
S
Sonic Writers
15 mai 2026·8 min de lecture
The Curio Clue: A Cozy Antique Mystery
An eccentric antique shop owner uncovers a cryptic diary hidden inside a Victorian music box, leading her on a whimsical hunt for a lost local heirloom.
Mystery#cozy mystery#puzzle#small town#antique shop#female sleuth#wholesome
The bell above the door of *Past & Presents* jingled cheerfully, announcing the arrival of another rainy morning in the quaint village of Willow Creek. Beatrice ‘Bea’ Abbott looked up from her mahogany counter, adjusting her cat-eye reading glasses. At sixty-two, Bea was the town’s premier purveyor of forgotten treasures, a woman who preferred the company of dusty first editions and brass astrolabes to most people.
“Morning, Bea!” called Oliver, the local baker, shaking a wet umbrella onto her slightly threadbare Persian rug. He held out a paper bag smelling heavenly of cinnamon and butter. “Brought you a scone. Thought you might need the sugar. Word is you bought out the old Hawthorne estate at auction.”
“Guilty as charged, Oliver,” Bea smiled, accepting the warm bag. “The boxes arrived an hour ago. The Hawthorne family were hoarders of the highest order. It’s an absolute mess of taxidermy and velvet.”
“Well, shout if you find any cursed artifacts,” Oliver chuckled, waving as he headed back out into the drizzle.
Bea took a bite of the scone and turned her attention to the large cardboard box on her counter. She carefully unwrapped layers of yellowed newspaper, revealing a stunning, intricately carved mahogany music box. The woodwork depicted scenes of a dense forest, with tiny brass foxes hiding among the wooden leaves.
It was heavy, far heavier than a standard music box.
Bea gently turned the ornate brass key on the side. The internal cylinder rotated with a soft click, and a tinkling, slightly out-of-tune rendition of *Greensleeves* filled the quiet shop. As the music played, Bea noticed a hairline fracture in the wooden base. Running her fingernail along the seam, she felt a hidden spring catch.
With a soft *pop*, a secret compartment in the base slid open.
“Well, well,” Bea murmured, her eyes lighting up with the thrill of a puzzle.
Inside the compartment lay a small, leather-bound diary, its pages brittle with age, and a singular, heavy brass key with a clover-shaped bow.
Bea opened the diary. The handwriting was elegant, dated 1894, belonging to Lady Eleanor Hawthorne. The entries were mostly mundane records of high tea and complaints about corsets, but the final entry, penned in hurried, messy strokes, caught Bea’s eye.
*“The sapphire tear is hidden where the weeping willow meets the iron swan. Let my greedy brother search the manor; he will find only dust. The key lies with the music, and the lock slumbers beneath the guardian’s gaze.”*
Bea practically vibrated with excitement. The ‘Sapphire Tear’ was a local legend—a massive, teardrop-shaped gemstone brought back from India by a Hawthorne ancestor, rumored to have been lost in a fire a century ago.
She grabbed her tweed coat and her umbrella. The shop could stay closed for the morning. She had a treasure hunt to win.
Her first stop was the Willow Creek historical archives, conveniently located in the damp basement of the public library. After an hour of digging through old plat maps and landscaping records from the late 1800s, she found what she was looking for.
“Where the weeping willow meets the iron swan,” Bea muttered, tapping a faded photograph of the original Hawthorne estate gardens. The estate had long since been demolished to build the town square, but the original garden layout showed a massive weeping willow tree right at the edge of the property, bordering a decorative wrought-iron fence forged in the shape of swans.
That exact spot was now the community park, right next to the town’s central gazebo.
Bea marched into the park, her boots squelching in the wet grass. The old willow tree was still there, its massive, sorrowful branches sweeping the ground. The iron swan fence, however, had been replaced by a modern brick wall decades ago.
“Think, Bea, think,” she told herself, pacing around the base of the massive tree. “The lock slumbers beneath the guardian’s gaze.”
She looked up. Facing the tree, sitting atop the roof of the adjacent historic town hall, was a stone gargoyle—a hideous, winged guardian staring directly down at the roots of the willow.
Bea dropped to her knees at the base of the tree, ignoring the mud soaking into her tweed skirt. She began to dig near the thickest root, directly in the line of sight of the stone gargoyle. Her trowel struck something hard and metallic.
