIE PARSONS MYSTERY

ROBIN BRANDE

RYER PUBLISHING

THE SLIP OF A RIB

A Winnie Parsons Mystery

By Robin Brande

Published by Ryer Publishing

www.ryerpublishing.com

Copyright 2025 by Robin Brande

www.robinbrande.com

Cover art by Ram Reyes/Canva

Ebook ISBN: 978-1-952383-61-8

Print ISBN: 978-1-952383-62-5

* * *

All rights reserved. This is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

CONTENTS

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

More from Robin Brande

Secret Code for Winnie Parsons Readers

A Mind for Mysteries

The Secret Juror

The Truth Chamber

The Miraculous Unknown

About the Author

Also by Robin Brande

1

Winnie Parsons stood at the granite-topped island in her kitchen and pressed her palms into a soft round lump of dough. She had awakened in the mood for bread. Not just for the taste of it, but mostly for the smell of a yeasty loaf baking in the oven, warming the whole house.

A cold February morning like today made her want to stay inside, bake, eat, sit by the fire with a mug of coffee or hot chocolate, and read. Her yellow Labrador, Clover, had different ideas of what was fun, and so Winnie had walked her on the nearby University of Arizona campus first to let the dog frolic on the frost-covered grass.

But now Clover was curled up on her dog bed beside the crackling fire, and Winnie could fulfill her urge to bake. There were a few steps between here and a hot, finished loaf, but Winnie’s part in it was short. Just mix a few ingredients, knead, then let the dough sit covered by a dishtowel all day in the warmth of the kitchen window. Even in winter, the sun shone through golden onto one particular spot on the counter. The dough would be ready to bake by midafternoon.

Winnie’s cell phone rang. Her hands were still deep in dough. She might have let the call go to voicemail, if not for the name she saw on her screen.

She used her relatively clean pinky finger to press the button to put the call on her phone’s speaker.

Dr. Amanda Birkauer was usually in a hurry, and this morning was no exception.

“Got an interesting call just now,” said Amanda without any greeting or other preamble. Winnie didn’t mind. She liked her friend’s ability to cut right to it, leave out the fluff, get to the interesting parts sooner.

Amanda had been Winnie’s colleague in the University of Arizona Psychology department when Winnie was a professor there. Winnie—Dr. Winifred Parsons—had retired four years ago, but her decades-long friendship with Amanda endured.

They had another connection as well. Amanda Birkauer was the Assistant Director of the university’s mind lab, better known as the parapsychology lab.

Winnie was a frequent test subject there. As a clairvoyant and occasional medical intuitive, Winnie wanted both to share her knowledge and to learn more about her gifts herself. She thought of them as any talent, like the ability to play chess or to do the high jump. She had been born clairvoyant, but she could still grow and improve the more she practiced.

And the more she learned from Amanda’s scientists and from other psychics who visited the lab, the more Winnie understood what she might be capable of if she expanded what she thought of as even possible.

“Remember Penny Bristol?” Amanda asked.

Winnie smoothed her dough into a ball and thought for a moment. “No.” But as soon as she said it, an image flashed in her mind: of an elderly woman, well-dressed and obviously wealthy, pushing a rolling walker that had a cargo basket on top. A soft blue blanket lined the basket, and a small brown and white dog rode nestled inside.

“King Arthur!” Winnie said, smiling.

“The one,” Amanda confirmed over the speaker.

It must have been five or six years ago. Mrs. Penny Bristol had brought her Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, named King Arthur, to the parapsychology lab to see if anyone could read the little dog’s mind.

Winnie had been on her way out of one of the rooms where she’d participated in whatever new test Amanda and her lab assistants had cooked up for her that day.

Winnie came to a sudden halt in front of the woman and her dog. She hadn’t planned on stopping—she had her own work to do, and needed to get back to her office—but something about the dog tugged at her and made her want to stay.

“Well, hello there.” Winnie smiled at the spaniel and reached out to pet its soft head between the two long ears that hung over the lip of the basket.

The dog growled at Winnie and bared his small teeth.

“Arthur! Stop that!” Mrs. Bristol seemed embarrassed. “He’s normally never like this,” she said by way of apology. And then tears misted her eyes. “I … I don’t know what to do with him. Something has happened. He’s not himself anymore.”

A phrase had come to Winnie’s mind. A phrase and an image.

“He has a rib out,” Winnie told Mrs. Bristol. “On his left side. He’s been in terrible pain for over a week. He’s sorry, but he hasn’t known how else to tell you.”

Mrs. Bristol gaped at Winnie. “How … how…”

Winnie waved the question away. “If you take him to your vet this morning, I’m sure they can fix it right away.”

Mrs. Bristol had gripped Winnie’s hand. “Thank you, oh thank you!”

Amanda came out of the lab then just in time to see the end of their conversation. Winnie gave her a nod, then hurried off toward the stairs leading up to her floor.

“Who was that?” Mrs. Bristol asked.

“I’m sorry,” Winnie could hear Amanda tell the woman, “but we keep our test subjects’ identities confidential.”

Winnie was there that morning in her capacity as Test Subject number 2134, not as Professor Winifred Parsons.

She appreciated Amanda’s discretion. Most of Winnie’s colleagues had no idea she was clairvoyant. Winnie suspected that many of them would not handle it well. Although the university’s mind lab was well-respected among others pursuing that same research, some scientists still viewed parapsychology as a fringe subject, not worthy of serious study—and even less worthy of funding.