Bubba and the Dead Woman (31 page)

BOOK: Bubba and the Dead Woman
11.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“So someone’s looking for the so-called gold?” Sheriff John had asked incredulously.

“Not just anyone, but you should have a look at Miss Annalee’s portrait in the Red Door Inn. I’m sure Miz Cambliss will show it to you. It looks just like Miss Lurlene.” Bubba had hesitated, a little ashamed of himself. “Or at least her face does. I’m not rightly sure about the rest. I don’t think that Lurlene Grady is her real name.”

“It’s not,” Sheriff John had said. “And although this sounds like something out of a dime novel. It fills in some of the details. You see, Bubba, we have records of phone calls made to and from the Dearman residence. We figured that we could catch you in a lie about having contacted Melissa Dearman.” Bubba had already known that, but he didn’t let on with Sheriff John about where the information had come from.

And Bubba had already knew that he hadn’t called Melissa. Sheriff John had went on, “We only found the one call from your house to Melissa Dearman’s, and we also found five calls from Lurlene Grady to Melissa Dearman.” He had stared at Bubba’s face. “At first I thought you’d called from her place, but she confirmed you ain’t never been there. So did the landlord. Said two other fellas had been, though. One who seems like it might have been Neal Ledbetter. So we got Miss Lurlene’s phone records, and she’s made all kinds of calls to Neal Ledbetter. The same with Neal’s phone records, fifteen calls in the last week to Miss Lurlene, and seven to the Pegram Café. There was a fingerprint on the cartridge in the .45. Clear as day. It belongs to a Miss Donna
Hyatt
of Spokane, Washington. A woman with a record of fraud and larceny a mile long. We got her driver’s license picture about two hours after I arrested you. Miss Donna Hyatt and Miss Lurlene Grady is one and the same woman.”

There was a certain amount of shock involved. Up until the time when the murderers so casually confessed to the planning and murdering of a completely innocent woman, Bubba had assumed the best of the worst scenario, that Melissa had come to see him to apologize for past deeds, and simply been in the wrong place at the wrong time. But the truth was far more insidious. The theory was that she had been lured by Lurlene in order to frame Bubba for murder. The story about Bubba and his ex-fiancée was well-known in the community. It was only a matter of finding the details. Then there was the simple process of stealing a gun from Miz Demetrice’s house. That was another well-known fact in the community; Miz Demetrice liked to keep guns around her house. The gun was used in the murder, wiped clean, and then hidden in Bubba’s woodpile, where the police would almost certainly find it, which they had with the help of an anonymous phone call.

It was true that all of this evidence was circumstantial, but they had a partial confession on tape, as they had all listened to the conversation between Lurlene Grady and Noey Wheatfall, her erstwhile companion in crime. Bubba had seen the three conspirators together at the strip mall on Farmer’s Road himself.

Lurlene was really Donna Hyatt, of Spokane, Washington. She hadn’t really been born in Georgia after all. She had in her possession diaries from her ancestors narrating the treasure story, or at least the popular version. She also had Colonel Snoddy’s stolen papers from the library. Half the town of Pegramville had seen Colonel Snoddy drive into the town with a covered wagon, which he had guarded ruthlessly. She happened upon the
People
article years after it had been written, figured she had as good a chance to find the gold as anyone. She even did some research on the Snoddy family, figuring that they hadn’t found the gold, either, and then moved down South, with a new name, and a new accent that sometimes went away. She had slowly gotten Noey into the act, followed by Neal Ledbetter, who had stumbled on them, when they were looking for the gold one evening. They had figured that all three could get would they wanted by simply removing Bubba and Miz Demetrice from the property. So they would frame Bubba for the murder of his ex-fiancée, and Miz Demetrice would have to sell the place for money to defend her son. Neal would be waiting to buy the place up. They would get to search for the gold at their leisure, and Neal would get to make the place a Wal-Mart Supercenter. Everyone would be happy except for perhaps Bubba and Miz Demetrice.

Except there was one little niggling detail; Bubba wasn’t so easy to frame. And he found the button that Lurlene/Donna had lost the night she had shot Melissa in the back. A button from a sweater that she had been wearing that night that the murder occurred, that shouldn’t be on Bubba’s porch, because Lurlene/Donna had never been on Bubba’s porch, as far as Bubba knew. So there were the break-ins to recover the button, and then the fire, both of which failed. Then Bubba saw the cardigan hanging in the Pegram Café and it all came to him in a sudden flash of knowledge. The sweater, Lurlene/Donna, the full-length portrait of Miss Annalee Hyatt, the missing Snoddy diaries from the library, the holes in the property, the missing forty-five. All of it.

