Authors: Tami Hoag
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Suspense, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Crime Fiction
friend hadn't been a better person.
"You don't seem much like her, luv," Drew said gently.
A sad smile pulled at the corners of her mouth as she slid down off the
rock. "No. We didn't have much in common . . . except that we were
friends. That doesn't make much sense, does it?"
He slid a brotherly arm around her, gave her shoulder a squeeze. "It makes as
much sense as relationships ever do. I can't say that I found Lucy to be
of sterling character, but I liked her as well. She had a rare sense of
humor and if she found you worthy of friendship, she would fight to the
finish for you."
"She was just . . . well, she was just Lucy. And now she's gone."
For several moments, they stayed side by side, leaning against each
other as if they had been friends forever instead of a day. The sunlight
spilled over the shoulders of the Absarokas like liquid gold, and the
valley began to come to life. A meadowlark trilled. Halfway up the side
of the mountain an eagle soared above the tops of the Douglas fir and
lodgepole pine, wings outstretched to catch the updrafts.
Marilee watched in silence, letting the peace seep into her and wash the
rest away. She took a deep breath of cool, clean air that was scented
with pine and cedar and the soft perfumes of a dozen wildflowers, and
let it soothe her as the line from the poem soothed her. I'll tell you
how the sun rose - a ribbon at a time.
She was eating breakfast when Miller Daggrepont descended on her. She
saw him coming across the dining room and knew with a sense of fatalism
that he was homing in on her. Everyone in the dining room paused with
forks and spoons in midair as he passed, their expressions ranging from
horror to amusement.
He was as wide as he was tall, a virtual cube of a man, with a face like
a bulldog's and a shock of ratty gray hair that stood straight up from
his head in a style reminiscent of fight promoter Don King. A gold and
black brocade vest stretched around his rotund frame over a white shirt,
and a black string tie lurked beneath the folds of his wattle. A huge
silver belt buckle set with nuggets of turquoise perched at the
forefront of his belly like a hood ornament on a Mack truck. The legs
of his black trousers were tucked into a pair of snakeskin boots that
looked ridiculously tiny beneath his enormous bulk.
Marilee froze with a slice of cantaloupe halfway to her fingertips, as
he slid in right across from her.
Through Coke-bottle lenses, his dark eyes were weirdly magnified behind
them.
"Little missy," he said, his voice booming in the high-ceilinged room.
"You'd be Marilee Jennings?"
Her automatic desire was to say no in the hope that he would go away and
embarrass someone else, but her head bobbed in affirmation. You're too
honest for your own good, Marilee.
He stuck out a hand that resembled an inflated rubber glove, gripping
hers before she could wipe the cantaloupe juice off. "Miller Daggrepont,
Esquire," he announced in a voice loud enough to wake the ghost of Madam
Belle.
"Attorney-at-law and renaissance man. I've got a surprise for you,
little lady."
"I'm not sure my heart can stand it," Marilee said, only half joking.
"Come on along," he ordered, tugging her up from her seat. "This is
important. You can eat anytime."
He appeared to be an expert on that subject. Stomach grumbling a
protest, Marilee shuffled after him, thinking that wild elephants
probably couldn't drag Miller Daggrepont away from a table. He towed her
down the lobby of the Moose and outside, rumbling along like a freight
train. Hustling down Main Street, he jaywalked across to First Avenue,
and continued on, oblivious of the curious looks people cast their way.
The buildings here, as on Main Street, were a jumble of styles and ages.
The shops were a mix of practical and pretentious - a dentist's office, a
wilderness outfitter's post, the Curl Up and Dye hair salon. Designer
fashions hung in the window of the Beartooth Boutique. Next door an old
man sat on one of several riding lawn mowers parked out in front of
Erikson's Garden Center.
They turned in at a brick building with an ornate front window. EDEN
VALLEY AssAy across the glass in gold gay-nineties-style lettering, but
the brass plaque on the door itself read MILLER DAGGREPONT, ESQUIRE.
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
"This is where I keep my collections," he said, thumbing through an
enormous ring of keys. "I collect everything. Signs, toys, farm
equipment, you name it. Never know when the next big rage will hit. I
made a killing on Indian artifacts when all the Hollywood types started
moving in. They think they're going native when they hang an old horse
blanket on the wall. Damned fools, I say - not because of the collecting.
Nothing wrong with collecting. They're just damned fools in general."
He swung the door open and went in, pulling Marilee along behind him
like a recalcitrant child. Shelves lined the walls from floor to
ceiling. A row of low display cases ran down the center of the floor
from the front of the room to the back. Old advertising signs and
license plates hung by wires from the ceiling. The floor was littered
with a jumble of junk. Toward the back of the main room two of the tall
cases had been tipped over, dumping a mountain of toys, glassware, tin
canisters, wooden boxes, and God-knew-what onto the floor.
"Watch your step," Miller ordered, grunting his disapproval at the mess.
"Some damned drunk broke in the back door last night and turned the
place upside down. You know we're just catercorner from the Hell and Gone.
Cowboys come into town and they go crazy. It's like bringing a wild pony into the
house."
