BRENDA NOVAK
DEAD GIVEAWAY
To Kendra DeSantolo, who supports me in everything I do. She reads my work and holds my feet to the fire until I get each story just right. She donates and shops at my annual online auction for diabetes research. She delivers food when I shut myself up in my house for days to finish a book (and my family is gone and I have nothing but a bag of almonds in my desk). She offers sage advice when I need input on various life subjects.
She notifies me of any bake sales in the area (I love bake sales). And she listens when I need to complain.
I’m glad she’s part of my life. She’s a true friend.
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Epilogue
Coming Next Month
1
Any coward can fight a battle when he’s sure of winning; but give me the man who has pluck to fight when he’s sure of losing.
—George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans)
English novelist 1819–80
They hadn’t meant to kil him. That should’ve mattered. It probably would have—in a different time, a different place.
But this was Stil water, Mississippi, and the only thing smal er than the town itself was the minds of the people living in it. They never forgot and they never forgave.
Nineteen years had passed since Reverend Barker disappeared, but they wanted someone to pay for the loss of their beloved preacher.
And they’d had their eye on Clay Montgomery from the beginning.
The only bit of luck that had gone his way was that, without a body, the police couldn’t prove Clay had done anything. But that didn’t stop them—and others—from constantly poking around his farm, asking questions, suggesting scenarios, attempting to piece together the past in hopes of solving the biggest mystery Stil water had ever known.
“Do you think someday he’l come back? Your step-daddy, I mean?” Beth Ann Cole plumped her pil ow and arranged one arm above her head.
Annoyance ripped through Clay despite the beautiful eyes that regarded him from beneath thick golden lashes.
Beth Ann hardly ever pressed him about his missing stepfather. She knew he’d show her the door. But he’d let her come over too much lately and she was beginning to overrate her value to him.
Without answering, he kicked off the blankets and began to get out of bed, only to have her grab hold of his arm.
“Wait, that’s it? Wham, bam, thank you, ma’am? You’re not usual y so selfish.”
“You didn’t have any complaints a minute ago,” he drawled, glancing pointedly over his shoulder at the claw marks she’d left on his back.
Her bottom lip jutted out. “I want more.”
“You always want more. Of everything. More than I’m wil ing to give.” He stared at the delicate white fingers clutching his darker forearm. Normal y, she would’ve recognized the warning in his expression and let him go.
Tonight, however, she went straight into her “how can you use me like this” mode, an act she put on whenever her impatience overcame her good sense.
The cloying sound of Beth Ann’s voice bothered Clay more than usual. Probably because he’d so recently had bad news. The police chief’s daughter, Al ie McCormick—a police officer herself—had returned to town. And she was asking questions.
Swal owing a curse, he rubbed his temples, trying to al eviate the beginnings of a headache.
The pounding only grew worse when Beth Ann’s voice rose. “Clay, are we ever gonna move beyond a physical relationship? Is sex al you’re interested in from me?”
BethAnn had a gorgeous body and occasional y used it to get what she wanted—and he knew what she wanted right now was him. She often wheedled or pouted, trying to coax him into a marriage proposal. But he didn’t love her, and she understood that, even if she liked to pretend otherwise. He rarely made the first move, hardly ever asked her out, never made any promises. He paid her way if they went anywhere, but that was a matter of courtesy, not a declaration of undying devotion. She initiated most of their contact.
He remembered the first time she’d come to his door.
From the day she’d moved to town nearly two years ago, she’d flirted with him whenever possible. She worked in the bakery of the local supermarket and did her damnedest to corner him the moment he crossed the threshold. But when he didn’t immediately fal and worship at her feet, like al the other single men in Stil water, she’d decided he was a chal enge worthy of her best efforts. One night, after a brief encounter at the store, during which she’d made some innuendo he’d purposely ignored, she’d appeared on his doorstep wearing a trench coat—and not a stitch of clothing underneath.
She knew he couldn’t ignore that. And he hadn’t. But at least he didn’t feel guilty about his involvement in her life.
Maybe she liked to act as though he was the sex fiend and she the benevolent provider, but after experiencing her voracious appetite over the past several months he had his own opinions about who’d become the provider.
“Let go of my arm,” he said.
Obviously uncertain, she blinked at the edge in his voice and released him. “I thought you were starting to care about me.”
Presenting his back to her, he pul ed on his jeans. Sex relaxed him, helped him sleep. Which was why he’d let his relationship with Beth Ann continue for so long. But they’d just made love twice, and he felt more wound up than ever.
He couldn’t stop thinking about Officer Al ie McCormick.
His sister Grace had told him she’d been a cold case detective in Chicago—a damn good one. Would she final y bring an end to it al ?
“Clay?”
Beth Ann was getting on his last nerve. “I think maybe it’s time we quit seeing each other,” he said as he yanked on a clean T-shirt.
When she didn’t answer, he turned to see her gaping at him.
“How can you say that?” she cried. “I asked one question. One!” She laughed in a manner meant to suggest that he’d completely overreacted. “You’re so jumpy.”
“My stepfather is not a subject I’m prepared to discuss.”
She opened her mouth, then seemed to reconsider what she was about to say. “Okay, I get it. I was tired and didn’t realize how much the subject would upset you. I’m sorry.”
She should’ve told him to go to hel and walked out.
He scowled. Although he’d tried to make it clear that he was the most emotional y unavailable man she’d probably ever meet, she was becoming attached. He didn’t understand how, but there it was, written al over her face.
He had to make a change. He wasn’t even wil ing to admit he had a heart, let alone open it to anyone. “Get dressed, okay?” he said.
“Clay, you don’t real y want me to leave, do you?”
He used to send her home as soon as they were finished, so there could be no confusion about the nature of their relationship. But the past few times they’d been together, she’d faked sleep and he’d let her stay the night.
Softening his stance had been a mistake. “I’ve got work to do, Beth Ann.”
“At one in the morning?”
“Always.”
“Come on, Clay. Stop being a grump. Get back into bed, and I’l give you a massage. I owe you for that dress you bought me.”
She grinned enticingly but with enough desperation to make his neck prickle. He should’ve said goodbye a month ago. “You don’t owe me anything. Forget me and be happy.”
Her eyebrows shot up. “If you want me to be happy, that means I matter to you.”
Determined to be completely honest—or at least retain his hard-ass image—he shook his head. “No one matters to me.”
As tears slipped down her cheeks, he silently cursed himself for not seeing this coming. Perhaps he’d relied too heavily on the fact that BethAnn wasn’t a particularly deep person. Anyway, she’d get over him as soon as some other man strol ed through the Piggly Wiggly.
“What about your sisters? You love them,” she said.
“You’d take a bul et for Grace or Mol y, even Madeline.”
What he’d done for his sisters was a case of too little, too late. But BethAnn wouldn’t understand that. She didn’t know what had happened that long-ago night. No one did, besides him, his mother and his two natural sisters. Even his stepsister Madeline, Reverend Barker’s only natural child, had no clue. She’d been living with them at the time, but as fate would have it, she’d spent that night at a girlfriend’s.
“That’s different,” he said.
Silence. Hurt. Then, “You’re an asshole, you know that?”
“Better than you do, I’m sure.”
When he wouldn’t give her a target, she drew herself up onto her knees. “You’ve been using me al along, haven’t you!”
“No more than you’ve been using me,” he replied calmly, and pul ed on his boots.
“I haven’t been using you! I want to marry you!”
“You only want what you can’t have.”
“That’s not true!”
“You knew what you were getting into from the start. I warned you before you ever peeled off that trench coat.”
She glanced wildly around the room as though stunned to recognize he was real y through with her. “But I thought…I thought that for me you might—”
“Stop it,” he said.
“No. Clay.” Climbing out of bed, she came toward him as if she’d wrap her arms around his neck and cling for dear life.
He put up a hand to stop her before she could reach him. Not even the sight of her ful breasts, swinging above her flat stomach and toned legs, could change his mind.
Part of him wanted to live and love like any other man. To have a family. But he felt empty inside. Dead. As dead as the man buried in his cel ar. “I’m sorry,” he said.
When she saw how little her pleading affected him, her top lip curled and her eyes hardened into shiny emeralds.
“You son of a bitch! You…you’re not going to get away with this. I…I’m going to…” She gave a desperate sob and lunged toward the nightstand, grabbing for the phone.
Because Beth Ann was so prone to histrionics, Clay guessed she was playing some kind of dramatic game, possibly hoping to get one of her many male admirers to drive over and pick her up, even though she had a car parked outside. He watched dispassionately. He didn’t care if she used the phone, as long as she left right afterward. This was a blow to her pride, not her heart, and it couldn’t have come as a surprise.
But she pressed only three buttons and, in the next second, screamed into the receiver: “Help! Police! Clay Montgomery’s trying to k-kil me! I know what he did to the rev—”
Crossing the room in three long strides, Clay wrenched the phone from her and slammed down the receiver. “Have you lost your mind?” he growled.
She was breathing hard. With her gleaming, frantic eyes and curly blond hair fal ing in tangles about her shoulders, she looked like an evil witch. No longer pretty.
“I hope they put you in prison,” she said, her voice a low, hateful murmur. “I hope they put you away for life!”
Scooping her clothes off the floor, she hurried into the hal , leaving Clay shaking his head. Evidently she didn’t grasp that she already had her wish. Maybe he wasn’t in a physical prison, but he was paying the price for what had happened nineteen years ago—and would be for the rest of his life.
Officer Al ie McCormick couldn’t believe what came through her police radio. Pul ing onto the shoulder of the empty country road she’d been patrol ing since midnight, she put her cruiser in Park. “What did you say?”
The county dispatcher final y swal owed whatever she had in her mouth. “I said I just got a cal from 10682 Old Barn Road.”
Al ie recognized the address. She’d seen it al over the case files she’d been studying since she and her six-year-old daughter had moved back to Stil water and in with her parents several weeks ago. “That’s the Montgomery farm.”
“There’s a possible 10–31 C in progress.”
“A homicide?”
“That’s what the cal er said.”
Al ie thought there might have been one murder committed on that property years ago—if the Reverend Barker hadn’t disappeared of his own volition. But there’d never been any proof.
This was probably a prank. Kids screwing around because of al the rumors that had circulated about Clay and his missing stepfather.
“Was it a man or woman you spoke to?”
“A woman. And she seemed damn convincing. She was so panicked I could barely understand her. Then the cal was disconnected.”
Shit. Skeptical or not, Al ie figured that couldn’t be good.
“I’m not far. I can be there in less than five minutes.” Peeling out, she raced down the road.
“You want me to rouse Hendricks for backup?” the dispatcher asked, stil on the line.
The other officer on graveyard wasn’t the best Al ie had ever worked with, but if there was trouble, he’d be better than nothing. “Might as wel try. I’l bet he’s sleeping at the station again, though. I caught him with his chin on his chest an hour ago, and once he’s out, an earthquake won’t raise him.”
“I could cal your dad at home.”
“No. Don’t bother him. If you can’t get Hendricks, I’l handle this on my own.” Hanging up, she flipped on her strobe lights to warn any vehicles she might encounter that she was in a hurry, but didn’t bother with the siren. Once she got near the farmhouse, she’d turn it on to let the panicking victim know that help had arrived. Until then, the noise would only rattle her nerves. She wasn’t completely comfortable being a street cop again. She was too rusty at the job. As a detective in Chicago, she’d spent the last seven years working mostly in an office, the past five in the cold case unit. But her divorce, and coming home so that she and her daughter would be closer to family, meant she’d had to make some sacrifices. Hitting the streets was one of them.
Rain began to plink against her windshield as she drove down Pine Road and hung a skidding left at the highway. It had been a wet spring, but she preferred it to the terrible humidity they were facing as June approached.
Staring intently at the shiny pavement ahead of her, she ignored the rapid swish, swish, swish of her windshield wipers, which were on high but beating only half as fast as her heart. “What’re you up to, Mr. Montgomery?” she muttered. She couldn’t imagine he was real y trying to kil anyone. Other than an occasional fistfight in the bar, Stil water had next to no violent crime. And Clay was a real loner. But, like everyone else in Stil water, she felt a little nervous around him. The Reverend Barker’s disappearance—an incident she clearly remembered—
was highly suspicious. She didn’t believe such a wel -
respected man, the community’s spiritual leader, would drive off without saying a word to anyone and without packing or withdrawing any money from his bank account.
No one would do that without good reason. And what reason, good or otherwise, could Barker have had to abandon his farm?
If he was alive, someone would’ve heard from him by now. He stil had plenty of family in town: a wife, a daughter, two stepdaughters, a stepson, a sister, a brother-in-law and two nephews.
His daughter Madeline—who, like Clay, was thirty-four, a year older than she was—was certain he’d met with foul play. But Madeline was equal y certain that her stepmother, stepsisters and stepbrother had nothing to do with it.
It made for an interesting mystery. One Al ie was determined to solve. For her own peace of mind. For Madeline, whom she’d known her whole life. For Barker’s nephew, Joe, who was pressing her to solve the case almost as hard as Madeline was. For the whole town.
Gravel spun as she arrived at the farm and whipped into the long driveway. She realized that the property looked far better than it had when Reverend Barker lived there. The junk he’d stacked al around—the rusty old appliances, flat tires, bits of scrap metal and other odds and ends—was gone. The house and buildings seemed to be in good repair. But she didn’t have time to look the place over very careful y. She was too busy flipping her siren on and off before coming to a halt.
Leaving her lights flashing, she jumped out of the car and hurried toward the front door, only to be intercepted by a woman wearing a pair of slacks unbuttoned at the waist and holding a shirt and purse to her bare chest. “There you are,” she cried, stumbling toward Al ie from the direction of the carport.
The woman appeared to be alone, so Al ie relaxed the hand she’d put on her gun and reached out to steady her. It was BethAnn Cole, who worked in the bakery at the Piggly Wiggly. Al ie had seen her several times. BethAnn wasn’t someone she—or anyone else—was likely to forget. Mostly because she had the kind of face and body people admired. Tal , elegant and model pretty, she had healthy, glowing skin, long blond hair and slanted, cat-green eyes.
“Tel me what’s going on,” she said.
Suddenly, the other woman was crying so hard she couldn’t speak.
“Try to get hold of yourself, okay?” Al ie used her “cop”
voice, hoping to cut through Beth Ann’s near hysteria, and it seemed to work.
“I—I’m cold,” she managed to say, glancing toward the house as if she was afraid Clay might come charging out after her. “C-can we sit in your car?”
“Of course.” Al ie didn’t hear or see anything that made her feel threatened, but until she knew exactly what had happened, she didn’t want to approach Clay. She’d never met a more difficult man to read. She’d gone to junior high and high school with him and had certainly noticed his swarthy good looks. But she’d never gotten close to him.
No one had. Even back then, he’d made it abundantly clear that he wasn’t interested in making friends.
If she waited, maybe her backup would arrive.
She helped Beth Ann to the passenger side. Then, once again checking to make sure Clay wasn’t about to spring out of the azalea bushes near the house, she slid behind the wheel.
After locking the doors and turning off her flashers, she twisted in her seat and studied the other woman as wel as she could in the dark. A floodlight attached to the barn had come on when she pul ed in, revealing BethAnn’s smudged mascara. But it had been activated by a motion sensor and chose that moment to go off, and Al ie didn’t want to turn on the car’s interior light until BethAnn was ful y dressed.
“Take a deep breath,” she said.
BethAnn sniffed and dashed a hand across her face, but more tears fol owed, so Al ie started with a simple question, trying to relax her. “How’d you get out here?”
“I drove.” She pointed to a green Toyota Avalon not far from where Al ie had parked. “That’s my car right there.”
“Do you have the keys?”
She nodded and sniffed again. “In my purse.”
Despite her desperation to escape, she’d been able to grab her purse? “What time was it when you got here?”
“About ten.”
“Are you the one who cal ed in the complaint?”
“Yes, he’s an…animal,” Beth Ann responded. She broke into sobs again but spoke disjointedly through them. “He—
he kil ed that reverend…guy everyone’s always talking about. The man…who’s been missing for…for so long.”
The hair rose on the back of Al ie’s arms. Beth Ann had stated it so matter-of-factly, as though she had no doubt.
And her words definitely supported the majority opinion.
“How do you know?”
She rocked back and forth, stil covering herself with her shirt but making no attempt to put it on. “He told me. He s-said if I d-didn’t shut up, he’d b-beat me to a bloody pulp, like he did his s-stepfather.”
Physical y at least, Clay was capable of beating just about anyone. Nearly six-four, he had a wel -defined body with shoulders broader than any Al ie had ever seen. The long grueling hours he worked maintaining a farm that should have taken two or more people to run kept him in shape.
But he hadn’t been very big at sixteen. He’d been a tal , lanky kid with a shock of shiny black hair and cobalt-blue eyes. When he wasn’t aware of being watched, he occasional y looked lost, even weary, yet he consistently resisted any and al kindness. He hadn’t fil ed out until after she’d gone to col ege—presumably in his early twenties.
“Did he explain how he kil ed his stepfather?” she asked.
“I told you. He—he beat him.” Much to Al ie’s relief, Beth Ann final y put on her shirt. Al ie had seen a lot in her days working for the law—more dead bodies than she cared to count—but having the very busty Beth Ann sitting next to her half-naked, and knowing she’d probably just left Clay’s bed, was a little too up-close and personal. There was no cushion of anonymity in Stil water.
“You’re tel ing me he kil ed Reverend Barker with his bare hands? At sixteen?” Now that Beth Ann was dressed, Al ie snapped on the interior light so she could read the nuances of the other woman’s expressions. But storm clouds covered the pale, waning moon outside, and the cabin light was too dim to banish al the shadows.
“He’s strong. You have no idea how strong he is.”
Al ie was familiar with Clay’s reputation. He’d broken a number of weight-lifting records in high school. But that was as a senior, when he’d had more meat on him, not as a skinny sophomore. “He might’ve weighed a hundred and sixty pounds at the time,” she pointed out.
Silence met the skepticism in her voice, then Beth Ann said, “Oh, I think he used a bat. Yeah, he used a bat.”
Something about this interview wasn’t right, but in an effort to avoid the kind of snap judgments that could sabotage a case, Al ie tried to go with it a little longer. If Beth Ann was tel ing the truth—and by now, she thought that was a pretty big if—what could Reverend Barker have done to cause Clay to take a bat to him? Had he grown too strict? Was his discipline too severe?
That was possible. Al ie remembered Barker as a particularly zealous preacher, and Clay had never been puritanical. He’d always liked women—there’d never been any shortage of females eager and wil ing to do whatever he wanted—and he’d been involved in a few fights. But he was kind to his mother and sisters. And, as far as she knew, he had no problems with drugs or alcohol.
“The police never found a murder weapon,” she said, hoping to draw more information out of Beth Ann.
“He must’ve gotten rid of it.”
“Did he tell you he used a bat?”
She glanced outside at the house. “No, but he must have.”
He must have… Al ie al owed herself a sigh. “When did Clay make this confession to you?”
“A…a few weeks ago.”
“Did you tel anyone?”
“No.”
The rain began to fal harder, drumming against the hood of the car and making the air smel of wet vegetation.
“What about your mother or father? A friend?”
“I didn’t talk about it. I—I was too afraid of him.”
“I see,” Al ie said. But she didn’t see at al . Beth Ann had shown no fear of Clay when Al ie had seen them together at church last Sunday. On the contrary, Beth Ann had touched him at every opportunity, clung to him like lint, even though he’d continual y brushed her off. “And you came out here tonight, although you’re afraid of him, because…” She let the sentence dangle.
“I’m in love with him.”
“But…”
“He attacked me!”
“What precipitated the attack?”
“We…had an argument.”
Al ie said nothing, merely waited for Beth Ann to continue. General y, people kept talking when the silence in a conversation stretched, often revealing more than they intended to. Sometimes it was the best way to reach the truth.
“I—I told him I was pregnant.” She wiped at a tear. “He…
insisted I get an abortion. When I refused, he started slapping me around.”
It was difficult to tel in the eerie glow of the interior light, but Al ie couldn’t see anything more than smeared makeup on Beth Ann’s face. There was certainly no blood. And she was calmer relating this part of the story, which should have evoked more emotion, not less. “Where?”
“In the house.”
“No, I mean, where did he hit you?”
Beth Ann made a vague motion with her hands.
“Everywhere. He wanted to kil me!”
Al ie cleared her throat. She wasn’t sure how she felt about Clay Montgomery, but he’d been pretty tight-lipped over the past two decades. She doubted he’d suddenly divulge his culpability in a capital crime to someone like Beth Ann, and then let her run straight to the police.
Besides, if he’d real y wanted to hurt her, she wouldn’t be sitting here safe and sound—in his driveway, no less. By her own admission, BethAnn had her car and her keys. Yet she’d chosen to wait for Al ie instead of speeding away from danger. “How did you manage to escape him?”
“I—I don’t know,” she said. “It’s al a blur.”
Al ie pursed her lips. Apparently only Clay’s confession was crystal clear.
Grabbing the notepad she kept in her car, she scribbled down Beth Ann’s exact words. Then she peered thoughtful y outside. “Stay here. I’d like to hear what Mr. Montgomery has to say. Afterward, you can fol ow me downtown and give me a sworn statement. Unless you feel you need to go to the hospital first,” she added, her hand on the door latch.
Beth Ann ignored the hospital suggestion. “A sworn statement?”
“Attempted murder is no smal crime, Ms. Cole. You want the D.A. to press charges, don’t you?”
Beth Ann tucked her hair behind her ears. “I—I think so.”
“You told me he assaulted you. That he tried to kil you.”
“He did. See this?” Beth Ann shoved out her arm.
Al ie saw a superficial wound that resembled claw marks. Hardly the type of damage she would’ve expected Clay to inflict. In a fight, a man typical y aimed for the face or midsection. But it was her job to document the injury, just in case. “We’l get pictures of that. Do you have any other scrapes, cuts or bruises?”
“No.”
“And yet he hit you how many times?”
“I guess he didn’t hit me that hard,” she replied, retracting what she’d said earlier. “He grazed me with his nails when I was trying to get away. It frightened me more than it hurt me.”
An accidental scratch was a far cry from attempted murder. “What about his confession? Did you remember that correctly?”
“Yes. Of course.”
Al ie had her doubts there, too. “You’l swear to it?”
Beth Ann stared at the house. “Wil he go to jail if I do?”
“Would it make you happy if he did?”
“Me and almost everyone else in this town.”
Al ie hesitated before answering. “If what you say is true, prison is a possibility. But your story would require corroboration. Can you offer any supporting evidence?”
“Like what?”
“The location of Reverend Barker’s body? The location of Reverend Barker’s car? The murder weapon? A taped or signed confession?”
“No, but Clay told me he kil ed him. I heard it with my own ears.”
Al ie didn’t believe a word of it. She didn’t even believe Beth Ann had been attacked. But, because it was stil smart to be cautious, she radioed dispatch to see if her backup was en route.
“I couldn’t reach Hendricks,” the dispatcher told her. “Are you sure you don’t want me to wake your father?”
Al ie flipped off the interior light and considered the quiet farm. Getting soaked seemed to be the only threat she faced. “No, I’l take care of it. If you don’t hear from me in fifteen minutes or so, go ahead and rouse someone.”
“You got it.”
Adjusting the gun on her belt, Al ie hung up and stepped out of the car. “Sit tight and lock the doors.”
“What wil you tel Clay?” Beth Ann asked.
“Exactly what you told me.”
BethAnn stopped her from closing the door. “Why? He’l just deny it. And you can’t trust someone with his reputation.”
Al ie didn’t respond. She knew there’d be plenty of people wil ing and eager to put Clay away based on such flimsy testimony. But she wasn’t one of them. She wanted the truth. And she was going to use everything she’d ever learned about solving cold cases to find it.
2
Clay took his time answering her knock. Al ie knew he must have heard the siren when she pul ed up, must have known that she and Beth Ann had been sitting in his driveway. And yet the only clue that he’d paid them any mind at al was the subtle movement of a curtain in the bedroom overlooking the front yard as she’d approached the house.
When he final y opened the door, he was dressed in a clean T-shirt, a pair of faded jeans that molded comfortably to his long legs, and work boots. If he was concerned or upset, he didn’t give himself away. But then, Clay Montgomery rarely revealed his emotions. He came across as brooding and uncommunicative, just like always.
Or maybe not always. According to the files, which included statements from everyone even remotely connected to Reverend Barker, Clay had once been a popular and fun-loving kid. Although Al ie hadn’t become ful y aware of his existence until the scandal broke, there were plenty of folks who remembered him from when he’d first come to town, right after the widowed reverend married Irene and moved her little family from neighboring Boonevil e to the farm. Those statements also said that Clay hadn’t changed into the very guarded person he was now until after his stepfather disappeared.
Which definitely left room for conjecture.
“What do you want?” he asked without preamble.
Al ie had seen Clay around town once or twice since she’d been back, but he’d acted as if she didn’t exist. Not that she’d expected him to take special notice of her. Only five foot three and barely a hundred and five pounds, she had a smal , compact body—a tomboy’s body—with dark hair that she’d recently cut into a very short style and brown eyes. Being athletic was a plus. But she had rather smal breasts and wore a badge. She couldn’t imagine that was a lot to recommend her to a man like Clay Montgomery, who socialized with bombshel s like Beth Ann and hated the police with a passion. Even minus the uniform, she doubted she’d ever turn his head. Despite his dubious past, he could have almost any woman he wanted. He possessed more sex appeal than a man had a right to. And he had a reputation for remaining just a hairbreadth out of reach.
For many, the chal enge proved irresistible. But Al ie knew better than to let anything about him appeal to her.
Maybe other women liked moody men, but she’d already made the mistake of getting involved with one.
Stil , she couldn’t help admiring the thick black hair that fel across Clay’s forehead, the nose that was, perhaps, a touch too wide, the prominent jaw. Every feature was intensely masculine, except his eyes. Fringed with the longest lashes she’d ever seen, they held a world of secrets. And, possibly, pain.
“I have a woman in the car who claims you assaulted her,” she said.
His gaze slid to the cruiser but he said nothing.
“You don’t have a response to that?”
The forbidding expression on his face made Al ie realize why most people chose to leave him alone. Beyond his impressive height and massive shoulders, he could shrivel a person with one glance. “Does she look like I assaulted her?”
“Tough to tel in the dark.”
“Then let me help you out—she’s lying.”
“So what are you saying? You didn’t touch her?”
Although she knew he wasn’t doing it on purpose, his muscles bulged conspicuously as he folded his arms and leaned against the doorjamb. “Is that a trick question, Officer?”
“Excuse me?”
He lifted one shoulder in a careless motion. “Sure, I touched her—in al the places she wanted me to touch her.
We weren’t playing checkers. But I didn’t hurt her.”
Normal y when a suspect made that kind of statement, it registered only in the cognitive part of Al ie’s brain. She was good at gathering facts, reconstructing the circumstances surrounding a crime, solving puzzles. But working in her hometown where she knew almost everyone made police work so much more personal. Clay’s comment evoked images she’d rather not see.
Wetting her lips, she quickly steered her focus back where she needed it to be. Because of who Clay was, and the number of people in Stil water who’d love to see him behind bars, this was a more sensitive situation than it would’ve been otherwise. She didn’t want to screw up—for his sake, more than anyone else’s, although she doubted he’d believe she had his best interests at heart.
“Is it true that you and Beth Ann argued about the baby?”
she asked.
“What baby?”
Confederate jasimine scaled the lattice on both ends of his porch. Al ie could smel its sweet scent despite the rain.
“She didn’t tel you she’s pregnant?”
The word made him rock back as if she’d just landed a solid right hook. Even Clay had his limits, because he wasn’t able to prevent the abject terror that flooded his face. “What?”
“She said you demanded she get an abortion.”
“That’s bul shit!” he shouted, and if Al ie hadn’t stepped in front of him, he probably would’ve charged out to the cruiser. “Bring her back here. She can’t be pregnant.”
Al ie arched her eyebrows. “You weren’t playing checkers….”
“We might’ve had…but we never—” He raked his fingers through his hair. “Hel , what we did or didn’t do is none of your damn business. I’l handle this.”
“I’m afraid it is my business,” she said, refusing to back down. “Beth Ann said—”
“She’s making it up!”
“Perhaps. But I have to investigate her story al the same.”
His nostrils flared, but he seemed to rethink his bel igerent attitude. “Okay, how specific do you want me to get?” he asked. “She was on the Pil , and I’m religious about using a condom. But we didn’t always do it the conventional way. She liked it best when I used my mouth.
Or sometimes I’d get her off by—”
“That’s enough,” Al ie said, hating the blush she could feel creeping up her neck. She knew he’d been trying to singe her ears, to punish her for treading where she didn’t belong, and hated giving him visual proof that he’d succeeded. But she was human and not completely at ease discussing the sex habits of such a private—and virile—
man.
“Would you say it’s possible she hasn’t been taking her pil s?” Somehow Al ie managed to maintain eye contact despite the extremely personal nature of her question.
“Maybe. But not likely. She wouldn’t get pregnant on purpose.”
He said that with absolute certainty, but Al ie could tel his mind was frantical y racing through possibilities. He seemed so panicked, she almost felt sorry for him.
“Because…”
“Because she wouldn’t want to be saddled with a baby and no husband to take care of her. She knows I don’t love her. I’ve never led her to believe otherwise.”
“Maybe she thought a baby would make you change your mind.”
“God.” He pinched the bridge of his nose.
“Mr. Montgomery?”
Dropping his hand, he sighed as he met her eyes. “I want a pregnancy test. Tonight.”
“I can’t force her to take one.”
“Of course not,” he said dryly. “You wouldn’t want to invade anyone else’s privacy. Why break with tradition?”
Al ie let the verbal jab go because he had a point. The police and others had sometimes pressed him too hard. “I can’t force her,” she explained, “but I wil tel you that if her other claims serve as any indication of her truthfulness in general, I don’t think she’s pregnant.”
At this, his eyebrows drew together, and he studied her more closely. Al ie got the impression he was so used to being bul ied by police that he couldn’t believe she’d offer even this smal amount of comfort. He seemed to suspect her of laying a trap for him, of trying to gain his trust so she could stab him in the back. “We didn’t argue over anything like that,” he insisted.
“But you did argue.”
“I asked her to leave. It’s my house. I should have that prerogative.”
“Would you do me a favor, Mr. Montgomery?”
“What’s that?” he asked, continuing to search her face.
“Wil you show me your hands?”
His expression darkened as if he’d final y guessed her motive. “No.”
“Mr. Montgomery—”
“I grow cotton, Officer McCormick. I rebuild antique cars.
I fix my own tractors and repair my own house, barn and outbuildings. In other words, I use my hands. A lot. They’re not going to look like some pencil-pusher’s from the big city. I won’t let you use a knick here or a cut there as proof that I struck her.”
The fact that he’d cal ed her Officer McCormick without even glancing at her badge told Al ie he’d known al along who she was. They hadn’t exchanged a word since she’d been back, but his familiarity with her didn’t come as any big surprise. Word traveled fast in Stil water.
“I’m not unrealistic, Mr. Montgomery,” she assured him.
“Beth Ann has accused you of a very serious crime, and it’s my job to see if that accusation has any basis.”
“And if I refuse to cooperate?”
“It might raise my suspicions.”
“Which would affect the situation in what way, exactly?”
She lifted her chin at the chal enge in his voice. It wasn’t much, but it was al she could do to overcome his tremendous height advantage. “I might have to arrest you and take you down to the station.”
“You and what army?” he asked, his eyes narrowing at the threat.
She smiled sweetly. “Trust me. I could arrange it.”
“I’d get an attorney,” he countered. “I happen to know a good one.”
He was referring to his sister Grace, of course, who’d worked as an assistant district attorney in Jackson before moving back to Stil water nine months ago. “That’s your choice,” Al ie said as amiably as possible. “Grace can join us. But if I remember right, she’s about to deliver a baby.
Do you real y want to wake her in the middle of the night and ask her to come out in the rain? It won’t make any difference in the end, you know. I’l see what I want to see.
It’l just take longer.”
The muscle that flexed in his cheek told her what he thought of her response. He didn’t like being cornered. He reminded her of a lion trapped inside a smal cage, a lion that paced back and forth, resenting his captivity.
After another long, defiant stare, Clay shrugged and thrust his hands at her. “I have nothing to hide.”
Al ie checked his palms, then turned his hands over and examined the backs.
“So, did I beat a defenseless woman?” he asked sarcastical y. “A woman who has no injuries?”
Al ie noticed a few cal uses and cuts, but no more than she’d expect to find on a man who worked outdoors. “I want pictures.”
“For what?”
“Proof.”
“I didn’t hit her!”
“A picture would show that your knuckles aren’t swol en and that your nails are too short to have made the gouges on her arm.”
He hesitated, obviously stil skeptical that she was on his side. “There aren’t any gouges on her arm.”
“There are now,” she said. Even if Beth Ann’s injuries were self-inflicted, as Al ie suspected, there were other people who might try to use those marks to pressure the D.
A. into building a case against Clay. Reverend Barker’s nephew was one of them. Joe Vincel i hated the Montgomerys—and he had powerful friends. “Beth Ann’s a bit…undecided about what real y happened. But that doesn’t mean Mr. Harris can’t press charges if he chooses to. Now…” Al ie was reluctant to move any closer to Clay but she inched forward to avoid the rain dripping down her col ar. “Would you please remove your shirt?”
“What?” he said as though she was out of her mind.
Where was Hendricks? she wondered. This would be easier if she had a male officer with her. “I think you heard me.”
“Why?”
“For the same reason I wanted to see your hands.”
She expected him to refuse her again. Al owing her to be in charge ran contrary to his nature. But he didn’t.
Instead, he riveted his blue eyes on hers, and his sensuous lips curved in a devilish grin. “After you,” he said.
Obviously, he was changing tactics. The best defense was a good offense and al that. But she refused to let him rattle her. “I’m convinced you’ve seen much more than I have to offer,” she said. “I’m hardly centerfold material.”
“Maybe I like my women smal .”
She conjured up a prudish expression. “If you don’t mind, I’m in a bit of a hurry.”
He glanced in the direction of her cruiser, and she knew he’d probably find it demeaning to be examined in front of his accuser.
Damn Hendricks.
“We could go inside, if you prefer,” she said politely.
“Shouldn’t you get rid of her first? In case you decide to stay?” His suggestive smile indicated that he was stil trying to make her as uncomfortable as possible.
“She’s fine where she is. I’m pretty sure I’l be able to control myself.”
Chuckling, he sauntered into the house as if he didn’t care, but she knew he did. The way he sobered the moment they were safe from Beth Ann’s prying eyes told her that much.
“Is this real y necessary?” he asked softly and there was a hint of desperation in his voice.
After al the police interest he’d endured, Al ie had little doubt he wanted to be left alone. But, for some reason, getting visual proof of his innocence was important to her.
Word of what had happened tonight could provoke some strong reactions, and she’d always been a sucker when it came to the underdog.
Why she thought of Clay as the underdog she had no idea. Except that public opinion was already stacked against him, and he never tried to change it. He was his own worst enemy.
“If I specify in my report that your hands and body show no signs of an altercation, the district attorney wil be much less likely to take action.”
“There wasn’t an altercation! Al I did was end the relationship.”
It was the past that made the situation volatile. But Al ie didn’t want to tel Clay that Beth Ann had claimed he’d confessed to Reverend Barker’s murder. If he wasn’t angry enough already that could do the trick. Why provoke a confrontation between them while they were in such proximity? She’d simply add Beth Ann’s statement to the file, where it’d join the plethora of other unsubstantiated claims Al ie planned to investigate—slowly and methodical y. “It’s for your own protection, Mr. Montgomery.”
