Authors: Tami Hoag
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Suspense, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Crime Fiction
been many unfortunate things, but no Rafferty would ever be a hired gun.
"You're starting to sound like a native, Marilee," she mumbled, amused
and a little dismayed by her automatic defense of the clan. Keeping her
eyes on the dog and the door, she reached down and jabbed the doorbell
again, holding it an annoyingly long time.
There was always Lucy's hired hand to consider for the hit man lineup.
Kendall Morton, shady drifter. She knew little about him, but by his
description he sounded as if he just might be the kind of man willing to
waste someone for spending money and then disappear. She wondered if she
could get his criminal record if she called the sheriff's department and
claimed to be a business owner checking Morton out before hiring him.
Quinn wouldn't give it to her any other way.
She heaved a sigh and hit the doorbell yet again. The interior door
remained closed, but the dog was diverted.
It bounded toward her, loping through the house with big, loose-limbed
strides, ears up, pale eyes boring into hers. It jumped up and put its
paws on the side light, toenails clicking against the glass, and stared
Marilee in the face. He was very clearly male and, as he slurped his
long, pink tongue against the glass, he was very clearly not a killer
watchdog. He jumped down from the window, galloped around in a tight
circle, barking, made a dash toward the closed interior door, then
dashed back toward Marilee, whining.
Marilee tried the front door. Maybe the old geezer had keeled over while
auditioning paramours and was lying on the bedroom floor, praying his
trustworthy dog would fetch help. Or maybe the hit man had wasted him.
The door was unlocked. She slipped into the foyer, feeling like a thief.
The dog danced around her, his thunderous barks resounding off the
adobe-look walls.
"Judge Townsend?
Anybody home?"
After the third call, the dog tried again to get her to follow him to
the closed door beyond the living room.
He had scratched deep gouges into the door, leaving raw open wounds in
the pine. Not far from the door, beside a potted fig tree that sat along
a bank of windows, he had left a big pile of doggie business that was
fresh enough to make Marilee wrinkle her nose.
Standing close beside the door, she listened for voices.
Silence.
"Judge Townsend?" She drummed her knuckles against the center panel,
inciting another booming bark from the dog, then silence again. The dog
shoved his wet nose into her hand, as if he thought he could physically
compel her to reach for the doorknob. Scowling, Marilee wiped the dog
snot off her palm onto the leg of her jeans and reached for the knob of
her own accord.
The door swung open to reveal a spectacular study.
Dark wood and big windows, a forest of leather-upholstered wing chairs,
and a fieldstone fireplace. The heads of a number of unfortunate
creatures were mounted on the wall above the fireplace. A mule deer, an
elk, a mountain goat, several antelopelike creatures she had never seen
outside the pages of National Geographic. There was a zebra hide tacked
up on the far wall with an enormous tiger skin beside it. The disparity
in size would have made zebras glad they didn't live in tiger country. A
grizzly bear stood in the far corner, petrified for all eternity on his
hind legs with his lips curled back in an ugly snarl.
Centered along the windowed wall was Townsend's desk, a massive polished
walnut piece with brass accents.
Slumped over, facedown on the desk, was Townsend. By the look of things,
he had stuck a gun in his mouth and blown the top of his head off.
For a long while Marilee stood frozen, staring. Every detail of the
scene soaked into her memory like indelible ink. She wanted to look
away, but couldn't. The shock had shorted out the brain synapses that
had to do with motor functions. She was trapped there, staring at the
carnage, a detached corner of her brain studying the play Of the
sunlight through the blood and brain matter splattered on the window
glass behind the desk. Bloodstained glass. The air in the sun-warmed
room was rank with the thick, gagging stench of violent death.
Her gaze drifted to Townsend again. The body was a dead husk, crumpled
and discarded. The essence of the person had gone on to places unknown.
His right hand was still wrapped around the handle of the pistol that
had shattered the crown of his head like the shell of a soft-boiled egg.
In a heartbeat Marilee's brain kicked back into action and she jolted
into motion. Her whole body jerked backward.
"Oh, my God!" she whispered, as if she were afraid of waking him. "Oh,
my God!"
The gasp jammed in her throat as her breakfast rushed up from her
stomach. Clamping a hand over her mouth, she stumbled back through the
maze of wing chairs and out of the room. There wasn't time to hunt for a
bathroom. The kitchen was a straight shot through the living room on the
other end of the house. She managed to make it to the sink before the
sight of the judge and the smell of dog shit made her gag.
When there was nothing left of her Rainbow Cafe buttermilk pancakes, she
turned the faucet on and stuck her face under it, as if she could wash
away what her eyes had seen. Trembling violently, she reached for a dish
towel and pressed it against her cheeks.
Townsend was dead. Lucy was dead, then Miller Daggrepont, now Townsend
had killed himself. She could still see the look of surprise in his
eyes, as if he had seen something unexpected in that final split second
between life and death. She could still see the blood that had run out
of his mouth to puddle on the desktop, and the hand that still gripped
the butt of the gun.