Bubba couldn’t even manage a hoarse laugh. It wasn’t funny. Lurlene, AKA Donna Hyatt, had killed two people for a supposed wagon full of gold. There was sad, pitiful irony in all of that. It might very well been avoided, if she had just asked Bubba about the legend. His mother might still protect the colonel’s not-so-sainted memory, but Bubba would have told her the real story without reservations as he had to other people, upon occasion.

The Snoddys hadn’t had a pot to piss in after the Civil War. There was the mansion, and the caretaker’s place. There were only fixtures left in the house, with a lot of blank walls, where various artworks had been sold off to support them. All the Confederate money that had been left over had been burned in the fire place in 1869 because it had been a very cold winter, and the money had been worthless. The Snoddys lived on revenues from his grandfather’s clothing sales business that had been sold to Sears in 1956. It wasn’t much but it still supported Miz Demetrice nicely.

With the sheriff and the deputies convinced of his innocence, Bubba pleaded with them to stake out the Snoddy Mansion. Lurlene/Donna and Noey had been present in the café when Bubba had been arrested the third and fourth times, and hadn’t realized that Miz Demetrice was back from Amtrak via a beat-up Porsche convertible. They didn’t have Neal to buy the place anymore, so they would have to search at night when no one was around. This particular Saturday night was perfect for rooting out lost Yankee treasure.

To Bubba’s surprise Sheriff John had agreed, and even took Bubba along. They set up recording devices and an amplifier to listen to any conversation the two had. Sheriff John even had someone tail the pair from the café, where it became obvious that something was up, because Noey Wheatfall closed the restaurant early on a Saturday night.

Bubba was amazed that after everything he had gone through, that it turned out to be so damned easy. Not only was it easy but the pair of murdering would-be thieves got to dig up a rotting 1946 Chevy truck. One of his great-uncles had stolen it from the governor of Texas in 1952 because he was a damned Democrat who had supported the republican presidential candidate Dwight D. Eisenhower. Stealing the truck and burying it the back yard was about the only way he could think to teach the damned idiot governor a lesson. When the great uncle buried the truck he found the load of rusted out pig iron and such and the whole Snoddy clan had a big laugh about the so-called buried treasure. It was common knowledge that there had never been Confederate gold on Snoddy property. Not then and certainly not in the present.

But Lurlene, also known as Donna Hyatt, had loudly and clearly incriminated herself, and then, gave up without incident, only pausing to snarl at Noey, “You better not say nothing to anyone.” Any hint of a southern accent had gone and apparently was gone forever.

Even Noey had been dumbfounded at the sudden appearance of a dozen police officers all around them. But the tape of the confession of the murder was strong evidence against them. Bubba didn’t know it but Sheriff John was planning on getting Noey alone to work out a deal with him. He thought that Noey would testify against Lurlene/Donna if he were promised a lighter deal in this whole mess.

Sheriff John stood beside his county car, watching the deputies secure the suspects, when Bubba stepped up beside him, Precious following at his heels. “Hey, Bubba,” Sheriff John said.

“Hey,” said Bubba. “You owe me an apology.”
Sheriff John choked for a moment. “I don’t think so.”
“Cain’t you even say you was wrong about me?”
“I notice that your accent goes country when you want it to,” Sheriff John remarked, folding his massive arms across his chest.
Bubba mimicked the motion. “So does yours.”
Sheriff John shrugged. “For your information, I’ve always had doubts about your guilt. So I wasn’t necessarily wrong.”

Bubba shrugged, too. He looked at Lurlene, no, it was Donna Hyatt. She was handcuffed, and being held by one arm by Willodean Gray, listening as another deputy rattled off her rights to her. He knew that Sheriff John had ultimately been persuaded by Willodean herself, upon the issue of Bubba’s innocence. She had done the digging that had come up with the information on the telephone records and the driver’s license photo of Donna Hyatt of Spokane, Washington. “You mind if I say something to her?” Bubba asked, referring to Lurlene/Donna.