She wasn’t sure he real y believed her but, with a nod that seemed incongruously boyish for such a strong man, he pul ed off his shirt.
Al ie had never seen a more beautiful example of the male body. A gold medal ion hung around his neck, fitting nicely in the groove between his pectoral muscles. It appeared to be a tribute to a Catholic saint, which surprised her. She didn’t think of him as particularly religious.
Their eyes met and, for a moment, she was afraid he could read her grudging appreciation of his looks.
“For a cop, you don’t seem very comfortable with some of the stuff you have to do,” he murmured, and this time al the bul shit was gone from his voice. The “I don’t give a damn what you do to me” and the “I’m too tough to care.”
He’d ditched the whole “screw the world” routine.
“My forte is dead bodies, not live ones,” she said.
“Surely live ones are more fun.”
He was flirting again, but she could tel he didn’t mean anything by it. He was probably searching for a way to keep his mind off the indignity of being inspected like an animal.
“Maybe,” she said. “But they’re also a lot more threatening.”
His good humor slipped away. “I didn’t hurt her.”
“I’m not talking about that kind of threat.” She touched his arm to get him to turn around, but he wouldn’t budge.
“If I was beating a woman, and she was fending me off, the marks would be on my face, neck and chest,” he said.
She saw no evidence of a struggle. But his reluctance to show her his back made her curious to know the reason.
“There are a few exceptions.” She gave his arm another tug.
“I’ve shown you enough,” he argued. But she insisted he turn around and when he complied, she saw what he hadn’t wanted her to see: several scratches, al of them fresh.
“I take it you got these tonight?” she asked.
He shot her a sul en glance over his shoulder. “Not from fighting.”
Right. Judging by the direction and angle of the scratches, Al ie could easily guess what he and Beth Ann had been doing at the time. He’d already painted her a very vivid picture.
Relieved to be finished, she stepped away from him.
“Thank you. If you’d like to meet me down at the station after I’m done with Beth Ann, I can take a few photographs, to show that you’re in great shape.” She blushed when she realized how her words could be interpreted, and hurried to clarify. “I mean, free from any injury that would show you’ve been in a fight.”
He didn’t acknowledge her slip. “Do you believe me?”
he asked.
“It doesn’t matter what I believe. I’m just going to document the facts. The district attorney wil draw his own conclusions. If you’re wil ing to play the odds that my notes wil be enough of a defense if Beth Ann doesn’t back down from her story, there’s no need to come to the station.
Otherwise—”
“Al ie.”
She blinked. She’d had no idea he knew her first name.
“What?”
“I’ve never struck a woman. Do you believe me when I say I didn’t hit her?”
She stared up at him, weighing her instincts. She’d been trying not to make any judgments one way or the other, to simply do her job. But it was Beth Ann’s words that had rung false, not Clay’s. She thought maybe he needed to hear that from someone in uniform.
“I do,” she admitted. Then she walked out.
Clay sat at his kitchen table, listening to the clock tick above the stove while tel ing himself that he didn’t need to go down to the police station. BethAnn’s charges were completely unfounded. Al ie McCormick had said she believed him. But he had little faith that she’d stick by her words if her father or anyone else read the facts differently.
Why would she? Clay knew the night’s events couldn’t have reflected wel on him. The hysterical woman cal ing from his house. The marks on his back. BethAnn’s assertion that she was pregnant and that he’d demanded she get an abortion.
It was humiliating. He was almost positive Beth Ann wasn’t pregnant, or she would’ve told him—to stop him from breaking off the relationship. She was manipulative enough to use that bargaining chip if she possessed it. But this scare convinced him that he wanted no more women in his life. He couldn’t even have casual relationships without regretting it.
“Shit,” he muttered and stood to col ect his keys. He’d go down and let Officer McCormick take her damn photos.
Stripping off his shirt and revealing Beth Ann’s nail marks couldn’t be any more demeaning the second time around.
He owed it to his sisters and mother to clean up the mess he’d made.
Anything to deflect interest. Anything to make Beth Ann’s accusations fade away so he wouldn’t draw any more unwanted attention.
Anything to make up for the past.
Al ie hadn’t expected Clay to show up, so she was more than a little surprised when he strode into the police station at nearly three o’clock in the morning. Beth Ann had left a few minutes earlier, and Hendricks had final y dragged his lazy butt out on patrol.
Which meant that, once again, she was alone with Clay.
“Mr. Montgomery.” She assumed he’d tel her to cal him by his first name. They were nearly the same age, had gone to school together. But he didn’t.
“Officer McCormick.”
She’d been about to pour herself a cup of coffee, but set the pot aside instead. “I’m glad you’re here.”
“You got your camera ready?” he asked.
“I do,” she said and retrieved it from her desk.
“Then let’s get this over with.”
She snapped photographs of his hands. Then he stripped off his T-shirt and she took several pictures of his face, chest and arms. When she purposely neglected to take pictures of his back, he raised an eyebrow. “That’s it?”
“That’s it.”
“So…is this going to blow over?” he asked hopeful y, pul ing his T-shirt on over his head.
Even with Beth Ann no longer on-site, Al ie felt reluctant to discuss his al eged murder confession with him. Mostly because, regardless of what Beth Ann had said, she wasn’t prepared to point a finger at Clay or anyone else. She needed proof, forensic proof, not circumstances and hearsay. And she was good enough to find it. Eventual y.
But eventual y wasn’t now, and it was only a matter of hours before he heard what Beth Ann had told her.
Especial y since Hendricks knew. The other officer had listened avidly to every word Beth Ann had said. If Al ie didn’t tel Clay herself, he’d probably feel as if she’d duped him in some way, and she saw no reason to alienate anyone involved in the case. She’d learned long ago that help often came from unexpected places. “I don’t think there are grounds for an attempted murder charge, if that’s what you mean.”
She let him know by the tone of her voice that there was more, and he didn’t miss the inflection.
Standing with his legs spread a shoulder width apart, he folded his arms. “Somehow I’m getting the impression I’m not completely off the hook.”
Al ie sat on the edge of her desk. “Not quite.”
The shuttered look returned to his face but not before Al ie saw a hint of the underlying weariness she’d occasional y noticed before. “Feel free to explain anytime,”
he said.
“She says you kil ed your stepfather.”
He seemed unaffected. “A lot of people say that.”
“She’s claiming you admitted it to her.” Al ie clasped her hands together, knowing, if he was innocent, how terrible Beth Ann’s words must feel. “She just signed a statement to that effect,” she added gently.
Al ie had thought he’d get angry and hol er, as he had about the pregnancy that might or might not be real. But he just stared at her—or, more accurately, stared through her.
“I didn’t confess anything,” he told her at last.
“That doesn’t mean you’re innocent of the murder,” she said, to gauge his reaction.
His chest lifted and fel again. “It doesn’t prove the opposite, either.”
Al ie’s question hadn’t rattled him into revealing more than he wanted to. She could tel by his response that he already knew Beth Ann’s statement wasn’t as incriminating as his enemies would like to think. So she played it straight.
“What’s real y going on? Is she out to get you?”
“Of course. And she’s not the only one.”
“That’s the problem, isn’t it?” she said. “Fortunately, I intend to discover the truth.”
He picked up the picture of Whitney, which she kept on her desk. “What I’ve heard is true, then?”
“What have you heard?”
“That you’re determined to find out what happened to my missing stepfather.”
She waited until he looked back at her to answer.
“Madeline has requested my help. We’ve known each other since high school, socialized a bit in the past. I’d like to bring her some closure, if I can.”
He returned the photograph to her desk. “Madeline stil believes her father is alive.”
“What do you believe?” she asked.
“I believe nineteen years is a long time. It won’t be easy to find anything.”
Was that wishful thinking on his part? Or was he merely stating a fact? “I’ve solved older cases.”
“I’m guessing those cases had some forensic evidence.
There is no evidence here. Plenty of other people have tried to find it and failed, including your father.”
“I have tools the police didn’t possess back then.”
“That’s hopeful,” he said, but the slight twist to his mouth made Al ie wonder if he was being sarcastic.
“If your stepfather’s dead, wouldn’t you like to see his kil er brought to justice?” she asked.
The expression on his face gave nothing away. “I’m al for justice,” he said, his voice completely deadpan.
“What are you doing, waking me up so early? It’s barely seven!”
Only five foot two—but with a bustline to rival Dol y Parton’s—Clay’s mother hid behind the door of her little duplex, which she’d recently begun to redecorate. It was becoming so cluttered with new rugs and furniture, paintings and knickknacks, Clay couldn’t help worrying that others would soon suspect what he already knew. Irene obviously wasn’t buying such expensive items with the money she made working at the dress shop. She told everyone she’d gotten a raise, but even an idiot would guess she couldn’t be making that much.
“Considering I get up at four most mornings—” and that he hadn’t slept at al last night “—I don’t feel too sorry for you,” he said. Especial y because he knew she wasn’t real y grumbling about being dragged out of bed. She hated anyone to catch her before she could “get her face on,” as she put it. Even him. He could count on one hand the number of times he’d seen his mother without the thick mascara she wore on her lashes and the deep red lipstick she put on her lips. “Are you going to let me in or not?”
“Of course.” She tightened her bathrobe, then patted her dark hair, which she usual y backcombed, before stepping to the side. “What’s gotten into you, anyway? What’s wrong?”
He barely fit inside the cluttered room. Since he’d last been over a month ago, his mother had acquired a new leather couch, two lamps, a big-screen TV and some sort of fancy tea cart.
“Tel me you quit seeing him,” he said the moment she closed the door.
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” she responded, but she wouldn’t look him in the eye.
The gardenia scent of her perfume lingered as she headed straight to the kitchen, which had been remodeled so that it opened directly into the living room. “Would you like some coffee? I have the most delicious blend.”
Gourmet coffee. Al ie’s father was sure taking care of her. “Do you realize what you’re doing?” he asked in amazement, fol owing her. “Do you know what you’re risking?”
“Stop it,” she replied. “I’m living, like everyone else.”
She was living, al right—in denial. Most of the time, her unwil ingness to acknowledge what had happened to Barker was harmless enough. As long as Clay was around to take care of her and his sisters, he figured everything would be okay. He wanted them to be happy…and to forget. That was why he stayed on the farm. That was why he diligently guarded any evidence to be found there. So they could have the kind of life he wanted for them. But if Irene refused to listen, al his efforts could soon be for nothing. “Al ie McCormick is working on Lee’s disappearance,” he told her.
She revealed no visible sign of distress. “Not official y.”
“That doesn’t matter. She used to be a cold case detective. She’s trained in forensics.”
“I know.” She continued to make coffee. “She’s an excel ent police officer, just like her father.”
The proud note in his mother’s voice made Clay’s jaw drop. “What?”
“Grace told me al about her,” she said. “But don’t worry.
Al ie’s been through a painful divorce. She’s lonely and bored, so it’s natural that she’d want to poke around a bit.
What else is there for a crack detective to do in a one-horse town like this? She’l grow bored with it eventual y.”
“Bored,” he repeated, unbelieving.
“It’s Madeline who’s egging her on, you know.”
“Al ie’s not just toying with this case, Mother. Unless I completely misread her, and I don’t think I did, she’s serious about locating your husband—or what’s left of him.
That doesn’t concern you?”
He knew he should add that Beth Ann’s accusations wouldn’t help matters. After last night, Al ie had to be more curious about him and the case than ever. But he’d been stupid to al ow himself to fal into the mess his relationship with Beth Ann had become, and he was ashamed to have put his mother and sisters at risk.
Irene turned her back to him while she sealed the smal package of gourmet coffee. “Why should anything Al ie does concern me?” she asked. “What happened was in another lifetime. Like I’ve told Grace over and over, that’s al behind us now. Why won’t anyone let me forget and enjoy what’s left of my life?”
“You’re happy settling for a married man?” he asked. “A man who can only see you on the sly? Who can’t acknowledge you in public?”
“He treats me better than any man ever has!” she spat, her eyes sparking in a rare display of temper. “Look at this lovely robe he gave me. Look at this place. Final y, I’m in love with someone who loves me back, someone who knows how to treat a woman.”
Clay hated the guilt that wel ed up inside him when he thought of his mother being satisfied with so little. It was largely his fault she’d gone through what she had during the past two decades. If only he’d done as she’d told him that night and stayed home with Grace and Mol y. But he’d been sixteen years old—too innocent to conceive of the possibilities, too young to understand the threat his mother had begun to sense. “Mom, it’d ruin him if anyone found out about the two of you. He’s the chief of police, for God’s sake!”
“No one’s going to find out.”
“You don’t know that. How long do you think you can sneak around before someone begins to suspect? To watch you more closely? Grace and I guessed the truth, didn’t we?”
“Did you tel Mol y?”
“No.” Fortunately, his youngest sister had moved away when she went to col ege and never returned to Stil water.
They heard from her often—she also came to visit two or three times a year—but more than any of them, she’d managed to put the past behind her.
“Wel , even if you didn’t tel her, I bet Grace did,” she said.
Clay knew that was true. Somehow, though, they’d been able to keep it from Madeline. “You have to give him up.
We have enough to hide already.”
“I’m not seeing him anymore,” she said in a sulky voice.
He wanted to let it go at that and hope for the best. But with Al ie nosing around, he needed more of a commitment.
“If you haven’t left him yet, make sure you do.”
“Easy for you to say,” she grumbled.
“Not as easy as you think. Anyway, consider the people who’l be hurt if you don’t. I know you care about that.”
Irene slammed the cupboard shut. “It’s okay if I’m the one who’s hurt?”
“He’s married! You don’t have any real claim on him!”
“It’s not as if I planned for this. It just…happened.
Sometimes marriages fal apart.”
“As far as we know, his marriage is fine. It’s his libido that’s leading him into trouble.”
“Stop it!” she cried. “Stop treating me like I’m a tramp!”
He wanted to tel her to quit acting like one. But he couldn’t be that disrespectful. Besides, he could almost understand why she’d fal en for Chief McCormick. Both the men she’d married had mistreated her. But Dale was a kind man who lavished her with gifts and attention.
“Mom, if Al ie finds out, she’l be determined to prove that we’re responsible for Reverend Barker’s murder. What better revenge would there be?”
The scent of coffee fil ed the room. “Dale and I haven’t been together since Al ie came back,” she grumbled.
Clay studied her, wondering if that was true. Judging from her expression, he decided it probably was. “That’s good. But you’re planning to be with him as soon as you get the chance, right?”
“No.”
He didn’t believe her. Without a definite breakup, he knew a relationship like theirs could go on for years.
“You’ve got to tel him you can’t see him anymore.”
Tears wel ed up in Irene’s eyes as she came toward him. Seeing her cry made Clay wish he could tel her everything would be okay. But he couldn’t. If Chief McCormick left his wife for Irene, the whole town would be out to get her. They’d never liked her much to begin with—
thanks to Reverend Barker. He’d isolated her right from the start by refusing to let her go anywhere except church events. He’d also taken every opportunity to imply that he’d made a mistake when he married her, that he was now saddled with a wife who was too flighty, lazy, vain—a cross for him to bear. Occasional y, he’d even criticized her in subtle, demeaning ways from the pulpit. And his parishioners had bought every word. After al , he’d had a history in this place—land, family, friends and the il usion of purity. Irene had had nothing, except the hope of a better life.
A hope the man behind the pious mask had quickly dashed.
But no one else knew that man. Not like the Montgomerys did.
“I’m sorry,” Clay said softly. “You don’t have a choice.
Not real y. You know that, don’t you?”
She swiped at the tears spil ing down her cheeks. “Yes.”
3
“Mommy…Mommy…”
Her daughter’s voice and smal hand, jiggling her shoulder, came to Al ie as if through a fog, waking her that afternoon. She was stil tired—she’d gone to bed only five hours earlier, after getting Whitney off to school—but she struggled to open her eyes. She wanted to be available to her child as much as possible. That was why she’d moved back to Stil water, taken a cut in pay and accepted the night shift.
“Who’s this?” Whitney asked.
Squinting to see clearly in the light filtering through a crack in the blinds, Al ie focused on the object her daughter was trying to show her. “What do you have there, sweetheart?”
“It’s a picture,” she said, confusion etching a frown on her soft, round face.
“Of who?”
“A man.”
The sleepiness Al ie had felt a moment ago fel away as she realized her daughter was holding a photo of Clay Montgomery. Al ie had brought his file home, hoping to finish her report on last night’s events. Whitney must have been going through the box she used to transfer work back and forth.
“No one you know,” she said in a careless tone.
Her daughter wrinkled up her nose. “Why isn’t he wearing any clothes?”
Al ie might’ve smiled at Whitney’s distaste—if she hadn’t been so aware of Clay when she was taking that picture.
“He’s wearing pants,” she said.
Whitney stil seemed skeptical. “I can’t see them.”
Al ie searched the bottom of the photograph for any hint of a denim waistband. “I guess they don’t show up, but they’re there.”
Her daughter continued to stare at Clay. “Why isn’t he smiling?”
“He’s not the type to smile.” Al ie remembered the sexy grin he’d given her when she’d asked him to remove his shirt. After you. “At least not very often.” Which was probably a good thing, she added silently. It was almost intoxicating when he did.
“Are you going to put this on the fridge, beside my picture?”
Al ie could imagine what her parents would think of having a bare-chested Clay Montgomery facing them every time they reached for a gal on of milk. “No, honey. I only have that because I need it for work.”
Hoping to divert her daughter’s attention from Clay’s photo, Al ie asked, “Where’s your grandma?”
“In the kitchen. She’s getting me a snack. She said I shouldn’t bother you, but I wanted to say hi.”
She gave her daughter a big hug. “You can say hel o to me anytime.”
As always, Whitney returned the embrace with plenty of enthusiasm. She was so loving that Al ie couldn’t believe her ex-husband could feel such animosity for their child, that he could hate being a father. His attitude toward Whitney was completely inexplicable to her. “You’re getting big, aren’t you?”
“I’m not in kindergarten anymore,” she said proudly.
But the distraction didn’t last. As soon as Al ie released her, Whitney bent her blond head over Clay’s picture again.
“Is this a bad guy?”
Al ie didn’t think Clay was a bad guy in the sense that Whitney meant it. But his reputation suggested he wasn’t an innocent, either. There were a lot of questions when it came to the Barker case, questions he hadn’t gone out of his way to answer. “No. I took this picture to show that he doesn’t have any marks on him that would indicate he’d been in a fight.”
“Oh,” she said, as though that cleared up al the confusion.
Fortunately, before Whitney could ask another question about Clay, Al ie’s mother’s footsteps sounded in the hal .
When Whitney glanced expectantly toward the door, Al ie shoved Clay’s picture between her mattress and box spring. She’d taken that photo and the others to establish the truth, but she knew protecting Clay, even in the interests of truth, wouldn’t be applauded in Stil water, even in her parents’ home.
“How are you feeling?” Evelyn asked as she stepped into the room.
“Boppo, I asked for cookies,” Whitney complained when she saw that her grandmother carried a plate laden with a sandwich and chips. “I already ate lunch.”
“This is for your mother. Your cookies are out on the counter.”
“Oh!”
Evelyn grinned as Whitney hurried past her, then handed the plate to Al ie.
Al ie had never dreamed she’d move back in with her parents. Not at thirty-three and with a child of her own. It was humbling, maybe even a little humiliating, to find herself right back where she’d started. No one liked to feel like a failure. But Dale and Evelyn owned a three-thousand-square-foot single-story rambler on four and a half acres. It didn’t make sense to pay for two households when they had so much room. Especial y when living with Grandma and Grandpa meant Whitney could sleep in her own bed while Al ie worked. Dale and Evelyn had a guesthouse down the hil , closer to the pond. Al ie could’ve taken that—and would if it became necessary—but so far she liked being close to her parents more than she didn’t like it. The last six years of her ten-year marriage had been particularly rough. Living in her own personal hel had made her grateful for their love.
“Thanks, Mom.”
“It was no trouble. How was work last night?”
“Interesting.” She kicked off the covers. It was only mid-May, but she could already feel the humidity of summer creeping up on them.
Her mother smiled. “Interesting?” she asked in apparent surprise. “What, did you give out a speeding ticket? Pick up someone for expired tags?”
Evidently her father hadn’t learned about the excitement last night. He hadn’t cal ed Evelyn about it, anyway.
Regardless, Al ie preferred not to discuss it. She’d heard her mother talk about Clay Montgomery before, knew Evelyn would believe Beth Ann before she’d ever believe Clay, and didn’t want to feel defensive.
“I drove a few folks home from Let the Good Times Rol ,”
she said—which was true, an hour or so before the cal came in from the county dispatcher.
“That’s it?” Evelyn asked.
“Pretty much.” Al ie knew she could convince her mother that Clay hadn’t real y attacked Beth Ann, that the evidence didn’t support it. But she was uncomfortable with the fact that she’d felt slightly attracted to him and was afraid that, in the process of explaining, she might somehow give that away.
Ironical y enough, in a roundabout way, Evelyn brought up the subject of Clay herself. “Are you making any progress on the Barker case?” she asked, sitting on the edge of the bed. Because she was so thin, she had more wrinkles on her face than Dale, Al ie’s father, who was ruddy and barrel-chested and looked about ten years younger than his real age. But her mother was stil attractive, in a faded-rose sort of way.
“A little.” Just reading al the reports and statements in the boxes that were stacked in the smal locked storage room at the station had been a chore. Al ie had one more box to go; she hadn’t had time to wade through its contents yet. Her father kept giving her other assignments. And she was the only one real y working the night shift. It wasn’t as if Hendricks was any help.
“From what I’ve seen so far, there’re a lot of contradictions,” she said. “Deirdre Hunt claims she saw Reverend Barker heading out of town at eight-thirty. Bonnie Ray Simpson says she saw him pul into the farm at about the same time. And you know Jed Fowler was there that night, fixing the tractor in the barn. He says he never heard or saw anything.”
“He also confessed to murder when he thought your father had found the reverend’s remains.”
“Those remains turned out to be a dog.”
“So? The point is, Jed tried to protect the Montgomerys, which means he might know more than he’s saying.”
“True. Rachel e Cook and Nora Young’s statements certainly suggest he’s lying. They claim Reverend Barker was going home when they said goodbye to him in the church parking lot just before he disappeared.”
Al ie knew her mother had heard al of this before.
Everyone in Stil water had. She would’ve been more familiar with it herself, had she not moved away as soon as she graduated from high school. After that, she had col ege, marriage and her own work to keep her busy. She’d thought about the missing reverend only when her father mentioned some facet of the case.
“You have to decide who’s got a reason to lie,” her mother said.
The way her mother loved mysteries and true-crime books, it was too bad she hadn’t gone into law enforcement. Especial y since she was surrounded by a family of cops. Besides her husband being chief of police, and her daughter serving on the same force, her oldest child, Daniel, was a sheriff in Arizona. When Al ie’s brother cal ed to discuss his various cases, it was often Evelyn who offered the best advice.
“Is Dad over at the station?” Al ie asked.
“If he’s not out on a cal . Or at the doughnut shop,” she added wryly. A year ago, the doctor had warned Dale that his cholesterol was too high. So Evelyn had put him on a diet. But they both knew he thwarted her attempts to curtail his calorie consumption. He’d sneak off to Two Sisters, a local café, for homemade pie, the Piggly Wiggly for chips and soda, or Lula Jane’s Coffee and Cake, for a gigantic apple fritter.
“He’s not very cooperative,” Al ie mused.
Evelyn shook her head. “He never has been. Not when it comes to food.”
Only five-ten and nearly two hundred and fifty pounds, Dale could stand to lose some weight. But he’d always been stocky. Al ie hated to see him denied what he loved most. “Maybe you should ease up on the diet restrictions.”
Her mother shook her head adamantly. “I can’t. The doctor said he could have a heart attack. Or a stroke.”
“It’s a good thing he’s got you,” Al ie said.
“We could lose him if we’re not careful.” Evelyn reached out to tuck Al ie’s hair behind one ear, the way she used to when Al ie was little. “Your dad and I have been together forty years. Hard to believe, isn’t it? Where has al the time gone?”
Al ie pressed her cheek into her mother’s palm. “Thanks for letting me come home.”
Evelyn lowered her voice because they could hear Whitney skipping down the hal , singing. “You should’ve told us what you were dealing with a lot sooner.”
“I thought the medication would help his mood swings.
And it did, to some extent. I could’ve lived with his ups and downs if only he’d cared about Whitney.”
“He was just too—” Whitney entered the room, and Evelyn finished with a simple “—selfish.”
Al ie’s daughter had chocolate smeared on her face and was grinning from ear to ear. “Boppo makes the best cookies. I’m glad we live here!”
Whitney didn’t seem to miss her father. Considering the way Sam had treated her, Al ie wasn’t particularly surprised. “I’m glad, too, honey.”
“That makes three of us.” Evelyn col ected Al ie’s empty plate. “Come on, Whitney. We’l let your mother grab a quick nap.”
Whitney didn’t answer. She was too busy searching the bed and the floor. “Where is it?” she asked in obvious disappointment. “Where did it go?”
Al ie had slumped back onto the pil ows. She planned to get up and help her daughter with homework. But she craved fifteen more minutes before she had to rol out of bed. “Where did what go?” she asked, her mind having shifted to the poster board Whitney needed for a project at school.
“The picture,” Whitney replied.
“What picture?” Evelyn asked.
“Of the naked man. The one Mommy took at work.”
Al ie could feel her mother’s gaze, but pretended not to be paying attention.
“Al ie?” her mother said.
“Give me a few minutes,” Al ie mumbled, feigning sleep.
“Mommy,” Whitney started but, much to Al ie’s relief, Evelyn managed to coax her from the room with the promise of cal ing Uncle Daniel in Arizona to say hel o.
“Wil Aunt Jamie be there, too?” Whitney asked.
“Maybe,” Evelyn said. “We’l see.”
As soon as they were gone, Al ie pul ed Clay’s photograph from under her mattress, intending to return it to the file. She had no reason to feel embarrassed that she had it. It was work, that was al . And yet his fathomless blue eyes held her spel bound.
Was he a murderer? An accomplice? Or a convenient target?
At this point, she had no idea. She only knew he was the handsomest man she’d ever met.
With a curse, she shoved the photograph back between the mattresses—she didn’t want her mother and Whitney to catch her leaving the room with it—and forced herself to get up.
It rained again that night, and steam rose from the warm earth. Clay stood at his bedroom window, watching it, listening to the wind whip the trees against the house. The ferocity of the storm made him feel more isolated than usual, and yet it reminded him that seasons changed and life went on—even though he felt like he was trapped in the past.
The phone rang. After a long day of plowing, he’d replaced the roof on one of the sheds behind the barn. His back ached from hauling the heavy roofing material up the ladder and from bending over to attach each shingle. He wanted to go to bed. But, tired as he was, he strode to the nightstand and reached for the handset. It had to be Beth Ann. He’d tried cal ing her twice earlier.
“Hel o?”
“Clay?”
It was her, al right. Stretching out on the bed, he gazed up at the ceiling, wondering why he wasn’t angry. She’d done her best to land him in prison, which was stil a possibility. But he blamed himself more than he blamed her. At least she was wil ing to make a commitment. He couldn’t even offer her friendship.
“What’s up?” he said.
There was a moment’s hesitation, during which he felt her surprise at receiving his typical greeting. “You’re not mad?” she asked.
“That depends on what you mean by mad.”
Her voice dropped. “I’m sorry, if that helps.”
She sounded contrite, which made it even more difficult to hold what she’d done against her. Maybe she wasn’t the finest person in the world. But she wasn’t the worst, either.
And Clay didn’t think he’d be nominated for sainthood anytime in the near future. “It happened. It’s over. I think we should both forget it and move on.”
“I agree,” she said eagerly.
Did that mean they could move on? He squeezed his forehead, anxious about what he might learn in the next few minutes. It was unlikely that Beth Ann was pregnant—but unlikely wasn’t impossible. “Just tel me one thing.”
“What’s that?”
Thunder boomed in the distance and rol ed across the sky, loud enough to rattle the windows. “Is it true, what you said?”
He thought she’d immediately know what he meant. But he realized that wasn’t the case when she answered.
“No. Whatever Al ie told you, she must’ve made it up. I was upset and I mouthed off. But she’s the one who wouldn’t let me go until I’d signed that sil y statement.”
At this point, the damage from last night had already been done. Al that mattered to Clay was whether or not there was a baby. But Beth Ann’s words were so unexpected they managed to distract him. “Are you trying to tel me it was Al ie’s fault you said I confessed to murder?”
“Yes! She took advantage of me. Maybe you haven’t heard, but she’s planning to solve your stepfather’s case. I guess she wants to show al us country bumpkins what a detective from the big city can do.”
Al ie’s image appeared in Clay’s mind. She wasn’t a beauty like Beth Ann, but she had a unique face. Short dark hair framed large brown eyes, a handful of freckles dotted her smal nose, and her chin was, perhaps, too sharp.
Because of her diminutive size, the freckles made her look almost childlike. But she had a beauty mark on her right cheek that added a degree of sophistication. And there was nothing childlike about her mouth. Ful and soft-looking, it seemed a little misplaced juxtaposed against that nose and those freckles, but it was a very womanly feature and somehow pul ed al the disparate parts of her face together.
“Stop blaming Al ie,” he said, growing irritated. Al ie was honest. He could tel . But that didn’t make him trust her.
Because it was the truth that posed the biggest threat to him.
“It was her.”
“Bul shit. Al ie’s not that kind of person.”
“Since when do you know her so wel ?”
He could read the jealousy in Beth Ann’s voice. But he had no patience for that, either. “You don’t have to know her. Al you have to do is meet her. She takes that badge seriously.”
“She’s a chip off the old block, Clay. And the police have been out to get you for a long time.”
“Al ie’s not out to get me, Beth Ann.” At least not yet. But that could change once she discovered that her father was having an affair with his mother. Or when she dug a bit deeper into the disappearance of Lee Barker.
“I wouldn’t have signed that statement without her, Clay. I promise.”
Beth Ann obviously thought it’d make a difference if she passed the blame. Clay understood that, but he couldn’t admire it. “I don’t care about the statement you gave Al ie. If that was enough to put me in prison, I’d be there already. I just want to know about…”
“What?”
“The baby.”
“What baby?”
“You told her you were pregnant, remember?”
“Oh, wel —” she laughed uncomfortably “—like I told you, I was upset and said some things I shouldn’t have. But I retracted them right away.”
Closing his eyes, he let his breath seep slowly between his lips. “So it’s not true?” he asked. He needed to be sure.
“No, but—” her voice fel to a hopeful whisper “—would you have married me if it was?”
Although he hadn’t wanted to acknowledge it, the answer to that question had been lurking in his heart and mind for twenty-four hours—ever since he’d first learned of the possibility. Which was why he’d been so frightened.
After what he’d experienced growing up, he wanted to raise any child of his on a ful -time basis and, if he could, he’d ensure that child received the support of both mother and father. Even if it meant marrying a woman he didn’t love.
“Probably,” he admitted.
When his answer met with complete silence, he knew he’d shocked her.
“I’l let you go,” he said.
“Wait…Clay, if it’s a baby you want, I’l give you one. We could make it work.”
He imagined hearing a little girl’s laughter in the house, or taking his son out on the farm. Since Grace’s marriage, he had two nephews. Teddy and Heath belonged to Kennedy, her husband, but Clay loved them as much as if they were blood relatives. He wanted a couple of boys just like them, or maybe a little girl like Grace. Strained though their relationship had been since Barker, they were getting along much better these days. She’d always been his favorite, not only because they were closer in age, but because she was so fragile and lovely.
Thinking of his nephews made Beth Ann’s suggestion more tempting than he’d ever imagined it would be—
almost worth the trade-off. He was thirty-four years old. Had his situation been different, he would’ve been married by now.
But what kind of life could he offer a wife and child when he was harboring such a dark secret? What if Al ie McCormick, or someone else, managed to reveal the truth?
He’d have to take ful responsibility. And then he’d go to prison.
Beth Ann didn’t realize it, but he was doing her a favor.
“No,” he said, “it’s over.”
“Don’t say that,” she cried. “Let me see you again.”
She didn’t know when to back off. “I’m tired, Beth Ann.”
“This weekend, then. Or next weekend. One last night together. For old times’ sake.”
“Don’t,” he said and hung up.
When Al ie went to work, she found her father sitting at his desk with a stack of paperwork. He usual y kept regular office hours, but he hadn’t been home since leaving for the station at eight that morning. He hadn’t even joined them for station at eight that morning. He hadn’t even joined them for dinner. Evelyn had mentioned that he’d cal ed to say he was busy, but Al ie was surprised that he hadn’t asked to talk to her. Surely by now he’d heard about the cal she’d handled at the Montgomery farm—from Hendricks or someone he’d told, from the rumors Beth Ann had probably started, from the dispatcher. From someone.
“It’s been a long day for you,” she said, setting the sack lunch she’d packed for later on her own smal desk in the corner. “What’s going on?”
He grunted in annoyance but kept typing on his computer, using only his index fingers. Her father didn’t welcome technical advancements with any enthusiasm. He preferred to work the old-fashioned way. “Everyone’s up in arms about Clay Montgomery’s confession,” he muttered.
So he did know. Al ie slid her report in front of him, then scooted a chair closer to his desk. “Word’s out already, huh?”
“Thanks largely to your fel ow officer.”
“Hendricks?”
“Who else? He’s done everything but cal the damn paper, claiming we final y have our man.”
She expected Dale to pick up her report, glance through it for the real story. But he didn’t. “What do you think?” she asked.
“Hendricks is an idiot.”
She checked the window for headlights, knowing Hendricks could arrive at any moment. “I agree. But his father is on the board of supervisors. And I was talking about the case. From what you’ve heard, do you think Beth Ann’s statement wil have any impact?”
“It could.”
Al ie had anticipated a different answer, a confirmation of her own opinion. “What about my report?”
“What about it?”
“Aren’t you going to read it?”
“I don’t need to.”
“What?”
He didn’t answer.
“Dad, if you’re not going to read the report, I’l tel you.
We don’t have much more than we had yesterday. Beth Ann is merely claiming Clay told her something he swears he didn’t. That’s not physical evidence.”
“It al adds up,” he said indifferently.
“Last I heard, we needed more than ‘he said, she said’
to charge someone with murder. At the very least, a body would be nice.”
“Try tel ing that to al the people who’ve been cal ing here, demanding Clay’s arrest,” he snapped. “I swear they’d lynch him if they could, without proof that he’s guilty of anything—except, perhaps, refusing to kiss the right asses.”
Al ie had never heard her father be so supportive of Clay. “You once told me you thought he was guilty, and that his mother and sisters were covering for him,” she said.
“Have you changed your mind?”
His two fingers continued to pluck at the keys. “What I think doesn’t matter.” He angled his head toward her report.
“What you think doesn’t matter, either. Only what we can prove.”
“But we can’t prove he kil ed Barker. So how can the D.
A. run with this?”
“He can and he might. It’s a political hornet’s nest right now.”
“That’s crazy,” she said. “We need to find the real culprit.”
“You don’t think it’s Clay?” He looked up at her.
“It could be him or one of several other people,” she hedged.
He went back to typing. “Don’t waste any effort on Barker’s disappearance.”
Al ie sat straighter. Her father had acted as if the Barker case wasn’t a high priority to him, but this was the first time he’d actual y stated it. “What did you say?”
“Whatever physical evidence there once was is long gone.”
“Not necessarily,” she argued. “The files themselves could contain the key to the whole mystery.”
“Maybe, but what’s to be gained for al the hours you’d have to spend doing the research and interviewing everyone who ever gave a statement? The offender’s never acted again. It’s not an issue of public safety.”