She used the kitchen phone to call the sheriff's department, shaking so
badly she had difficulty punching out 911. The dispatcher assured her a
car would be sent out right away - as soon as they could determine where
exactly judge Townsend lived.
Too shaken to sit still, Marilee wandered through the house. She found a
bottle of Glenfiddich on the sideboard in the dining room and drank a
little to soothe her jangling nerves and calm the chaos swirling like a
cyclone through her head. Townsend's grisly last portrait remained in
her brain, but she was now able to concentrate on other aspects of the
picture - a clean slice of sky in the window; the scales of justice
sitting front and center on the desk, one side weighed down by a handful
of change and a roll of stamps; the telephone, black and high-tech, its
receiver nowhere in sight, a red light burning on the console.
No receiver. She stared out the window at the front yard, waiting for
the distant cloud of dust that would signify the imminent arrival of a
deputy. She took another sip of scotch and held the cool, heavy tumbler
against her cheek. No receiver. Had he taken the receiver off the hook
so as not to be interrupted by some telemarketing flunky as he carried
out his final verdict on himself?
Or had he been calling someone?
If his suicide had anything to do with Lucy's death . . . if he had been
talking to someone shortly before his own death . . . might that person
have some connection to Lucy?
The dog came into the dining room, whining, and bumped against Marilee's
legs, gazing up at her with worried eyes. She stroked his head absently
and set her glass aside. Quinn was fed up to his eyeteeth with her
theories.
He wouldn't want to hear this one either. He certainly wouldn't allow
her to nose around the crime scene. She would be summarily removed from
the vicinity and escorted back to the station to make her statement with
no embellishments or queries allowed.
With the German shorthair trailing despondently after her, she went back
into the living room and stared at the open study door while her heart
did a slow drumbeat against her sternum and the scotch simmered in her
stomach. She ordered the dog to stay and walked on into the study as
purposefully as her quaking knees would allow. Keeping her eyes trained
away from the judge, she skirted around the front side of the desk to
the end where the telephone sat with its red light glowing like an evil
eye.
The redial button was just to the left of Townsend's ravaged head.
Concentrating on the button, she reached out with the eraser end of a
pencil and punched it. The electronic music of modern technology played
over the receiver, which lay on the floor. Marilee watched the number
appear in the LCD display above the answering machine cassette
compartment, listened to the phone ringing on the other end of the line.
On the third ring a woman with a heavy eastern-European accent answered.
"Mr. Bryce's residence. 'Ello?"
Samantha stretched out in the lounge chair, her eyes shaded from the
glare of the sun on the pool by a pair of sunglasses that cost more than
she made in a week. Bryce had loaned them to her. Actually, he had given
them to her, but she felt more comfortable considering it a loan than a
gift.
She had called in sick to work. After their discussion the night before,
she had no desire to run into Mr. Van Dellen today. Bryce told her not
to worry about it. Drew was meddling where he didn't belong without
knowing all the facts, he said. Drew didn't understand their friendship,
he said. He didn't understand what she was going through with Will. He
was feeling protective of her - like a brother for a sister - but wasn't
that ironic, since Bryce felt the same way?
No need for a conflict when
their goals were essentially the same.
Bryce's words had soothed her last night. Just the sound of his voice
soothed her, warm and rich as it was.
He smiled at her with that movie-star smile, his eyes kind and wise, and
for a moment her life didn't seem quite so screwed up. But when she woke
up alone in her bed with the morning sun glaring like a spotlight on her
shabby room, Bryce's comfort had faded away and Mr. Van Dellen's
disapproval had shone through.
Think what you're doing, Samantha!
You're not like them. Can't you see
that?
Yes, she could see it. Apparently, everybody could see it - that she was
just a dumb, gawky half-breed kid trying to be something she wasn't.
Everybody saw it except Bryce. He treated her as if she were just as
good as, just as important as any of his rich and famous friends. He
treated her like a beautiful woman instead of a kid sister.
That was what she could see: that she had a husband who didn't care and
a man - a friend - who treated her better than her own father ever had, even
in her dreams.
Bryce saw possibilities for her; he gave her encouragement when all she
had ever gotten from anyone else was pity or ridicule or nothing at all.
Nobody else seemed to understand that.
So she had sought refuge today with her friend. She could spend the day
on his mountain, beside his pool, hiding away from the reality of her
life. She could leave Sam the tomboy barmaid behind on the dusty side
streets of New Eden and become Samantha of the hip crowd for a day. She
could lie by the pool with Uma Kimball in the next chair and a famous
trial lawyer bringing her drinks and staring at her cleavage.
Actually, the last part made her uncomfortable, so she turned onto her
stomach on the chaise and pulled her long hair over her shoulders for a
curtain.
"Thanks," she murmured, setting the Margarita aside on a low
glass-topped table.
Ben Lucas grinned at her as if she had just said something truly witty.
He stood between her and the pool, a tan, health-club body in orange
Speedo trunks.
"You'll get a better tan without the shirt," he said.
Samantha stared up at him, seeing her reflection in the mirror lenses of
his sunglasses. From the selection of swimwear in the guest room, she