“You’re not gonna hurt that woman?” Sheriff John asked, only half-serious. Privately, he was glad that an arrest was made, and that it wasn’t Bubba who was going to be staying in jail. Bubba was a popular fella, and the townsfolk looked at the sheriff like he was a mean, mean man of late. But not only that it turned out that that young woman he’d hired was a fine detective, and would probably do very well in the Pegram County Sheriff’s Department in the future. And that was even if her methods weren’t always above board.

“Won’t touch her,” vowed Bubba.

“Go ahead.” Sheriff John waved him on.

Bubba approached Lurlene/Donna, and gazed down into her face. It seemed a different face now, a face full of sly intent, and even coldly homicidal tendencies. There was not only that but her features almost seemed a mirror image of the heroine, Miss Annalee. Why hadn’t he seen it before? Maybe it was because he hadn’t looked at Miss Annalee’s portrait for years before that one night he’d dropped off the drunken Major Dearman.

Lurlene/Donna returned his scrutiny, saying nothing. He had intended to tell her that there wasn’t any gold, that it had only been a pile of rusting junk, that she had murdered two people for no good reason, but clipped it short on his tongue. Instead, he said, “Miss Lur-uh-Donna, I don’t think we should see each other anymore.”

Donna’s eyes opened up wide. After a long time, she said incredulously, “You’re
breaking up
with me, Bubba?”

“I don’t associate with people of your ilk,” he said, with a regal air, that would have reminded anyone instantly of Miz Demetrice had they been listening.

The other woman stared at Bubba as though she couldn’t believe what she was hearing. Finally, she screamed, “BITE ME!”

Willodean happily restrained her prisoner, and finally shoved her into the back of a police car with the assistance of another deputy. Bubba said cheerfully, “It’s only been seven dates, not including lunch with my mother. You’re taking this too seriously.”

Donna unleashed another string of profanities, unfit for man or animal alike. But Willodean shut the county car door on her, and the words instantly became too muffled to understand.

Willodean turned to Bubba with a smile that seemed to light up her whole face. “So, big fella, what do you plan to do now?”

Bubba smiled slowly. “Do you happen to like chocolate Jell-O pudding?”

 

 

Epilogue – The Legend of Bubba –

 

A Few Weeks Later -

 

“It turned out that Noey Wheatfall did roll over on his partner, the lovely Miss Donna Hyatt of Spokane, Washington. He spilled his guts. Then he spilled a little more,” said Lloyd Goshorn, who was a consummate gossip. He stood at the bar of the Dew Drop Inn while a tourist from Dallas bought him all the whiskey he could drink. As a matter of official Pegramville history, Lloyd could drink quite a bit of whiskey before he dropped, and he had proven it on several occasions. “The major went back to the military, and buried his poor wife with full military honors. She had been in the service, too.”

“And Bubba Snoddy?” the tourist asked, a man in his late thirties, with a paunch, and a Dallas Cowboys cap perched jauntily on his head. He looked at Lloyd as if the other man were speaking the gospel.

“As clean as a brand new washing machine,” Lloyd said with a smile. “As innocent as a newborn baby.”

“So everything went back to normal?” the tourist’s wife asked, sipping on a beer herself. She was a short, fat woman with long brown hair and her blue eyes were fixed on Lloyd as well.

Lloyd Goshorn shook his head. “No. I didn’t say that. Bubba got the girl, the beautiful Willodean Gray, the most beautiful Sheriff’s deputy this side of the Mississippi River. They’re planning on getting married next spring. They’re going to have seventeen bride’s maids, and the biggest wedding cake in the history of Texas. They fell in love that very night. They found the gold in the potato cellar, mind you. When it was weighed it was three hundred pounds of the purest gold on the market today. They dug it all up, one night soon after, and sold it on the international market. They say it was worth over two million dollars because the bricks was all stamped ‘Property of the United States of America, 1860.’ So they had to sell it in secret. Miz Demetrice Snoddy is fixing up the Snoddy Mansion up to like when it was brand, spanking new.”

“Boy, that’s something,” the man commented with awe in his voice.
“Sure is,” Lloyd replied, finishing off a shot of whiskey. “Another?”

Other books

Wee Scotch Whisky Tales by Ian R Mitchell
One-Eyed Jack by Bear, Elizabeth
The Mighty Quinns: Ryan by Kate Hoffmann
Sacred Sins by Nora Roberts
The Solomon Scroll by Alex Lukeman
Prisoner of Glass by Mark Jeffrey
Body Of Truth by Deirdre Savoy
A Charm for a Unicorn by Jennifer Macaire