Authors: T. J. O'Connor
Tags: #Sarah Glokkmann. But the festive mood sours as soon as a well-known Glokkmann-bashing blogger is found dead. When Mira's best friend's fiancé becomes a top suspect, #Battle Lake's premier fall festival. To kick off the celebrations, #she wades through mudslinging and murderous threats to find the political party crasher., #the town hosts a public debate between congressional candidates Arnold Swydecker and the slippery incumbent, #Beer and polka music reign supreme at Octoberfest
turned her attention to the tomcat. “I’m sorry, Ernie. I dozed off.
What were you saying?”
“I was saying that you must get some rest. It’s been a long and
trying day.”
“Yes, yes. You’re right. But, I have so much to contend with.
First …”
“No first.” Ernie set his drink on the mantel and folded his
arms like a parent about to discipline. “You get rest. Everything
else will wait until tomorrow. I’ll take care of everything—wel ,
André and me, of course.”
“Thank you, Ernie. I don’t know what I’d do without you two.”
Ernie was always near in difficult times. During her child-
hood, he was a close family friend. When tragedy took her par-
ents, he assumed the role of uncle and never ventured far. He
helped mentor her through her doctorate and secured her pro-
fessorship at the university. Since then, he’s been a fixture in our home for holidays and summer barbecues. Her choice, not mine.
But, since she made three-times my cop salary, Old Ernie could
hang around whenever he wanted. Ernie was a mixture of doting
uncle, persnickety mentor, and pain-in-the-ass houseguest.
Thankful y, he was nearby now.
30
“Angel,” I said. “Are you all right?” I slid onto the couch beside her and sent the tomcat bristling from the room with hisses and
growls.
Did I do that? “Angel, it’s me. Can you hear me? I’m all right—
I’m okay.”
She looked after the cat before turning toward me. I thought
she was going to reach out and touch my face but she dropped
her chin and cried instead.
“Angel, I’m okay.”
“I hope so,” she said and the words startled both of us.
“Tuck?”
“No, Angela.” Ernie crossed the room and sat down between
us. “No, Dear. He’s gone—I’m so sorry.”
Angel blinked, rubbed her eyes, and scanned the room. Her
face paled and she leaned back onto the pillow. “No—yes, of
course. But for a moment, I swear I heard him.”
“No, I’m here.” I slid off the couch and stood, looking down at
her. “Listen for me.”
She looked at Ernie and smiled a faint, embarrassed smile.
“You’re right. He’s gone.”
“No, Angel. Focus on my voice. Listen for me. I had a
dream … a vision.”
She cocked her head and closed her eyes. Her eyebrows rose
and she bit her lower lip as she did when concentrating.
Was it working?
“Angel, listen. There were two men digging in our house—but
it wasn’t our house. They found something important. One of
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them had a cross tattoo. It must have something to do with my
murder … that’s why I saw it …” Even dead, I tended to ramble.
“Tattoo?” She sat upright. “A tattooed man? Digging?”
Ernie suddenly stood and returned to the mantel, draining
his drink. He stole a glance at her and retrieved the crystal de-
canter, pouring a healthy refil .
“Angela, you’re dreaming—confused—grieving.”
“What tattooed man?” A voice said from the doorway. André
Cartier—official y, Uncle André Cartier—walked into the living
room with a tray of sandwiches. “Someone was digging? Where
and for what?”
“She has to get to bed, André. Leave the dream alone.”
“Dreams are funny things—manifestations of our subcon-
scious. Especially at a time like this.” Dr. André Cartier was a
professor of history and anthropology and a senior director at
the Smithsonian Institute in Washington D.C. His accolades were
long, but he coveted no greater role than as the former guardian
of his sister’s only child. “Besides, she has to eat first. We all do.”
Ernie lifted his glass. “I’ll drink, thank you.”
André and Ernie could easily be brothers. André had distin-
guished gray temples and a presence of confidence and intellect.
He shared Ernie’s athletic build and ageless appearance. André,
however, wore round, wire-rimmed eyeglasses perched on his
nose, preferred to be clean-shaven, and had ten or fifteen pounds
on Ernie.
Ernie was an uncle by choice; André by birthright. Both
shared Angel’s devotion.
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“I didn’t dream, André.” Angel stood and folded her arms as
though unsure of what to do next. “I heard Tuck. He was talking
to me. He saw a tattooed man digging. It had to be a dream.
Right?”
“See, André, a digging tattooed man. This is nonsense …”
“Nonsense?” André threw Angel a wink that drew a smile.
“How would you know about digging, Ernie? In al these years,
I’ve never seen your hands dirty.”
“I’m a history professor, not a laborer.”
“And a snob.” André let a thin smile dull the jab.
“And you? You are a typical Washington Bureaucrat.”
“Perhaps.” André laughed. “But, I’ve done more historical ex-
cavations this year than you have in your life.”
“Oh, you have?”
André threw his chin. “With more hours in the field than you
have in the classroom.”
Did I mention they were competitive?
Ernie dismissed him with a huff and returned to his brandy.
The glass stopped halfway to his lips when André spoke again.
“You don’t suppose this tattooed man has anything to do with
Kel y’s Dig?”
Angel sat upright. “Kelly’s Dig? Why would that involve
Tuck?”
“Oh come now,” Ernie said, snorting. “I don’t see a connec-
tion. After al , it’s just a dream.”
André said, “Dreams are funny things—but yes, enough said.”
Ernie agreed with a nod and took a long pull on his brandy.
33
“Kel y’s Dig,” Angel mused, curling her legs beneath her. “I
want to get working there immediately. It’ll be good for me.”
“Now, Angela,” Ernie said. “I think work should wait a few
weeks. I’ve arranged …”
“No. I need to work. It’ll keep my mind off … Tuck. Kelly’s
Dig is not the day-to-day at the university. That’ll help.”
André caught Ernie’s eye and nodded. “I agree with Ernie.
The university has already given you ample bereavement time. I
can handle the dig. You don’t need distractions. You need to
grieve.”
“Distractions?” Ernie sprang to the middle of the living room
and thrust an angry finger into André’s chest. “Distractions? Kel-
ly’s Dig is the key to the county’s historical future.”
“Please, Ernie,” Andre whispered. “Not now. Think of Angel.”
“If Tyler Byrd gets his way, he’ll pave over our entire legacy.
You Washington Bureaucrats only understand money.”
“Now hold on.” André met him nose-to-nose. “I work for the
court, too, Ernie. And my Washington credentials are why.”
“Ernie,” Angel said, “you know very well he’s the expert we
need. Shame on you.”
“Yes, yes, I’m sorry.” Ernie patted the air in surrender. “Of
course it’s your Smithsonian credentials. Kelly’s Dig frustrates
me. I’m sorry.”
“I’m sure it does,” André said. “I’m not saying you’re wrong.
It’s just not the time to be discussing Civil War cemeteries and
nineteenth-century skeletons.”
“Oh, dear.” Ernie looked at Angel and his eyes softened. “No,
of course not. Forgive me.”
34
“It’s al right.” Angel forced a smile. “But, Ernie, the time off
from the university will be good for me to work on Kel y’s Dig.
You understand—a new project and al . I’m not ready to face al
the faculty and students yet.”
André said, “We can talk about this in the morning—all of us.
Why don’t you run up to bed, Angela?”
“Yes, all right.”
“Do you need anything?” Ernie asked.
Angel tried to smile but failed miserably. “Bear is taking care
of Hercule. He said they’re done with the house—the crime scene
people I mean.”
“Shall I bring Hercule here?” Ernie asked. “Would you feel
better?”
“No, he’s fine—recuperating. Bear’s looking after the house.”
“All right, Dear.” Ernie hesitated before holding up his hand.
“There is one small thing.”
“What is it?”
“About Kelly’s Dig.” Ernie moved close and placed a gentle
hand on her shoulder. “I called the local medical examiner’s of-
fice about their final report on the skeletal remains. They sent it and some artifacts they unearthed to you. I was unaware the artifacts existed. I’d like to see them.”
“No, I don’t have anything,” Angel said. “Where did the M.E.
send it?”
“Where?”
“To my home or office?”
He shrugged. “I assumed your home. We agreed you wouldn’t
involve the university.”
35
“Wel , yes we did. But, the court sends papers to me there.”
“I see.” Ernie nodded. “You think it’s at the university then?”
“I don’t know.”
