Cardinal takes flight
by donalee Moulton
February brought with it a dozen red roses from my husband, some of which are wide open and aromatic even today. I split the dozen flowers into two vases. Beside each vase sits Cardinal. A book, not a bird.
Cardinal took flight, in paper and digital formats, in February. The book is part of the Paranormal Canadiana Collection from BWL Publishing. There is a paranormal mystery for each province and territory in Canada. When my publisher approached me about writing the story for Nova Scotia, I didn’t hesitate to say yes. Then I turned to my friend Lynn, and said, “What does paranormal mean?”
I envisioned aliens, not my most-favorite image. I learned, however, the term refers broadly to anything unusual or unnatural that we can’t scientifically explain. That meant aliens could take a back seat to ghosts. So, I went ghost hunting.
Like most places, Nova Scotia is full of lure and lore about those who have failed to cross over or who have made a return appearance. One of the former is Catherine McIntosh, a little girl who died in rural Nova Scotia before the nineteenth century turned into the twentieth and one month before her ninth birthday.
There does not appear to be anything sinister or suspicious about Catherine’s death. It’s what happened after that has made the little girl part of the fabric of the otherworldly in my province. Catherine decided to stay.
Today people travel the backroads of Pictou County and wind their way along a narrow dirt road to visit her grave and bring her gifts. She likes it when you bring her presents, and this may earn you a giggle or a muddy handprint on your car. Don’t take one away though. Catherine is usually friendly and warm, but she is still a little girl.
Now she is the cornerstone of Cardinal. In these pages, private detective Em Montgomery is hunting for a missing woman. She expects dead ends. She does not expect a dead girl who refuses to stay buried. Em finds herself knee-deep in fog, small-town secrets, and the uneasy sense she’s being watched by more than wildlife.
Oh yes, there is also blueberry grunt. You know why they call it grunt, right?











Fascinating! Congratulations, and the paranormal mystery of searching for a dead girl with ultimate secrets sounds fresh and irresistible! I have no idea what a grunt is regarding blueberries!
So glad you liked the premise. And you’d love blueberry grunt. It’s like cobbler, only better.
Best of luck with the new book, donalee!
New books are so wonderfully nerve-wracking.
Interesting. Love that you said yes and then did the research to make it happen.
I did the same thing with Conflagration!, part of my publisher’s series of historical mysteries set across Canada. She unexpectedly lost her Quebec writer and I was invited to step in.
Congratulations on your publication! Nova Scotia sounds like a perfect place to set the mystery. I visited there many, many years ago. It was beautiful, but in an ominous sort of way.
We’d love you to come back. Coffee and blueberry grunt is on me.
Congratulations on CARDINAL! Wonderful news!
Thank you!
Best of luck, Dona Lee. And why is it called a grunt?
“Grunt” is said to be the sound the blueberries make as they burble away.