“It can stop the D.A. from going after the wrong guy.
Although I doubt they’d get a conviction against Clay, even if they tried him.”
“They could if they tried him around here.”
Al ie didn’t like that answer. “It’s a matter of justice,” she said. “Of giving Reverend Barker’s relatives the answers they crave. A man has gone missing, Dad. As far as I’m concerned, it’s our job to find out what happened to him.”
“He went missing a long time ago,” he said. “As far as I’m concerned, we’ve got more pressing problems.”
Al ie gaped at him. “Why the change of heart?”
“Solving a cold case takes months and months of hard work. You’ve told me that yourself.”
“It does, but—”
“I don’t see any point in chasing this one,” he interrupted.
“On or off the job. I need you to take care of the problems that are cropping up today, not two decades ago. And you’re a single mom, Al ie. You don’t want to be spending al your off-hours working on Barker’s disappearance.”
After hitting a final key, he pushed away from his desk, and the printer whirred into action. As it pumped out the document he’d just created, Al ie could see that it was a letter to the mayor; she hoped it explained the lack of evidence against Clay Montgomery. But she didn’t retrieve it for her father. “I don’t understand,” she said.
He met her gaze. “What’s not to understand?”
“You used to be as interested in this as I am.”
Scowling, he yanked on his coat. “I’ve put the past behind me. The rest of this town should do the same.”
“Dad, they’ve lost a friend, a family member, a neighbor.
And they don’t know why.”
“They’re out to pin it on someone whether he’s guilty or not.”
Al ie felt her irritation increase. “If we solve the case, we solve the problem.”
“Maybe some cases are better left unsolved,” he grumbled.
“What?”
He didn’t answer. “I’m beat. I’m heading home.”
Al ie watched him sign the mayor’s letter, put it in the out-box and cross to the door. For a moment, she thought he was going to leave without saying goodbye. But then he turned back. “How about keeping things quiet tonight?” he said and tossed her a tired grin.
Al ie forced a smile. “Be careful, Dad. It’s ugly outside.”
He paused to shake out his umbrel a. “Where’s that damn Hendricks?” he asked, consulting his watch.
Al ie shrugged. “Late, as usual.”
“Worthless,” he muttered. Then he opened the door and the wind blew into the room, smel ing of rain.
Al ie used the coffee cup he’d been drinking from to keep his papers from scattering to the floor. At first she was so preoccupied with trying to make sense of her father’s uncharacteristic responses— some cases are better left unsolved? —that she wasn’t real y seeing what was in front of her. But a moment later, her eyes focused on the cup she’d just moved. It had a teddy bear on it and said, “Life would be un-bear-able without you.”
Life would be un-bear-able without you? Frowning, she picked it up to take a closer look. Where had her father gotten this? Her mother always chose plain, masculine items for Dale, and elegant, classy things for herself. Al ie couldn’t remember ever seeing cutesy objects like this in her parents’ house. And it wasn’t the type of cup a man, especial y Dale, would purchase for himself….
She glanced over at the coffeemaker and the odd assortment of cups that accumulated there. Who knew where any of them came from? she thought, and carried the cup to the sink.
4
“There you are.”
Al ie twisted to see Officer Hendricks standing in the doorway of the storage closet, rubbing his giant bel y as if he had indigestion. It wouldn’t have surprised Al ie if he did.
He ate more than anyone she’d ever known; he had a grease stain on his col ar right now.
“What ya workin’ on?” he asked, hooking his thumbs into his belt and leaning against the doorjamb.
That was rather obvious since she was sitting on the floor with the Barker files spread out in front of her. But, contrary to what a police uniform general y signified, Hendricks wasn’t known for his deductive reasoning. “I’m searching for leads on the Barker case,” she replied.
“Leads?” He scowled. “Why? We already know the devil who did it.”
“We do?” She arched a sardonic eyebrow at him.
He reacted by scratching the top of his head, where his thinning blond hair had been reduced to a mere three or four strands. “Shoot, you’re the one who took Beth Ann’s statement.”
“And you can prove what she’s saying is true?”
“Just because we can’t prove Clay’s the one, doesn’t mean he ain’t,” he countered.
She’d heard that line from almost everyone in town. But she wouldn’t accept it from a fel ow cop. “You can suspect al you want. But it doesn’t mean anything until you col ect the proper evidence. Without it, we don’t have a case.”
“The evidence is there somewhere,” he said. “We just haven’t found the thread that’l unravel it al .”
“That’s why I’m combing through the files, trying to figure out what’s been overlooked.”
He took a handkerchief from his pocket and dabbed at his forehead. It was cold outside—cool in the station, too—
but he always sweated profusely. “Last I heard, your daddy didn’t want us messin’ with the Barker case no more.”
She retrieved another stack of files from the box in front of her. “He doesn’t want me wasting a lot of time on it, and I’m not.” When he left, her father had been too preoccupied to give her any new assignments. And it was a quiet night.
She didn’t see any problem with pushing forward. She’d promised Madeline Barker some answers, and knew Clay’s stepsister would be cal ing any day to check on her progress. Madeline touched base with her once a week, sometimes more often.
Besides, Al ie knew if she wasn’t intent on some goal, she’d nod off the way Hendricks usual y did. She’d been up since Whitney woke her at two-thirty this afternoon, doing homework with her daughter, taking Whitney to her piano lesson, helping her mother with dinner, and then going through Whitney’s bedtime routine. She was exhausted, but felt she owed the taxpayers. She believed pursuing the Barker case was the highest and best use of her skil s.
Maybe it was nineteen years old, but it was stil very present in the minds of so many—Reverend Barker’s daughter and extended family, the Montgomerys, Jed Fowler, who’d fixed the tractor at the farm the night it al happened, Reverend Portenski, who’d taken over for Barker at the church, and Reverend Barker’s whole congregation. Even the Archers had a stake in it now that their son had married Grace—
and they were a very prominent family.
Al ie couldn’t imagine why her father would make this case such a low priority, especial y when he used to be so determined to solve it. He’d often berated his predecessor for bungling the original investigation and swore if it had been handled correctly they would’ve had the answers ages ago.
So why not handle it correctly now?
“What are you findin’ that we don’t already know?”
Hendricks asked.
“Not much,” she said. But she was actual y quite intrigued by the report she held in her hand. According to Officer Farlow, the officer whose position she took when he moved to Tennessee, Reverend Barker’s nephew had found the pocket Bible Reverend Barker had carried with him everywhere. This was last July, and it had since been released into Madeline’s care, but Joe claimed he’d discovered it at a campground on Pickwick Lake and insisted that Grace Montgomery had buried it there.
Records confirmed that Kennedy Archer had rented a spot at the campground during the month in question.
Kennedy readily admitted Grace had been there with him, along with his two boys. But both he and Grace denied knowing anything about the Bible. Interestingly enough, Joe had camped with them one night, and although he and Kennedy had once been good friends, they were now pointing fingers at each other. Joe said it was Grace who’d stashed Barker’s Bible; Kennedy suggested Joe had buried it there in an attempt to frame Grace.
Al ie could see how Kennedy might be tempted to lie in order to protect the woman he loved. But she could also understand why Joe might resort to providing the police with “proof” against the Montgomerys. He was positive they were responsible for the death of his uncle and wanted to see them punished. He figured he’d waited too long. But, prior to last July, the Bible hadn’t been seen since the reverend went missing. If Joe had planted it, where did he get it in the first place?
She made a note to ask Madeline if she could take a look at it.
Hendricks gathered phlegm in his mouth and spat into the wastebasket behind her, jerking her out of her concentration.
“Do you mind?” she asked, disgusted by the crude noise.
“Mind what?” he replied and pointed at her notepad.
“What’s that you’re writing?”
If she ignored him, would he leave? she wondered hopeful y. But she wasn’t that lucky. Her silence only encouraged him to hunch down and peer over her shoulder.
“If…Joe…found…the…Bible…at…the…campsite…as…
he…claims…how…did…he…know…where…to…look?”
He read slowly, trying to decipher her handwriting.
“Where…else…could…he…have…gotten…it? Who…
has…it…now?”
“Hendricks, don’t you have—” Al ie started, but he interrupted her.
“Heck, I can answer those questions for you.” He used the door frame to straighten because his knees struggled beneath his weight. “Grace took the Bible off Reverend Barker when Clay kil ed him, just like Joe says.”
“Then why would she keep it for so long before trying to dispose of it? She was an assistant district attorney, for crying out loud, and very successful at her job. Don’t you think she’d know better than to hang on to something that would raise so much suspicion if she was caught with it?”
“Maybe she was moving it to another hiding place,” he said. “Like she tried moving Reverend Barker’s body.”
“There’s no proof that she was moving anyone’s body,”
Al ie reminded him.
“What do you suppose she was doing at the farm in the middle of the night with a flashlight and a shovel?”
“According to her—” Al ie thumbed through some sheets of paper, came up with the statement she’d read only a few minutes earlier and quoted Grace. “‘After hearing so many people accuse my mother and brother of kil ing my stepfather, I was final y ready to see for myself if he was buried out behind the barn.’”
“Yeah, right,” Hendricks said.
“She wouldn’t want to do it in the middle of the day—let anyone else know she’d begun to doubt her family.
Besides, if they knew what she had planned, they might’ve tried to stop her. Makes sense.”
“I don’t care. I don’t believe her.”
Al ie wasn’t sure she believed Grace, either. But she wasn’t going to jump to the same conclusions as everyone else. When she operated from a preconceived notion, she often missed the most salient clues in a case. She’d learned that the hard way. While tracking down a serial rapist in Chicago, she’d been so sure it was one man when it was real y another that she’d misled the whole task force and the real culprit had slipped away. It had taken them an additional two years to find him. “We can’t prove she’s lying,” she said. “As a matter of fact, right now we can’t prove anything. Joe marked the spot where Grace was digging, then we took a backhoe to Clay’s farm. And what did we get for our trouble? The remains of the family dog, which died of old age before Barker ever went missing.
That’s it.”
“We?” he chal enged.
“The police,” she clarified.
“I was there, and I’m tel ing you, as soon as we struck bone Grace was sure we’d found Barker. You should’ve seen her. She nearly fainted when we pul ed that skul from the ground.”
“She might’ve thought it proved someone in her family had kil ed her stepfather. She actual y says that’s what she thought in here.” Al ie slapped the report on the concrete floor. “Finding out that you’re so closely related to a murderer would be shocking for most people.”
“I think she already knew her brother had done the evil deed and she was scared he’d get caught.”
Al ie stretched her legs in front of her because they were getting cramped from being crossed for so long. “Then why didn’t we find any human remains?”
“Because Clay moved the body before we could get there, that’s why.”
“Was Clay watching you dig?” she asked.
“Yes sirree. No one steps onto his property without him knowing it. And it’s best to get permission—with or without a search warrant. It could be dangerous to startle him.”
She set aside the report she’d been reading, interested at last. “Did he seem nervous? Frightened? Like Grace?”
“How could you ever tel ? That man’s made of stone.”
Al ie remembered the subtle evidence of vulnerability she’d witnessed in Clay last night, the embarrassment and humiliation, the anger and simmering resentment. He’d tried to flirt with her to ease the discomfort they were both feeling, so he wasn’t without sensitivity.
“He’s as human as the rest of us,” she said.
“No, he’s not. I could put a gun right between his eyes and cock the damn trigger—and he’d dare me to fire. I’ve never seen a tougher sumbitch.”
Clay was tough, al right. Al ie suspected that life had made him that way. How else would he have survived the constant doubt, the suspicion, anger and animosity he’d battled for so many years? Al ie could only wonder why he hadn’t moved as far away from Stil water as possible. What kept him around? The farm? As Barker’s wife, Irene had inherited it when he disappeared. Then once Clay had graduated from col ege, she’d passed it on to him. Al ie wasn’t sure what kind of an agreement he had with his mother and sisters as far as the property was concerned, but surely he could sel out, pay them off if he owed them money, and buy another piece of land where no one had ever heard of the missing reverend.
“Why do you think he stays put?” she asked. If he’d kil ed Barker and buried him at the farm, that would explain it. But if he was innocent…
“Where else would he go?” Hendricks asked.
“There must be towns where he’d be welcomed. He’s young, strong, handsome. Without Reverend Barker’s disappearance hanging over his head, he’d be like anyone else.”
Hendricks wiped the perspiration beading on his forehead. “Guess he stays ’cause he’s got family in the area.”
Why didn’t they all find a new home? Al ie wondered.
Mol y, the youngest of Irene’s children at thirty, had left as soon as she graduated from high school. According to Madeline, she was currently designing clothes in New York.
Grace had left, too, but she’d come back, and now that she was married to Kennedy Archer, Al ie didn’t think she’d leave again. Kennedy, along with his father, owned the bank. He wouldn’t want to uproot his boys, abandon the family business and leave his parents. His father had just survived a bout with cancer. But Clay and Irene had never even attempted to get away. When he returned from col ege, she’d moved into town and let him take over at the farm. And that was that.
“Do you know much about Clay’s background?” she asked, adjusting her position so she could see Hendricks without putting a crick in her neck.
“Aren’t the details al there, in the files?” he asked.
Some of them were. But the Stil water police force hadn’t investigated many missing persons—or murders, for that matter—and the files weren’t as detailed as they should be. She was looking for the word-of-mouth snippets her father and his predecessors had deemed unrelated or unimportant. If Hendricks was going to impose his presence on her, she figured she might as wel learn what he knew. He loved gossip and general y picked up on whatever was being said around town. “There’re a few bare facts. Where he was born, that sort of thing.”
“He was born in Boonevil e, wasn’t he?”
She nodded.
“My little sister was in his class when he moved here.
Said he made good marks in school. Until he was older.”
“Did his grades start to fal before or after Reverend Barker went missing?”
“Mary Lee told me it happened about the same time, but I’ve never checked his transcripts.”
“What about his natural father?” she asked.
“Ran off is al I heard.”
Clay’s file indicated that much, but no more. “Has anyone ever tried to locate Mr. Montgomery?”
“Not that I recal . Why?”
She shrugged, but to her surprise, Hendricks caught on, anyway.
“You don’t think Clay might’ve kil ed him, too?”
She rol ed her eyes. “I’m no genius, but my guess is Clay would’ve been too young.”
He didn’t respond to the sarcasm in her voice. “So you were thinking of Irene? Of course!” He clapped his hands as if they’d just solved the case. “Now I know why they paid you the big bucks in Chicago. I doubt anyone else has even thought of that.”
Probably because Al ie was the only person in Stil water jaded enough to consider it. The cops on her father’s force had never come up against the kind of heinous criminals she’d dealt with. “It’s worth checking,” she said slowly.
“Sure. Makes sense.” Hendricks’s head bobbed like the bobble-headed puppy Al ie’s grandmother used to display in the rear window of her giant Oldsmobile. “If Clay’s father was alive, he would’ve come around at some point. The Montgomerys have lived in Stil water for…what, twenty-three years? But no one’s seen hide nor hair of him.
Curious, ain’t it?”
If Clay’s father was dead, and the circumstances surrounding his death were at al suspicious, Al ie needed to examine that coincidence. But Hendricks was getting more excited than such a slim possibility warranted. “Not necessarily. There could be lots of reasons we’ve never seen him. So don’t get carried away,” she cautioned.
“Chances are, Mr. Montgomery’s alive and wel and living in some other state.”
“Right,” he said, but she could tel he wasn’t real y listening. He was too busy jumping ahead. “If we got Irene for one murder, we’d get her for the other. It’s bril iant.”
“Hendricks.” She stood and grabbed hold of his arm to make sure he understood that she was serious. “It’s a real long shot, so don’t go spreading it around.”
“Who me?” He waved a dismissive hand. “I won’t breathe a word,” he said. But it wasn’t a day later that someone approached her at the Piggly Wiggly to ask if Irene Montgomery was a serial kil er.
Reverend Portenski’s hand shook as he removed the floorboard in the far corner of the old church and reached into the dark hole beneath. He had stumbled upon this smal recess quite by accident a decade ago, when he was moving furniture and doing some repairs to the building—
and had rued the day ever since.
If only God would let him know what he should do with what he’d found. While trying to decide, he’d replaced the heavy table that had hidden the loose floorboard and tried to forget its existence, to forget what was beneath. But during the dark quiet hours of the night, when the pressures of the day began to dissipate, he remembered the contents of this hiding place, which conjured up images he wished he’d never seen.
After ten years, he was tired of the guilt, the nagging worry, the indecision. It was time to put the matter to rest.
He pul ed the paper sack from the hole and walked as quickly as his arthritic joints would al ow to the smal study at the back of the church.
A fire burned in the sparsely furnished room. He wasn’t as poverty-stricken as such a study might indicate. He could’ve afforded more elegant appointments. But he had no wife or children to make comfortable and eschewed al but the most necessary physical possessions. He craved knowledge and enlightenment, and believed that intel igence was the true glory of God. So he spent every dime he possessed, above what he devoted to the church and his flock, on books. They lined the room on three sides, residing on makeshift shelves he’d built himself, using unfinished wooden planks and cinder blocks.
It was a sacrilege to bring what he carried into this room.
The words of some of the greatest men who’d ever lived—
renowned philosophers and theologians—resided here.
But the devouring heat and glimmering flames of the fire beckoned.
Portenski pressed closer. He felt as if the hounds of hel were nipping at his heels as he drew his hand back to toss the sack into the fire.
Do it! Throw it! his mind screamed. And never think of it again.
But he couldn’t. As much as he wanted to protect the church and the faith of his parishioners, he couldn’t in al conscience destroy what he’d found. Neither could he take it to the police. He’d waited too long. Besides, doing that wouldn’t change anything; it was too late.
Which brought him right back where he’d been for the past ten years: he was the guardian of a secret he could neither tel nor keep.
Slumping into his seat, he slowly opened the sack and spread several Polaroid pictures on the desk.
As penance, he forced himself to focus on each one—
and then he threw up.
His mother was cal ing him.
Clay shaded his face with his arm and gazed toward the driveway that circled around to the chicken coop, barn and outbuildings. Sure enough, there she was, hurrying toward him in a red dress, a flamboyant hat and high heels.
“Stay there, I’m coming,” he cal ed and dropped his shovel before she could break an ankle in the loose gravel.
He’d been cleaning out irrigation ditches al morning. The exertion made his long-sleeved T-shirt stick to him, but it was actual y a mild, overcast day.
“Have you heard?” his mother cried before he could reach her.
He didn’t know what she was talking about. If the shril ness of her voice was any indication, he didn’t want to know. But she wouldn’t have left the boutique where she worked unless it was important.
He braced himself for the worst. “What’s wrong?”
“Al ie McCormick is searching for Lucas.”
He’d expected to hear Barker’s name. “Lucas?”
“Your father, Clay! Don’t you remember the name of your own father?”
With one sleeve, he wiped the perspiration rol ing from his temple. Of course he remembered his father’s name. It was just that he didn’t think about Lucas anymore. He had more pressing concerns. But there’d been a time when he’d longed for his father on a daily basis—to the point of nearly making himself il .
“Why is she looking for him?” he asked.
“Folks are saying I kil ed him! Can you believe it? He’s probably as alive as you and me, and a darn sight richer.”
He raised a hand. “Whoa, slow down. Why would Al ie be interested in Lucas? He’s got nothing to do with Reverend Barker or Stil water or anything else. He’s never even been here.”
“She thinks I’m some sort of black widow. Mrs. Little just told me.”
Mrs. Little owned the dress store where Irene worked five days a week. Although the Littles had been grudging with their friendship at first, and stil kept the relationship mostly on a professional level, they were kinder to Irene than anyone else in town.
“So she’s searching for him,” Clay said with a shrug. “Let her. The more time she spends on Lucas, the less she can spend on Barker.”
“But what if she finds him?”
“Maybe she can col ect the back child support he owes you.”
She made a face. “Stop being facetious. I’l never see a dime from him, and you know it. Not at this late date. I don’t even want his money.”
Clay didn’t understand why she was so worked up.
“What exactly are you worried about?”
“If she contacts him, it might bring him here. I don’t want that.”
“He won’t bother us, not after so many years.”
“He could see it as an opportunity to make amends,” she said. “Especial y with you. You were the oldest. He knew you best.”
Clay brushed some of the dirt from his pants. His father had never come back. Not even for him. It was a wound that would likely never heal. But he refused to indulge in self-pity.
Anyway, something else was going on. He could feel it.
“You think I’d welcome him back?”
“You used to worship the ground he walked on,” she said.
She was right. Lucas Montgomery had once been Clay’s hero. He was the man who showed up on payday and took them to town for an ice-cream cone. The man who waltzed Irene around the kitchen, or pretended her spatula was a microphone, making them al laugh. The man who held Mol y on his lap until she fel asleep, then tucked her safely in bed. Clay’s life—and he assumed it was the same for the rest of his family—had been better, more complete whenever Lucas was around. He couldn’t lie about that.
But even when Clay was only five or six, Lucas had stopped coming home on a regular basis. And when he began staying away two and three days at a time, the fighting started. Clay could stil hear his mother pleading with his father. “Lucas, you’ve gotta stop drinkin’ and carousin’, do ya hear? The water bil ’s due. What we gonna do if we can’t pay the water?” and “You’ve got children to take care of now, Lucas. How’s Clay gonna learn to be a man if you don’t stick around and teach him?” His father always said, “It has nothin’ to do with drinkin’, Irene. I’m stil a young man. I’ve got a lot of life to live, a lot of places to see. And I can’t do that strapped down to a wife and three kids.”
Clay had initial y sympathized with his father. It was his mother who was wrong, who tried to tel his daddy that he couldn’t have any fun. She was the reason he didn’t stick around like he used to. Then Lucas abandoned them altogether, and Clay was forced to grow up almost overnight. As he worked for the local feed store, making less than half of what he would’ve been paid as an adult, Clay had realized which parent real y loved him.
Occasional y, he stil felt guilty for the way he’d blamed his mother during those years. But, as a child, he’d found it was difficult to fault the parent who was always smiling and saying, “I’m just funnin’, Irene, don’t get yourself in a state.”
“There’s no reason to worry,” he told his mother. “I don’t want anything to do with him.”
“It’s his fault, you know. We’d stil be living in Boonevil e if it wasn’t for him.”
“I know,” Clay said. When his father walked out, he’d left Irene so destitute she’d almost lost her children. Without an education, she couldn’t make enough to feed them. Clay remembered eating nothing but oatmeal for one entire summer. So when Reverend Barker had asked Irene to marry him, she’d agreed mostly out of desperation. They al knew that. Clay suspected even Barker understood. How else could he have gotten a woman so much younger and so much more attractive than he was?
At least Irene had gone into the relationship determined to be a good wife, to make the best of what she considered a second chance. Clay remembered her treating Reverend Barker’s daughter, Madeline, the same as Grace and Mol y, remembered her pul ing him aside to say that the reverend might not be a handsome scoundrel, or make them laugh, but he had his priorities straight. He was a man of God, and they were final y going to be a complete and happy family.
Little did she know life would only get worse from then on….
“Talk to Al ie, convince her to stop what she’s doing,”
Irene said.
Clay blew out a long breath. “Why? Let her do what she wants and ignore it. If you react, she’l know she’s struck a nerve and she’l keep after it.”
“But she has struck a nerve! You need to explain how it was for us after Lucas left. Tel her not to bother with him.”
“Mom, you’re not making any sense. If Dad hasn’t looked back before now, what makes you think he’s going to? And even if he does, I’ve just told you it won’t make any difference to me. I’m sure Grace and Mol y feel the same.
You have nothing to lose.”
She clasped her hands tightly. “That’s not true,” she said, her gaze intense.
Clay narrowed his eyes. “What are you talking about?”
“He cal ed me once,” she admitted.
“When?”
“Not long after Lee died.”
“How’d he find you?”
“Everyone in Boonevil e, including his own cousin, knows I married a reverend and moved to Stil water. I’m sure it wasn’t hard.”
Clay jammed a hand through his hair. “Okay, he cal ed once. Why is that so significant?”
“I was at my lowest, Clay. I—I was inches away from a nervous breakdown. Grace was…you know what Grace was like after what that bastard did to her. She’d wal ed herself off from both of us. And Mol y was just a little girl, confused but mostly oblivious. You were al I had, and you were only sixteen.”
Adrenaline began to pound through Clay’s veins. “Tel me you didn’t,” he said.
“Clay, I needed him. I—I’m ashamed to admit it, but I was so desperate that I pleaded with him to come back.”
His chest constricted. “How much did you tel him?”
“Al of it,” she said. “I had to talk to someone, let the pain out. My head was going to explode if I didn’t. And I thought if he knew what we were facing and how unfair it al was, he’d stand by me and be the man I’d always wanted him to be. How could any man hear how his daughter had been abused, defiled by her own stepfather, and not support her?”
Anxiety made it difficult to speak. “What did he say?”
“He promised to come. He was living in Alaska, said it was beautiful and that he’d move us up there with him.”
Clay dropped his head in his hands. “Even if he’d kept that promise, we couldn’t have left,” he said. “You knew that.
We stil can’t. The moment we sel the farm, the police wil get the new owner’s permission to search, and they’l go over every inch.”
“Maybe he realized that,” she said softly.
“Because…”
Her gaze fel to the ground. “I never heard from him again.”
“God.” Clay squinted into the distance, out across the cotton fields. What was he going to do? If Al ie tracked down his father and started questioning him, there was no tel ing what Lucas might say. And once the details of Barker’s death were revealed, they wouldn’t be hard to prove. The police would find Barker’s car in the quarry, where Clay had driven it. They’d get another warrant to search for Barker’s remains, and this time they wouldn’t walk away empty-handed. Clay had poured cement over the earthen floor of the cel ar, but that wouldn’t stop them.
“What if he’s told someone? What if he tel s Al ie?”
“He swore he wouldn’t.”
As if that counted for anything. “Can’t you get Chief McCormick to cal off his daughter?” he asked.
“Are you kidding? He won’t even mention my name in front of her.”
“What the hel does he think happened to Barker? Has he ever asked you about it?”
“No. We’ve never discussed it. I don’t think he wants to know.”
Clay clenched his jaw. “You’ve heard from Dale recently, then?”
“He cal ed me yesterday.”
“What did he say?”
“He misses me.”
Clay knew from the way she’d spoken that she missed him, too. “Did you tel him it was over?”
She cringed visibly.
“Mom!”
“I couldn’t,” she said. “It was the first time we’ve been able to talk in over a week. But I wil . I promise,” she added quickly. “Just get Al ie to quit searching for Lucas, okay?
You have to stop her before she contacts him.”
Clay rubbed the whiskers on his chin. He had no leverage with Officer McCormick. She wouldn’t back off because he asked her to. Especial y after the other night.
“What can I do?” he asked.
“She’s lonely,” his mother volunteered.
He rocked back. “I hope that doesn’t mean what I think it means.”
She straightened her hat, as if she needed to keep her hands busy. “Women like you, Clay. You can make Al ie like you, too. You could even make her fal in love, if you wanted.
A woman wil do anything for love.”
“No,” he said. “Absolutely not. I won’t play with her heart.”
“But she’s attractive and—”
“No!”
“Okay, don’t go that far. Just…be nice to her, take her out a few times. Maybe you’l enjoy her company. You never know. You could do worse than end up with a woman like Al ie.”
Clay couldn’t believe it. “Are you insane?” he asked.
“How long do you think it would be before she figured out the whole scenario?”
“It’s better to make her your friend than your enemy,” she replied. “You’re not opposed to having another female friend, are you?”
He said nothing.
“Come on,” she continued. “Madeline says she’s very nice.”
His mother didn’t need to convince him of that. He could already tel Al ie was a good person. She’d certainly been fair with him the other night, despite the prejudice he faced from the rest of the community.
“I don’t know,” he said. He couldn’t imagine befriending a cop under any circumstances. He’d spent too many years avoiding them. But there was wisdom in the old adage
“Hold your friends close and your enemies closer.” The more information he gleaned about her investigation—what she was finding and which direction she was going—the more he’d be able to protect himself and his family.
“I don’t like it,” he said. Her suggestion made some sense, but he’d be using Al ie, and he didn’t feel right about that. He preferred to keep his distance.
“Can we real y afford to hunker down and just hope for the best?”
No. He knew they couldn’t.
“Clay.” His mother touched his arm.
“What?”
“We have to do whatever we can.”
She was right. He couldn’t pretend Al ie didn’t have the skil s and determination to reveal what—so far—he’d managed to hide. Maybe he should spend some time with her, try to neutralize the threat. What better choice did he have? He could be careful, maintain just enough distance.
He wondered if he’d ever be able to throw off the yoke of the past. “Fine,” he said with a sigh.
His mother smiled in apparent relief, as if she thought he’d crook his finger and Al ie would forget al about Lucas and Barker. Problem solved.
If only it was that simple.
5
That evening, after Clay stepped out of the shower and finished toweling his hair, he cal ed his stepsister, Madeline, on the cordless phone he’d taken into the bathroom. He loved Maddy, talked to her often. Irene, Grace and Mol y did, too. After her father “went missing,”
she’d chosen to stay with them instead of going to live with Barker’s extended relatives and was as much a part of the family as any one of them. They shared everything with her
—except the secret destined to make her hate them if she ever found out.
“Hey, I ran into Beth Ann when I was getting gas today,”
she said the moment she heard his voice.
He hung the towel on the rack behind him. “Am I supposed to be excited about that?”
“I thought you might want to know that I already heard what happened at the farm night before last.”
“Somehow that doesn’t surprise me,” he said, leaving the steamy bathroom and heading into his bedroom.
“Wel , maybe this wil . The version she gave me is quite different from the rumors going around town.”
He twisted in front of the mirror to see how the scratches on his back were healing. “Is this good or bad news?”
“Good news.”
The scratches were almost gone. That was good news, too. “Then she didn’t tel you I tried to kil her?”
“She just said you broke up with her.”
“Even that isn’t true,” he muttered as he delved into his underwear drawer.
“How’s that?”
“There wasn’t any commitment between us to begin with.”
“She was hoping for one. She feels terrible about cal ing the cops on you, by the way. She claims she’s in love with you.”
He pul ed on his boxer briefs. “Don’t worry. She’l be in love with someone else next week.”
“You’re so cynical,” she said, laughing. “But maybe you’re right. She had John Kel er in the car while she was crying over you, and he seemed more than wil ing to comfort her.”
“John Kel er?” he repeated, not immediately recognizing the name.
“The guy who manages Stil water Sand and Gravel for Joe Vincel i’s parents. Why? Jealous?”
“No.” He selected a pair of jeans. “I thought Joe managed the gravel pit.”
“He has the title. But he doesn’t do much other than chase women and drink beer. At least since he divorced Cindy. John’s the one who keeps the business afloat.”
If Madeline said it, it was probably true. No one knew Stil water and the people living in it better than she did. It was her job to know. She owned the Stillwater Independent, a weekly paper she’d bought two years ago from the old couple who’d published it before.
“Good old Joe,” he said, putting on his pants.
“I know. Not your favorite person.”
“An understatement if I’ve ever heard one.” Joe had instigated the last search of the farm. And Joe had mistreated Grace. Clay knew he didn’t have the whole story and doubted Grace would ever tel him, but he’d gathered enough to suspect that the hatred between his sister and Joe stemmed from high school. Clay also guessed the contact between them had been sexual in nature. But after what his sister had been through, he didn’t judge her.
Barker had nearly destroyed her. After what had happened when she was only thirteen, she’d acted out in various ways, no doubt hoping to finish the job—and Joe had been there, ready and eager to take advantage, to inflict even more damage.
Clay had done what he could, but Grace had thwarted his attempts to protect her, and he couldn’t help her if she wouldn’t confide in him. So, he’d watch helplessly as she searched for the attention she needed, the love and support she’d rejected from her family.
Until recently. Somehow, she’d managed to survive even her own self-loathing and Joe’s opportunistic abuse. And now she was happy, and Clay was going to make damn sure she stayed that way, if he had to sit at the farm and guard whatever forensic evidence remained until he rotted right along with Barker.
Which reminded him of the purpose behind his cal .
“What are you doing tonight?” he asked, holding the phone with his shoulder so he could button his fly.
“Kirk said he’d like to shoot some pool. Why? Want to come?”
Kirk Vantassel, a roofing contractor, was Madeline’s longtime boyfriend. Clay kept expecting them to marry but, so far, they weren’t even engaged. In some ways, they acted more like brother and sister than boyfriend and girlfriend.
“I know you don’t like crowds, and Good Times is busy on Friday night,” she said. “But it’d be fun for you to get out.
You don’t do it often enough.”
“I’l meet you over there.” He held the phone out as he pul ed on a T-shirt. “Any chance you could convince Al ie McCormick to come?” he asked when he had his head through.
“You mean with us? You want me to set you up with Al ie?”
“Nothing like that,” he replied. “I was just hoping to get to know her a little.”
“I see,” she said, drawing the word out as though she saw far more than he intended.
“Stop it.” He shrugged into a button-down shirt and splashed on some cologne. “She’s investigating Dad’s case, isn’t she? I figure I might as wel talk to her, see if there’s anything I can do to help.” Clay hated making such statements, hated being the hypocrite he was when it came to Maddy but, once again, past actions propel ed current ones.
“Considering how you feel about the police, that’s generous of you. I’l cal her,” she said. “I’ve been meaning to, anyway. She left a message on my answering machine, asking about Dad’s Bible.”
“Why? Does she want to look at it?”
“Yeah.”
Clay felt another trickle of unease. Would Al ie see the demented man behind the notes the reverend had made in the front and back pages of that Bible? Or, like Madeline, would she see a pious man who loved his new family—and was particularly impressed with his oldest stepdaughter?
At times like this, Clay felt almost justified in keeping the truth from Madeline. Wondering where her father had gone was hard. Especial y because she had to deal with the fear that he’d abandoned her. But learning that her father wasn’t fit to breathe the same air as other human beings would be much harder. Of course, that was assuming she’d believe the truth if she heard it. Certainly no one else would.
“I’m going to grab some dinner,” he said. “I’l see you at Good Times.”
“Are you eating at home or in town?”
“I’m on my way to Two Sisters. Why? Would you like to join me?”
“I’m tempted, but I should finish the article I’m working on. Besides, Kirk’s stil out, patching a leaky roof. I’l eat with him, then catch up with you later.”
“What article are you writing?” he asked. Whatever it was, Clay hoped it wasn’t about him. One week, his stepsister had published a piece on the cars he restored in his barn and the fact that he’d recently sold a 1957
Chevrolet Bel Air for $52,000 and had a client waiting for his 1960 Jaguar XJ6 at a much higher price. Another week she’d written about the way he managed “a large, successful farm” al on his own, as if there’d never been a better farmer. But the worst was when she’d put him in her Singles section and referred to him as “appealing to women” and possessing an “elusive, mysterious al ure.”
Suspicions being what they were, he already drew enough attention when he walked into a room. He didn’t need her training the spotlight on him.
But, according to Madeline, she sold more papers when she included an article about him, so he didn’t complain.
He figured it wouldn’t kil him to occasional y boost her circulation.
Stil , he cringed at her next words.
“After the thing with Beth Ann, I’d like to do one on what causes a woman to make false claims against the man she loves.”
“When?”
“In a few weeks.”
Hoping she’d forget by then, he picked up his wal et and keys. “What are you working on now?”
“A series of articles on Al ie.”
“Wil they run in the Singles section?”
“No, this is front page stuff. I’m writing about some of the murders she solved while she was working in Chicago.”
“Sounds interesting.”
“It is. In one case, she found the guilty party because of the stitching on the bedsheet that was wrapped around the victim’s body.”
“The stitching?” he repeated.
“Yeah. I guess she could tel that the sheet wasn’t the type typical y purchased for home use. So she contacted the big commercial cleaners who wash linens for hotel chains in the area and, sure enough, each hotel has different-colored stitching to designate which sheets belong where.”
“How did that lead her to the kil er?” he asked.
“You can read the details when the article comes out. It was pretty darn smart of her. But, basical y, she traced the sheet to a major downtown hotel and one of their employees.”
“Great,” Clay said. But he wasn’t sure he wanted to read the article. He was worried enough already.
“Al ie?”
Her father’s voice intruded on the Disney movie she was watching with Whitney. Picking up the remote, she muted the sound so Dale wouldn’t have to yel quite as loudly.
“What?” she cal ed back.
“Telephone!”
Al ie hadn’t heard it ring. She’d been dozing. She was off work for the weekend, which meant she could sleep through the night. But she was having trouble staying awake until bedtime. “Coming!”
She turned up the volume again, leaving Bel e singing to the Beast as she walked into the adjoining room—her the Beast as she walked into the adjoining room—her father’s den. It took a moment to find the phone amid the clutter on his desk. “Hel o?”
“Al ie?”
“Yes?”
“It’s Madeline.”
Al ie sank into her father’s leather chair. She’d been expecting this cal . “How are you?”
“Good. And you?”
“Hanging in there.”
“Glad to hear it. I have the Bible you were asking about.
I’ve pored over every single word and I can’t find anything that could be cal ed a clue. But I’d be happy to let you see it.”
“A fresh pair of eyes might help. I’m not making quick progress on your father’s case, but I am working on it. It takes a while to go through so much material, especial y when I’m trying to note every detail.”
“I understand. I’m grateful you’re being so thorough.
You’l uncover the missing piece. I’m sure of it.”
Al ie pitied the hope in Madeline’s voice. Maddy had waited nineteen years to find out what had happened to her father and was stil waiting. Al ie couldn’t imagine how difficult that must be. “I can’t make any promises, but I’l try.”
“If anyone can help me, you can.”
Al ie prayed that Madeline’s confidence wasn’t misplaced. For every case she’d solved, there were at least five she’d been unable to break. That was the nature of the business. She’d mentioned those statistics when she’d granted Madeline the interview for the paper, had talked about evidence that was often too degraded to use and key witnesses who’d died or could no longer remember what they’d seen or heard. But Madeline had focused on Al ie’s successes. Apparently Madeline’s five-part series would summarize some of her toughest cases, but only those that had a happy ending.
Maybe Madeline needed to tel those stories to bolster her faith that she’d eventual y find the resolution she sought.
“I’l do my best,” she said again.
“I know you wil . Anyway, I have another question for you.”
Al ie rol ed closer to her father’s desk and glanced idly through his Rolodex. “What’s up?”
“Are you working tonight?”
“No, why?” She stopped at the number for a Corinth florist written in her father’s hand. She’d never known him to order flowers. He was too practical. Had someone died?
No one close to them. And if it was a professional acquaintance, her father would’ve handled it at the station….
“I was hoping you might be interested in going out dancing or playing pool tonight.”
As she considered Madeline’s invitation, Al ie continued to flip through the smal cards. She liked Madeline a lot and ordinarily would’ve jumped at the chance to go out with her.
They’d sometimes hung out when they were kids. And although her two best friends from high school had married and moved away shortly after she did, there were other people she remembered and wanted to see. So far, though, she’d been too busy moving, getting Whitney started in a new school and becoming familiar with her job.
But she was so tired. “I would if I could keep my eyes open,” she said, covering a yawn. “I’m stil getting used to working graveyard.”
“Real y?” Madeline seemed genuinely disappointed.
“Clay was hoping you could make it.”
“Clay?” she repeated, nearly choking on the name.
“He cal ed me a few minutes ago and asked me to invite
“He cal ed me a few minutes ago and asked me to invite you.”
Al ie’s jaw dropped as she immediately conjured up an image of Clay—the image in the picture beneath her mattress. “Why would your brother want me there?”
“He said he’d like to get to know you, and maybe talk about Dad.”
Dad… Madeline had said that as if Clay cal ed Barker
“Dad,” but he didn’t. At least not in front of Al ie. Did he play it differently when he was with Madeline?
It’d be interesting to watch the two of them together, Al ie thought, when they were relaxed and didn’t feel they were under scrutiny. The way they interacted might tel her something about the case, certainly more than Clay intended to divulge.
“If he’s ready to share, I guess I’d better not miss out,”
she said, reversing her earlier decision. “He’s not usual y so open.”
“Not to police officers in general, but that’s because they’re almost always prejudiced against him,” Madeline said, a defensive note creeping into her voice. “He’s not the one responsible for whatever happened to my father.”
“You’ve told me that before. But I can’t rule him out, Maddy.” Especial y since Joe Vincel i and others claimed exactly the opposite. “I can’t rule anybody out. I have to keep an open mind. Otherwise, I won’t be any good to you.”
Madeline seemed to struggle between loyalty and common sense.
“Tel me this,” Al ie said softly.
“What?”
“If it was Clay—”
“It’s not, ” she insisted. “Don’t listen to what people around here say. They don’t know him the way I do.”
“I’m just asking— if it was—would you want to know?” To Al ie, justice was justice. The case needed to be solved, regardless. But did Madeline real y understand what she was asking? She craved answers, but what if those answers only caused her fresh pain?
“I don’t have to worry,” Madeline said. “It’s not him.”
For Madeline’s sake—and Clay’s, too, because he was so young when it’d al happened—Al ie hoped not. “I’l take your word for it,” she said. “For now. But I definitely don’t want to miss out on the opportunity to talk to Clay while he’s wil ing to speak with me.”
“There’l be other chances.”
Al ie wasn’t wil ing to risk it. “No, I’l tank up on coffee and go out with you. Just let me get Whitney to bed.”
“Okay. But don’t press my brother too hard. He doesn’t socialize much, and I want him to have a nice time tonight.”
“I’l be on my best behavior,” Al ie said. But she couldn’t imagine anyone pressing Clay further than he wanted to go.
Clay spotted Al ie the moment she opened the door of the crowded pool hal . She was wearing a black miniskirt and a hot-pink, long-sleeved stretchy top. The skirt could’ve been a lot shorter, but it was short enough to be surprising on someone so conservative. And while the top wasn’t low-cut, it clung to her in al the right places. Maybe she wasn’t soft and voluptuous, but she looked…trim, fit and wel proportioned, especial y for her size. She’d also put some gel in her hair and styled it in a shaggy, fashionable way.
The short length emphasized her eyes—and her slightly oversize mouth. That mouth had been sexy even when she wore that off-putting uniform.
Clay saw more than a few male heads turn as Al ie spotted him, Madeline and Kirk and began to stride toward their table in the back corner. Evidently, he wasn’t the only man in the place impressed with her transformation.
“Hi,” she said, giving Clay a no-holds-barred smile as she slid into the one empty chair, which happened to be right next to him.
He refused to let his gaze linger on her mouth. “Hel o,” he responded. Then he drained his beer. He had a feeling that it was going to be a long night. He didn’t like what he was doing or why he was doing it. But that didn’t matter. He had to do what he could. It always came down to necessity.
“You look great,” Madeline said. “I hope you’ve found your second wind.”
“I took some No-Doz. It was quicker and easier than drinking a gal on of coffee,” she said.
Clay knew his stepsister was very attractive, with her long, thick auburn hair, dramatic cheekbones and large hazel eyes. But Al ie didn’t look drab by comparison. It was her mouth…. And that beauty mark. Heck, Clay was even beginning to like her freckles. She was different, unusual…
and seemed unaware of the effect she was having on the men around her.
“Coffee makes me jittery if I drink too much,” Al ie was saying. “It’s the curse that goes along with having a high metabolism. I’m usual y hyper until I can’t go anymore, and then—” she snapped her fingers “—I’m out. So, if this affects me the same way and I go to sleep—” she smiled at Clay again “—wake me up.”
“We’l take care of you,” he said.
Her eyes met his, and he read frank curiosity in them.
“Would you like a drink?” he asked.
“I’l have a beer.”
At his wave, the waitress hurried over, and he ordered two beers. “Anyone else?”
“I’m al set,” Madeline said.
Kirk lifted his half-fil ed glass. “Me, too. I don’t know about you, but I’m ready for a game of pool.”
Kirk was as easygoing and affable as he looked. Until he was confronted by a threat to someone he loved. Then he was a force to be reckoned with. Clay liked him, thought he’d make Madeline a fine husband.
“A table’s opening up,” Madeline said, cal ing out to a friend to hold it for them. “We gonna bet on the game?”
“Hel , yeah,” Kirk replied. “I came to win big.” Shoving his dark hair out of his eyes, he turned to Al ie. “Fifty bucks says Maddy and I can take you and Clay.”
“I’l bet fifty, too,” Madeline said.
“You?” Clay asked, obviously taken aback.
“I’m expecting a sizable tax refund.”
“So what do you say?” Kirk’s focus was stil on Al ie.
Al ie’s eyebrows slid up. “You two aren’t confident or anything, are you?”
“We might be confident, but are we any good? That’s what you have to ask yourself,” he replied with a teasing wink.
“That’s not the only factor in the equation.” Al ie winked right back. “Maybe you two are good, but maybe Clay and I are better.”
Madeline made a taunting sound and spoke over Kirk.
“Ooh, I love it. She’s not going to let you intimidate her.”
“We won’t know until we play,” he said.
Al ie leaned closer to Clay, thoughtful y tugging on her bottom lip. “You’ve seen what these two can do. What do you think? Wil I have to carry you?”
Clay coughed in surprise. Women general y assumed he’d be the better player.
“I might be a burden,” he replied dryly, “but I’l try to hold my own.”
She studied him a little longer, then flashed him a grin.
“Let’s do it.”
As Al ie, Kirk and Madeline headed over to the pool table, Clay intercepted the waitress who was bringing their drinks and carried them into the back room, where Kirk was already racking bal s.
Al ie accepted her beer with a nod of thanks, took a sip, then set it on the edge of the table. “Who breaks?” she asked above the babble of voices around them.
“You can,” Kirk said, but Al ie didn’t respond. She was too busy staring across the room.
Clay fol owed her gaze to see Joe Vincel i coming toward them, a smirk on his face.
“Out on the town tonight, Officer McCormick?” he asked.
Al ie’s spine visibly straightened. “Something wrong with that, Mr. Vincel i?”
“No, of course not. It’s just that when you said you were going to find the man responsible for my uncle’s murder, I didn’t expect you to go out drinking with him. That’s a hel of a way to investigate.”
Instinctively, Clay stepped in front of her. He wouldn’t al ow Joe to bul y a woman in his presence. But, even at barely over five feet tal , Al ie didn’t seem to feel she needed his protection. She put a hand on his arm and gently but firmly pushed him out of the way. “I’l drink with whoever I want,” she stated flatly.
Joe’s jaw tightened as his eyes sought Clay, but Clay could sense that he was weighing his response. Obviously not wanting to get his ass kicked, Joe reined himself in, which came as a bit of a disappointment to Clay. He’d long been eager for the opportunity to rearrange Joe’s weasel-like features.
“What’s your problem?” Clay asked. “Why are you always harassing women? First Cindy, then Grace and now Al ie. I’m right here, Joe. If you want a piece of me, let’s take it outside.”
He thought Al ie might interfere—maybe assume her role as cop—but she didn’t. She stood where she was and didn’t speak, but he could feel the tension in her as Joe considered his options.
Final y, Joe backed away. “He’s a cold-blooded kil er, Al ie. Don’t let him fool you.”
“He doesn’t frighten me,” Al ie said. “Nor wil he or anyone else interfere with the integrity of my investigation.”
Joe risked throwing one more glance at Clay. “If that’s the truth, I wouldn’t go anywhere alone with him. Maybe if you learn too much, you’l go missing next.”
6
Cursing Joe Vincel i, Al ie bent over to take her first shot.
Just when Clay seemed to be relaxing, Joe had to come up and cause trouble. Now Clay was wearing a closed, rather grim expression and had fal en silent. Why couldn’t the people in this town trust her to do her job?
Setting the cue bal on the dot, she sent it flying into the triangle of solids and stripes, which scattered across the table. Two solids dropped with a double thunk into opposite corner pockets. The others rol ed to a stop. She didn’t do as wel on her second shot, but she didn’t leave her opponents with anything they could capitalize on, either.
“Not bad, eh?” she said, teasing Madeline and Kirk.
“I haven’t lost any money yet,” Kirk said and motioned for Madeline to take her turn.
When nothing fel for Madeline, Kirk put his arm around her and, kissing her temple, joked none too quietly that she’d better come up big next time or he was going to dump her.
Clay chuckled as he chalked his cue. “Watch it,” he said.
“That’s my sister you’re talking to.”
Secretly admiring his fluid movements, Al ie watched Madeline’s stepbrother circle the table. When he paused at the end, as though he’d found an angle he liked, he looked up at her.
“Do you real y want to take the toughest shot available?”
she asked in amazement.
“Yes, he does,” Kirk said, laughing. “This game’s no fun for him unless he tries fancy shit like that. That’s how I knew we were going to win.”
Al ie arched an eyebrow at Clay. “You try that, and you’re the one who’l have to pony up the cash when we lose.”
Clay’s teeth flashed as he grinned at her, and she knew she’d said just the thing to make him relish the chal enge.
Bending over the cue bal , he tried to bank the three twice before sending it into the side pocket.
The move didn’t work.
“Nice,” she said sarcastical y.
He came around the table and clicked his beer bottle against hers. “I’m depending on you to pul us out.”
Al ie wished she didn’t like the smel of his cologne, or the way his jeans fit his body. But she did. For the duration of the game, she almost forgot she’d come to the pool hal with a goal in mind. Especial y when they lost. Because Clay had actual y sunk as many bal s as she had, he made her split their losses with him.
“At least I took reasonable shots,” she complained. “The shots you attempted were crazy.”
“I made a few,” he said.
And he had. Which was pretty impressive. He was obviously a much better player than the rest of them, but he hadn’t exploited his advantage.
“Let’s get another drink,” Madeline said. “Then we’l play again.”
“Okay, but I’m not betting any more money,” Al ie said, sulking. “Cops don’t make enough to get taken at pool, especial y by their own partners.”
In the crush near the bar, she and Clay got separated from Kirk and Madeline. Al ie almost lost Clay, too—but then his fingers curled around her hand and he guided her through the people between them. “So why’d you become a cop?” he asked as the press of bodies jostled them closer.
“I guess I like the chase,” she said.
She hadn’t realized how flirtatious that would sound until the words were out of her mouth.
Clay pivoted to face her, his expression conveying surprise and predatory interest. She’d definitely caught his attention. Deep down, she knew she was too fresh from her divorce, that she was letting the excitement of this night go to her head. But she felt young and free, as if she’d managed to turn back the clock ten years, and it was an exhilarating experience. Especial y after she’d put in so much work and time and effort to get through col ege, get a job, improve her marriage, survive her divorce, raise her daughter….
“The chase, huh?” he murmured, his gaze riveted on her lips. “What’s it like when you get your man?”
Her heart began to pound. She’d started this, so she wasn’t about to reveal that she was already in over her head. “Last time I’m afraid the chase was the best part,”
she admitted. “But I’m not sure that was entirely my fault.”
“Last time? ”
“I’ve only been with my ex.”
“Sounds as if it was disappointing.”
“Very.”
“It’s not always like that.”
She gave him a weak grin. “I’l take your word for it.”
“Not interested in a walk on the wild side, eh?”
“I’m the daughter of a cop, remember?”
“And a cop yourself. How could I forget?” He averted his eyes, but she could feel his hand at her back, steering her through the crowd. The warmth of his touch seemed to burn right through her shirt, but she was glad he was there when someone in front of her threw a playful punch and the person who dodged to get out of the way stumbled and nearly fel into her.
Clay pul ed her out of danger, against his chest. “Did he step on your toes?” he murmured in her ear.
His breath tickled. Suppressing a shiver, she said, “No.
Thanks to you,” and purposely avoided his touch as they continued to the bar.
They each got another beer, then went to play a second game of pool. This time she and Clay won back their money. But the No-Doz she’d taken before she’d come wasn’t mixing wel with the alcohol. She was beginning to feel as if she were floating above everyone else.
She needed to find a ride home, she decided. She’d lost al focus on the reason she’d come; she’d have to talk to Clay later, when her mind was clear.
But Madeline wouldn’t hear of letting her leave so early.
Clay’s sister announced that they should al dance and, a few seconds later, Al ie found herself in Clay’s arms, swaying to Rascal Flats singing “Bless the Broken Road.”
“Are your parents amenable to watching your daughter when you go out?” he asked, his voice a deep rumble.
“It hasn’t been an issue so far,” she said. “This is the first time I’ve gone out at night, other than to work.”
“In six weeks? ” he said.
“Is that how long I’ve been back?” She couldn’t remember clearly. In any case, she didn’t real y want to talk.
She wanted to listen to the music and press closer to the hard body that was moving against hers, making her breasts tingle. It felt like forever since she’d been with a man, especial y a man who smel ed as good as Clay—
Suddenly, he shifted to hold her away from him.
She looked up and would have released him, except that he kept his hands on her waist.
Was she the one who’d snuggled so close? She must’ve been. Otherwise, he wouldn’t have reacted like that. “I’m sorry,” she said, embarrassed. “I’m not thinking straight.”
“I know.”
“I’ve gotta go.”
He didn’t answer immediately, but when he did, he said,
“That’s probably a good idea. I’l take you home.”
“No, you’ve got your stepsister and Kirk here. I’l cal my father.”
“There’s no need. I’m leaving anyway. Meet me outside in five minutes,” he said as if it had al been decided.
“Meet you?” she repeated. “Are you going somewhere else before we leave?”
He subtly indicated one side of the room. When she glanced over, she saw that Joe was watching them again.
“You don’t want to start any rumors, do you?” he said, putting his back to Barker’s nephew and effectively shielding her from his view.
Her thoughts were a little fuzzy, but she was fairly sure any rumors that might get started wouldn’t bother Clay in the least. Folks had whispered about him for most of his life. And having people believe he’d bagged the cop who was supposed to convict him of Barker’s murder would be a feather in his cap. Wouldn’t it?
Which meant…he was protecting her. He’d been protecting her when he put some space between them while they were dancing, too, she belatedly realized. But he was supposed to be the bad guy. So why wasn’t he taking advantage of the situation?
She thought of the pool they’d played. He could easily have stoked his own ego by dominating the game and walking away with al the winnings. But he hadn’t. He’d kept each game close, even lost the first one. And now, instead of slinging an arm around her and taking her outside as if he’d just claimed some kind of trophy, he was thinking of her—and how any affiliation with him would affect her.
She liked Clay. A lot.
But she was light-headed, she reminded herself. For the sake of remaining objective in her investigation, and preserving her peace of mind, she hoped she’d like him a great deal less when she sobered up.
Clay could tel Al ie was tipsy but, except for those few minutes on the dance floor when she’d melted into him, she was trying hard to compensate. She sat in his truck as he drove, holding herself rigid and staring out at the landscape as if she was afraid she might say or do something she’d regret if she wasn’t careful.
“Do you plan on living with your parents for very long?”
he asked.
“I never planned on moving back home in the first place.”
“You seem to be making it work.”
“It’s better than farming my daughter out to day care.”
“That was your other choice?”
“If I’d stayed in Chicago and kept my old job.”
“What about your ex-husband? He couldn’t help?”
“When you have a man who never wanted a child in the first place, you don’t get a lot of support.”
Clay knew what that was like. His father had never wanted him or his sisters or things would’ve turned out differently. “At least in this day and age he has to provide some financial support.”
“No, he doesn’t.”
Clay turned on the car radio. “How’s that?”
“I made him a trade. He signed papers relinquishing his rights to Whitney, and I gave up child support.”
Clay wished he could ask why she’d done that.
Regardless of whether or not her ex had wanted the child, he was her father. But those questions were far too personal.
“Take this street,” she said.
“I know where you live.” He could tel she wasn’t interested in conversation. Even though she hadn’t drunk al that much, she was too busy fighting the effects of the alcohol combined with the No-Doz she’d taken earlier. But he figured this might be his only chance to talk to her about Lucas, to—hopeful y—dissuade her from contacting him.
“Word has it you’re interested in finding my father,” he said as they came to a stop at the intersection of Fourth and McDonald.
She looked over at him, seeming puzzled. “You knew that.”
He lowered the volume on the radio, which, oddly enough, was playing the same song they’d just danced to.
“I’m talking about my real father.”
“Oh.”
He drove down McDonald, then took Response Road.
“Why Lucas?” he prompted. “It’s not because I think your mother’s a serial kil er, if that’s what you’ve heard.” She scowled and, talking mostly to the window, she muttered, “I hate the gossip in this town.”
Clay opened the vents to stop the windows from steaming up. “What are you after, then?”
She tucked a few strands of her short hair behind a smal , perfectly shaped ear. “General information. I always do a thorough background search on everyone involved in my investigations. I’d be stupid not to. People don’t exist as separate entities. We’re al part of a network, a number of networks. I can’t get a clear picture of who I’m dealing with if I don’t also examine the networks.”
“But Lucas isn’t part of my family’s ‘network.’ He left long before Lee Barker went missing.”
“Lucas? You don’t cal him Dad?”
Clay passed a slower moving truck as he headed away from town. Maybe Al ie was slightly drunk but she was perceptive enough to capitalize on what he’d said instead of letting him guide the conversation. “He walked out when I was only ten years old. What else would you expect?”
“That must’ve been rough,” she said.
“We survived.” Not easily, but he didn’t add that. “And I don’t want him coming back.”
She closed her eyes and leaned her head against the seat. “You think he might?”
“I’d rather not take the chance.”
She regarded him from beneath her lashes. “Then I should probably tel you not to worry. He’s remarried and living in Alaska.”
Her words provided a one-two punch that made Clay ease off on the gas. She’d already spoken to Lucas? Had he kept his mouth shut? Or had he let some detail slip that would eventual y expose them?
And, on a deeper level, how come Lucas had final y settled down? He hadn’t loved his first family enough to stick by them, hadn’t loved Clay enough. But he could do it for someone else?
“Are you okay?” she asked.
They were stil decelerating. Clay brought the truck up to normal speed. “Of course.”
“Maybe we should talk about this tomorrow. Your father’s got to be a difficult subject for you, and right now I’m not capable of being as sensitive as I should be.”
“I don’t need you to protect my feelings,” he said irritably.
“Just tel me how you found him.”
She shrugged. “It wasn’t hard. I got his social security number from the trucking company where he worked when you were a boy and performed some databank magic.”
It was too late. Now Clay’s hands were tied.
“What did he have to say?” he asked, fearing the worst.
“I haven’t talked to him yet. He wasn’t home when I cal ed, so I left a message with his wife.”
His wife… Clay wished those two words didn’t turn his stomach. He told himself they shouldn’t. He wasn’t a needy little boy anymore; he was thirty-four years old. But the pain was stil there. “Do you know if he has other children?”
“No. But I can tel you what he does for a living.”
Clay hesitated, but curiosity ended up getting the better of him. “What?”
“He’s a pilot. Flies fishermen to remote lakes and streams.”
I’ve got a lot of life yet to live, a lot of places to see….
“Makes sense, I guess,” he muttered.
“What makes sense?”
“Nothing.”
She put a comforting hand on his arm. “I’m sorry.”
Embarrassed that he’d given away his true feelings, he shook her off. “My father doesn’t matter to me.”
The moon lit one side of her face as she studied him.
“You expect me to believe that?”
He slung an arm over the steering wheel in the most careless pose he could summon. “You don’t?”
“Not for a minute.”
Clay wasn’t sure how to respond. Most people took him at his word. But he was quickly finding that Al ie wasn’t like most people. She knew he might be involved in a murder, was moving forward with an investigation that would include him at some point, and yet she treated him fairly. Innocent until proven guilty. She hadn’t automatical y assumed the worst the other night, although the situation couldn’t have reflected favorably on him—or Beth Ann, either. And, earlier at the pool hal , she hadn’t let Joe intimidate her into avoiding him.
She was trying to give him the benefit of every doubt, reserving judgment, relying on facts instead of prejudice.
In a way, he appreciated her generosity; in another way, he resented it. Because now he had something to lose.
“It’s been a long time since he was part of my life,” he said, trying to suggest that what he felt about Lucas was unimportant.
“I can get a few more details about him when he cal s me, if you want,” she offered. “I could even give you his number.”
“No.” He pul ed to the side of the road in front of her house. The porch light on Chief McCormick’s long brick rambler glowed yel ow across the sloping lawn, but the rest of the house was dark. The cars in the driveway, and the knowledge that Al ie’s parents were asleep inside, made him feel sixteen again, as if he were dropping off a date.
“Maybe he misses you, too, Clay,” she said.
“He couldn’t miss me too badly, could he?”
She didn’t respond, so he continued, “Anyway, as far as I’m concerned, he’s no longer my father. I certainly don’t want anyone to engineer some sort of reunion.”
She nodded. “Okay. Let me know if you change your mind.”
Clay almost asked her not to talk to Lucas if he cal ed.
But now that she’d already left a message, he feared that pressing the issue would only raise Al ie’s suspicions. Why had his mother given the man who’d triggered al the terrible events of the past a chance to destroy their future, as wel ?
Clay wanted to be angry with Irene, but if Lucas had cal ed him, he might’ve been tempted to reveal just as much. Lucas could win anyone’s confidence. His problem was that he couldn’t live up to the promises he made.
And that might prove true once again.
“Good night,” Clay said as Al ie opened the door to climb out.
Her lips curved in a sympathetic smile. “It’s his loss, Clay.”
“Don’t.”
Her eyes widened. “Don’t what?”
“Pity me.” He turned to look at her. “Love me or hate me.
But don’t pity me.”
She rubbed her arms. She hadn’t brought a coat.
“Interesting choice,” she said and shut the door.
“How’d it go last night?”
Al ie’s mother sat beside her father at the breakfast table, drinking a cup of coffee. Evelyn was wearing a bathrobe and slippers, but Dale was dressed in the clothes he wore to mow the lawn. His reading glasses were perched on the end of his nose and he was skimming the newspaper while doing his best to ignore Whitney, who kept yel ing, “Jump in!” and tossing her Barbies into the kitchen sink.
“Aren’t you going to answer your mother?” he asked when Al ie didn’t say anything.
“It was fine,” she said. She hoped to minimize the fact that she’d even gone out. She’d asked her mother to babysit so she could do some investigative work. Instead, she’d let loose and simply had fun. She’d rather not analyze why, but she knew it had a lot to do with how she felt when she was around Clay.
“That’s it?” Evelyn said. “Just fine? ”
Al ie shrugged, feeling uncomfortable beneath the pointed stare of her father. “Pretty much.”
“Where’s your car?” he asked solemnly, angling his head to see her more clearly over his glasses.
Her parents had always watched her closely. It came with being the daughter of a cop. But she hadn’t expected her father to resume the old watch now that she was thirty-three. “I see you’re stil on your toes,” she said wryly.
“I had some caulking to do in the shed earlier.”
“Right.” She drummed her fingers on the table. “What time did I get in?”
“Two.”
“Two what?”
“Two-thirteen.”
She chuckled. “Some things never change.”
“But I don’t want to go swimming,” Whitney said in a high-pitched voice, posing a Barbie on the edge of the sink.
Dale leaned forward. “Where’s your car?”
“It’s at the pool hal ,” she said as indifferently as possible.
“What’s it doing there?”
She lowered her voice. “I didn’t want to drive.”
This explanation met with a moment’s silence, enough to tel Al ie her parents didn’t approve.
“You weren’t drunk!” her mother whispered, sounding horrified.
“Buzzed would be a better word. But before you start to panic, let me assure you that one night does not constitute a problem.”
Evelyn’s forehead wrinkled in concern. “I don’t understand why you’d drink so much. Ever.”
“I was tired so I took some No-Doz to help me stay awake. It didn’t mix wel with beer. That’s al .”
“And you thought it would?” she asked as if such a flimsy excuse made it even worse.
“At least I didn’t try to drive,” Al ie said, hoping they’d see that as something positive. But they weren’t so easy to console.
“Who were you drinking with?” her father asked.
They’d final y arrived at the inevitable question. Al ie took a deep breath, because she knew her parents wouldn’t like this answer any more than they had the others. “Madeline Barker. Kirk Vantassel. And Clay.”
“Montgomery?” her father bel owed.
Whitney dropped her Barbies and turned to watch the drama unfolding at the table. Al ie wanted to tel Dale to calm down, but she had her mouth ful and couldn’t speak.
She’d taken a big spoonful of cereal in an attempt to act nonchalant, as if she expected Evelyn and Dale to react no differently to Clay’s name than to the others. But her ploy hadn’t worked.
“Tel me it’s not true,” her mother said.
Al ie managed to swal ow “It’s true.”
“I’ve never known you to be a drinker.”
“I’m not.”
“Yet the first time you go out with Clay, you come home after two in the morning, drunk.”
“Stop it! You—it’s not how you’re making it sound. I was tired, but Madeline said Clay would be at the pool hal , and I wanted to ask him a few questions about Barker’s disappearance. That’s why I took the No-Doz.”
“And then you drank on top of it.”
“I didn’t think a few beers would make any difference.
And then…” She stopped because she couldn’t explain, at least to their satisfaction, how her interview intentions had so easily turned into pool and dancing. Especial y dancing.
When she closed her eyes, she could stil smel the scent of Clay’s cologne and feel the strength of his arms around her, guiding her body in perfect rhythm with his.
Dale set the newspaper aside. “And then?” he encouraged when her words dwindled away.
She figured the less she said, the better. “When I needed a ride home, Clay was kind enough to offer.”
“You think he was being nice? ” Dale said.
“Yes.”
“Shows how naive you are!”
“How do you know he wasn’t simply being nice?” she chal enged, irritated by the whole Inquisition routine.
“Because I’m familiar with his reputation.”
“So am I. Most people in Stil water keep a list of every mistake he’s ever made!”
“Yet you got into his car, knowing he could be dangerous.”
Clenching her jaw, Al ie began to tap her spoon against the side of her bowl. “If you think he’s dangerous, why won’t you support me in my investigation? Official y reopen the case? Don’t you want to know if he’s real y the one who murdered Lee Barker?”
Her father rattled his paper as if he had a lot to say but was deliberately holding back.
“Dad?”
“I told you, we have more important issues to worry about,” he snapped. “You should spend your time on something that matters.”
“Why don’t we ask Madeline if this matters?”
“You have no business with Clay Montgomery.” His face turned even redder than when he’d caught her necking on the porch after her junior prom. “You’ve chosen poorly once.
I’m not going to stand by while you do it again.”
“Dale,” her mother warned, but it was too late. Al ie shoved her cereal bowl aside and got up.
“How dare you!”
Gripping the table, he pul ed himself to his feet and loomed over her. “I dare because I’m your father!”
Al ie refused to let him intimidate her the way he used to.
“You wouldn’t be treating Danny like this.”
“He’s a man.”
“So? We’re al adults, and you’re being ridiculous.” She glanced between her parents. “You’re making a big deal out of nothing.”
“Just stay away from Clay, from al the Montgomerys,” he said.
“Mommy? Are you in trouble?” Whitney asked, her eyes round.
Al ie glared at her parents. “No. I’m old enough to make my own decisions,” she said and stalked out of the room.
7
Clay reserved most weekends and weeknights for working on the vintage cars he restored in his barn. It was a solitary occupation, but most of his activities were. He didn’t mind being alone. He took his time with each car and general y enjoyed the change of pace.
Today, however, he hadn’t been himself. He felt listless, bored, preoccupied. Again and again, his thoughts drifted to Al ie. At first, he tried to convince himself that he was merely searching for the best way to neutralize the threat she posed. Holding his enemy close and al that. But by midafternoon he was ready to admit that his desires didn’t stem from a motivation nearly that subversive. He wasn’t strategizing about how to protect himself or his family. For once in his life, he wasn’t even thinking about the past.
He wanted to take her to dinner. To go out as though he wasn’t harboring any dark secrets, as though he was just like any other man.
After wiping his greasy hands on a towel, he began putting away his tools. There was no point in working on the Jag today; he wasn’t making any real progress. He kept staring off into space, remembering the expressions that had flitted across Al ie’s face the night before, and repeating the same thing: Forget it. Why would she ever go out with you?
He could think of one very obvious reason: she stil wanted to talk about Barker. She’d go if she believed he’d provide her with some detail she didn’t already know. But he was reluctant to entice her with such an irresistible hook.
He wanted her to go because she wanted to be with him. It was that simple—and that complicated.
“Clay? Where are you?”
Recognizing his sister’s voice, he poked his head out of the barn to find Grace standing on the steps of his back porch, her extended stomach clearly defined by her dress.
New life. He was fascinated by her pregnancy, loved hearing her talk with so much enthusiasm about the coming baby. Her husband’s gaze trailed after her wherever she moved; Heath and Teddy cuddled up to her at every opportunity.
A yearning for the things that real y mattered in life grew so strong in Clay that it momentarily stole his breath, and he halted in mid-stride. In the glare of the afternoon sun, which was unseasonably hot for mid-May, he could easily imagine another woman standing where Grace stood now. A woman waiting for him, big with his child.
“What’s wrong?” she cal ed.
Shaking his head to clear away the sil y daydream, he started forward again. He couldn’t bring a woman—a wife
—to the farm and expect her to fight the same negative sentiments he did, couldn’t claim her heart and then leave her husbandless if the truth ever came out.
“Nothing.” He shaded his eyes with his hand as he approached. “How’s the baby?”
“Fine. Getting big, as you can see. I feel like a moose.”
“Don’t,” he said. “You’ve never been prettier.”
She smiled when he reached her. “You’re sincere about that?”
“Would I lie to you?” He offered her a lopsided grin.
“Besides, how can I not think you’re beautiful? You look just like me.”
She gave him a playful slug, then settled into the porch swing.
“Would you like a cold drink?” he asked.
She’d pul ed her thick black hair into a ponytail, but several strands fel loose around her face, framing eyes the same blue as his own. “No, thanks. I had a late lunch.”
He needed to wash up, but ridding himself of the grease on his hands required heavy-duty soap, a stiff-bristled brush and ten ful minutes of scrubbing. Because Grace never stayed at the farm very long, he decided he’d get to see more of her if he waited until she left to start that routine.
He sat next to her. “Where’re the boys?”
“Fishing with their father one last time before the baby gets here.”
“What if you go into labor while they’re gone?”
“They’re not far, just down at the old Hatfield pond. And Kennedy’s got his pager with him.” Kicking off her sandals, Grace tucked her feet beneath her and leaned her head on his shoulder.
“I’l get you dirty,” he warned.
“I don’t care.” She seemed so peaceful and content as she closed her eyes and let him swing her that he began to feel guilty about the dissatisfaction he felt with his own life.
At least his sister was happy. How many years had she suffered because he hadn’t looked out for her the way he should have? “I didn’t know Kennedy had a pager,” he said.
“He didn’t until last week. He went out and bought one because he doesn’t trust his cel phone. I’m supposed to cal both the minute I go into labor.”
Clay chuckled and continued to move the swing. “You’l remember to cal me as soon as Junior arrives, won’t you?”
“Of course.”
“Have you decided on a name?”
“If it’s a girl, she’l be Lauren Elizabeth.”
“Nice. But I’m predicting a boy.”
Her smile grew shy as she sat up. “Then he’l be Isaiah Clayton.”
He studied her in surprise. “After me?”
She slipped her hand into the crook of his arm. “If you don’t mind.”
“Why?”
“Because you’re such a good brother.”
A lump swel ed in his throat, making it difficult to talk.
They rocked in silence for a moment. Then she nudged him. “I hear Al ie McCormick is searching for Dad.”
He nodded.
“What a relief he doesn’t know anything that can hurt us.”
Clay glanced at her but kept his mouth shut. Irene hadn’t told Grace? Considering Grace’s situation, he was glad.
She didn’t need the worry. She’d been through enough, and none of it had been her fault. “Yeah, what a relief,” he echoed.
“Do you think she’l find him?”
He stared at his greasy hands. “She already has.”
She put her feet down to stop the swaying motion.
“Where is he?”
“Alaska.”
“What’s he doing al the way up there?”
“He’s remarried.”
The expression on her face momentarily revealed the old fragility. The mention of Lucas had obviously brought back bad memories.
Reaching out, Clay squeezed her hand despite the grease on his own. “He’s not worth the pain,” he said softly.
Her smile appeared forced, but she nodded. “Has Al ie come snooping around here yet?”
“She’s been by, but not because of Barker.”
“You’re talking about what happened with Beth Ann.”
He scowled. “God, is there anyone who hasn’t heard?”
She laughed and, relieved to see her smile again, he relaxed in the seat.
“She’s tel ing everyone you want a baby, you know,” she said, wiping the grease he’d transferred to her on his dirty T-shirt.
“I didn’t know. But that’s crazy.”
She angled her head to size him up. “Is it?”
“Of course. I’m not even married.”
“You’ve been almost as interested in this baby as Kennedy.”
“Why wouldn’t I be? I’m the kid’s uncle.”
“Maybe it’s time you started thinking about settling down and having some children of your own.”
They both knew a man didn’t get more settled than he was. Unless he wanted to wind up in prison, he couldn’t go was. Unless he wanted to wind up in prison, he couldn’t go anywhere. And he’d be stupid to marry. But he knew it hurt Grace to acknowledge the limitations of his situation, so he played along. “I’m sure I’l know when I meet the right woman.”
“Don’t let what happened stop you,” she said, suddenly fierce.
How could he not let it stop him? He couldn’t pretend he didn’t have the remains of his stepfather buried in the cel ar.
“Don’t worry,” he said. “I’m fine as I am.”
She stared off into space, toward the barn. He’d torn down the horse stal s to make room for his car shop, but he knew that, for Grace, the barn held the worst memories of al . At one end was the reverend’s office, where Barker used to prepare his sermons. It was also where he’d tie Grace up and—
Clay winced, unable to think about it. They’d left that office completely intact for nineteen years, as if they believed he might one day return, until last summer when Grace had final y snapped and torn the place apart. Clay had since boxed up the reverend’s belongings and passed them on to Madeline, but that two-hundred square feet of space stil felt evil. Clay never went in there.
“What is it?” he asked. Once the memories crowded this close, Grace never lingered—unless she had a good reason.
When she reached for his hand, her fingers were cold, despite the warmth of the sun. “I ran into Reverend Portenski at the drugstore.”
“I didn’t realize you knew Reverend Portenski.” Grace never went to church anymore. Of Irene’s three children, she’d once been the most receptive to spiritual guidance.
But that was before Barker.
“We’ve seen each other around town, of course. Usual y he won’t even look at me, and I ignore him. I guess he hasn’t seen my soul as worth saving. Or he knew he’d be wasting his breath, even if he tried. But this last encounter…”
“What?” Clay prompted.
“He approached me with the oddest expression on his face.”
“What kind of expression?”
“Sort of pained or fil ed with regret or…I’m not sure.”
“What’d he say?”
“That God knows al things and that his wrath wil destroy the wicked.”
Clay felt instantly defensive. He was always defensive of Grace. But judging by his own experience with Portenski, what she’d just told him didn’t make any sense. “That doesn’t sound like him,” he said. “When I first started going back to church several months ago, he made sure everyone knew he was fine with having me there. I think some people, like Joe, were trying to convince him I shouldn’t be al owed to participate, because he delivered a rather passionate sermon saying it wasn’t his place to judge. ‘God is the only one who knows the thoughts and intents of each man’s heart and reserves judgment for himself,’ he said.”
“But I didn’t get the impression that he was blaming me, Clay. It was almost as if he was trying to tel me that Barker wil be punished for his sins.”
Clay’s muscles tensed. “Do you think he knows?”
“I do.”
“But how could he? We searched the entire church and personal y boxed up everything in Barker’s private rooms.
The pictures weren’t there. What we burned must’ve been al of them.”
“No.” They’d had this discussion before. Although it was difficult for Grace to talk about, she always maintained that there had to be more. Barker’s fetish included the camera.
She claimed he’d taken hundreds of Polaroids.
“Then, where did he hide them?”
“I don’t know. But I believe Portenski’s found them.”
“If that’s true, why hasn’t he come forward? Used them to put one of us on trial? They certainly establish a strong enough motive.”
“They also reveal what a monster Barker was. Maybe Portenski has sympathy for the thirteen-year-old child in those pictures.”
She’d spoken as if that thirteen-year-old child was a stranger to her. Clay wondered if that was how she coped, by divorcing herself from the little girl she used to be.
“He said if I ever decide to come back to church, he’d love to see me in his congregation,” she murmured. “That God can heal al wounds.”
“What’d you say?”
“I told him I’l never set foot inside a church again, particularly that one.”
“How’d he respond?”
“He nodded, as if he understood, and shuffled away.”
Like Grace, Clay had stopped attending church after what had happened with Barker. He’d tried to pretend he didn’t need religion in his life, but the beliefs and rituals were too big a part of his upbringing, and he couldn’t deny himself indefinitely. Intel ectual y, he recognized that a preacher could be bad without making the doctrine he taught bad. This understanding was what had led him back.
But Clay’s emotions sometimes got the better of him and he occasional y walked out in the middle of the sermon, if a word or phrase or even a look reminded him of Barker. The kind of hypocrisy he and his mother and sisters had witnessed changed a person, and once that innocence was lost, there was no reclaiming it.
Grace touched her stomach, and a hint of a smile instantly replaced the haunted expression of a moment earlier.
“The baby’s kicking?” Clay asked.
“More like he’s rol ing over. If your hands were clean I’d let you see for yourself. I know how much you like it.”
“Who says I like it?” he teased.
“You might fool other people, but you don’t fool me.” She laughed. “Are you sure Beth Ann isn’t the woman for you?”
“Absolutely.” His life seemed to exist in shades of gray, but at least here he was speaking God’s honest truth.
“I want you to find someone to love, Clay. I want you to find someone and be as happy as I am.”
Her earnest words tugged at his heart. “Quit worrying about me,” he said gruffly.
“I can’t help it,” she said. “I worry about you, Mol y, Madeline, Mom.” She rol ed her eyes. “Especial y Mom.”
“I’ve got Mom covered.”
Her eyebrows shot up. “You do? Then why did she just tel me she’s going out of town for the weekend?”
He blinked at her. “You’re kidding, right?”
“I wish I was.”
“With Chief McCormick?” He kept his voice low, in case someone was coming down the driveway.
“She says she’s going alone, but you and I know that’s highly unlikely.”
“This wouldn’t be happening if she lived here with me.”
“She couldn’t take living here,” Grace said with a grimace. “I don’t know how she lasted as long as she did.
Or how you do it.”
He wouldn’t have remained at the farm, either, except that he had no other choice. It was his duty to look after his mother and sisters, and staying was the only way he could do it. “Maybe it wouldn’t be fun to have her here al the time, but I’d be able to keep her out of trouble.”
“You’re both better off living on your own.”
As much as Clay felt obligated to take care of his mother, maybe Grace was right. He wasn’t sure he could tolerate living with her again. He’d grown too used to rambling around the farm by himself. “How’s Chief McCormick getting away from his wife this weekend?”
“I have no idea. How does he do it any time?”
Clay shook his head. “Why won’t Mom listen to me?”
“I’m sure she wants to. She just…can’t.”
“Can’t?”
“I couldn’t give Kennedy up if my life depended on it.”
“Kennedy’s your husband. Dale’s committed to someone else.”
She smoothed her dress. “I’m not saying what Mom’s doing is right. I’m saying she’s never been so completely in love, and that’s why it’s tough to make the sacrifice.”
“She’s more in love with him than she was with our father?”
“Chief McCormick is everything Dad wasn’t. Solid, dependable, responsible, down-to-earth.”
“He’s not exactly a man of sterling character. He’s cheating on his wife!”
“Of course that part’s not admirable. But it’s understandable—to a point. Mom’s several years younger and far more attractive than Evelyn. Sex is…new and exciting again, and al that.”
“At his age, it’s as much about ego as it is about sex,”
Clay said. “Being able to get Mom probably makes him feel like a real man.”
“And Mom’s final y found someone who’s treating her as if she’s special.”
“But it can’t go anywhere,” Clay said. “Imagine the scandal once everyone finds out.”
“The backlash wil be severe,” she agreed, cringing visibly. “I feel so sorry for Kennedy. Sometimes I wonder if he understood what he was getting into when he married me.”
“Don’t say that! He’s lucky to have you.”
“I hope he thinks so after Mom’s affair is exposed.”
“You say that as if it’s inevitable.”
“You can vouch for how hard it is to keep a secret in this town.”
“Is Kennedy aware of it?”
“Yes. I thought it was only fair to warn him.” Standing, she dropped a quick kiss on his cheek, and he knew she’d already stayed at the farm as long as she could tolerate.
“Thanks, big brother. I’l try to convince Mom not to go this weekend.”
“Good luck,” he said. Lord knew that what he’d told Irene hadn’t made any difference.
She paused on the steps. “By the way, Mol y’s coming out here for the birth.”
“It’l be great to have her back. She hasn’t been home since Christmas.”
“She’s seeing someone new. Have you heard?”
“No. Do you think this relationship’s got a future?”
“I doubt it. She’s only interested until they start making demands, and then she moves on.” She tossed him a grin.
“I wonder where she gets that from.”
“Not me,” he said.
“If you say so,” she scoffed.
“Grace?”
Brushing the loose hair out of her eyes, she glanced back at him. “What?”
“Would you want to talk to Dad if you had the chance?”
She didn’t take even a moment to think about it. “No,”
she said and gave him a final wave.
Al ie was at the police station, sorting through the Barker files, when Lucas Montgomery’s cal came in. She had Whitney with her, coloring near her desk. Her father hadn’t stopped by today, thank goodness. They hadn’t spoken since breakfast and she wasn’t ready to talk to him yet.
Fortunately, he usual y didn’t work on Saturdays. Two other officers, Grimsman and Pontiff, were on duty, out on patrol.
“Officer McCormick,” she said into the phone. Her heart had started to race as soon as she saw the Alaska area code on her cal er ID. She wasn’t sure why she’d be nervous about talking to Clay’s father, but she was.
“This is Lucas Montgomery.”
“I recognized the number. I don’t get many cal s from Alaska. Thanks for phoning me back.”
“No problem. What can I do for you?”
She tried to hear Clay in his voice, wondered if the two men looked much alike these days. She’d seen a copy of an old family photo in the file, but it was blurry and over a quarter of a century old. “As I explained to your wife, I’m from Stil water, a little town in—”
“I know where you’re from,” he said. “And I know why you’re cal ing. But I don’t think I’l be able to help you. My wife said you have a few questions regarding the disappearance of some man I’ve never met.”
Al ie heard a trace of resentment in those last four words, beneath a thin veneer of good humor. “Not some man, Mr. Montgomery,” she clarified. “We’re talking about your ex-wife’s second husband.”
“I’m afraid I never knew him. I haven’t spoken to Irene since I left.”
“Not once?”
“Not once.”
“So you don’t know that your family’s suffered through a great deal of suspicion and doubt concerning the disappearance of Lee Barker?”
“No, I don’t. What I do know is that Irene isn’t the kind of person who’d harm anyone. That’s al I can tel you. I’m sorry if you were hoping otherwise.”
“I wasn’t hoping otherwise, Mr. Montgomery. I’m just searching for the facts.”
“Isn’t it a bit late for an investigation?” he asked.
“Excuse me?”
“Surely after nineteen years—”
“Nineteen years?” Al ie interrupted, her breath lodged in her throat.
Silence fel over the line as if he’d suddenly realized his blunder, then he said, “It’s been that long since I left.”
“But you moved away when Clay was only ten years old.”
She could’ve used the actual date instead of Clay’s age, but she wanted to remind Lucas of the little boy he’d abandoned.
“I’m not positive about that.”
“You don’t remember how old your son was?”
“Not exactly.”
“It’s been twenty-five years. A sixteen-year-old boy is quite different from a ten-year-old.”
“Guess I lost count.”
“So it’s merely a coincidence that the nineteen years you just mentioned correlates perfectly with the length of time Reverend Barker’s been gone?”
“I told you, I don’t know anything about Reverend Barker!”
“Then it’s even more amazing that you guessed the year he went missing, isn’t it?”
There was a slight pause. “Listen, you—you’re heading down the wrong road,” he said. It was easy to tel that she’d managed to rattle him. “Like I said, Irene wouldn’t hurt anybody. She’s a good woman.”
Yet he’d turned his back on her….
“Is it possible you know more than you’re saying, Mr.
Montgomery?”
“Are you cal ing me a liar?” he retorted.
For the first time, Al ie wondered if he could’ve had something to do with Barker’s disappearance. Could he have come back, found another man in his place, fought with that man and possibly kil ed him? That would certainly explain why Lucas Montgomery had made himself scarce for so long.
The thought came as a relief to Al ie. She would much rather it was Clay’s father than Clay. “I’m just doing my job,”
she replied. “Can you tel me where you were the night the reverend disappeared?”
“Yes. I have an airtight alibi. So don’t go trying to pin his death on me.”
Al ie’s hand tightened on the receiver. “I didn’t say he was dead.”
No response.
“Mr. Montgomery?”
“After so long, I think it’s safe to make that assumption, don’t you?” he said. “Anyway, I’ve been in Alaska for twenty years, and you can’t prove I ever left. No airplane tickets.
No train tickets. No gas receipts.”
“I see you’ve been watching your share of Forensic Files.”
“I’ve sat through a few.”
“So you’ve never been back to see your children?”
Silence.
“Do you need me to speak up?” she asked.
“I heard you.”
“And?”
“I haven’t been back, okay?”
“Wel , as far as I’m concerned, that’s as much of a crime as anything else.” She had no business passing judgment on him. But her own experience with Sam’s rejection of Whitney and what she’d sensed in Clay last night put her too close to the situation.
“Go to hel ,” he said and hung up.
Al ie returned the phone to its cradle. She hadn’t handled that cal as professional y as she should have. But she’d caught him lying to her. She was positive of it. Now she just needed to figure out why.
Whitney looked up at her. “Was that Daddy, Mommy?”
“No,” she said. “It was someone a lot like him.”
8
Reverend Portenski gripped the sides of the pulpit as he gave his weekly sermon, enjoying his own message—until he saw Clay Montgomery slip into the back of the church.
The man scarcely made a sound as he came in and sat several rows behind everyone else—but it took only one person to notice him. Then the rumble of voices rose, and heads began to turn. Clay tolerated the attention with more dignity than he was ever credited with possessing. He stared straight ahead and ignored what was going on around him. But that didn’t mean he liked it. Who would?
After a slight nod in his direction, a welcome Portenski forced himself to offer each and every time Clay showed up, he let his eyes seek out other parishioners with whom he felt more comfortable. Clay was an intimidating man.
He’d probably seen and done things Portenski didn’t even want to consider. The pictures in that dark hole explained why. But if Clay was as guilty as everyone believed, even the church couldn’t bring him peace.
“Vengeance is mine, sayeth the Lord.”
The confused expressions of those in the audience told Portenski he’d just spoken those words out loud, right in the middle of a persuasive argument on succoring the needy.
Clearing his throat to give himself a split second to gather his scattered thoughts, he recovered by tel ing his listeners that it wasn’t their place to judge whether or not a beggar deserved his current circumstances. “We should never turn away the needy. For aren’t we al beggars before God?”
Several people murmured, “Amen.” Portenski smiled approvingly and continued preaching—while trying to avoid Clay’s piercing gaze. In another fifty minutes, he’d be rid of Mr. Montgomery, he told himself. And chances were good Clay wouldn’t show up next week. His attendance was sporadic at best. But when the closing prayer ended, Clay didn’t immediately walk out, as usual. He stood at the back, waiting.
Folding his arms, Clay leaned one shoulder against the wal as the rest of the congregation filed past him. Most people refused to even look at him. Joe’s father muttered under his breath that he had no right to be standing in a church with decent people. Joe’s mother and her friends glared at him shamelessly. But Clay didn’t acknowledge them. He’d seen Al ie McCormick’s mother escort Al ie’s daughter out a few minutes before the service ended, saw the little girl turn and wave to her mother, so he knew Al ie had come. He wanted to catch a glimpse of her badly enough to wait around. And, after what Grace had told him, he was hoping for a chance to speak to the reverend.
But it was Beth Ann who approached him as soon as she could cut through the crowd flowing toward the exit.
“Clay, it’s so good to see you,” she said.
“Good to see you, too.” His response was automatic and subdued, but he regretted saying even that much when she pounced on the opportunity to read more into it.
“Real y? Do you mean that?”
The longing in her voice made Clay uncomfortable. He wanted to say something to make the situation less painful for her, but being nice only gave her false hope.
“Listen, Beth Ann, I’m sorry—” he started, but a third voice interrupted before he could finish.
“Of course he means it. Clay likes to see al his friends.
I’m glad you could make it to church today, Mr.
Montgomery.”
Surprised that Al ie would involve herself, he turned to find her coming toward him from the other side. When their eyes met, she grinned, letting him know she’d rescued him on purpose.
“Officer McCormick,” he said with a nod. Clay supposed he should smile politely and leave it at that, but he couldn’t stop his eyes from wandering over her. She looked so pretty, so…wholesome in her white blouse and skirt. For a moment he completely forgot she wasn’t the most beautiful woman in the world.
“What’s going on?” Beth Ann asked, glancing between them.
Clay regarded her blankly, hoping to defuse her apparent jealousy, but it was too late.
“Are you hoping for your turn in his bed?” she asked Al ie, instantly suspicious.
“You’re in a church,” Clay reminded her, but Beth Ann didn’t seem to care.
Al ie responded with far less than the denial Beth Ann had obviously hoped to provoke. “What I’d real y like is a few lessons in pool,” she said.
“Pool?” Beth Ann repeated, confusion wrinkling her normal y smooth forehead.
Al ie nodded. “Yes—bil iards. Clay definitely knows how to play.”
“That’s not the only game he’s good at,” Beth Ann said.
“If you’re not careful, he’l hurt you, too.”
Al ie merely smiled. “If he doesn’t want to tutor me, I’l learn from someone else.”
“Until you realize there is no one else, at least no one like him,” Beth Ann said sulkily and walked away.
Embarrassed, Clay wasn’t sure what to say in the wake of such a departure. So he rubbed a hand over his jaw and waited for Al ie to break the awkward silence.
“That was some endorsement,” she said.
He tried to shrug it off. “She didn’t grow up here, remember?”
“What does that mean?”
“I guess I have her fooled.”
“Today. Considering the cal she made from your farm, she tends to vacil ate.”
“She’s not as bad as the past week might suggest.”
Al ie’s smile changed, grew thoughtful. “That’s generous of you.”
“It’s true,” he said simply.
“I guess she’s tel ing everyone she’s ready to marry and settle down.”
“I’ve heard.” He shoved his hands into the pockets of his chinos. “She’l make someone a good wife.”
“Someone?”
“Someone else.”
“Why not you?”
“She can’t play pool,” he teased. “When do you want your first lesson?”
Al ie lifted her chin. “How much is it going to cost me?”
He sent her a slow, devilish grin. “I’m not as cheap as you might’ve heard.”
She feigned disappointment. “Now you’re real y breaking my heart.”
“But I’l give you a lesson if you’l go out to dinner with me.”
She glanced surreptitiously around the church. “When?”
“Tonight?”
His heart hammered against his chest as he waited for her response. He couldn’t remember the last time he’d been nervous asking a woman out. In most cases, he wasn’t the one extending the invitation.
She opened her mouth to answer him, then saw her father moving toward them. “I’l cal you,” she murmured and scooted out the door.
Clay was tempted to watch her as she left. But Chief McCormick had stopped in front of him and made a point of getting his attention.
“Leave her alone,” he muttered.
Clay blinked in surprise. “What did you say?”
“You heard me,” he replied and stalked out the door.
Al ie hurried to her cruiser, which was the vehicle she usual y drove around town. Whitney had grown restless in church and Evelyn had already taken her home for a nap, so she didn’t have to worry about getting her daughter strapped into the back seat, which was fortunate because she didn’t want to give her father a chance to catch up with her. She and her parents had barely spoken since their argument at the breakfast table yesterday. When they did talk, they acted as if nothing had happened. Judging by the look on Dale’s face when he saw her with Clay, however, the truce was over.
She managed to slip into the driver’s seat of her car and, pretending she didn’t see her father coming after her, closed the door and drove off. She thought it’d be wise to give Dale a chance to cool down and get involved in a TV
show or project before she saw him again—because it wasn’t going to do any good to continue arguing. He couldn’t convince her to stay away from Clay. Clay was part of her investigation and, after speaking with Lucas, Al ie believed more than ever that the Montgomerys were the key to solving the case. Clearly, since Clay had stonewal ed the police for nearly twenty years, the antagonistic approach wasn’t working with him. She couldn’t see the harm in trying a little friendship.
Besides, she liked Clay—just as much as she had when she was drunk, she realized with chagrin.
Beth Ann’s words came back to her. He’ll hurt you, too, she’d said. But Al ie wasn’t concerned. She had no expectations of a serious relationship. He might’ve asked her out to dinner, but she knew better than to assume he had more than a passing interest in her. A woman didn’t have to know him very wel to understand that he wasn’t big on commitment. Of al the rumors that circulated about him, the one that said he was hard to get—which Al ie translated as impossible—was the one she most believed.
Her cel phone rang. She rooted around for it while she drove, trying to find where it had fal en, hoping it was her brother. She’d cal ed him earlier to complain about their father. Moving home was a mixed blessing. She appreciated her parents’ support, knew it was good for Whitney to have them around, but it was so hard giving up the autonomy she’d enjoyed as a married adult. Maybe living with her father and working for him had started out okay, but after only six weeks it was putting a strain on their relationship. Danny had tried to warn her….
Where was her phone? As it rang again, she leaned forward to feel under the seat, wondering if she should move into the guesthouse. Her parents wouldn’t like it, but it would give her more privacy. And Whitney could stil stay at her parents’ on the nights Al ie worked.
Eventual y her fingers closed around her phone and she managed to pul it out from under the passenger seat. But after one glance at the cal er ID, Al ie tossed it aside. It wasn’t her brother, it was her father—and they’d only get into a yel ing match if she answered.
Since Whitney was probably asleep, Al ie wasn’t in any hurry to return home. She decided to use the next two hours to interview some of the witnesses whose testimony she’d read in the Barker files. It was Sunday, so most of them should be available.
She planned to begin with Jed Fowler. He’d been at the farm the night Barker disappeared; he’d also attempted to confess to Barker’s murder nine months ago, during the last police search. And yet, apart from the three minutes it took to brush off enough dirt to determine that they’d dug up the skul of a dog and not a human, he’d never real y been a suspect. Maybe he was strange, but he had no motive, nothing to gain from Barker’s death.
Chances were much greater that he’d witnessed something and was keeping silent about it. But if that was true, why would he confess to murder instead of pointing a finger at the real culprit?
From what she’d read in the files, Al ie thought she could venture a guess.
Clay remained near the doors of the church, grappling with his anger over Chief McCormick’s parting words. He considered walking out—and never coming back. He wasn’t sure why he’d returned in the first place. He didn’t need Al ie, her father or anyone else. But he wanted to speak to Portenski before he left—if the man would ever acknowledge his presence. For the last few minutes, the reverend had been moving around the pews, putting away hymnbooks and tidying up as if he didn’t know Clay was stil in the room.
When Clay cleared his throat, the preacher final y looked up and glanced around, apparently shocked to find them alone.
“Is there something I can do for you, Mr. Montgomery?”
he asked. He had a mild voice and manner, which was fitting for a man in his position. And yet, as nice as Portenski was, Clay got the distinct impression that the reverend was reluctant to talk to him. Prior to what Grace had told him, Clay had simply assumed Portenski’s reserve had to do with the fact that he believed what most people believed—that Clay or his mother was responsible for Barker’s disappearance. Or if he wasn’t certain, at least he wondered. But now Clay suspected there might be more to it.
“My sister mentioned to me that you spoke to her the other day.”
A quick darting of the tongue wet Portenski’s lips. “Yes, I
—I wanted to make sure she felt welcome here. If she ever decides to join us again.”
Clay took note of the color rising high on his cheeks.
“You told her that God’s wrath would destroy the wicked.
Isn’t that right?”
The reverend smoothed down the white tufts of hair growing over his ears. “I—um—yes, I did. It’s true, after al , is it not?”
“Were you referring to my sister’s destruction when you made that comment?”
The reverend’s eyes widened. “Is that how she interpreted it?”
“Considering what most people in this town have accused us of, what else would she think?”
He flapped a hand in front of him. “That wasn’t it at al ! I was just trying to tel her that God knows al things and wil set them right eventual y. We must have faith.”
“That’s an interesting comment to make to someone you believe was involved in a murder.”
The reverend muttered something, but Clay couldn’t make out al the words.
“What was that?” he asked.
“I said I’ve never indicated that I believe Grace is guilty of any crime.”
The inflection was too noticeable to be accidental.
Clay lowered his voice. “So you know.” He wanted to add, “That Reverend Barker was a predator,” but he had to be careful. He didn’t need to reveal a stronger motive for murder than the greed they’d already attributed to him, especial y on the heels of his supposed “confession” to Beth Ann.
Portenski’s lips pursed. He seemed reluctant to respond
—but he showed no curiosity or surprise.
“Reverend?”
The preacher remained stiff, uncomfortable. “I’m confident only of what I told her.”
Clay stared at him for several seconds. “That God knows al things.”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
“I told you, it’s true.”
“That’s it?”
“Of course.”
Whatever the reverend was thinking, he wasn’t going to tel . And, judging by his attitude, pressing him wouldn’t loosen his tongue. Portenski had the determined look of a man who’d dug in for a storm.
Clay refused to waste the effort asking for answers he wouldn’t get. But he had other questions, questions that were, in their own way, every bit as important. Questions he’d wanted to ask someone like Portenski for years. “And do you find God particularly forgiving?”
There was a slight delay in the reverend’s response, as if Clay’s change in tactics had caught him off guard.
“According to the Bible—”
“Don’t quote me the Bible, Reverend. I’m asking what you think.”
“I’m just a man.”
“A man who’s read libraries of books on theology, philosophy and sociology.” Portenski was known for always having a book in his hand, and often quoted from a variety of works during his sermons. “If you’re not qualified to form an opinion, who is? We’re al just men.”
Portenski lifted his chin. “I believe that, for the deserving, mercy tempers justice.”
Clay nodded. Grace was right. The reverend had found the missing pictures or some letters or…something. He must have; he knew too much. He was keeping silent, but not because he thought Clay was innocent. The “deserving”
part of what he’d said indicated that he thought God’s mercy would be reserved for Grace alone.
And Portenski was probably right. Although Clay hadn’t actual y kil ed Barker, he’d indirectly caused the events of that night, and he’d definitely had a hand in the cover-up.
His desire for mercy, for forgiveness and peace of mind, had brought him back to church. But he was wasting his time.
After living such a lie, he could never be cal ed deserving.
As Al ie parked her police cruiser at the curb, Jed Fowler appeared briefly at his front window wearing a stark frown. She wanted to believe it was because he didn’t recognize her. But that couldn’t be the case. She was the only female officer on the force, and her father had been taking their vehicles to Jed’s automotive repair shop for the past forty years.
Jed knew who she was, but he seemed il at ease around women and children. A simple person, he got up early, worked until late and returned home to the same two-bedroom house where he’d grown up. His father had been kil ed in an automobile accident while Jed was just a boy.
His mother, a cantankerous old woman who used to sit on the porch and rock for hours, glaring at the children who streamed by on their way home from the nearby elementary school, had died while Al ie was in col ege. As far as Al ie knew, Jed had lived alone ever since.
She strode up the walk, wondering if his mother was the reason he’d remained a bachelor. Quite possibly, the old woman had been so demanding that he was unwil ing to welcome another female into his home. The stories that circulated about her were a bit scary. Al ie remembered a group of her friends tel ing her they were walking home from a party late one night when they were startled by Mama Fowler. Jed’s mother was sitting on her porch in the dead of winter, al bundled up in coats and blankets, and brandishing a shotgun, pointing it at anyone who so much as looked at the house.
With that background, no wonder he’s odd, Al ie thought.
She reached the stoop and lifted a hand to knock. But the door opened before she could touch it, and Jed’s craggy nose and rheumy eyes appeared in the crack.
“Mr. Fowler?”
He made a noise that might’ve been a response, but he didn’t open the door any wider.
Al ie leaned close, hoping to win him over with a polite smile. “May I have a word with you?”
He glanced behind him as though he was looking for an excuse not to admit her.
“We could talk out here on the porch, if you like.”
Yanking on the red bal cap she’d seen him wear around town, he stepped out, leaving the door ajar. Because he’d been reluctant to invite her in, Al ie had assumed the house might not be neat enough for company. But from what she could see, there wasn’t a thing out of place.
“You’ve probably guessed why I’m here.”
The frown had left his face. Now he just stared at her, his bushy eyebrows forming a prominent ledge over his deep-set eyes. “No, ma’am.”
“I’d like to talk to you about Lee Barker.”
His eyes narrowed. “You’re reopening the investigation?”
“No. Not official y. I’m doing what I can for Madeline.”
“You want to help her?” he said.
“That’s right.”
“By finding out what happened to her father.”
“Yes. I used to be a cold case detective before moving back here,” she explained. “I learned a few things that I’m hoping wil make a difference. Madeline deserves to know what happened, don’t you think?”
Al ie wasn’t sure what kind of reaction she’d been expecting, but it wasn’t the one she got. “Better off without him, if you ask me.”
“What did you say?” He’d mumbled the words.
He pul ed the bil of his cap lower. “Nothin’.”
“You didn’t like Reverend Barker?” Jed had been a regular at Barker’s church until a few years before the reverend went missing. One day, Jed got up and walked out in the middle of the service and never returned. She remembered her mother launching a fel owship crusade to reclaim him, but nothing Evelyn or anyone else did made any difference. Jed had never joined the congregation again.
“Can’t say as I did.”
“I’d be interested to hear why, if you wouldn’t mind tel ing me.”
“He’s gone. Don’t matter now.”
“It might,” she said. He stil didn’t volunteer the details she was after, so she resorted to the questions she’d planned to ask in the first place. “You were at the property, fixing the tractor in the barn the night Barker disappeared.
Is that correct?”
A single dip of his head served as confirmation.
“In the reports, you said Barker didn’t come back to the farm that night.”
No comment.
“Is that true?” she prompted.
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Would you have seen him, or at least heard his car, if he did?”
“Tough to say.”
“You had the radio on, right?”
“Yeah.”
“Was it louder than you normal y play it at your shop?”
Al ie knew he always had his radio tuned to a country-western station.
“Maybe. The kids were the only ones home, so I wasn’t worried about botherin’ anybody.”
“The kids?”
“The Montgomery girls.”
“Irene wasn’t there? Clay wasn’t there?” She knew they weren’t, of course. She’d read the statements. But she needed to hear the words directly from Jed in order to get a sense of how he felt about the night’s events. And to see if his story had changed over the years.
“Mrs. Montgomery—”
“Wasn’t she Mrs. Barker then?” Al ie asked, watching closely for his reaction.
He seemed undisturbed by the question. “I guess she was.”
“Do you remember when she went back to her former name?”
If Al ie was right about Jed’s motivation for his strange and sudden confession at the farm—if it was true that he carried a torch for the attractive Irene Montgomery and had been trying to protect her—he’d be able to give her this information.
But his expression remained blank as he shook his head.
“Okay,” Al ie said. “Back to the night in question. Did you see Mrs. Montgomery that night?”
“She came out to the barn to tel me she’d be gone for a spel .”
“Did she say where she was going?”
“Somethin’ to do with the church.”
Records confirmed that she’d attended choir practice at Ruby Bradford’s. She’d headed home thirty minutes after her husband had supposedly started in the same direction.
“Did she seem eager to be on her way?”
He frowned as if this was a question he hadn’t been asked before. “I don’t know.”
“How was she acting? Agitated? Worried?
Preoccupied? Resigned?” Irene hadn’t sung with the church choir since. When asked about it, she admitted that it was the reverend who’d insisted she join. He wanted her to set the proper example by supporting his auxiliary programs.
“She said she had to go and left.”
“And then you were alone with the girls.”
“No. Clay was there. At first.”
“What were they doing? Do you recal ?”
He shrugged. “I was just there to fix the tractor.”
“Did anyone else come or go that night?”
“I heard some kids stop by.”
“When?”
“Maybe half an hour later.”
So he’d heard one car. “What happened then?”
“I saw Clay climb into a black truck with some other kids.
They drove off a second later.”
Those “other kids” were Jeremy Jordan and Rhys Franklin. They’d gone over to the home of Corinne Rasmussen, a girl Clay had been dating at the time.
Corinne had since moved away, but she’d confirmed the visit in the original investigation. The files contained these details.
“So thirteen-year-old Grace and eleven-year-old Mol y were home by themselves?” Al ie clarified.
“I guess.”
“It didn’t concern you that they were alone?”
“Why would it? Grace was old enough to take care of her sister. Anyway, it wasn’t any of my business.”
“You were just there to fix the tractor.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
Frustrated, Al ie studied him for a moment. He wasn’t doing a heck of a lot to help her out. He offered only as much as he had to in order to answer each question. Was it just his taciturn manner? Did he distrust her because she was a woman? Or did he have some other reason for keeping quiet? “How wel do you know Irene?” she asked, trying that tack again.
“She brings her car in now and then.”
“That’s it?”
“That’s it.”
“Were you friends at the time the reverend went missing?”
“She was his wife.”
“She didn’t deal with you personal y?”
“Not unless the reverend wasn’t around.”
“Did that happen very often?”
“No.”
“What type of interaction did you have when he wasn’t there?”
Fowler shoved his hands deep into the pockets of his coveral s. “I told you, we didn’t talk much.”
Interviewing a man like Fowler wasn’t easy. She hadn’t gotten anything out of him that wasn’t already wel documented. But Al ie kept at it. “You said you spoke to her when her husband wasn’t around.”
“She’d listen to what I told her so she could tel it to him.”
“And Clay?”
“He was only a kid.”
“What about now?”
“I don’t do any work for him. Clay fixes his own cars.”
“So you have no dealings with him at al ?”
“Not unless we meet on the street.”
“How does he treat you then?”
Fowler stared at her. “Like he treats anyone else, I s’pose.”
“What about Grace and Madeline? Do you ever see them?”
“I’ve passed them in town—Grace more than Madeline since she moved back. She brought her Esplanade in for an oil change a few weeks ago.”
He said it as if she was just another customer. If there was any kind of bond between the Montgomerys and Jed Fowler, Al ie couldn’t sense it. And yet he’d confessed when he thought Barker’s remains had been discovered at the farm….
“According to what I’ve been told, nine months ago you tried to take responsibility for the murder of Reverend Barker. Is that true?”
No response.
“Can you tel me why you did that, Mr. Fowler?”
“I knew they were going to try and pin it on Mrs.
Montgomery.”
He admitted it? But he didn’t even cal her Irene…. “So you were trying to protect her?”
“I didn’t want to see her go to jail.”
“You’d rather go to jail yourself? That’s a pretty big sacrifice for a lady you don’t know al that wel .”
“She’s been through enough.” He stated it matter-offactly.
Al ie let her breath seep out. “Is it because you’re in love with Irene Montgomery, Mr. Fowler? Is that why you confessed?”
“No.”
“You’re not in love with her?”
The telephone rang in the house. Fowler glanced back at it. “I’ve got to go. Someone might need a tow.”
“Go ahead and answer it. I’l wait here.”
He didn’t have time to argue. Ducking inside, he left the door standing open as he headed down a hal way—
presumably to the kitchen.
Al ie took advantage of his absence to study the neat living room. From the look of the place, he’d kept the furnishings Mama Fowler had owned when she was alive.
The crocheted doilies covering the arms of the sofa and the side tables had an old woman’s touch. Even the television seemed ancient. An old Magnavox with rabbit ears on top, it sat next to a crystal candy dish that wasn’t empty, as Al ie might have expected, knowing that Jed never entertained, and a photograph of—
Who was that? Al ie poked her head into the room. She might not have found the photograph so curious, except that there wasn’t another sentimental object in sight—just a few landscapes hanging on the wal and a knitted afghan folded neatly on a footstool.
Fowler’s voice filtered to her from somewhere else in the house. He was talking about a truck in a ditch and seemed fairly engrossed, so she slipped inside.
The scent that greeted her reminded her of a funeral home. This room didn’t seem to be used much, and yet she spotted Fowler’s work boots perfectly positioned beneath an antique oak hal tree.
He lived like a ghost, moving around without disturbing a thing. She thought his mother had died about fourteen years ago and yet the place felt as if Mrs. Fowler might walk in at any second.
Ignoring the creepy chil that skittered down her spine, she picked up the photograph. It was an old black-and-white snapshot. Was it Mama Fowler? Another relative?
Al ie might’ve supposed so, except that someone had been torn out of the picture. She could see a man’s arm next to the jagged edge.
On closer examination, she realized it wasn’t a snapshot at al . It was part of a program for some event. At the bottom it read, “Join Reverend Barker and his—” The rest of the words were missing, along with the man in the picture. But what she’d read jostled Al ie’s memory enough that she suddenly recognized the woman. It was Eliza Barker, the reverend’s first wife.
Al ie held the picture closer, trying to see through the image to the writing on the other side. It was an invitation to a church Christmas party. From the date, it was probably the last party Eliza had ever attended. Barker’s wife committed suicide three years before he married Irene.
Al ie remembered her as a gentle, soft-spoken woman who worked tirelessly to serve the members of her husband’s church, but her suicide hadn’t come as much of a surprise.
Everyone knew Eliza suffered from depression. She’d even tried to start a support group for others who suffered as she did.
Finding her picture in such a prominent location in Jed’s house, however, sparked Al ie’s curiosity. Had Eliza known Jed as more than just a parishioner? Al ie didn’t think so. If they’d had a relationship—a close friendship or even an affair—surely he’d have a real photograph of her and not simply a torn-off portion of a Christmas program.
Had he been obsessed with her?
The complete silence suddenly shattered Al ie’s preoccupation. Feeling the weight of Jed’s stare at her back, she turned to find him standing at the entrance to the room.
She set the picture on the dusty coffee table, then wiped her hands on her skirt. “Does someone need roadside assistance?”
His face was flushed—with anger or embarrassment, she couldn’t real y tel . “Yes,” he said. “I’ve got to go.”
“No problem.” She moved to the door, but looked back when he cal ed her name.
“Don’t come here again unless you’ve got a subpoena,”
he said.
Al ie was frightened of Fowler. And she was uncomfortable in his neat but musty-smel ing house. She was going to get in her cruiser and investigate some of the reverend’s friends and neighbors who would be more forthcoming. But she had one last question. “Would you like to tel me why you have that program?”
“I received one just like everyone else who went to church that day,” he said.
“I see,” Al ie responded. But she was wil ing to bet he was the only one who’d torn Barker out of the picture and framed it.
9
Clay’s muscles shook as he pushed himself to bench-press more weight than ever before. Some days, in order to achieve any peace at al , he had to drive himself until he could scarcely think. Which was why he had a complete weight room in the basement of his house.
Today was one of those days. After his confrontation with Chief McCormick and the discussion that fol owed with Reverend Portenski, he was searching for the oblivion of absolute exhaustion.
Three hundred and fifty pounds hung suspended by his own power in the air above him. His body begged him to stop. But he wouldn’t. He could stil picture Al ie in that pretty top at church, the flirtatious smile she’d given him when he said he wasn’t as cheap as she might think—and the glower on her father’s face as Chief McCormick demanded Clay leave her alone.
Maybe getting close to Al ie would enable him to control
—to a degree, anyway—what Al ie learned about Barker and how she interpreted it. At least he’d know where she was in her investigation. He could see the value in that, for him. But he couldn’t offer her anything. Unless she was just looking for a good time. Clay knew women enjoyed what he could give them in bed. Problem was, Al ie McCormick wasn’t like Beth Ann or the others who pursued him so relentlessly. Clay wasn’t convinced he could get her to sleep with him even if he tried. She’d always been one of those straight-arrow types. I’ve only been with my ex….
One…two…three…Sucking air in between his teeth, he began to lower the barbel careful y to his chest. It wasn’t wise to lift so much weight when he was alone. Maxing out, as he was doing now, was supposed to be done in the presence of a partner who could help in an emergency. But Clay didn’t care about the risks involved. He preferred to lift alone, the way he did almost everything.
Briefly, the barbel touched his chest. Then he gritted his teeth and commanded his arms to lift it again. One…t-w-o…t-h-r-e-e, he groaned. For a moment, he didn’t think he could do it. But he refused to give up before he was ready.
Push, dammit. Push! he ordered himself.
His whole body trembled with the strain. The weight began to rise, but it was only through sheer wil that he final y lifted the barbel until he could ful y extend his arms.
As he gasped for breath, Clay wanted to believe he’d done enough. He wasn’t sure how much more he could take. But it was early. And he stil wanted to see Al ie, regardless of whether or not it’d be good for either one of them.
Another rep. He needed to keep lifting.
He managed two more, and then the phone rang.
Maneuvering the barbel into the holder over his head, Clay sat up and grabbed a towel to wipe the perspiration from his face. Al ie had said she’d cal him. He’d asked her to dinner.
But by getting to know her, he could lose as much as he stood to gain. Why bother? Without Barker’s remains, she couldn’t prove there’d even been a murder, whether Lucas was tel ing tales or not.
At least Clay hoped that was true. Since that night nineteen years ago, he could never be completely sure.
With a tired curse, he let the cal er go to voice-mail and headed for the shower.
Al ie hung up when Clay’s voice, in the form of a recorded message, came over the line. She had several people stil to interview and planned to go down her list. But Clay had had plenty of time to get home and she didn’t want him to think her earlier lack of response and rapid departure meant she’d decided not to go out with him.
Sure, she hoped to keep the peace with her parents, especial y now that she was living with them and depending on them to watch Whitney while she worked. They’d always been close. But she had her limits. She wasn’t going to al ow them to tel her who she could and couldn’t see.
To prove it, she’d go out with Clay in spite of her father.
What was one dinner? They needed to talk. They’d been together a couple of times but had never thoroughly discussed the details of the night Reverend Barker went missing. In light of the photograph she’d just discovered at Fowler’s, Al ie had some questions Clay might not have entertained before. Also, Lucas denied that he’d spoken with his family during the two previous decades, but Al ie knew from what he’d inadvertently revealed that he’d talked to someone during that time. She was hoping to get Clay to explain a bit more of how, when and why Lucas might have been in touch.
In any case, having dinner with Madeline’s stepbrother should prove interesting. Dealing with him usual y was.
Pushing the End button on her cel phone, she decided to try again later and slowed to turn into the property across from Clay’s farm. Bonnie Ray Simpson lived in the ramshackle old home set back a quarter of a mile from the road. Her aging husband, the victim of a recent stroke, and the wayward teenage granddaughter she was struggling to raise lived with her. According to the files and Al ie’s memory, Bonnie Ray had claimed she saw Barker come home on the night in question.
Al ie wanted to see how definite Clay’s neighbor was about that sighting. But as she looked over at the farm, wondering where Clay might have gone, she spotted the back end of his truck parked slightly behind the house. Had he missed her cal because he was outside in the barn or somewhere else on the property?
Turning around, she pul ed into Clay’s driveway instead of Bonnie’s and parked next to his truck. He hadn’t answered the phone, so she didn’t bother approaching the front door. She walked to the chicken coop in back, cal ing his name as she scanned the fields and the area between the outbuildings.
No one responded and nothing moved except the chickens pecking at the ground and the leaves on the trees, stirred by a gentle wind.
She crossed to the barn. Clay spent a lot of time restoring antique cars. She was betting she’d find him tearing apart one engine or another. But the barn doors were bolted shut and secured by a heavy padlock.
To the right, she recognized the smal room that had been Barker’s office. She’d accompanied her father there once to hand in her brother’s permission slip for a youth campout. That was a long time ago, but she had a vivid recol ection of the middle-aged, soft-looking Barker sitting behind his wooden desk, wearing a pair of reading glasses she’d never seen on him before.
Tossing a quick glance over her shoulder to make sure she wasn’t being watched, she hurried closer to the window. Sunlight reflected off the glass, making it difficult to see. But when she raised a hand to shade her eyes, she found herself peering into a room that had been stripped of absolutely everything—even the carpet and the dark paneling that had once covered the wal s.
Obviously, Clay didn’t plan on Barker’s coming back.
Al ie could understand, now that Barker had been gone for so many years. But she wondered why Clay hadn’t turned the space into his own office. Or used it for some other purpose. Maybe he was in the process of doing so, she thought. But—she squinted to see more clearly—it appeared that someone had stabbed at the bare Sheetrock with a knife or some other sharp object.
Automatical y, she began searching for the instrument that might have caused the damage, but the deep rumble of an engine distracted her. She looked between the buildings, toward the sound, just in time to see a tow truck heading toward town.
Was it Jed Fowler? Had he fol owed her here?
Hurrying toward the road to catch another glimpse of the truck, she charged around the corner of the house as fast as she could in high heels.
A strong arm reached out and grabbed her, halting her in midstride and causing her to step right out of one shoe.
“What are you doing here?”
Al ie blinked up at Clay. She’d seen a number of closely guarded emotions flicker across his face in the past three days, more than she’d ever seen him reveal before—but now his expression was positively stony.
“You didn’t answer your phone,” she explained. She looked past him, trying to see the road again. But the tow truck was gone.
“And?” Clay prompted.
She gave him her ful attention. “And when I was on my way to Bonnie Ray’s, I spotted your vehicle and thought you must be working outside.”
“I was having a shower.”
She could tel . Water dripped from his hair onto his bare shoulders. He hadn’t taken time to put on a shirt or shoes before coming out of the house.
“I’m sorry. I just wanted to let you know that I’m interested in dinner.”
He flicked his hair out of his eyes. “So you can dig a little deeper into my past?”
“So we can work together to discover what happened to your stepfather and bring Madeline and the rest of your family some closure.” Al ie suspected he wouldn’t like that answer, but she knew he couldn’t complain about it, regardless of his true feelings.
“And your father?” he asked.
“Don’t worry about my father. He’s…confused right now.”
“About?”
“The nature of our relationship.”
“Which is…”
She wasn’t completely sure herself, but she knew what it needed to be. “Professional, of course.”
“Of course,” he repeated.
“So where should we eat?”
He wiped away a drop of water running down his chest.
“I don’t like crowds.”
“We could find some out-of-the-way café. Or…wait, I know the perfect place.”
He hesitated as if he might refuse.
“Have you changed your mind?” she asked.
“Maybe.”
She sent him a chal enging grin. “Why? Do I make you nervous?”
He chuckled softly—the cat laughing at the canary.
“What time?”
“Is it okay if we go late? After I put Whitney to bed?”
“Your cal ,” he said.
“Fine.” She told him how to get to the back of her parents’ property and promised she’d be waiting at the guesthouse. From there, they’d drive on to the destination she had in mind. “Pick me up at eight-thirty.”
His eyes moved over her. The blouse she was wearing wasn’t particularly revealing. It wouldn’t raise eyebrows even in a church, which was why she’d felt perfectly comfortable wearing it to the service today. But Clay had a way of making her feel as if he could see right through it.
Her heart began to pound for no reason at al and she realized then, more than ever, that police officer or not, she wasn’t as immune to his sex appeal as she preferred to think.
The nature of our relationship is professional. Of course.
“See you at eight-thirty,” he said and went back inside as if he didn’t care whether she rambled around the farm.
But now that he was aware of her presence, she knew she wouldn’t get very far if she started snooping again. Clay was infamous for guarding his own.
With a sigh, she wiggled her foot back into the high heel she’d lost, climbed into her car and headed to Bonnie Ray’s. The place she’d chosen for dinner with Clay was private indeed. Which could work in her favor, if it put Clay at ease and he actual y talked to her. Or the seclusion could be a liability, if Clay was as dangerous as her father had suggested.
Was she foolish to take the chance? Possibly. But not because she feared Clay would hurt her physical y. It was the promise of what he could do to make her feel good that worried her. The last thing she needed was to get intimately involved with her prime suspect.
Clay picked up Al ie and they took his truck, but she insisted on driving, so they switched seats.
She drove about forty-five minutes from Stil water to an isolated fishing shack upstream from Pickwick Lake. Then she cut the engine, grabbed the picnic basket she’d wedged into the seat between them and climbed out.
Clay wasn’t sure whether or not to fol ow her. He didn’t know where Irene and Dale spent time together, but he figured it had to be fairly close. Neither of them was ever gone for long. And Clay doubted the chief would risk meeting Irene at the guesthouse on his property in town.
This smal fishing hut, which Al ie had described as her father’s favorite getaway, sounded like a much more viable option. It was always available to Dale, very private and somewhere Evelyn probably never went.
Clay stared at the cabin, which Al ie had already entered. He’d never dreamed she’d take him to such a place. He hadn’t even known it existed. Now that he did know, however, he could easily imagine Al ie’s father cal ing Irene and asking her to meet him here for a few hours on an available afternoon.
Not that imagining such a rendezvous created a picture Clay wanted to see….
“Aren’t you coming?” Al ie cal ed from the front step, her body silhouetted by the flicker of a kerosene lamp. She seemed uncertain about his delay, but she didn’t act as if she’d just stumbled on proof that her father was having an affair.
Releasing his breath, Clay got out of his truck and approached the cabin.
“This is definitely private,” he said.
“My dad comes out here almost every Sunday,” she told him. “He likes to fish.”
“With you?”
“When my brother and I were younger, he’d bring us along. These days he mostly comes alone.”
Or so he wanted everyone to believe, Clay thought.
“What about today? He didn’t come up?”
“No, he had too much to do. I saw him at home before I left.”
More good news. “I can see why he likes it here.”
The qui-ko-wee of a lone whip-poor-wil , which rose from the damp woods surrounding them, seemed louder than any Clay had ever heard. He liked that sound and the sense of seclusion provided by the dense vegetation. But he hesitated at the cabin door, stil afraid he might find something of his mother’s inside.
“You seem…reluctant to be here with me,” Al ie said, frowning up at him. “What’s wrong?”
“Nothing,” he said and stepped across the threshold.
Only about twelve by fifteen feet, the shack looked like an old miner’s cabin. There was a double bed pushed up against the wal . A dining table sat in front of a rock fireplace that had a spit and an iron hook dangling from above. Three wooden logs, crudely fashioned into chairs, were arranged by the table. White drapes hung at the window. The other furnishings included a smal bookcase near the bed, some detached cupboards, a shelf above the fireplace with cooking utensils hanging from it and a knotted rug that covered the wooden planks of the floor.
“There’s no bathroom?” he said.
“The outhouse is downstream a bit. This time of night you’l need a flashlight or you’l never find it.”
“How long has your father owned this place?”
“Most of my life.” She gestured around her. “Luxurious, isn’t it?”
Maybe it wasn’t luxurious, but it was appealing. After al the unwanted attention he’d endured in his life, Clay felt as if he’d just stepped into another world, as if he could hide out here and avoid the prying eyes that watched him wherever he went in Stil water.
It was easy to see how Chief McCormick and Irene might feel the same sense of security. Clay was almost certain this had to be their meeting place. But, fortunately, he saw no sign of his mother’s having visited once, let alone more often.
“Maybe someday my father wil make improvements,”
Al ie said.
Clay shook his head. “I hope not. I like it the way it is.”
“If you had to cook here very often, you wouldn’t be so eager to keep it primitive,” she said. “I personal y think it could use running water and electricity. And I’m not fond of trudging down to the outhouse in the middle of a dark cold night.” She moved the picnic basket from the floor to the table. “But considering how remote this place feels, it’s real y not that far from civilization.”
She tilted her face up, expecting a reaction to her remarks, but he’d already forgotten what she’d said. Clay was beginning to marvel at the fact that he hadn’t original y considered Al ie very attractive. She was so quick-witted and optimistic, so ful of life and energy. She made him feel again—eagerness, hope, a deep-seated arousal—just when he’d decided he was beyond reach. Stil water had become such a stagnant place, one that, for him, stil revolved around the events of nineteen years ago. And yet, now that Al ie was back, everything seemed to be changing….
He welcomed the way she made him feel, knew he needed it. At the same time, he feared the hope—because he knew no one could real y change anything in his life.
Certainly not the past…
“What?” she said when he simply stared at her.
“It’s perfect,” he said.
She smiled as if she was a little surprised he liked it so much. But he hadn’t been talking about the cabin. “I hope you’re hungry.”
“What’s for dinner?” He eyed her basket. “Or do the pointed questions come first?”
“Don’t worry about the questions. I’m going to ply you with wine before we start. Maybe I’l get more out of you that way,” she said with a wink.
He arched his eyebrows. “More what out of me?”
She ignored the double meaning. “More than you normal y say, which isn’t much.” She pinched her bottom lip, an action Clay found distracting, to say the least. Her lips were so ful , so kissable. He was imagining what they might taste like, when she drew him back to the conversation.
“Why is that? Why do you keep such a tight rein on yourself?”
Clay was beginning to believe they were far too alone….
“I don’t. Haven’t you heard? I do exactly as I please.”
She shook her head. “That’s not true. You push everyone who reaches out to you away. And yet I sense a deep desire to connect.”
“That’s bul shit,” he retorted, but he couldn’t meet her eyes. The way she watched him made him feel as if she could decipher every need, every longing. “I don’t trust just any idiot who comes along, that’s al .”
She folded her hands on top of the picnic basket. “Are you wil ing to trust me, Clay?”
He couldn’t trust anyone. Especially her. But he didn’t say that. He steered the conversation in a different direction. “Tel me what you think happened.”
“To Barker?”
“Who else?”
“As far as I’m concerned, it’s stil a mystery.”
“Come on,” he said. “After everything you’ve heard, you have to wonder—am I the guilty party?” He advanced on her to see if she’d back away. “I don’t even go to church regularly. That makes me a heathen right there.”
She stood her ground. “Not in my opinion.”
“You’re avoiding the bigger issue,” he said softly. “What if it’s not safe for you to be alone with me?”
He loomed over her, hoping she’d cower in fear or retreat—so he could dismiss her as easily as he did everyone else in Stil water. He had to destroy the confidence she seemed to have in him. He was pretty sure it was the way she treated him, as if he was good and not evil, that affected him so deeply. But she didn’t blanch or move. She seemed perfectly relaxed as she glared up at him. “You don’t intimidate me,” she said calmly.
“Then maybe you don’t know what’s good for you,” he scoffed. “I bet no one’s even aware that you’re out here.”
“Who would you have me tel ?”
“Not your father, that’s for sure.”
“Good. We’re in agreement there.”
“So no one knows.”
“Does it matter?”
“It could if I’m the monster everyone thinks I am.”
Her expression turned thoughtful. “You’re not a monster, Clay. But that doesn’t mean you’re perfect.”
“Do I have to be?”
She studied his face, but he glanced away before she could guess how badly he wanted her to accept him as he was. “For what?” she asked.
To atone for the past. But it was a pointless question. He already knew he could never be good enough. And that was his problem, not Al ie’s. He was the one who had to live with his role in what had happened. “To get fed tonight,”
he said.
She jerked her head toward a smal stack of firewood.
“As soon as you build a fire, we’l eat.”
The flames cast a golden haze of moving shadows over Clay, softening the harsher angles of his face. Al ie wished she could see him more clearly, but once she’d warmed the gumbo over the fire and poured it into the sourdough bowls she’d brought, he fil ed two wineglasses with Merlot and turned off the kerosene lamp.
She’d considered turning the lamp back on, but, in the end, decided that she liked the darkness. It encircled them like a protective shroud, evoking the kind of intimacy that set them apart from the concerns of everyday life. She thought that might help Clay loosen up and talk to her. But she was a little concerned that it might loosen her up, too.
They ate mostly in silence. Then, because the chairs were so hard, they carried their wine over to the bed. Al ie lay on her stomach, cradling her glass in her hands; Clay leaned against the wal and stretched his legs out in front of him.
“I could get used to coming here,” he said, gazing into the fire.
Al ie had guessed he’d like the place, but she’d been surprised by how vocal he’d been about it. Clay wasn’t al that vocal about anything. “I’l bring you again sometime.”
He raised his glass to her in a mock toast. “Providing I have more secrets to share, eh?”
She grinned. “You must have something I want.”
“I can play pool, remember?”
“And if I’m ever in the market for a 1950s Jag, I’l know where to go.”
He shook his head. “Wow, such enthusiasm. You real y build a guy’s ego, don’t you?”
She ran her finger around the rim of her glass. “I suspect your ego can withstand one less female swooning at your feet.”
“Swooning?” He took another sip of wine. “I never dreamed someone so prim and proper could be such a smart-ass.”
“Prim and proper?” she echoed. “What makes you think I’ve ever been prim and proper?”
“Maybe it’s the badge.”
“Not everyone who wears a badge could be cal ed prim and proper. Why would you describe me like that?”
“I guess it started with the long skirts you wore in high school. And the way you hugged your books to your chest and walked to class with such purpose.”
“You remember that?” she said with a laugh. She hadn’t thought Clay had ever real y noticed her.
“Along with the speech you delivered as valedictorian.
What was it—‘Building on the Foundation of the Past’?”
“You just nailed the topic,” she said, astonished.
“They printed it in the paper. It was a damn good speech. If you had a past worth building on.”
“My parents made sure I had what I needed,” she said.
But she knew he hadn’t been nearly as lucky. Once his stepfather went missing, his mother had been forced to take whatever job she could, and it was a standing joke in town that she’d work for slave wages. She’d had to. No one in Stil water had wanted to give the person they held responsible for the reverend’s disappearance any breaks.
Clay wore the same clothes to school for several days in a row and never ate lunch. He didn’t have the money. Like his mother, he worked at the farm and took whatever odd jobs he could find. Some days he showed up at school so ragged around the edges he could scarcely stay awake in class. But he always looked after his sisters, even his stepsister, Madeline. And he would’ve died before admitting that he was going without because he had to. He made it seem very cool and rebel ious, as if he liked what he wore and wasn’t in need of anything at al .
Most of the kids actual y bought in to the tough image he’d projected but, as an adult, Al ie could see it for what it was—a young man’s sacrifice and pride.
“They care about you,” he said. “You should listen to them.”
“And stay away from you? Is that what you’re getting at?”
she asked bluntly.
His eyes settled on the smal amount of cleavage showing above her shirt. “For starters.”
“Yeah, wel , thanks for trying to protect me, but I’l tel you what I told them. I’m a big girl. I’l think for myself.”
“A big girl?” he scoffed. “Hardly.”
“I’m big enough.”
“For what?”
“To do whatever I want to.”
His grin slanted to one side, as if he found what she’d said rather endearing, like a puppy barking at a much larger dog.
“Stop with the patronizing bul shit,” she said irritably.
“Hey, I think you’re tough.” He lifted his hands in a show of sincerity, but his grin had turned into a ful -fledged smile.
The kind you didn’t get very often from Clay Montgomery.
As if he was enjoying himself. As if he liked her. “You carry a gun, don’t you?”
She cocked her head to the side. “Don’t make me shoot you.”
He laughed softly. “Are al lady cops out to prove something? Or just the ones who weigh less than a hundred pounds?”
“I weigh a hundred and five pounds,” she said. “Anyway, haven’t you ever heard that good things come in smal packages?”
“I’m growing more convinced of that by the moment,” he said, staring at her mouth.
Al ie’s heart was now beating in her throat. She wanted to fil the silence but wasn’t sure she could speak. She felt as though al the oxygen had been sucked from the room.
Final y, he broke the tense silence. “What happened to your marriage?”
She scowled. “I thought I was the one who got to ask the uncomfortable questions.”
“You know the saying—al ’s fair in love and war.”
“Which is this?” she asked.
His gaze returned to her lips. “You tel me.”
She swal owed hard. It sure as hel wasn’t war…. “He struggled with mood swings, had very little patience and different priorities,” she said.
Clay seemed to have lost the thread of the conversation.
“My ex,” she clarified.
“What were his priorities?”
“Affluence. Freedom.”
“And yours?”
“Children.”
“The other day you told me he didn’t want children.”
“Right. He couldn’t stand to have anything slow us down and resented the financial obligations and responsibilities.
But mostly he hated sharing me with anyone else.”
“Did he tel you no children before you were married?”
“No. He mentioned it before I got pregnant, though. We argued about it al the time and decided to compromise at one.”
“And then?”
“And then he’d hardly look at Whitney and got jealous whenever she interrupted us or required my attention.”
“Where did you meet this guy?” he asked.
Al ie liked that response. It told her that Clay found Sam as unbelievable as she did. “At col ege. He’s a bright guy, ambitious, social—and intensely possessive and selfish. I eventual y realized that I couldn’t tolerate having a husband who wouldn’t even babysit our child if I needed it. I began to feel more and more torn between the two of them. Then, one day I came home to find that Sam had picked up Whitney before I got off work because the babysitter had a family emergency. He’d tried to cal me, but I was working an important case and couldn’t be reached. So he brought her home, locked her in her room and let her cry for hours.”
“That’s the point where I’d make him very sorry.”
She laughed. “I was the one who was sorry—sorry I’d ever married him. To my mind, there was no excuse for such neglect.”
“Sounds like he didn’t deserve either of you.”
“Yeah, wel , he’s with someone else now, and it’s for the best.”
“Are you happier on your own?”
“I’d never go back to him, if that’s what you’re asking.”
She rubbed her free hand over the goose bumps on one arm. Now that it was later, the air was growing cold despite the fire.
Leaning over, Clay unfolded the quilt at the foot of the bed and pul ed it over her.
“Thanks,” she said.
He grinned. “Don’t say I never did anything for you.”
“Okay, I won’t.” She drained her glass and set it on the bookcase. “Now can I ask you a few questions?”
“Am I going to need more wine to survive the interrogation?”
“Possibly.”
“Where are you going to start?”
She frowned apologetical y. “With your father.”
He grimaced. “Great.”
“Should I get you another glass of wine?” she asked, sitting up.
“Actual y, I’m pretty sure I wouldn’t want to talk about him even if I was fal ing-down drunk. So you might as wel go ahead.”
Switching positions on the bed, she sat beside him with her back against the wal , and covered them both with the blanket. “When did he come back here?”
“Where’s here?” he asked.
“Stil water.”
He blinked at her. “He didn’t, as far as I know.”
“He’s never contacted you?”
“No.”
She hated having to press him about this particular subject. She knew that what his father had done stil hurt, although Clay liked to pretend otherwise. “What about your mother?”
He stared into his wineglass. “He didn’t contact her, either.”
“Would she tel you if he did?”
“I think so. For a while, I was al she had.”
For a long while, Al ie added silently. “You’ve always been close.”
“She told me most everything.”
Al ie suspected Irene had shared far more about her very adult problems than was good for a teenage boy. But, as Clay had just said, he was al she’d had. And somehow, at sixteen, he’d taken on the responsibilities of a man. He’d run the farm and picked up various part-time jobs. The way he’d supported her and his sisters was admirable, but no one in town ever talked about that.
Al ie wondered why he never seemed to get any credit for the good things he’d done. He’d graduated from high school while doing the work of two men and acting as his family’s patriarch. And then he’d put himself through col ege, completing a four-year degree in only two and a half.
“Your mother’s lucky to have a son like you,” Al ie said.
He finished his wine. “Someone about twenty years older would’ve been a greater help.”
“You did your best. What more could she ask?”
He grew quiet, pensive.
She craned her neck to look at him. “What is it?”
“Nothing. I’m just tired.”
He tilted his head back against the wal and Al ie scooted a little closer, seeking the warmth of his body. He responded by putting his arm around her, as if it was the most natural thing in the world. She sensed that his first inclination was to shelter, to protect.
Did that mean he was protecting someone else—his mother, for instance—in the reverend’s disappearance?
Al ie was about to ask him about that night, when she realized Clay was asleep.
Reluctant to disturb him, she rested her cheek against his chest and counted the steady beats of his heart. Clay wasn’t what she’d expected. He was far more sensitive, far deeper. She was wil ing to bet a lot of people, including her father, would be surprised to learn that. Al ie thought she’d never met anyone more misunderstood.
We’ve got to leave, she told herself. But she was exhausted, too. She decided they could afford to rest for another ten minutes….
The next thing she knew, birds were chirping in the trees.
It was morning.
10
Al ie’s first thought was that she’d just spent the night with Clay Montgomery. Her second was that he hadn’t even tried to kiss her. She wasn’t sure whether she was relieved or disappointed. She had to admit his lack of action was a blow to her self-esteem. She’d never expected Clay to pursue her. She knew she wasn’t his type. But she’d slept in his arms for hours and he’d acted as if he wasn’t even tempted….
“We have to get back,” she mumbled, pul ing away from the comfort his body had provided. “I need to be at home when Whitney wakes up.”
He’d opened his eyes the moment she began to stir and was looking at her as if, unlike other mortals, he didn’t need to go through the various groggy stages of rising to ful consciousness.
Al ie yawned, guessing that instant alertness came from a lifetime of standing vigil over the farm. Couldn’t Clay ever truly relax?
“What’s wrong?” she asked when he didn’t respond.
“Nothing.”
Immediately standing up, he started gathering the leftovers of their picnic while Al ie tried to stretch the kinks from her muscles. “Do you always wake up going a hundred miles an hour?”
“What?” he said.
“Never mind.” With a final stretch, she stood, too, and began to help.
“So, did you learn any deep dark secrets last night?” he asked as he carried the basket out to his truck.
She fol owed with the tablecloth. “Are you kidding? You know I didn’t. You got off pretty light.”
“How’d I manage that?” he said with a boyish grin.
She liked the way his hair stuck up on one side, the dark shadow of beard growth covering his prominent jaw. He looked rumpled—and sexy. “You went to sleep. What was I supposed to do, wake you?”
They both knew she could’ve done exactly that. But Al ie was no longer so anxious to badger Clay for details about that long-ago night. She was beginning to hope, really hope, that he’d had no part in whatever had happened. And it was easier to avoid the answers to certain questions if she didn’t ask them in the first place.
“What makes you think Lucas has been back to Stil water?” he asked.
After loading the picnic supplies in the back, they’d both gone to the driver’s side. Clay opened the door and waved Al ie in, then got in after her.
Al ie slid over a few feet so he could drive, but not al the way. She had the oddest desire to sit close to him.
Probably because she wasn’t quite ready to return to regular life.
“He acted kind of suspicious when I talked to him on the phone,” she said.
Clay’s face was unreadable. “In what way?”
“He claimed he didn’t know anything about Barker. Yet, a few seconds later, he accidental y revealed that he knew it’d been nineteen years since Barker went missing.”
Clay said nothing.
“That’s strange, don’t you think?” she prompted.
“Anything’s possible with my dad.”
“I guess he could’ve heard about the investigation through the media,” she went on, “but it wasn’t that widely publicized. And he’s been living in Alaska for two decades.”
“He has some distant relatives here in Mississippi.”
“Do you think he stays in touch with them?”
Clay shrugged. “He could.”
His dad might have maintained contact. But that didn’t explain why Lucas had jumped to the conclusion that Barker was dead, when only the guilty party, and anyone the guilty party might have told, real y knew for sure. And it didn’t explain why Lucas hadn’t simply told her that he’d heard about Barker from family or friends.
“Do you know much about Eliza?” Al ie asked, gazing out the window as they turned onto the highway and began to travel at a greater speed.
“Eliza?”
She glanced over at him. “Barker’s first wife.”
“Not real y. Besides what Madeline’s said.”
“Barker never talked about her?”
“No. I found some old pictures in his office, but I gave those to Maddy when I final y dismantled the place.”
“When was that?”
“Last summer.”
“Why haven’t you used the office for something else?”
she asked.
He had one arm slung across the back of the seat, his hand so close he could’ve touched her hair, but Al ie could tel he wasn’t as relaxed as he appeared. “I don’t need the space.”
What Clay had done to the office was extreme, considering the fact that he had no real reason for gutting it.
But Al ie didn’t want to ask about that, for fear of getting too close to details she’d rather not know.
“Can you tel me why Jed Fowler might have hated your stepfather?” she asked, changing the subject.
Clay took a little longer than he should have to answer, as though he was warring with himself over whether or not to be truthful. “No,” he said at last.
Evidently, he’d decided he couldn’t. Which set Al ie’s cop instincts buzzing. Clay had too many secrets. They frightened her. For him.
“We can never be completely honest with each other, can we?” she asked earnestly.
He took his eyes off the road long enough to stare across the seat at her. “That depends on what you want.”
“I don’t know what you mean.”
“Yes, you do.”
Was he acknowledging that he felt a spark between them, the same spark she felt? That the truth, once known, would stand in the way of what they both secretly wanted?
She could’ve asked for clarification, but he wasn’t a man who spel ed out his feelings. And she was too confused about her own emotions to press him on his. So she let him drive the rest of the way in silence.
As they neared her parents’ property, Al ie couldn’t help glancing nervously at the clock. It was only six-fifteen. She should arrive before Whitney woke up for school, which usual y didn’t happen until seven. But Al ie’s father was likely pacing the floor, waiting. Or maybe he’d gone to the guesthouse looking for her.
Fortunately, when Clay pul ed down the back road, the guesthouse looked as empty and dark as they’d left it. If Dale was awake, he’d be expecting Al ie at the main house. “I don’t think we should see each other again,” she said as she grabbed hold of the door handle.
“Neither do I.”
His quick, decisive rejoinder caused a painful jab. But Al ie was determined not to show her disappointment.
“Right. So we agree.”
She opened the door, but he caught hold of her jacket before her feet could touch the ground.
“What is it?” she asked.
He cursed under his breath but didn’t release her.
“What?” she said again.
“When are we going back?”
Al ie didn’t ask where. He was referring to the cabin.
They’d acknowledged what they thought they should do; now they were addressing what they wanted to do.
“I’m on graveyard al week,” she said.
She could tel he believed she was turning him down.
With a nod, he let her go.
“But Friday would work,” she added, lingering of her own volition.
His eyes fastened on hers. Agreeing to see him again confirmed that she wanted to be with him enough to go against her better judgment.
“We’re at the part where you say okay,” she told him when he didn’t respond.
He nodded, looking somber. “Okay. I’l pick you up here.”
Al ie knew she’d be crazy to nurture the romantic feelings she was beginning to have for Clay Montgomery.
And yet the temptation to return to her father’s fishing shack, to spend another evening with him, was too enticing to resist. She’d stop seeing Clay after next weekend. One more outing would be okay. He didn’t want her sexual y, she told herself, or he would’ve made a move when they’d shared the bed. He needed company, a friend.
“Same time?” she asked, her heart beating wildly.
With a nod, he said, “I’l bring the food,” and, as soon as she’d grabbed her picnic basket out of the back, he drove away.
“Dale’s furious,” Clay’s mother said over the phone, her voice a harsh whisper, which indicated she was cal ing from work.
Clay was squatting near a broken water pipe out on the south forty. When he heard this, he put the lid on the special cement he’d been using, and stood. “About what?” he said, but he didn’t need to ask. Dale had obviously found out that he’d been with Al ie last night. If Clay were Dale, he’d be furious, too. He wouldn’t want his daughter dating someone in Clay’s position.
But Chief McCormick had at least one reason to be grateful, Clay thought. A lot more could’ve happened at the cabin than did. Clay had never exercised so much self-control when he held a woman that close. He’d never had to. The girls he dated started climbing al over him almost at hel o. Yet last night, he’d shared a bed with Al ie, felt her pliant body curl into his, breathed in the scent of her clean hair and soft skin—and hadn’t so much as brushed his lips across her neck. Knowing she was too good for him, but having her completely available to him, was one of the most bittersweet experiences of his life.
And, like the stupid glutton for punishment he was, he’d asked for more of the same kind of torture next weekend.
“You know what,” his mother said.
“Do I need to remind you that seeing Al ie was your idea?” Clay pul ed a rag from his pocket and wiped the dust from his face.
“I’ve changed my mind. I—I didn’t know how much it’d upset—” her voice dropped again “—you-know-who.”
“Your lover. Who’s married.” Clay laughed without humor. “Doesn’t it bother you that he can sleep with you while demanding that your unmarried son stay away from his unmarried daughter?”
“It bothers me,” she admitted. “But it’s not that he doesn’t like you.”
“Right,” he said, but she ignored the sarcastic interruption.
“It’s that he’s extra protective of Al ie. She’s his baby. He doesn’t want to see her hurt again.”
“She’s only a year younger than I am. Why’s he treating her like a kid?”
“I just told you. He doesn’t want her to get hurt again. She has a child now, Clay. She needs to find a good father for Whitney.”
Clay winced. “And that excludes me?”
“It’s not as if you’ve had many long-term relationships,”
she said. “What woman have you dated more than a handful of times?”
“What woman that I’ve dated would you want me to marry?” he countered.
“None of them. You tend to like a woman who has a bust measurement larger than her IQ. But Al ie’s different.”
He chose the women he chose on purpose. So there was no danger of wanting more than he could have. So he wasn’t cal ously breaking the heart of one innocent woman after another while trying to fulfil his own needs. But he wasn’t about to explain that to Irene. “I don’t like what’s happening to you,” he said instead.
“I don’t know what you mean.”
“You’re not yourself. This relationship is clouding your judgment, making you do things you ordinarily wouldn’t.”
“That’s not true.”
“Yes, it is. And besides that, it’s dangerous.”
“For who?”
“For al of us, but especial y Grace. She has the most to lose.”
Irene made no response.
“Are you even listening?” he asked.
“Grace isn’t the only one who wants to be loved, Clay.”
He knew that from personal experience. But he stil had to protect his sister. And standing by while his mother had an affair with the chief of police wasn’t the way to do it.
“Find someone else,” he said. “Someone who’s free to love you back.”
“Stop it,” she said. “I don’t want to hear any more.”
“Listen to me!”
“No, I won’t! What’s wrong, Clay? Why do you hate it so much that I’m final y happy?” she asked. “Just because you’re determined to be miserable for the rest of your life, you want me to be miserable, too? Is that it?”
Clay’s chest grew tight. “Is that what you think?”
“Yes!” she said and hung up.
But she cal ed right back, and this time she was crying.
“I’m sorry. That wasn’t fair and I know it. It’s just…I love him so much, and he says he loves me, but I can’t ever real y have him, can I? There’s no way to make it work.”
“No,” he admitted.
She sniffed and gulped for air. “So what do I do?”
“The only thing you can do, Mom. Cut it off as soon as possible and then do your best to survive the bleeding.”
Al ie was supposed to be sleeping while Whitney was in school, but instead she was staring at her picture of Clay.
Madeline had left her several messages. Clay’s stepsister wanted to talk about the case, present some ideas and leads she thought Al ie should fol ow up on. But Al ie didn’t particularly want to talk to her. She was losing enthusiasm for the case and knew she’d have trouble hiding it. For the first time in her life, she honestly believed there might be some truth to that old cliché about letting sleeping dogs lie.
Not returning Maddy’s cal wouldn’t help, though. Her cel phone rang again, and cal er ID indicated Clay’s stepsister’s name. Knowing Madeline would only keep cal ing if she didn’t pick up, Al ie hit the Talk button. “Hel o?”
“How’s it going?”
“Good, you?”
“I’m great.”
She didn’t sound so great. She sounded as if she was forcing herself to be cheerful when she was real y just eager
—eager for answers Al ie didn’t have.
“You finished going through the files yet?”
“Almost.”
“Anything stand out?”
Nothing Madeline would want to hear. But to fil the silence, and pretend she was stil moving forward, she mentioned that she’d questioned Jed.
“Did he say anything new?”
“Not real y.”
Al ie could feel the other woman’s disappointment, which made her want to ask her next question very careful y. She had no idea whether the torn program at Jed’s house meant anything. He was odd enough that he might’ve kept it simply because Eliza had given him a kind word now and then. And Maddy’s mother had to be a painful subject for her. “Do you know if your mother and Jed were ever friends?” she asked, putting a little lift in her voice to make the question sound as casual as possible.
“Friends? I don’t think I’d say that. But I was only ten when…when she died, so maybe they knew each other better than I realized.”
“You don’t remember ever seeing him at the house?”
“No…but he helped us out when our car stal ed once. I remember him towing us back to his shop and giving me a quarter for a Pepsi. And there was the time he got scarlet fever. He refused to go to the hospital. My mother helped nurse him so he could stay at home. But she was always doing that kind of stuff for people…Why?”
“I’m just trying to figure out why he quit coming to church.
I wondered if they might’ve had a fal ing-out.”
“Oh, no. No one ever had a fal ing-out with my mother.
She was…” She seemed aware that her admiration for her mother was breaking through the anger that usual y kept al mention of Eliza at bay. “She didn’t have any enemies,” she finished.
“Right. I didn’t think so.”
“Who are you going to talk to next?” Maddy asked.
Al ie held Clay’s picture a little closer. “I don’t know,” she said. “I spoke to Bonnie Ray but she just repeated what was in the files. And we’re pretty busy at the station.”
Silence.
“I’l make a list of other people to interview, though, okay?” she added.
There was another pause, as if Madeline wanted to ask
“When?” But she didn’t. “Great. Okay. I know it’s hard to get it al done.”
Especially when your heart isn’t in it. Al ie sighed.
“That’s it for now, then. I’d better go.”
“Al ie?”
“Yes?”
“Tel me you won’t give up.”
Thinking of her rendezvous with Clay, Al ie cringed.
“Maddy…”
“I know, you’l do your best,” she said and disconnected.
Over the next few days, Clay worked even harder than usual. He rebuilt fences, added soil amendments to the fields, and started to relandscape the front yard, al in an effort to keep himself too busy to think about Al ie. But it was no good. On Tuesday night, his mother came over and told him she’d broken off her relationship with Chief McCormick. From her abject despair, he knew it was the truth, and was glad, especial y for Grace. With the baby due in less than a week, she didn’t need her world to fal apart.
But Clay felt hypocritical tel ing his mother she’d made the right decision when, by seeing Al ie, he was asking for the same kind of dilemma. He and Irene were both reaching for someone they couldn’t have.
Cut it off as soon as possible, and then do your best to survive the bleeding.
He should be taking his own advice. Sooner rather than later. But he didn’t attempt to contact Al ie until Thursday night, after he’d already gone to bed, when he couldn’t put it off any longer. Since he didn’t have her cel number, he had to cal the police station while she was at work.
“Stil water Police Department. Officer McCormick.”
Glad she’d answered the phone herself, Clay muted the television, shoved his pil ows behind his back and sat up.
“It’s Clay.”
“What’s going on?” She sounded pleased to hear from him, which made him even more reluctant to cancel their plans for the fol owing night.
“Nothing much.”
“No late-night trips to Let the Good Times Rol ?”
“Not tonight.”
“The farm’s looking nice. I couldn’t help noticing when I was out there,” she said.
“Thanks. How’s your father treating you?” After his mother had told him how unhappy Dale was, Clay had worried that Al ie’s father might take his displeasure out on Al ie. He’d wanted to cal her just to see, but he knew he couldn’t do anything about it, anyway.
“He’s been in a bad mood al week,” she said.
“Who told him you were with me?”
“I did. We weren’t doing anything wrong. I didn’t see any reason to lie.”
She wasn’t ashamed of being with him, and that made Clay feel better. He didn’t want the fact that they’d gone out to cause problems for her, but neither did he want to be her guilty secret. “What did he say?”
“He said I’d ruin my future and that I had to think about Whitney. That was about it. To be honest, he didn’t say as much as I thought he would. He seems a little…
preoccupied these days.”
“With what?”
“I’m not sure. I’m actual y worried about him.”
Had Irene’s decision made more of an impact on Dale than Clay had expected? Was that the reason for his preoccupation? “Why?”
“He hasn’t real y been himself since I got back.”
“From the cabin?”
“From Chicago. But this week he’s been worse than usual.”
A trickle of unease made Clay kick off his blankets and get out of bed so he could wander over to the window. “In what way?”
“Gruffer. Highly irritable. I don’t know what’s bugging him.
Danny’s noticed it, too, when he’s talked to Dad on the phone.”
“Danny’s your brother, right?”
“Yeah. In Arizona. He says Dad’s been distracted. But what real y has me frightened—” She stopped as if she wasn’t sure whether or not to continue.
“Is…” he prompted.
“I shouldn’t be tel ing you this.”
Clay hated the fact that he probably already knew the reason behind her father’s strange behavior—and hated pretending he didn’t. “You don’t have to tel me,” he said and sort of hoped she wouldn’t.
There was a long pause. “I’d like to tel someone I can trust.”
He pressed his forehead to the cool glass. She wanted to trust him? “What is it?” he asked, closing his eyes.
“I found a tube of bright red lipstick under the seat of my father’s car.”
Clay gripped the phone more tightly and began to pace.
This was exactly what he’d been afraid of. His mother had broken up with McCormick—but had she done it in time? If news of the affair came out now, it’d cause just as much damage. “It doesn’t belong to your mother?” he asked.
“No. She’s never worn such a flamboyant color. She rarely wears any lipstick.”
“Was it in his squad car?”
“Yes.”
Clay pivoted and headed back across the carpet. “Then it could belong to almost anyone, right?”
“Conceivably, but…I don’t know. That’s not al . This is going to sound sil y, but…there’s this cute bear mug my dad uses. At first I assumed he grabbed whatever cup he saw. But no. He goes for the teddy bear every day. And he has the number of a florist in Corinth written on his Rolodex.”
“Why’s that so odd?”
“I don’t remember him ever sending my mother flowers.”
“Maybe he’s planning to do it in the future.”
“No. Something’s not right. My mom covers it wel , but I don’t think he’s giving her the attention he used to. When he’s home he barely acknowledges her.”
“They’ve been married a long time.”
“That’s no excuse.”
Cursing to himself, Clay pivoted again. “What are you going to do about the lipstick?”
“Keep it until I can figure out what’s going on. I’m thinking about searching the cabin when we go there tomorrow night.”
“We were just there,” he said. “Wouldn’t you have noticed anything unusual?”
“I didn’t real y look. But if my father’s having an affair, he has to be meeting the woman somewhere. Maybe it’s at the cabin.”
Clay imagined combing through the place with Al ie, shoving any proof he might find in his pocket, and decided he couldn’t do it. He didn’t want what his mother had done to hurt his sisters—or Al ie—and would carry Irene’s secret to his grave. But he couldn’t pretend to be Al ie’s friend, let her believe he was there for her when he was actual y serving his own purposes. Maybe he wasn’t a saint, but he wasn’t going to abuse her trust like that, either.
“I’m afraid I won’t be able to help you,” he said.
A couple of seconds ticked by before she responded.
“You’re canceling?”
He cleared his throat. “Yeah. I’ve got a conflict.”
“No problem,” she said, but he could tel she was only being polite.
“Why don’t you take a friend,” he said. “You shouldn’t be going alone.”
“No. This isn’t something I want to share with anyone else. I’l do it myself.”
He dropped his head in his hand and massaged his forehead. “I’m sorry,” he said, even though an apology wouldn’t improve matters.
“Don’t worry about it. We were never meant to be together, anyway.”
She wasn’t speaking in anger. It was an acknowledgment. And she was right. “I know.”
“Is that the real reason you’re not coming tomorrow night?” she asked.
“Yes.”
He heard her sigh and wanted to tel her how badly he wished it could be different. But what was the point?
“Can I say one thing?” she asked.
He braced for the worst. “What’s that?”
“I’ve never met anyone like you,” she said and hung up.
Al ie sat in her father’s chair, staring glumly at the teddy bear coffee mug that seemed so damn out of place on his desk. She’d taken that cup to the sink every night for the past week, thinking her father would use another one when he came in the fol owing morning. But every time she returned to work, she found the cute “Life would be un-bear-able without you” cup sitting beside his calendar. Obviously, it was a cup he deemed his own and not one to be shared around the station. But where had it come from? And why did he like it so much?
Al ie wished she knew. On second thought—she sank lower in her seat—maybe she didn’t. She felt bad enough.
She had to admit that she was better off accepting the fact that she and Clay had too many secrets between them, secrets that could have devastating effects on any relationship, let alone one involving a cop.
But since last Friday, she’d thought of little besides seeing him again. Not only was he breathtakingly handsome, he’d been through enough in life to make him interesting, layered, unique—not shal ow and selfish, like her ex.
The door swung open, and Al ie barely hid her grimace as Hendricks walked in. She’d sent him out on patrol an hour ago, and he was already back. Not that it surprised her.
Taking one look at her, he asked, “What’s wrong?”
The question caught Al ie off guard. She hadn’t managed to hide her real feelings? “Nothing, why?”
“Normal y you’re in the storeroom, digging through the Barker files as if you plan to strike gold. Don’t tel me you’re getting discouraged.”
Reluctant was a more accurate word. When she’d talked to Madeline earlier in the week, she’d gotten excited about the case al over again. Clay’s stepsister was so sure that he and his family weren’t involved. Al ie had wanted to solve the mystery just to prove Clay was as innocent as she hoped. To final y dispel the doubt and suspicion, so there was nothing to fear.
But then she’d begun to read the reverend’s pocket Bible, which Madeline had dropped off at the station the day before. Judging by the notes in that Bible, the reverend seemed obsessed with sins of the flesh and, simultaneously, with his new stepdaughter. She wasn’t sure the two were related in Barker’s mind, but if so, what that Bible revealed made for some unsettling possibilities.
Madeline attributed her father’s words to his zeal for righteousness and his love of Grace. But whenever Al ie began to puzzle out the most likely scenario, she immediately lost her enthusiasm for pursuing answers. She hoped Barker was living in Alaska, like Lucas Montgomery, or in some other remote place. Or that he’d been murdered by a stranger.
It was possible, she told herself. But in her more pragmatic moments, she had to admit the chances of that weren’t high. In her experience, random murders were rare, especial y when theft wasn’t a motive. Homicide was almost always committed by someone who knew the victim, and it was general y the person who had the most to gain.
The Montgomerys had the most to gain in Barker’s disappearance….
“I’m giving it a rest tonight,” she told Hendricks. She couldn’t think about the case right now. She was too disappointed about not seeing Clay tomorrow night, even though it was for the best. And she was too worried about her father. Was Dale having an affair? Betraying her mother? Betraying the whole family? If so, with whom?
The door opened again and Joe Vincel i strode in. Beth Ann Cole was hanging on his arm, but Al ie wasn’t surprised to see them together. Last night, around midnight, she’d stopped in at Let the Good Times Rol , just to make sure there weren’t any fights or folks needing a ride home, and found Beth Ann sucking on Joe’s tongue and grinding herself against him right there on the dance floor. It was such a flagrant display that Al ie had nearly cited them for public indecency.
She wished she had….
“Hel o, Joe,” she said. “Beth Ann. What can I do for you?”
“We dropped by to see how you’re coming along with my uncle’s case,” Joe said.
As Al ie stood, she placed the teddy bear cup behind her father’s standing file folders. She knew moving it was probably unnecessary, but she instinctively wanted to hide it. “It’s slow going. Cold cases general y take lots of time.”
“Is my statement going to make a difference?” Beth Ann asked.
“It’s in the file,” Al ie said.
Hendricks’s shoes creaked under his weight as he made his way over to them. “It should be a big help.”
“What does ‘in the file’ mean?” Joe demanded, ignoring him.
“It means it’s there with everything else, and I’l take it into consideration,” Al ie responded.
“Wil it get some attention?”
“If it warrants attention. But the case isn’t even official y open, so don’t expect too much.”
Joe’s expression darkened. “What are you talking about? Clay confessed. If that isn’t enough to reopen the case, what is?”
“Last time I talked to Beth Ann, she didn’t seem too sure of anything,” Al ie said.
“I was sure of Clay’s confession.” Beth Ann looked to Joe, who gave her an encouraging nod. “And I remembered something else.”
“What is it?” Hendricks asked anxiously.
“Clay told me he buried the body right there on the farm.”
Hendricks rubbed his hands together as if he believed every word, but Al ie had to grit her teeth to stop from cal ing Beth Ann a liar. She couldn’t let this case get any more personal than it already was. She had to al ow people to prove what they real y were.
Reminding herself of that, she managed to reel in her temper. “He did?” she said, trying to sound neutral.
Beth Ann flipped her long blond hair out of her face. “He did. And I said, ‘Aren’t you afraid the police wil find it?’”
“What did he say?” Hendricks asked.
Beth Ann flashed Al ie’s fel ow officer a smile for his eagerness. “He said, ‘I’m not worried about that. The cops around here aren’t smart enough to catch me.’”
Obviously, Beth Ann and Joe were hoping to provoke Al ie into acting against Clay, whether she had justification or not. “That’s an interesting and very detailed conversation,” she observed. “It’s a wonder you didn’t remember it when I had you in here a week ago.”
“I was upset.”
“Who wouldn’t be?” Joe chimed in, slinging his arm around her neck. “That bastard threatened to kil her if she told anyone.”
“That’s right,” Hendricks breathed, enthral ed by the drama.
“That’s why I didn’t come forward before,” Beth Ann said.
“I told you that, didn’t I, Al ie?”
Al ie folded her arms. “That’s Officer McCormick.”
Beth Ann blinked in confusion. “What?”
“I’m Officer McCormick to you.”
She stiffened, but Joe was already talking. “So what are you going to do about it? Are we final y going to see some action against the Montgomerys?”
“I can’t do anything until I figure out who real y kil ed your uncle,” Al ie said. “If anyone did.”
The frown between his eyebrows deepened. That, together with his narrow face and pointy eyeteeth, made him appear more wolfish than usual. “You’re saying it’s not Clay?” he nearly shouted, ignoring her qualification.
“I don’t think so,” she said, but Al ie wasn’t sure if the facts supported her opinion or she just didn’t want to accept the possibility.
“You’re crazy,” he told her scornful y. “Who else could it be?”
“I’m afraid I can’t answer that yet.”
“See?” Beth Ann looked smugly up at Joe. “She’s hoping to get with him. She wants Clay.”
“I’ve contacted him regarding the investigation. Like I’ve contacted a lot of other people,” Al ie said, trying to stem the accusations.
“But you’re not hoping to sleep with those other people,”
Beth Ann said.
Anger drove Al ie forward, until she stood mere inches from Beth Ann’s face. “You’ve lied to me on several occasions,” she said. “Unless you have something truthful to say, get out. Now.”
A muscle flexed in Joe’s cheek. “I’m going to the mayor.”
Mayor Nibley was a friend of Joe’s family, and she could cause problems for Al ie, and for Al ie’s father, which wouldn’t help their relationship. But Al ie refused to let Joe intimidate her. “You do what you have to,” she said. “And I’l do what I have to. Now leave before I arrest you both for disturbing the peace.”
“You’re the one who’s disturbing the peace,” Joe said.
“Because I won’t pile on when it comes to Clay?”
“Because you won’t do your job!”
“You can’t prove something that didn’t happen,” Al ie said. She was taking a big gamble, assuming so much. Al the circumstantial evidence pointed to Clay. But she couldn’t imagine him doing what everyone thought. At least not in cold blood.
Joe gave her a look of utter contempt. “This isn’t over.”
Al ie had more to say but, fortunately, Beth Ann managed to drag Joe outside. The door swung closed behind them, then a long silence fel , during which Hendricks gaped at her.
“I don’t think you want to be on Clay’s side,” he said at last.
“Maybe it’s time someone was,” Al ie responded and stomped into the bathroom where Hendricks couldn’t fol ow her.
11
Dale shot up out of his seat the moment Al ie walked through the station door the next morning. The veins protruding in his neck told her he was every bit as angry as she’d figured he’d be.
“You wouldn’t listen to me. You wouldn’t keep your head down and stay out of the line of fire,” he shouted.
Al ie didn’t know what to say. When her mother had nudged her awake and told her she was needed at the station, she’d known it was time to face the backlash from Joe’s visit. But her father’s reaction was even worse than she’d expected.
“Calm down. You’l give yourself a heart attack.” She took a seat across from him, but she knew Dale wouldn’t relax until he was good and ready. They were alone, so he could yel al he wanted without fear of being overheard.
“What were you thinking? ” he demanded. “Being seen around town with Clay Montgomery. Getting drunk with Clay Montgomery. Sleeping with Clay Montgomery.”
She hadn’t told her father they’d gone to his cabin. He assumed she’d gone to Clay’s farm, and she planned to leave it that way. “Maybe I had a little too much to drink the night we played pool,” she said. “But I didn’t get drunk with Clay. Not the way you think. And Clay didn’t even touch me when we were out last weekend. We fel asleep, okay?
Nothing happened.”
“But you know everyone around here believes he’s guilty of murder. And you’re a police officer, for God’s sake!”
“No one’s been able to prove Clay was responsible,”
she said. “Besides, like I just told you, nothing happened.”
“Wel , something happened this morning,” he said.
Foreboding settled deep in Al ie’s bones. “What’s that?”
“What you get when you thumb your nose at the people who’ve been dying to bring Clay Montgomery down.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“The mayor’s already cal ed me three times, mad as hel .
When she was struggling to win the election, she promised the Vincel is that she’d get to the bottom of Barker’s disappearance. It was part of her damn platform. I had her convinced we were doing everything we could, that there wasn’t enough proof to press charges. And that was okay
—before you riled up the Vincel is. Now she wants a ful -
fledged investigation. No holds barred.”
Al ie caught her breath. Until that moment, she’d been studying her father’s ruddy face, wondering if he was real y cheating on her mother. But this last statement got her ful attention. “What?” she murmured.
“You heard me. You’ve wanted this ever since you came home. Wel , now you have it. You’d better solve the damn thing and do it fast, or we’l both be out of a job.”
Al ie’s jaw dropped. She didn’t want to investigate Barker’s disappearance anymore. These days she had difficulty even reading through the notes and statements in the storeroom, terrified she’d uncover some piece of evidence that implicated Clay. “I’ve changed my mind,” she said. “There’s not enough there. I can’t solve it.”
“It’s too late,” he said. “You don’t have a choice. You solve it or we’l be packing our bags. And they’l bring charges against Clay regardless.”
“It’s official? You’re reopening the case?”
“It won’t be open long.”
“They’l never get a conviction based on what we’ve got!”
“That depends on the jurors, doesn’t it? And if they’re from around here, you never know.”
Shit! Al ie knew Clay’s enemies were powerful enough to guarantee a panel of jurors to their liking.
She nibbled nervously at her bottom lip. “We can’t put an innocent man in prison, Dad. That’s where this is al leading, isn’t it? They want to put him away and they’re tired of waiting for the proper evidence in order to do it.”
“Who says Clay’s innocent?”
“I do!”
“That’s your heart talking, Al ie. And that’s what scares me.”
What about Dale’s heart? Where was his heart in al of this? And what about his marriage? Al ie wanted to ask if he was seeing someone else, but right now she could only accuse him of drinking out of the wrong mug. Clay was right; that tube of lipstick could belong to anyone who’d ridden in his car. Her father didn’t give rides to many women, but that didn’t mean he couldn’t or hadn’t. “I was just trying to help Madeline,” she said.
He shoved some papers aside and final y sat down. “If they lock up her brother, you won’t have done her any favors.”
“That isn’t what I wanted.”
“I know. I’ve been trying to keep you out of this….” His words trailed off, and he shook his head in frustration. “That family’s been through hel , Al ie. You think I want to see that happen? I actual y had Clay’s best interests at heart when I asked him to stay away from you. But the two of you wouldn’t listen to me. And now I have no alternative except to pursue the case.”
Al ie considered the information she’d sifted through already, Lucas’s odd reaction on the phone, the picture Jed Fowler kept in his living room. What did it mean for Clay?
For Madeline? For the rest of the Montgomery family?
She thought of Clay holding her at the cabin, remembered her desire to feel his mouth moving on hers…. “Clay didn’t do it,” she said.
Her father lifted a skeptical eyebrow. “It doesn’t matter, does it? Someone has to pay. They’re going to get him one way or another.”
“No, they’re not,” she said. “He didn’t do it, and I’m going to prove it.”
Al ie smiled at her daughter. “Hold stil , babe, okay?”
Whitney could hardly contain her excitement long enough for Al ie to tie the bow in her hair. “They’l be skating. On ice!” she said breathlessly.
“I know.”
“And in the morning we’re going to eat breakfast on a little cart in our room!”
Whitney had been planning this trip with her grandmother for the past several days. They were driving three hours to Nashvil e to see Disney on Ice and then, because it would be late, they were staying the night.
Whitney had hardly talked about anything else. Fortunately, she didn’t need much in the way of a response, because Al ie hadn’t been paying a lot of attention. She was too focused on trying to figure out how to stop the Vincel is from manipulating her father into pressing murder charges against Clay—and whether her search of the cabin would yield proof that her father was having an affair.
“Bel e and Cinderel a and Snow White wil be there,”
Whitney went on. “And Beast.”
“It’l be wonderful,” Al ie murmured absentmindedly.
Evelyn stuck her head in the bathroom. “How’s my girl?
She al set?”
Wearing a cream-colored dress, with a strand of pearls at her neck and matching pumps on her feet, Evelyn had put on some makeup. But Al ie couldn’t help noticing that the lipstick she wore was a very light pink. Soft. Muted. Like always. “Whitney’s ready,” she said.
Al ie’s daughter jumped up and down and clapped her hands. “Do I look pretty, Boppo? Do I? Huh?”
“You look beautiful, darling. Now, don’t mess your hair.”
Evelyn gave her a warm embrace. “You remind me so much of your mother at this age.”
“Are you sure tonight won’t be too much for you?” Al ie asked. “Driving so far alone? Maybe I should go with you.”
Evelyn waved a dismissive hand. “Don’t be sil y. You don’t have a ticket for the show, and there’s no need to sit in some hotel room, waiting for us. This is our little adventure, right?” she said to Whitney.
Whitney came in perfectly on cue. “Right!”
Al ie had assumed that her mother was spending so much time with Whitney because, prior to Al ie’s return, Evelyn hadn’t been able to see her only grandchild very often. Danny had married three years ago, but so far he and his wife remained childless. Having Whitney in the same house was new for Evelyn and she was definitely enjoying it. But now Al ie had to wonder if her mother wasn’t channeling al her energy into her grandchild to make up for losses and disappointments in other areas of her life.
“Mom?” Al ie asked.
Evelyn adjusted the clasp on her pearls. “What?”
“Doesn’t Dad mind that you’l be gone al night?”
“Of course not. Why would he?”
“Because he’l miss you?”
“He’l be fine. He knows we’l be back tomorrow.” She opened her purse and began to show Whitney al the treasures she had stashed inside.
“Are you and Dad getting along okay?” Al ie asked.
Evelyn seemed to grow even more interested in the contents of her purse. “And see this?” she said to Whitney.
“These are mints. To freshen our breath.”
Whitney beamed at being treated like an adult. “Oh, I’m going to want one of those,” she said reverently.
“Mom?” Al ie persisted.
Evelyn snapped her purse shut and straightened.
“What?”
“Are you and Dad doing okay?”
“Of course.” She smiled, but Al ie couldn’t tel whether it was sincere. “Why do you ask?”
“He’s seems a little…”
“Temperamental?”
Al ie watched Evelyn closely. “I guess.”
“Don’t worry.” She smoothed back a strand of Whitney’s hair. “It’s the diet.”
“He doesn’t like to eat his peas,” Whitney confided.
Al ie doubted her father was denying himself. From what she could see, he’d actual y gained a few pounds. Was her mother afraid to question what was real y going on for fear she might find the truth too painful?
If so, Al ie certainly didn’t want to be the one to inform her. But who else was there?
“I’l see that he finishes his vegetables tonight,” she teased and walked them out to the car.
Her mother and daughter waved as they drove off, then Al ie began packing for her own trip. She wanted to reach the cabin before it grew dark—and she wanted to leave before her father came home. She hadn’t told him she’d be gone, hadn’t wanted to invent any excuses.
If she was lucky, he’d assume she’d gone with Evelyn and Whitney.
Al ie was on her way out of town when she spotted Grace Montgomery—Grace Archer since the wedding—at the stand she occasional y ran in front of what used to be Evonne Walker’s house on the corner of Main Street and Apple Blossom. Since Grace had married Kennedy Archer, she’d taken a sabbatical from working as a lawyer. She preferred to stay home with her stepsons, and certainly didn’t need to work for financial reasons. She didn’t need to sit at the side of the road sel ing baked goods, garden produce and handmade items, either. But when Evonne died a year or so earlier, the Walker family had inherited her house and Grace had inherited her special recipes—
recipes that were such a tradition in Stil water, Al ie couldn’t imagine them disappearing. Evidently, Grace felt the same way. When the Walkers put the house up for sale, Grace had bought it and was in the process of turning it into a shop that would sel the same things Evonne had made.
Until the improvements were complete, however, she continued to run her stand right there in the front yard, just as Evonne had always done.
Everyone knew it was in tribute to a woman Grace had truly admired. Grace wasn’t the only one to miss Evonne.
The entire town mourned her.
Kennedy’s two boys were with Grace, as usual. They seemed especial y close to their new stepmother. Which was a little surprising. Like Clay, Grace could be remote and guarded. Al ie had tried to approach her on a number of occasions, but if Kennedy was around, he general y moved to intercept anyone who might corner his wife and make her feel uncomfortable.
Kennedy wasn’t around today. So Al ie decided to stop.
She wanted to get to the cabin as early as possible, but she was also aware of what lay ahead of her on the Barker case. She needed to find some clue, some kernel of truth that would lead her to Barker’s real murderer—before the situation spiraled out of control.
She hoped Grace would be the one to provide that kernel of truth.
Parking at the side of the road, she turned off the engine and climbed out.
“Hi, Officer McCormick!” Nine-year-old Teddy, the younger of the two boys, hurried over to meet her. He loved police officers and had once told her he wanted to be a policeman when he grew up.
“Hel o, Teddy.”
Heath, Teddy’s older brother by two years, hovered near the end of the table. “I’l col ect your money when you’re ready,” he announced.
If Al ie had her guess, he’d be the one to take over at the bank. “Okay,” she said chuckling as she picked up a bar of handmade soap.
Grace was sel ing two fruit pies to Mrs. Franklin, the wife of a retired pharmacist who’d been an institution in Stil water since Al ie could remember. When Clay’s sister glanced up and saw Al ie, she didn’t seem too pleased.
“These smel good,” Al ie said to Teddy, stal ing for time.
“Those are violet,” Teddy told her.
“Lavender,” Grace corrected as Mrs. Franklin left.
“They’re nice,” Al ie said.
Heath handed her a wicker basket to hold her purchases, and she set the bar inside, along with some lavender lotion. “Evonne would be proud of the way you’ve stepped into her shoes,” she told Grace. She was sincere in her praise, but that comment didn’t start the conversation she was hoping it would.
“Thank you,” Grace said politely, then shifted her attention to the curb as another car pul ed up.
Al ie turned to see that it was Reverend Portenski. He nodded a general greeting as he approached the stand, but his eyes kept flicking—rather nervously—to Grace.
Grace immediately busied herself restocking the brownie and cookie platters from covered plastic dishes stored under the table.
“What can I get for you, Reverend Portenski?” Heath asked.
“The peaches are good,” Teddy suggested at his elbow.
Portenski picked up a bottle of peaches. “Yes, I think you’re right. I’l have some of these.” He glanced at Grace again; she didn’t look up. “And a jar of dil pickles.”
Teddy got the pickles for him while Heath hurried to the cash drawer behind the table. “That’l be ten dol ars.”
Al ie put a plateful of brownies in her own basket.
Because she’d been in such a hurry to leave the house, she’d packed a very meager dinner. The brownies might sustain her if the search took longer than expected. Or possibly help console her, as much as anything could, if she found something she’d rather not see.
“No fresh tomatoes yet?” Portenski asked Grace.
“Not yet,” she replied.
“That’s too bad. The ones you had last summer were the best.”
Grace didn’t respond, but Teddy spoke up. “They’l be ripe in a few weeks.”
Al ie sensed a strange kind of tension between Grace and the reverend, but she didn’t understand the cause.
Grace never went to church. Maybe the reverend had invited her to come out and she’d refused. Or he wanted to invite her and was afraid she’d refuse. Grace certainly didn’t seem any more open to talking to him than she did to the police in general, or Al ie in particular.
Al ie watched the reverend struggle to gain her attention
—in between adding a dozen fresh eggs to his purchases and examining the jams and jel ies. But then a truck drove by, a truck Al ie recognized. It was Jed’s old Chevy, and she focused on that instead.
She stil suspected he was the one who’d driven by the farm the other day, when she was peeking in the window of Barker’s old office. If he hadn’t fol owed her, it was an odd coincidence that they’d been heading in the same direction. And Al ie was always suspicious of a coincidence.
He was such an unusual man. What was he doing with that picture of Eliza Barker? she wondered for the mil ionth time.
“I, uh, I spoke with your brother.” Portenski was talking to Grace again, but the fact that he’d lowered his voice to almost a whisper caught Al ie’s notice.
“I’m afraid I might have given you the wrong idea with what I said the last time we talked,” he murmured.
Al ie had to strain to hear him, but Grace spoke more loudly.
“It’s fine,” she said. “No need to mention it.”
It seemed obvious that Clay’s sister didn’t want to address the issue, but the reverend was intent on saying what he’d come to say. “I want you to know I’m sorry. For everything.”
Grace fidgeted nervously, and Al ie did her best to look preoccupied. “You have nothing to be sorry for,” Grace said.
He seemed relieved by her response. “Thank you.” He gave Heath the money he owed for his purchases and started to leave, but Grace surprised Al ie by cal ing him back. “Reverend Portenski?”
“Yes?” he said, a trifle too hopeful y.
“You can help me by helping my brother.”
Portenski must have understood what she meant, because he didn’t ask how he could help Clay. The two of them stared at each other for a long moment. Then he nodded and got back in his car.
Al ie handed her shopping basket to Heath. “I’m ready.”
He added up the cost, gave her a total, and she withdrew twenty-five dol ars from her purse.
“Come again,” he said.
She accepted her change. “I wil .”
Grace turned away, expecting her to walk off, but Al ie stood where she was. “Grace?”
Grace was putting labels on more bottles of peaches.
“Yes?”
“I’d like to talk with you.”
Any warmth that had been in her pretty, blue eyes when Al ie drove up had long since fled. “About what?”
“I want to help your brother, too.”
Silence. Then, “How do you propose to do that?”
“At this point, I’m not sure,” Al ie admitted. “That’s why I’m coming to you.”
“What can I do? I’ve already told you everything I know about the night my stepfather went missing.”
The slam of a car door broke Al ie’s concentration. Jed had parked in front of her Camry and was approaching the stand.
“You’ve heard about Beth Ann’s claims,” Al ie said quickly.
“She’s lying.”
“I know that and you know that, but we have to prove it.”
“What can I get for you this week, Mr. Fowler?” Teddy asked, rushing over to meet him.
Al ie sensed Fowler and the boy coming up behind her, and instinctively shifted to put more distance between them.
But she didn’t turn to look at Jed again. And he didn’t answer Teddy. He merely handed the boy a jar of peaches and a sweet-potato pie, along with the exact change.
When Teddy began to whisper excitedly to his brother about how busy they were, and how much money they were making, Al ie assumed Jed was on his way back to his truck and forgot al about him in favor of appealing to Grace. If there was a way to reach her, to enlist her support, it was through her love for Clay. Al ie felt certain of it. In the past, Grace and Clay might have had their differences, but they’d always maintained a unified front.
“What do you say?” she asked. “Wil you sit down with me? Answer a few questions I’ve never had the chance to ask?”
“I don’t know,” Grace said, her eyes troubled. “I don’t see what that’l change. We’ve already been over it.”
Al ie wanted to tel Grace that the Vincel is had friends in high places who were trying to strong-arm her father into pressing charges. But she hesitated to go that far. Grace was too close to the end of her pregnancy. Al ie hoped to solve the Barker disappearance, but she didn’t want to throw Grace into an early labor or spoil the excitement she had to be feeling about the baby. “Wil you think about it?”
Grace nodded, and Al ie reached out to touch her arm.
“Trust me, I’m on your side,” she whispered earnestly, then nearly ran into Jed Fowler when she started to leave.
“Excuse me,” she murmured. Irritated that Jed seemed to be lurking around every corner, she got in her car and drove away.
Al ie reached the cabin much later than she’d hoped. A semi pul ing two trailers ful of dirt had overturned on the highway ahead of her, causing a traffic jam that lasted more than two hours. And then it had started to rain. By the time she arrived, it was pouring and completely dark.
“Just my luck,” she muttered, staring miserably at the fat drops pelting her windshield. She was tempted to turn around and go back. She didn’t real y want to be out here alone so late at night. And she definitely didn’t want to find what she was looking for.
But she’d already made the drive. It didn’t make sense to give up before she’d even gotten out.
Grabbing her smal dinner and the plate of brownies, she made a dash for the door. But she hesitated once she stood under the smal overhang, staring at the dark cabin.
She felt jittery, afraid, because she hadn’t been able to answer the questions she’d been asking herself the entire drive: What if my father is seeing someone else? Would I tel my mother? Confront him? Or keep his dirty secret?
What would be best for both my parents?
Despite her father’s bluster, Al ie loved him as much as she did Evelyn. But she wasn’t sure how she’d feel toward him if she caught him cheating. To her, the fact that he was a cop made the situation that much worse. She expected more from a police officer. She didn’t want to lose respect for the man she’d always admired.
“Please, don’t let me down,” she whispered. Then she took a deep breath, retrieved the key from under the mat and went inside.
The place smel ed like Clay. Al ie couldn’t believe it. It’d been a whole week, and yet she could stil detect his cologne. Or maybe she was only imagining that she could pick up his scent because she wished he was with her.
She scanned the room. Nothing that said “adultery”
jumped out at her, even now that she was looking with a critical eye. But her father wouldn’t leave evidence of a clandestine affair lying around where anyone could find it, would he?
She had to search for the smal , insignificant details he might have overlooked.
Clay flipped through the channels on the television, trying to distract himself. Al ie was probably at the cabin already, searching for proof of her father’s infidelity. Whether or not she’d find it, he couldn’t guess. He hadn’t seen anything suspicious. But he hadn’t checked the drawers, under the bed, the bookcase or cupboards. There was no tel ing what smal thing his mother might have left behind. And if Al ie found anything to fuel her suspicions, it’d only be a matter of time before she reached the truth.
Unless his mother could remain strong and stay away from Dale. Then there might be a chance.
But Clay didn’t have much hope of that. He’d spoken to Irene earlier. “I’m fifty-one years old, and my life is more than half over. What else do I have to look forward to?”
she’d wailed. “Why am I denying myself?”
He’d tried to remind her. He’d also invited her to the farm, so she’d have company, but she’d declined. He would’ve gone to her place and kept watch over her, except he didn’t believe that, ultimately, it would make any difference. If Irene was going to see Dale, she’d just arrange a meeting after he left. He couldn’t stand guard on her around the clock.
Besides, he was agitated and torn himself. He couldn’t stop thinking about Al ie up at that cabin alone, discovering that her father was sleeping with his mother.
He shook his head. Al ie would hate him by association.
She might even guess that he’d known al along and wonder if he’d been secretly laughing at her.
The possibility that she might feel he’d betrayed her bothered him. But he didn’t owe her anything. He had to protect his family from the people of Stil water, including the police, including Allie. She was a cop.
And yet—he blew out a long sigh and changed the channel—and yet he wanted to shield her from the hurt she’d suffer as a result of learning the truth.
Flipping off the television, he stood. If she was going to find proof of her father’s affair she’d have it by now. He’d drive there, console her if necessary, see that she made it safely home.
But if she hadn’t found anything, they’d be in the same situation as last weekend, alone together, with only a nineteen-year-old secret to keep them apart—a secret that was al too easy to forget when he felt her beside him.
Muttering a curse, he forced himself to sit back down.
He wasn’t going anywhere. Al ie wasn’t his concern. He couldn’t care about her and his family, too. Loving one would only betray the other.
Al ie pointed her flashlight under the bed, then lifted the mattress. She was looking for sex toys, cast-off lingerie or lipstick-smeared shirts. But she found nothing.
She went through the bookcase, searching for pictures or notes or pornography. Nothing there, either.
She pul ed everything out of the cupboard, checking for champagne or the presence of foods her father didn’t like or wouldn’t eat. She looked everywhere else she could think of—but once again came up empty-handed.
Standing in the center of the room, she turned slowly around, wondering if she’d missed anything. But she couldn’t imagine what. One room, without much furniture, didn’t give her father a lot of hiding places. Besides, he wasn’t even aware that she suspected him, so she doubted he’d get too creative.
And that meant she’d been wrong.
Feeling a tremendous surge of relief, she laughed out loud. So what if her father was drinking out of a teddy bear mug? So what if she’d found the number of a florist on his Rolodex or a tube of lipstick in his car? She didn’t care—
because it didn’t mean anything. He wasn’t having an affair, or there’d be proof of it here at the cabin. She felt certain of it. Where else would he find the privacy an affair required?
He couldn’t meet his lover anyplace in town. He’d be instantly recognized.
Hunger pangs reminded Al ie that she hadn’t had dinner yet. Throwing another log on the fire she’d built for light as much as heat, she left the kerosene lamp burning, grabbed a flashlight, some soap and a towel and went to the outhouse before heading down to the river to wash her hands. It was stil raining outside, but she didn’t mind getting wet. She wasn’t going to stay at the cabin much longer. She’d eat, then drive home, where she’d give her father a heartfelt hug and revel in the knowledge that her mother’s life wasn’t about to be destroyed.
The sound of shattering glass brought Al ie’s head up.
There were a few other cabins in the area, but she didn’t know exactly where and they were pretty spread out. She was fairly sure the noise had originated from her own place.
Dropping the soap and towel, she ran up the bank to the cabin, careful to turn off her flashlight and hang back out of sight as she approached it. But the window wasn’t even cracked. She could see the glimmer of the fire through the glass. So…
A rustling in the woods not far away sent her pulse racing. Was it a smal animal of some sort? “Is someone there?” she cal ed, just in case.
No one answered.
She stepped out of the woods, her flashlight held low to the ground. But as she examined the clearing, she realized that someone had broken her car window. The rock that had been used to smash it was lying a few feet away.
Stunned, she crouched down for cover and searched the clearing again. But she could see no one, hear nothing except the soft beat of rain. Whoever had used that rock seemed to be gone, so she hurried over to check the damage. Why would anyone—
“Oh, God,” she whispered. Slipping her hand gingerly through the jagged hole to unlock the car and open the door, she began to feel underneath the seat. Her gun was missing. Someone had stolen her Glock.
“Shit.” Automatical y, she reached for the portable radio she carried almost everywhere. But whoever had stolen her gun had taken the radio, too.
How had someone stumbled upon her car in this remote location and in the middle of a storm? Where had that person come from? And, more important than anything—at least at this moment—where had he gone?
Using the door for protection, Al ie moved her flashlight in a wide arc. Who’d done this?
She couldn’t see anything but trees.
Too bad she hadn’t brought her squad car. That might have discouraged the theft. But she never took it outside jurisdiction.
She needed to get her cel phone, alert her father, then get the hel out of the woods. She didn’t want to be sitting here alone in the middle of a storm while some unknown person was running around with her gun.
Turning off the flashlight, she picked up the closest stick she could find and crept toward the cabin to peer through the open doorway. Empty. A more thorough check revealed that there was no one hiding under the bed or behind the door. But her purse, which she’d left on the table, was gone, too—and with it her cel phone and car keys. In its place, next to the plate of brownies she’d bought from Grace, was a rain-soaked note.
The paper nearly fel apart as she unfolded it, but she managed to make out the blurry words that appeared to have been typed on a computer.
Leave the past alone, or Barker won’t be the only person missing.
12
Rain pounded on the roof of the cabin as Al ie huddled by the fire. She’d covered the window with a blanket so she couldn’t be seen from outside and shoved the bookshelves in front of the door. It wasn’t a perfect plan, but without a car or any way to cal for assistance, she couldn’t do much more. Except hope that the dry wood lasted until morning, and that the offender who’d paid her a visit was gone for good.
Noises from outside kept her on edge. Branches banged against the sides of the cabin; the rain thrummed loudly and steadily on the roof. Even the crackle of the fire made it difficult to determine whether or not she heard someone moving around.
It was unlikely, she told herself. If the person who had her gun had intended to hurt her tonight, he would’ve done it already. She had a kitchen knife for a weapon, but a knife wasn’t much use against a gun. Considering her isolation, she was easy prey. So she doubted her visitor had hung around with plans to harm her. For now he—or she—was only out to deliver a message.
She knew that and yet she couldn’t relax.
Holding her breath, she closed her eyes so she could focus on differentiating between the various rustling, tapping and scratching noises. But, in the end, concentrating didn’t help. Her nerves were working against her. She couldn’t tel what was real and what she’d imagined.
Calm down. Her palm began to sweat on the handle of the knife, but she didn’t release it. She tried to occupy her mind by puzzling out who might’ve written the note. It had to be someone who knew her and what she was working on, someone who was familiar with the Barker case and had a personal stake in it.
Unfortunately, that didn’t bring a lot of possibilities to mind. Most people in Stil water wanted her to get to the truth. The Montgomerys were the only ones she knew of, besides Jed Fowler perhaps, who weren’t particularly forthcoming.
Could it be Clay?
The thought crept in, even though she’d been careful y avoiding it. She’d told no one else where she’d be tonight.
But he was too smart to write a note that would make him look worse than he already did. And he’d told her not to come to the cabin alone. Would he encourage her to bring a friend if he planned to break into her car and frighten her half to death?
She didn’t think so. It had to be someone else.
Someone who wanted her to believe it was Clay….
Joe Vincel i? Joe’s father or another member of the Vincel i clan? Beth Ann?
A car door slammed, and Al ie froze. Maybe she was about to find out.
Scrambling to her feet, she pressed herself against the inside wal of the cabin listening for the sound of approaching footsteps. Whoever it was wouldn’t be able to get in through the door. But he—or she—could break the window.
A loud knock made her knees go weak.
“Al ie? Are you in there?”
Clay! She recognized his voice immediately and nearly cal ed out to him. But she was afraid she’d been a fool to trust him so much. Had she been blinded by his legendary sex appeal?
It was possible. Anything was possible. At the moment, she doubted herself, doubted everyone.
“Al ie, open the door,” he said. “What happened to your car? Why’s the passenger window broken?”
The doorknob rattled. Icy tentacles of fear tightened every muscle—and yet Al ie’s first instinct, even now, was to let him in. She would have, if not for the echo of her father’s voice in her head… you got into his car, knowing he could be dangerous…
“Al ie, answer me! Are you okay?”
If Clay intended to hurt her, he’d had his chance last weekend.
Her reaction wasn’t logical, but fear rarely was. Fear said if she lowered her defenses and she was wrong, he could kil her, bury her in the woods and drive back to town as if he’d never even left the farm—and no one would be the wiser. She’d simply be gone. Like Barker. Just as the note promised.
The fingernails of her free hand curled into her palm as she heard Clay move to the window. Would he break it?
She waited, heart racing, as she wondered if she’d have to defend herself against the man she’d started fantasizing about.
But when she heard his voice again, he was heading toward the river, probably searching for the outhouse she’d told him about, hoping he’d find her there.
“Al ie!” The wind tossed his voice about. Her name seemed to echo against the trees, mixing with the melee of thunder and wind and rain. He must be getting soaked.
If he wasn’t responsible for the night’s events, what was he doing out here?
Think, she ordered herself. Think, think, think! She needed to clear her head; her imagination was getting the best of her. She didn’t believe Clay had kil ed Barker, at least not purposely. And she couldn’t believe he’d harm her now. She trusted him.
Enough to bet her life on opening the door?
She remembered the humiliation she’d sensed in him when she’d made him remove his shirt the night Beth Ann had accused him of murder. Beneath the tough exterior, Clay was a good man. Her gut had told her that from the beginning and her gut was al she had to rely on.
Taking a deep breath, she set the knife aside and started to shove the bookcase out of the way. But then she heard a muttered curse right outside the cabin, too close to be Clay. Clay was stil cal ing for her down by the river.
Was the person who’d taken her gun stil there? If so, why?
Joe’s face, angry and vindictive, flashed through Al ie’s mind. The only answer she could come up with was that this was some kind of setup. No doubt Beth Ann had convinced Joe, along with half the town, that Al ie wouldn’t put Clay behind bars even if he deserved it. Maybe Joe had gotten tired of waiting for justice and decided to take the law into his own hands. Joe and his father and brother had been fishing with Al ie’s father a couple of times, so they knew about the cabin. It was possible that Joe had enticed Clay to the lake on false pretenses.
And if that was true…
Al ie’s stomach tensed. If that was true, she’d just let Clay walk into a trap.
She had to warn him. Now! But it had taken her a ful fifteen minutes to slide the bookcase in front of the door.
She couldn’t move it in a matter of seconds.
Unable to stop the terrible images bombarding her brain
—images of Joe creeping up behind Clay with her Glock—
she tore half the books off the shelves, kicked the unit over and used the wal to give her some leverage as she pushed.
“Al ie?” Clay was stil cal ing her.
“Stop! Get down!” she cried out in panic and frustration.
But she knew he couldn’t hear her. Each agonizing second seemed to last an hour as she moved the bookcase inch by inch.
Final y, she was able to open the door enough to slip through. “Clay!”
Clay’s truck was parked right in front. Even without a flashlight she could tel that someone had punctured two of his tires.
Someone who didn’t want him to leave. Which frightened her more than anything.
“Clay, get down! Don’t say a word!” she yel ed. Her cry echoed back to her as she charged after him. But it was too late. A shot rang out before she’d taken five steps. She heard a gasp to her left. Then someone went crashing through the woods to her right.
Time seemed to stand stil as, not far away, Al ie heard an engine start. The shooter was escaping. She didn’t even try to fol ow. She’d never be able to catch him. But that wasn’t what kept her rooted to the spot. It was the sickening realization that someone had just taken a shot at Clay. And she’d heard him fal .
The pungent smel of wet earth fil ed Clay’s nostrils as he lay on the ground, blinking against the rain fal ing into his face. What had happened? One moment, he’d been searching frantical y for Al ie. The next, he’d heard a gunshot and something—presumably a bul et—had knocked him off his feet.
Had someone taken a shot at him? As surreal as that seemed, it was the only explanation. He wanted to believe the gunshot was a freak accident, but then he remembered Al ie yel ing, trying to warn him.
What was going on? He remembered the shattered window in Al ie’s car. She wasn’t safe. He had to get up.
But his arm…
Muffling a groan, he tried to see what was wrong with it.
It ached and burned. His head hurt, too. But he had to reach Al ie somehow. The person who’d shot him could be after her.
“Al ie?” he cal ed. Except he was pretty sure her name didn’t actual y leave his lips. He was yel ing, but only inside his head.
“Clay? Answer me if you can. Please! Clay? Help me find you.”
She was the one who was cal ing. She was pleading with him, searching for him, but he couldn’t seem to respond. Why?
The beam of a flashlight swept through the trees. She was coming toward him.
He cursed the target her light made. She had to turn it off, run, hide….
Squeezing his eyes shut, he tried to clear his muddled brain. Had he blacked out when he hit the ground? “Al ie, get out of here,” he said. The words were a mere croak, but at least this time he heard his own voice and, when he redoubled his efforts, he was able to yel louder. “Get out of here! Do you hear? Go!”
“Clay!” she cried, breaking into a run.
“Not this way!” he yel ed. Slowly, his faculties were returning. He clambered into a sitting position and used the tree to pul himself to his feet. Dizziness nearly overwhelmed him, but he fought it back. She wasn’t listening, dammit. She was hurrying toward him.
“Al ie—” he started. But then she was there, helping to support his weight while she shone her flashlight, examining him closely.
“Are you hurt?”
He wanted to shield her, in case another bul et came from the same direction. But he didn’t have his accustomed mobility. He wasn’t even sure he’d stil be standing without her. “My arm.”
The beam of her flashlight rose, and he heard her gasp.
She’d spotted the warm, sticky blood he’d felt soaking into his clothes. But when she spoke, her cop instincts seemed to take control because she sounded quite calm. “It doesn’t look too bad.”
He knew she was saying it for his benefit, but he had bigger concerns on his mind right now. Like getting shot again. Or seeing Al ie shot. “Whoever did it could stil be out there—”
“No, I heard him go. We’ve got to get you to the cabin,”
she said urgently.
“The cabin?” he said. “Let’s get the hel out of here.”
“We can’t,” she told him. “We don’t have a vehicle.”
As soon as Al ie got Clay out of the rain, she helped him strip off his wet clothes. She was afraid he’d go into shock if she didn’t get him warm. He was soaked clear through, and his pupils were dilated.
“Do you have a cel phone?” she asked.
“No.”
“No.”
Great. “That’s okay. You’re going to be fine,” she said over and over. She wasn’t sure who she was trying to convince, him or herself; she didn’t feel nearly as confident as she tried to appear. Before she joined the cold case unit in Chicago, she’d responded to cal s that involved some serious wounds, but she’d never come across a victim she couldn’t immediately rush—or have rushed—to the hospital.
In any event, it didn’t matter if she sounded a little panicked, because Clay didn’t seem to be listening, anyway. Al ie got the impression he had to concentrate just to remain conscious.
“Are you in a lot of pain?” she asked.
“No,” he said.
She could tel by the grim set of his jaw that he was lying, but decided to play along. “That’s good.” She pul ed the blankets over his naked body then rummaged through the cupboards, searching for anything that might help them.
She located a first-aid kit that was at least fifteen years old. Thankful y, the bottle of ibuprofen she found right afterward was almost new. “Here, have some of these,” she said, dropping four pil s into his palm. “They might take the edge off.”
He swal owed the pil s without water and without argument.
“Doesn’t look like a big deal,” he said, gazing down at his arm.
Bits of dirt and grass clung to the blood smeared on his bicep, and a fresh trickle flowed from a tiny hole in his deltoid.
Was the bul et stil inside?
That thought made Al ie nauseous, which surprised her.
She’d dealt with some gruesome murders, considered herself to have a strong stomach. But this was different.
Clay wasn’t a stranger.
Al ie wiped away the blood with a dish towel, because it was al she had. More blood surged out, so she applied pressure until the bleeding slowed. She could see where the bul et had gone in and—she leaned forward, then sagged onto the bed in relief—where it had come out. It had passed straight through the muscle.
“Don’t tel me you’re going to faint,” he murmured.
“No, I’m just glad we don’t have to perform any kind of crude surgery. There’s a lovely exit wound on the back of your arm. If it didn’t hurt so badly, you could probably turn it far enough to see for yourself.”
He winced. “I’l take your word for it.”
“I’m getting the bleeding under control.”
“Glad to hear it,” he muttered.
She tied the dish towel around his arm to keep pressure on the wound. “I’l be right back.”
He reached out to stop her, but she stood up too fast.
“Where are you going?”
“To the river for water.”
“No, I don’t want you out there. Get under these blankets before you catch pneumonia.”
Al ie immediately pictured the body beneath the covers, the body she’d helped undress. She knew Clay was only being practical. They were almost out of dry wood and had to stay warm somehow. The shock to his system was probably making it difficult for him to bring his body temperature up, even though he was dry and covered with blankets. But she should clean his wound first. There was no tel ing how much bacteria he’d encountered when he fel in the mud.
Besides, she couldn’t climb into bed wearing wet clothes and, although she had more worrisome issues to deal with at the moment, she felt self-conscious about getting naked. She was too attracted to Clay. Had he been a stranger, she could’ve reacted to the necessity of the situation without feeling so nervous and aroused.
“I wil once I clean it,” she said.
“Isn’t there some antiseptic?”
“No. It’s long gone. I need some water.”
He scowled. “Morning wil be soon enough for that.”
Al ie was so cold she could scarcely feel her fingers or toes. But she knew it was important to do al she could for Clay’s injuries. “Hang on. I’m already wet, so now’s the best time.”
“Just come here,” he said stubbornly, but she got his truck keys out of the pocket of his jeans. She wanted to see if he had anything in his vehicle that might prove useful.
Then she grabbed a pan and hurried out.
The wind and the rain lashed at Al ie’s clothes and hair.
She hunched against it, grimacing when she saw Clay’s truck sitting at an awkward angle because of the two flat tires. She’d get the son of a bitch who’d shot him, she promised herself. Another foot to the right and Clay might’ve been dead when she reached him.
Rage roiled inside her, tempting her to dash off to look for tracks—before they were completely obliterated by the storm. But she couldn’t. Clay needed her.
Planning to comb every inch of the area come morning, she searched his truck. She could smel Clay’s cologne, but he kept his truck as utilitarian and clean as his house. In the glove compartment, she found only a tire gauge, some napkins, his registration, proof of insurance, a seven-inch knife and a box of condoms.
Obviously, he was prepared. He just wasn’t prepared for getting shot.
She considered trying to drive them out of there despite the ruined tires, but she couldn’t risk getting stuck in the mud in the middle of nowhere. And she couldn’t lose valuable time running around, looking for other cabins. She had no idea if she’d even find an occupied one. At least for the moment they had a warm place and a bed.
Worried that she was leaving Clay for too long, she ran down to the river and fil ed her pan. When she returned, she found him curled up, shaking, struggling to get warm. The fact that he might be slipping into shock scared her so badly she abandoned the water, stripped off her clothes, and dried herself off as wel as she could.
The mattress creaked slightly beneath her weight. Al ie knew Clay had to be aware of her. But he didn’t seek her body, as she’d expected. And that scared her even more.
“Clay?”
“Hmm?”
She wanted to pul him to her that very second, to reassure herself that he was as strong as ever. But until she got warmer, she’d only leech what little heat he’d managed to generate away from him. “Are you okay?” she asked, briskly rubbing her arms and legs to hurry the process.
“Umm.”
His response sounded like an affirmative answer, but she wasn’t about to take any chances. As soon as she dared touch him, she fixed the dish towel as a field bandage. Then she slid over and wrapped her body around his. She no longer cared about nudity or propriety or anything else. She didn’t even care if he figured out how deeply he affected her. She only wanted to make him better.
“Feels good,” he mumbled a few minutes later.
“Can you sleep?” she asked.
He didn’t answer. She worried that the pain might be too much for him. But after a few minutes, he seemed somewhat improved. She could feel a steady, strong heartbeat, and his chest began to rise and fal in a regular rhythm.
“Thank God,” she whispered and prayed he’d remain safe through the night.
The pain in his arm dragged Clay out of a deep sleep while it was stil dark. He couldn’t immediately remember why he hurt, but he knew he wasn’t alone. A woman was hugging him from behind. Her smal firm breasts were pressed against his back, her legs were tucked under his buttocks and her warm breath moved his hair, tickling his neck. But it was her hand that distracted him the most.
She’d looped her arm around his waist as if she’d been holding him tightly to her. But now that her body had relaxed in sleep, her hand dangled very close to—
He shifted, wondering what the hel was going on.
“You okay?” she muttered sleepily.
Al ie McCormick. At the sound of her voice, it al came back to him. The broken window. Tramping through the woods. Gnawing fear for her safety. The crack of gunfire.
But, strangely enough, the fact that she was lying next to him seemed the most pertinent. They were in bed at her father’s isolated cabin. Naked and alone. And he wanted to touch her….
“I’m fine.” Easing out of her arms, he turned to face her.
Embers stil glowed in the fireplace, but he could make out only a few rough shapes. His other senses took in more.
The warmth emanating from her body. The feel of her soft legs entwined with his. The scent of her on his pil ow.
“Clay?” she whispered, reaching for him.
Her hand encountered his stomach. At that point, he thought she might recoil and find some excuse to get out of bed.
But she didn’t. Her fingers moved toward his injured arm, but he deflected her questioning touch.
“Are you sure you’re al right?” she asked.
“Positive.” He was sure about a few other things, as wel
—like the testosterone suddenly pounding through him.
“I’m glad.” The hand that had touched him a moment earlier touched him again, moving slowly over his chest as if she was eager to explore every groove and contour.
Squeezing his eyes shut, he told himself not to react.
She was just reassuring herself that he was okay. Or she was half-asleep and didn’t know what she was doing.
Otherwise, she wouldn’t be touching him so…erotical y.
She had to realize that the closer she got to him, the more she alienated herself from her family and friends.
Her hand traveled up to his neck and eventual y cupped his cheek in a movement so tender it made Clay’s stomach twist with longing. But he couldn’t respond. One eager kiss or receptive moan on her part, and he’d be on fire.
Drawing a deep breath, he fought to hang on to his self-control. But then her thumb brushed his bottom lip and he couldn’t help tracing the edges with his tongue.
Her sigh made his muscles bunch with desire, and he took her thumb al the way into his mouth.
The bed moved as she inched closer.
“You real y had me worried,” she said.
He felt the tips of her breasts against him and nearly let his good arm encircle her, pul her to him.
No. Think of her father. Think what it would do to her.
But she didn’t stop. She was threading her fingers through his hair, and he could feel her breath on his neck.
Clay lay suspended between what he knew he should do and what he wanted to do. He had to warn her at least.
There was a condom in his wal et from the box he’d bought at the gas station. But if they made love, he didn’t want her to be sorry about it later, didn’t want to feel responsible for her regret.
“Al ie?”
“What?”
“I—” Her nipples grazed his chest again, causing a reaction powerful enough to silence him. His determination to restrain himself kept him from reaching out, from taking what she offered. But he couldn’t push her away. Especial y since she seemed a bit tentative, as if she imagined he might not be interested.
“Can you go back to sleep?” she asked.
Not a chance. “No.”
“Am I…disturbing you?”
“Hel , no.”
She seemed relieved, but that didn’t help his situation.
He couldn’t think of anything except the softness of her skin.
He wanted to bend his head and take one nipple in his mouth while his hands wandered elsewhere, eliciting the responses he craved from her…
Don’t think about it. He didn’t want her to be ostracized later just because she’d been with him.
But he couldn’t help thinking about it. Remove her hand.
The command came with authority, but the pleasure of her touch was too intense. And then her tongue slid invitingly over his bottom lip and every cel in his body rose up against him. He longed to move decisively, aggressively.
To rol her onto her back and kiss her as he buried himself inside her—and to forget al the reasons he shouldn’t. But he merely parted his lips and met the tip of her tongue with his.
She made a sound that told him she liked it and arched into him. What they were doing couldn’t possibly be good for her, though. He wasn’t husband or father material. And she had a child.
“Clay?” she said. The quaver in her voice meant that his earlier response hadn’t completely squelched her insecurities.
He didn’t answer. If he explained what he knew to be true, he’d have to act on it. But he wasn’t sure how long he could hover between yes and no.
Final y, he pul ed away.
He could sense her embarrassment and confusion. He hated that, but what could he do? Rejecting her advances was the lesser of two evils. Especial y since it would encourage her to keep her distance from him in the future.
They lay in silence for minutes that felt like hours.
“I’m sorry,” she said at last. “I know you’re in a lot of pain.”
He was too aroused to care about the wound in his arm.
He’d have to be unconscious not to want her. “It’s not the pain.”
She didn’t say anything.
“I don’t want the people you know and love to look at you the way they look at me,” he explained, because he couldn’t take her thinking that she’d made a fool of herself by approaching him.
His heart beat several times before she responded.
“You’ve slept with other women in Stil water.”
“No one like you.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“You’re different. You know that. You’re a cop, one of them.”
“I’m also a woman.”
“Expectations are different for you.”
“So you’re doing me a favor?”
“I’m trying.”
There was a slight pause. Then she said, “I’m not sure I’m able to appreciate that right now. When you were shot, I
—” She didn’t finish, but he could hear the huskiness in her voice, the worry and concern. The shooting had real y shaken her, made her want to reassure herself in the most primitive way possible.
He let go of a long breath. “It’s not easy for me to say no,” he admitted. “It’s…harder than you know.”
Her finger began tracing a line through his pectorals and down his stomach. “How hard?”
He guessed she wasn’t talking about the difficulty of the situation. “Hard enough,” he told her gruffly, but he didn’t move. He held perfectly stil .
“Maybe I should decide about that.” Her finger had reached his navel. She was moving slowly, giving him plenty of time to stop her. But he didn’t. He couldn’t wait until she touched him. His heartbeat radiated throughout his entire body as she drew closer and closer—and then her hand curled tightly around him, and he knew trying to resist would be hopeless.
With his good arm, he brought her into ful contact with him. “You’re making a mistake,” he said, taking her mouth in a harsh, hungry kiss.
“Good thing you’re worth it,” she said and buried her face in his neck as he used his hand to make her tremble.
13
It’d been more than a year since Al ie had made love. She missed the physical intimacy of having a man in her life. But being with Clay was nothing like what she’d experienced in the past. Clay’s lovemaking was ful of an urgency she’d never known, as if it wasn’t enough for him to claim her body—he wanted her soul. The crazy thing was, she knew better than to give it to him, yet she did so eagerly. With every kiss, with every touch, with every thrust of his hips, she gave up a little more of herself. He was alive, and somehow that was al that mattered in this cloistered cabin.
The rest of the world could not intrude.
She was making a mistake, she dimly realized. She was letting him spoil her for anyone else. But she was too caught up to care. With one hand he angled her hips so she could take more of him.
Euphoria, combined with raw, desperate need, caused every muscle to quiver. Al ie moaned as Clay’s mouth closed over her breast, suckling her just hard enough. He knew how to amplify every sensation, how to take it to the extreme.
“What are you feeling?” he murmured, his voice ragged, breathless, as he kissed her mouth, her ear, her neck.
“You. I feel you. You’re in me, around me, everywhere.”
“Then let go. Give me what I want, okay? Trust me.”
Worry lingered in some distant corner of her mind. “Be careful of your wound,” she said. But he didn’t act as if he had an injury. Pinning her hands over her head, he nuzzled her neck. Then his mouth trailed back down to her breasts.
Al ie had never felt so alive, so hyperaware of another human being. As the rhythm intensified, she was no longer sure where Clay’s body stopped and hers started, and she didn’t care. The separate parts didn’t matter, only the unified, glorious whole. They were nothing without each other.
Her muscles tensed, then several spasms rol ed through her so hard her whole body shook.
Clay chuckled softly as she shuddered in his arms.
“That’s it. One more,” he said, but she could sense him struggling to hold back and wanted to relish a little power of her own. Pressing him onto his back, she made sure he lost al control.
When Al ie woke up, it was light. She blinked, feeling lazy, satiated, content—until she saw red on the pil ow in front of her. Then she sat up so fast black spots danced before her eyes.
The dish towel she’d wrapped around Clay’s wound had fal en off, and his blood had smeared the bedding. But, once the dizziness passed, she could see there wasn’t as much as she’d feared.
“What’s wrong?” he asked, lifting his head.
“You’ve been bleeding.”
He groaned and fel back on his pil ow. “Is that al ?”
“Is that all? ”
“The way you had my heart going, how can you be surprised?”
He’d turned his face into the pil ow, which muffled his voice, but Al ie knew he was teasing her. “We’ve got to get you cleaned up,” she said, straining for a look at his wound.
“Not here. We don’t have any dry firewood to purify the water.”
“I can wash off the dried blood, at least.” She started to climb out of bed but realized she didn’t have anything except the wet clothes piled on the floor. She hesitated. It was one thing to strip in the dark. It was quite another to go strol ing naked about the cabin in broad daylight. Especial y when Clay couldn’t help but compare her to the likes of Beth Ann.
“What’s the matter?” he asked.
She pul ed the sheet off the bed with her as she moved.
“It’s freezing in here.”
He scowled. “You don’t want me to see you.”
Clay never missed anything. Feeling a blush warm her cheeks, Al ie glanced away. “We made love half the night.
You’ve already seen me.”
“I’ve felt you,” he clarified. “I haven’t seen you.”
Take what Beth Ann has and cut it in half, she wanted to say. But she refused to reveal her insecurity. “It’s too cold.”
“I never expected you to be the self-conscious type, Officer.”
“I’m not!”
He sat against the headboard and cocked a disbelieving eyebrow at her.
“I’m not—what did you cal me? Prim and proper?”
“The way you’re hiding behind that blanket isn’t too convincing.”
“Do you know who shot you?” she asked, trying to change the subject. During the night, she’d briefly told him about her missing gun and the note. But they’d been too preoccupied to discuss it ful y.
“No idea.” A crooked grin curved his mouth. “So…I’m number two.”
She knew he was referring to the number of men she’d slept with. In her mind, he was number one, and she was pretty sure she’d think of him that way for a long time. She’d never experienced anything like last night. But she wasn’t about to tel him that. “Stop gloating,” she said.
“I’m not gloating. I’m wondering how I got so lucky.”
“Are you kidding? You were bleeding. I felt sorry for you,”
she said with a smirk.
Clay’s blue eyes sparkled. “How can I get you to feel sorry for me again?”
She laughed, shaking her head. “If you could make love the way you did last night, you’re fine.”
“I’d be a lot better if you’d take off that sheet.”
“No.”
“What if I take it off?” he chal enged.
Al ie recognized the desire in his voice. She’d expected last night to be an isolated incident, a breakdown of her customary resistance, due to an unusual situation. But he wanted her again. Now.
And, just as Beth Ann had predicted, she wanted him.
Frightened by how shaky he could make her feel with just that look, