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Authors: Sandra Parshall

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BOOK: Disturbing the Dead
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Without looking around, Shackleford added, “I was real sorry to hear about your tragedy.”

Yeah, I’ll bet. Probably thought you were home free when Dad died.
Tom said nothing. The sound of rain pelting the windows filled the silence.

Shackleford threw a glance over his shoulder. “Must be hard to live with, you comin’ through okay and that little boy losin’ his mama and daddy both. Especially since you happened to be behind the wheel.”

Cheap shot, and an obvious attempt to get under Tom’s skin. He was beginning to think he would come up against a lot of that in this investigation. His voice cool, Tom said, “My father always thought you had some reason to want Mrs. McClure dead.”

Shackleford sauntered to his chair, avoiding Billy Bob. Instead of sitting, he gripped the back of the chair. “I was a suspect because I was around her. And your father couldn’t find any evidence against nobody else. But I didn’t have no reason to hurt her. Hell, after she went missin’, I lost work. I had to relocate to make a livin’.”

Tom looked down at the legal pad and darkened the dot on each
i
in Miami. “I’ll need to talk to you again. Probably more than once. So stick around.”

“Sure. I’m stayin’ at my mother’s house.” Shackleford paused, then added, “Say, can I ask you a favor? You won’t drag my daughter into all this, will you? She was just a little kid when it happened, no point gettin’ her upset.”

“Your daughter?” Tom said.

“Holly. Lives with her Grandma Turner.”

“You’re Holly’s father?”

“Yeah. You didn’t know that? Her mama’s Jean—Pauline’s baby sister. Anyway, I’d appreciate it if you didn’t get Holly involved. No way she could know anything that’d help you. Well, if that’s it, I’ll take off. Get in touch if you need to.”

When Shackleford was gone, Tom snapped his pencil in half and flung the pieces at the door. God damn it, why hadn’t he trusted his own second thoughts about Holly? He had to stop Rachel before she brought his prime suspect’s daughter into her business and her life.

Chapter Nine

Rachel stopped at the entrance to the McKendrick horse farm to collect her mail from one of the roadside boxes, then drove through the open gate and up the lane. The rain had stopped, and wisps of fog crept over the pavement. On the left, security flood lights illuminated Joanna McKendrick’s two-story brick colonial, but the house’s windows were dark. Joanna had gone to Kentucky to deliver one of her American Saddlebred horses to a buyer, and Rachel was surprised at how lonely she felt in her new friend’s absence.

She drove past three more houses, where the farm manager and other employees lived. Warm lights in the windows and glimpsed movements of parents and children brought a stab of longing for the ordinary lives other people shared.

When she’d come to Mason County six months before, after the all-consuming business of prosecuting Perry Nelson had reached its devastating end, Rachel had craved solitude. She’d wanted to be left alone so she could sit all evening staring at the wall if she couldn’t bring herself to do anything more. Cry if she needed to, without Luke hovering solicitously. But lately privacy had begun to feel like a prison of isolation, and what she craved was life, activity, the noise of other people.

Her rented cottage was a mile down the farm lane, beyond the stable and paddocks. When she pulled into her driveway, the downstairs lights were blazing because she always left them on when she went to work in the morning. She’d rather pay a bigger electricity bill than come back to a dark house at night.

She opened the door to a greeting from Frank, a black shorthaired cat with blotchy white markings and one and a half ears. Her African gray parrot, Cicero, squawked, “Hello, Rachel! Hello, Rachel!” and flapped from atop his big cage in a corner to land on her shoulder. She petted Frank, let Cicero kiss her with his beak, and felt some of the loneliness ebb away.

Half an hour later, she was heating a small pot of vegetable soup on the stove when the telephone rang.

With the care that had become automatic to her, she checked her Caller ID monitor. The number on the display made her groan, not because it was unfamiliar but because she knew it all too well. Luke, calling from his townhouse, the house she’d shared with him for more than two years.

Torn between longing and dread, she let the phone ring four times. In the middle of the fifth ring, when voice mail was about to cut in, she snatched up the receiver. “Hello, Luke.”

“Hey,” he said. “How’re you doing?” He sounded worried, as if he expected to find her in an emotional crisis.

Squeezing her eyes shut, Rachel clamped down on the riot of contradictory feelings he always stirred up in her. She pictured his blue eyes clouded with concern, his sandy hair messy because he’d raked his fingers through it. A squeak in the background told her he was in his home office, his lanky frame folded into the desk chair, swiveling back and forth the way he always did when he was nervous or distracted. That chair had been squeaking as long as Rachel could remember, but he was oblivious to it.