After ten minutes of frantic scraping, she unearthed a small, heavily oxidized iron lockbox. Her hands shook as she pulled the clover-shaped brass key from her pocket. She slid it into the keyhole. It was stiff with a century of rust, but with a firm twist, the mechanism gave a satisfying *clack*.
Bea lifted the heavy iron lid.
Resting on a bed of decaying silk was the Sapphire Tear. It was breathtaking, catching the dull gray light of the rainy morning and reflecting a brilliant, deep ocean blue.
“Incredible,” Bea breathed, holding the gemstone up to the light.
“I quite agree, Ms. Abbott.”
Bea jumped, nearly dropping the gem. Standing behind her, holding an umbrella and a smug expression, was Reginald Hawthorne, the great-great-grandson of the estate’s original owner, and the town’s notoriously pompous real estate developer.
“I saw you digging around in the park like a truant badger,” Reginald sneered, holding out his hand. “That gem belongs to my family. Hand it over, Bea, or I’ll have the police arrest you for theft of heritage property.”
Bea stood up, brushing the mud from her knees with incredible dignity. She looked at Reginald, then down at the diary still tucked in her pocket.
“Actually, Reginald,” Bea said, a sly smile touching her lips, “if you had bothered to read your great-great-aunt's diary before carelessly selling off her possessions, you’d know the truth. Eleanor didn't steal the gem from your family.”
“What nonsense are you prattling on about?”
Bea pulled out the diary and flipped to a previous page. “Entry dated August 12, 1894. *'I have officially donated the Sapphire Tear to the Willow Creek Orphanage Trust, though I dare not tell my brother. I have hidden it securely, and forwarded the deed of gift to the town solicitor.'*”
Bea closed the diary with a snap. “The gem doesn't belong to the Hawthornes, Reginald. It belongs to the town trust. And considering the orphanage was converted into the public library... it seems the library is about to get a very hefty, very blue donation to fix that leaky basement.”
Reginald’s face turned the color of a bourgeois plum. He opened his mouth to argue, but the furious sputtering died in his throat as Oliver the baker, drawn by the commotion, walked up with his rolling pin in hand, looking highly protective of Bea.
With a dramatic huff, Reginald spun on his heel and stormed away into the rain.
Bea looked down at the brilliant blue stone in her muddy hands. She loved selling antiques, but returning a piece of history to where it truly belonged? That was a thrill that no price tag could match. She smiled, tucked the gem safely into her pocket, and headed back to the shop. She had a sudden craving for another cinnamon scone.”
“Morning, Bea!” called Oliver, the local baker, shaking a wet umbrella onto her slightly threadbare Persian rug. He held out a paper bag smelling heavenly of cinnamon and butter. “Brought you a scone. Thought you might need the sugar. Word is you bought out the old Hawthorne estate at auction.”
“Guilty as charged, Oliver,” Bea smiled, accepting the warm bag. “The boxes arrived an hour ago. The Hawthorne family were hoarders of the highest order. It’s an absolute mess of taxidermy and velvet.”
“Well, shout if you find any cursed artifacts,” Oliver chuckled, waving as he headed back out into the drizzle.
Bea took a bite of the scone and turned her attention to the large cardboard box on her counter. She carefully unwrapped layers of yellowed newspaper, revealing a stunning, intricately carved mahogany music box. The woodwork depicted scenes of a dense forest, with tiny brass foxes hiding among the wooden leaves.
It was heavy, far heavier than a standard music box.
Bea gently turned the ornate brass key on the side. The internal cylinder rotated with a soft click, and a tinkling, slightly out-of-tune rendition of *Greensleeves* filled the quiet shop. As the music played, Bea noticed a hairline fracture in the wooden base. Running her fingernail along the seam, she felt a hidden spring catch.
With a soft *pop*, a secret compartment in the base slid open.
“Well, well,” Bea murmured, her eyes lighting up with the thrill of a puzzle.
Inside the compartment lay a small, leather-bound diary, its pages brittle with age, and a singular, heavy brass key with a clover-shaped bow.
Bea opened the diary. The handwriting was elegant, dated 1894, belonging to Lady Eleanor Hawthorne. The entries were mostly mundane records of high tea and complaints about corsets, but the final entry, penned in hurried, messy strokes, caught Bea’s eye.
