Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Mother of the Bride and Mystery Writer by E. B. Davis

  

I’m helping my daughter enact her wedding plans because she is getting married on the beach on Hatteras Island, where I live, in June, followed by a reception at a wine bar/deli located a few miles away. It’s a casual wedding and the guest list is under forty people. The bride and groom are in their mid-thirties, so we pretty much let them dictate their wishes except that we insisted on paying (since we’d like them to save their money for a house down payment) and that guests be given a choice of entrĂ©e since not everyone loves fish, which, of course, is the best on Hatteras Island. As a mom, I think I’ve fulfilled my duties. But as a mystery writer, I haven’t yet begun. The groom’s sister-in-law has shown herself to be a diva and her daughter, a diva in the making. Should one be the victim?

 

But then I realized that there might be better victims, and I wanted to play the villain when I realized that

Rocky trying on his tux!
the NC Methodist Church took a week in June to have its conference and ordination ceremonies, and yes, it was the very weekend of my daughter’s wedding, and our young pastor was to be ordained that day, the last day of the conference in Raleigh, five hours away from Hatteras. I try not to ask hard questions, like what were they thinking? June being the most popular month for weddings—none of the pastors in the church are available due to internal business—statewide? Why not a miserable week in January? Luckily, I found our last minister, who retired nearby, to conduct the ceremony, but I’d still like to take my rolling pin to a few heads.    

 

My next victim was the National Park Service that requires a permit for beach weddings as all of the beach here is owned by the Federal government. I finally got one for the special event, as they term it, but hoops were jumped through in obtaining one. (And yes, money, too.) Dare County also requires couples to obtain a wedding license within a month of the ceremony. The only way to get one is to apply in person, Monday-Friday 8:30 am to 4:30 pm, regardless that many couples from out of state get married here (a big revenue source) who work during those same days/hours. I’m not sure what they will do. I guess they have to take off work (cutting into their honeymoon time) drive four hours to get to our county seat and drive four hours home. Yes, the bureaucracies can’t have hours or extended time making it a bit more user friendly. I’ll let them be the perps on that one.

 

I ask myself when should the body appear? During the ceremony washing up on the beach or discovered by a guest behind the dunes? Maybe Rocky, my daughter’s dog, will find the body or his cousin, Biscuit, the white Standard Poodle. Will the body appear on the deli’s wide front porch sitting on the wicker couch? Or will someone be poisoned during the reception? The MC, me, will have to investigate to clear the caterer of wrong doing. Or maybe I’ll make my daughter the MC with her new spouse and their trusty dog to help investigate.

 

It’s no wonder so many cozies are set during weddings. What is your favorite wedding mystery?

15 comments:

  1. Yes, weddings are stressful! Best wishes to you and your family! And Rocky looks so handsome!

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    1. He does, and his cousin, Biscuit, a female standard poodle, will also attend with a flower and diamond necklace!

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  2. Of course the plot twist might be that someone else is planning on doing in the mother of the bride. Who gets to whom first?

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    1. LOL--never thought of that, Jim, but yes, perhaps the divas or the new mother-in-law.

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  3. I'm blanking on wedding mysteries, but I definitely think one of the dogs should appear from behind the dunes with a decomposing arm in his mouth.

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    1. Try Murder with Peacocks by Donna Andrews. It was a LOL novel.

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    2. I have been known to give a copy of that as part of a shower gift.

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  4. Hang in there, Elaine! It only gets better. My daughter had a beach wedding on Cape Cod. At five pm, the tide was high, the surf pounding the shore, the wind approaching hurricane force. I've written two wedding short stories, one about evil bridesmaids trying to bunp off the allergic bride with tree nuts in her bourbon bread pudding. The other was about a wedding cake baker whose cake was covered in deadly fresh lilies of the valley.

    Congratulations and have fun!

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    1. We are having a GF carrot cake since the bride has Celiac disease, but it better not be poisoned since it cost an arm and a leg. We do have two venues that we can move the wedding to if the weather doesn't cooperate!

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  5. Oh, I love this so much! I find picturing people dead in my next book helps mitigate stress...We're all a little sick like that...

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  6. Have you considered a sniper positioned offshore to take out the divas? Seriously though, congratulations to the happy couple and to the mother of the bride who has to make all the magic happen! And it will! As far as wedding mysteries go, Mary P Karnes (Who in real life is a wedding planner) has a terrific series with a wedding planner MC). You two should compare notes!

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    1. Thanks for the recommendation. A sniper offshore is a terrific suggestion!

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  7. Aw, how sweet, and congratulations to the happy couple. No favorite wedding mystery, mostly because I find I enjoy them all equally. Rocky looks adorable!

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    1. As my daughter says--it's great he's cute because as a rescue he has anxiety issues and can be a real PITA!

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