André said, “I’ll get it for you, Angela. I can swing by your of-
fice tomorrow. I’ll have Carmen find it.”
“That won’t be necessary.” Ernie waved his hand and gave
Angel a squeeze. “I’m in the same building. I’ll speak with Car-
men in the morning. She’ll be calling about you anyway.”
André shrugged. “Fine, I’ll be at Kelly’s Dig then. I’d like a
copy as wel , Ernie.”
“Certainly.”
André stepped between them and gave her a long, comforting
embrace. Ernie huffed and retreated to the mantel again. André
said, “Now, get some sleep. No more skeletons, Kel y’s Dig, or tattooed men.”
“Good night to both of you.”
“Dear,” Ernie said in a soft voice. “I hope you know that I was
very fond of Oliver.”
I hated that name. It reminded me of that sniveling little vag-
abond from Oliver Twist. I am more a Raymond Chandler or
Mickey Spil ane kind-of-guy. I lost the name “Oliver” in the first grade after my third playground fistfight.
“Tuck,” Angel said. “He hated being called Oliver.”
Ernie grinned. “I know.”
36
seven
I sat all night with Angel trying to talk to her, to reach her,
anything. Sometime after three in the morning, her tears suc-
cumbed to exhaustion and she fell asleep. I don’t know if I’d
reached her, but I wouldn’t stop trying until I did.
The next morning, I left her sleeping and went for a walk.
Strolling down Ernie’s half-mile gravel road, I stepped
through the looking glass back into my den. Hercule was no-
where around so I assumed he was up on our bed basking on my
pillow. That was his preferred place whenever I worked late at
night.
A disheveled blanket and pillow lay on the couch and I found
Bear sipping coffee in the kitchen. He checked his voicemail and
the Sheriff’s dispatch, then he poured more coffee. He penned
out a note to Angel telling her Hercule was okay and that Captain
Sutter released the house back to her. She could come home.
Crime scenes take time, but when a cop is killed, things move
37
faster. It also helps to have ten extra cops working the scene and being a priority at the crime lab.
For the third time in two days, he startled me.
On my front porch, he reached into his pocket and withdrew
his key ring. With a key I never knew existed, he locked my front
door. Then he walked to his cruiser outside the front gate and
drove away.
When did Bear Braddock get my front door key?
I felt the dizziness churn in my head again. Before I realized
it, I was sucked from the house onto the spook-express. I’m not
sure what happens when I’m pulled from here and sent to
there—wherever “there” ends up being. I seemed to go into time-
out. Sort of like when kids are bad. It was “time-out” and off to
their rooms. For me, it was an empty, dark place where I was
very, very alone. This time, however, it was momentary and
when the light surrounded me again, I was standing next to
Bear’s cruiser.
He was nowhere around.
I recognized the parking lot of the “Shenandoah View Fair-
ways” golf club. It was ten in the morning and a chil y fall day.
There were about five cars in the lot. Since Bear didn’t play golf, he was up to something.
What?
I found him standing beneath a rain shelter along some trees
three fairways away. He was arguing with a large man beside
him. The man seemed familiar but I couldn’t place him. His face
was round and puffy and he was built more for Greco-Roman
wrestling than golf. He had powerful, burly arms, and his bulky
38
body was stuffed into golf slacks and a sweater—his girth exceed-
ing his belt in the front. His features were tinted with a dark,
Mediterranean complexion. His hair was black and his eyes
shadowed by a thick, perpetual eyebrow. He reminded me of an
old movie thug collecting overdue debts. What a guy—part wres-
tler, part bagman.
Bear jabbed a finger at Mr. Sumo. “I told you to drop that. I
don’t want to hear that shit again.”
“Sure, sure, Bear,” Mr. Sumo said. “Whatever you say. But, lis-
ten, I’m just saying what’s on the street.”
“Forget rumors. I want your boss. I want him now.”
Mr. Sumo threw up his hands. “Fagget it. You know the rules.
I don’t give him up like that.”
“I want him. I need something to take the edge off. Funerals
make me grouchy and I got a big one coming.”
“He’s clean on that. I swear.”
“I don’t give a shit.”
“No, listen. The Man ain’t gonna whack no cop. Especially
one snoopin’ around him already. You nuts?”
“Did I mention Tuck? I’m talking about the other one.”