*“The sapphire tear is hidden where the weeping willow meets the iron swan. Let my greedy brother search the manor; he will find only dust. The key lies with the music, and the lock slumbers beneath the guardian’s gaze.”*
Bea practically vibrated with excitement. The ‘Sapphire Tear’ was a local legend—a massive, teardrop-shaped gemstone brought back from India by a Hawthorne ancestor, rumored to have been lost in a fire a century ago.
She grabbed her tweed coat and her umbrella. The shop could stay closed for the morning. She had a treasure hunt to win.
Her first stop was the Willow Creek historical archives, conveniently located in the damp basement of the public library. After an hour of digging through old plat maps and landscaping records from the late 1800s, she found what she was looking for.
“Where the weeping willow meets the iron swan,” Bea muttered, tapping a faded photograph of the original Hawthorne estate gardens. The estate had long since been demolished to build the town square, but the original garden layout showed a massive weeping willow tree right at the edge of the property, bordering a decorative wrought-iron fence forged in the shape of swans.
That exact spot was now the community park, right next to the town’s central gazebo.
Bea marched into the park, her boots squelching in the wet grass. The old willow tree was still there, its massive, sorrowful branches sweeping the ground. The iron swan fence, however, had been replaced by a modern brick wall decades ago.
“Think, Bea, think,” she told herself, pacing around the base of the massive tree. “The lock slumbers beneath the guardian’s gaze.”
She looked up. Facing the tree, sitting atop the roof of the adjacent historic town hall, was a stone gargoyle—a hideous, winged guardian staring directly down at the roots of the willow.
Bea dropped to her knees at the base of the tree, ignoring the mud soaking into her tweed skirt. She began to dig near the thickest root, directly in the line of sight of the stone gargoyle. Her trowel struck something hard and metallic.
After ten minutes of frantic scraping, she unearthed a small, heavily oxidized iron lockbox. Her hands shook as she pulled the clover-shaped brass key from her pocket. She slid it into the keyhole. It was stiff with a century of rust, but with a firm twist, the mechanism gave a satisfying *clack*.
Bea lifted the heavy iron lid.
Resting on a bed of decaying silk was the Sapphire Tear. It was breathtaking, catching the dull gray light of the rainy morning and reflecting a brilliant, deep ocean blue.
“Incredible,” Bea breathed, holding the gemstone up to the light.
“I quite agree, Ms. Abbott.”
Bea jumped, nearly dropping the gem. Standing behind her, holding an umbrella and a smug expression, was Reginald Hawthorne, the great-great-grandson of the estate’s original owner, and the town’s notoriously pompous real estate developer.
“I saw you digging around in the park like a truant badger,” Reginald sneered, holding out his hand. “That gem belongs to my family. Hand it over, Bea, or I’ll have the police arrest you for theft of heritage property.”
Bea stood up, brushing the mud from her knees with incredible dignity. She looked at Reginald, then down at the diary still tucked in her pocket.
“Actually, Reginald,” Bea said, a sly smile touching her lips, “if you had bothered to read your great-great-aunt's diary before carelessly selling off her possessions, you’d know the truth. Eleanor didn't steal the gem from your family.”
“What nonsense are you prattling on about?”
Bea pulled out the diary and flipped to a previous page. “Entry dated August 12, 1894. *'I have officially donated the Sapphire Tear to the Willow Creek Orphanage Trust, though I dare not tell my brother. I have hidden it securely, and forwarded the deed of gift to the town solicitor.'*”
Bea closed the diary with a snap. “The gem doesn't belong to the Hawthornes, Reginald. It belongs to the town trust. And considering the orphanage was converted into the public library... it seems the library is about to get a very hefty, very blue donation to fix that leaky basement.”
Reginald’s face turned the color of a bourgeois plum. He opened his mouth to argue, but the furious sputtering died in his throat as Oliver the baker, drawn by the commotion, walked up with his rolling pin in hand, looking highly protective of Bea.
With a dramatic huff, Reginald spun on his heel and stormed away into the rain.
Bea looked down at the brilliant blue stone in her muddy hands. She loved selling antiques, but returning a piece of history to where it truly belonged? That was a thrill that no price tag could match. She smiled, tucked the gem safely into her pocket, and headed back to the shop. She had a sudden craving for another cinnamon scone.”