“I guess you’ve heard the news about Perry Nelson,” she said.

“Just a minute ago, on the TV news. This is the craziest thing I’ve ever heard of. He tries to kill you and gets away with it, he spends a few months in a hospital, and now the doctors want to let him out? I’m worried about you. I couldn’t stand it if that nutcase hurt you again.”

The distress in his voice brought an answering rush of emotion and made Rachel want to reassure him even though she could barely reassure herself. “He won’t get to me. I hope he isn’t released because he doesn’t deserve it, but if it happens, he’ll just be going to his parents’ house for weekends.”

“And he could take off any time he wanted to, go anywhere. You’re way out there in the country where you don’t know anybody, you don’t have anybody to call on for help.”

“But I know a lot of people here, including the sheriff’s deputies. Most of them bring their pets to me.” The sizzle and burnt smell of boiling-over soup jerked her attention back to the stove. She grabbed the pot’s handle, pulled it off the burner, and snapped off the heat. “I’m all right, Luke, please don’t worry.”

“I always will, you know that. I want you to come home. Please. I’ll never feel like you’re safe unless you’re here with me and I can look after you.”

She turned on the cold water to soothe her scorched fingers while she groped for something to say that wouldn’t provoke yet another dissection of their relationship. Why couldn’t she make a clean break with him? Why did she let him go on calling her, trying to talk her into coming back? Was it because some part of her believed that moving out here had been a mistake? “I don’t think going back where his family lives would make me any safer.”

“We’ll buy a house in Vienna or Arlington. And you don’t have to work for me in McLean. Look, I heard about this guy who wants to open a new clinic in Alexandria, specializing in cats. He needs a partner who can put up some of the money. If you sold the place you’ve got now, you’d be able to swing it. I’ve got his phone number—”


Luke.

At one time, she would have been outraged, but she’d long ago grown used to him deciding what was best for her and simply informing her of it. “I have to deal with this in my own way.”

“It’s the perfect solution,” Luke said. “We’ll move out of McLean, but I’ll still work here and you’ll still have a clinic of your own.”

“I’m not going to uproot myself again.” She twisted the faucet off and shook water from her fingers.

“Rachel, come on, be honest with yourself. You left because Michelle pushed you into it. She was determined to separate us, and she used the whole Nelson thing to scare you into running away.”

Rachel felt anger bubbling up in her and forced herself to keep it in check. “Do you really believe I let my sister make major decisions for me?”

“She sure as hell knows how to push your buttons. She’s an expert manipulator, just like that woman who called herself your mother.”

Rachel sighed. “Do you have any idea how it makes me feel when you talk about my sister that way? She’s the only family I have, and it took me a long time to get close to her again after Mother died. I never got any help from you.”

“And Michelle doesn’t get any of the blame?” Luke said. “How do you think I feel about the way she treated me? Accusing me of trying to turn you against your family, as if I’m responsible for everything that happened, when we all know the truth about the whole damn mess.”

“Luke,
stop it.
” Rachel pressed a hand to her mouth, swallowed down bitter nausea.

“I’m sorry,” he said instantly. “I shouldn’t have brought that up. I’m just so damned worried about you, I miss you so much— Look, I know you love your sister. And we both love you. That’s one thing we’ve always had in common. I give you my word, if you come back home I’ll learn to get along with her.”

“You’ve made that promise before and you’ve never been able to keep it,” Rachel said wearily. “And Michelle can’t do it either. The two of you make me feel like the rope in a tug of war.”

“Rachel.” His voice softened to a quiet plea. “I’ll do whatever you want. I love you, and I can’t believe you’ve just turned off your feelings and stopped loving me.”

A wave of yearning shook her, weakened her resolve. She wanted to pour out her loneliness, tell him about all the nights when she’d lain awake, wishing he were beside her. But no. However much she loved him, she couldn’t live with him. That door was closed, and if she reopened it she would walk back into the maelstrom of emotion that had driven her away in the first place.

“I can’t talk about this anymore,” she told him. “I love you and I don’t want to hurt you, but I just can’t do this anymore. Please don’t worry about me.” Rachel hung up before he could answer, and she switched off the ringer so she wouldn’t hear it if he called back.

Too agitated to think about eating, her mind still on Luke, she absently shuffled through her mail on the counter, separating junk and bills. It was easy to pretend that the Perry Nelson ordeal was the reason she’d left McLean, but he was only one of several forces that had driven her away, and perhaps not the most important. Even before Nelson attacked her, she’d felt smothered by Luke’s knowledge of her past. He knew what her life had been like as Judith Goddard’s daughter, what she’d gone through to learn the truth about her family. Every day, in some way, he reminded her of the most painful part of her life, and his protectiveness, added to the implacable enmity between him and her sister, made it impossible for any of them to put the past to rest.

She started to toss a plain envelope with no return address into the recycling bin under the sink, but paused when she noticed the Richmond postmark. A friend from vet school lived in Richmond and occasionally sent her articles.

She slit open the envelope with a paring knife and pulled out a single sheet of white paper. Two sentences were laser-printed on it:
I know where you live
.
Want me to pay you a visit some night?

She gasped and threw the paper onto the counter. Perry Nelson. It couldn’t have come from anyone else. He was doing it again, he’d found out where she was and he was invading her life again. Nelson was locked up in the state hospital in Petersburg, south of Richmond, but he’d gotten the letter out somehow. He’d found somebody to do his dirty work, the same way he had when he was in jail awaiting trial.

Rachel paced the kitchen without taking her eyes off the letter.
Calm down,
she told herself.
This could be a good thing.
Nelson had violated a restraining order. However alarmed she might be that he’d found her, she had to hope this contact would give the prosecutor a solid case for keeping him locked up. But only if the note could be tied to
him
.
Was he stupid enough to leave his fingerprints on it? Could the police even lift prints from a piece of paper? She didn’t know, but it was worth a try.

Her hands shaking, Rachel grabbed tongs from a drawer, used them to fold the paper. Tomorrow morning she would express mail it to Leslie Ryan. Stuffing the note back into its envelope, Rachel made the decision to attend Nelson’s hearing and insist on speaking. “I can stop him in the courtroom,” she muttered, “or I can stop him at my door. That seems to be my choice.”

Her appetite had vanished, but she knew from experience that she’d make herself ill if she started skipping meals. She switched the gas back on under the vegetable soup and put together a grilled cheese sandwich.

On the kitchen’s wooden table a stack of computer printouts waited to occupy her while she ate. The night before, she’d found plenty of information about Melungeons online, and hadn’t yet been able to read through everything she’d printed. She wanted to learn more about the heritage Tom Bridger and Holly Turner shared.

Cicero perched on the back of a chair opposite hers and preened his red tail feathers. Frank, on another chair, uttered a demanding meow, and Rachel tore off a bit of her cheese sandwich for him.

Determined not to think about Perry Nelson or Luke or Michelle, she began reading about the history of the Melungeon people, a centuries-long tale of poverty and legalized discrimination. She could hardly believe that Tom, so strong and confident, was descended from people who had been driven off their land by encroaching white settlers, denied basic rights under the law, and shunned by their mountain neighbors. Even the name Melungeon had been a product of racial hatred. It could have come from the French word
mélange,
which meant mixture, but Rachel was inclined to believe the theory that it came from the Turkish phrase
melun jinn
—cursed souls. Small wonder that some Melungeons had always refused the name. Tom seemed to accept it, but he certainly wasn’t indifferent to the lingering prejudice against mixed race people.

A sound outside made her break off reading and jerk her head up. A vehicle was approaching the cottage. The car stopped, the engine died. Who would come to her house at night without calling first?

A door slammed. She reminded herself that the person she feared most was locked in a mental institution on the other side of the state. But she’d made a new enemy that day. Maybe Holly’s cousin Buddy had decided to follow up with a visit, in case he hadn’t made his point at lunchtime.

Sweat broke out on her body but her skin felt icy. She jumped up, took three quick strides and grabbed the telephone, ready to punch in 911.

Footsteps sounded on the front porch. She didn’t have time to call. She dropped the receiver, yanked open a drawer and scrabbled among the knives, nicking a finger painfully. She pulled out a meat cleaver.

The visitor rapped on the door. “Rachel? It’s Tom.”

Oh, for God’s sake.
She leaned against the counter and swiped perspiration from her upper lip.
Scare me half to death, why don’t you?
What on earth was Tom doing here?

“Just a minute,” she called. Feeling a little foolish, she shut the knife drawer, caught the telephone receiver and dropped it back on the hook. By the time she swung the front door wide she wore a smile.

Tom’s grim expression instantly told her he’d brought bad news.

“Sorry to bother you,” he said. “I need to talk to you and I didn’t want to do it on the phone.”

As she let him in, she clicked through all the possible reasons for his appearance at her door and hit on one that made her heart lurch. “Has something happened to Joanna? Did she have an accident?”

BOOK: Disturbing the Dead
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