Marilee picked her way along behind him, stepping over the prone form of
a cigar store Indian and a woman's straw hat decorated with faded silk
cabbage roses. "Mr. Daggrepont, I've worked with lawyers for six years,
and I have to say I've never come across an office quite like this."
His booming laugh rattled the tin signs overhead.
"Well, little missy, I'm not your run of the mill attorney. Like I said
before, I'm a renaissance man."
He led her down a hall and into a smaller room that was an even worse
mess than the front had been. An old desk sat in the middle of it all.
Somewhere on the desk, beneath a drift of fishing tackle and assorted
debris, a telephone rang. Daggrepont ignored it. He let go of Marilee to
work on the combination lock of an old vault set into the back wall.
"This was the assay office back in the 1860s," he explained. "Gold was
discovered up in the Absarokas. The place went bonkers with gold fever.
The town boomed. Didn't last long though. The lode wasn't rich enough
and it was too damned hard to get to. Those mountains are rugged sons a'guns."
Marilee had read all about it in her guide books, but she didn't comment
on it as she picked her way across the office. He heaved the vault open
and she raised up on tiptoe in an attempt to peer over his shoulder.
"Uh, Mr. Daggrepont, would it be too much to ask what this is all
about?"
He shot her a look of annoyance, his eyeballs swimming behind his thick
glasses. "Lucy MacAdam," he said, cigar stub bobbing above his chins. "I
was her attorney. You're her heir."
The news knocked her in the head like a mallet. Marilee swayed a little
on her feet and stumbled back. "I'm her heir?
That can't be. I mean,
why- what-?"
Daggrepont ignored her stammering, searching for the proper file among
the boxes on the shelves that lined the vault. "Thank heaven for this
vault," he grumbled.
"There'd be hell to pay if some drunk dumped these files. Inez would be
sorting paper from now till kingdom come. Ah!
Here it is. Lucy MacAdam."
He pulled the file and herded Marilee back out into the office, where he
swept off a chair and ordered her to sit.
He leaned his bulk back against the desk and told her the gist of Lucy's
last bequests.
"She didn't have any living relatives. Left everything to you. Her
place, her bank account, this letter-" He held out a sealed envelope to
her. Marilee took it with limp fingers and held it in her lap. "All
subject to inheritance taxes, funeral expenses, and, um, my fees, of
course."
"Of course."
"But it's all yours as soon as it clears probate. Oh, and there's one
other thing. Damn near forgot."
He trundled back into the vault and came out with a foot-tall old tin
replica of Mr. Peanut, which he thrust into Marilee's hands. She stared
at the smirking peanut, then up at Daggrepont and back again.
"What is it?" she asked at last.
"Why, it's Lucy. She had herself cremated."
She drove out to the ranch with Mr. Peanut strapped into the passenger
seat beside her. Daggrepont had immediately tried to persuade her to
sell the ranch. Inheritance taxes would be astronomical, considering how
property values had gone up. What would she want with a ranch anyway?
She had a life back in California, didn't she?
No, she didn't, but she didn't tell that to Daggrepont or to his
weaselly real estate buddy who had just happened to drop by. The same
way a vulture just happens to drop by road kill.
"I can sell that property for you, little lady. I can sell anything,
anytime, anyplace."
On the verge of giddiness, she had nearly asked him if he could paint
her car any color for $99.95.
"Lucy," she said, cutting a look at the tin peanut.
"You always did have a bizarre sense of humor, but this is really too
much."
The peanut just smirked at her.
She had to get away, to think, to try to sort through it all in her
mind. The ranch seemed the best place to do it.
Somehow she thought an answer might come to her there. But another part
of her knew there would only be more questions, and her stomach churned
at the prospect.
By daylight the place Lucy had called home for the last year was as
picturesque as anything Marilee had ever imagined. The log house was set
on high ground overlooking a broad valley with a wide, glittering stream
running through it. The hills above were covered with pine and aspen.
The valley beyond the stream was dotted with grazing horses. She fell in
love with it the minute she stepped out of the car. It radiated a sense
of peace, a sense of constancy. Nothing about it struck her as being
Lucy's style at all.
She climbed the steps onto the porch and followed it around the side of
the house to a broad deck that overlooked the stream. The bent willow
furniture and Adirondack chairs had escaped the vandals' zeal. Setting
the tin on the glass-topped table, she sank down onto the cushions of a
high-backed chair and stared out at the panorama.
It was hers. The idea wouldn't penetrate. It made no sense. She had
never even been here to visit Lucy. She had never thought of their
friendship as being something that went so deep as this. They had shared
laughs and gripes over a few beers. They had been drinking buddies,
comrades in arms against the vicious lawyer hordes who never wanted to
pay them and always wanted to get them into bed. The thought that their
relationship had been anything more to Lucy left her feeling confused and
vaguely guilty, the way she had felt in high school when one of the nerd
boys had revealed that he had a crush on her.
Hoping for an answer or at least a clue, she pulled the envelope
Daggrepont had given her out of her jacket pocket and opened it with a
nail file from her purse. Inside was a strip of green paper folded in
half, torn on both ends. Stenographer's notes, a set of hieroglyphics no
one but another court reporter would have been able to decipher. How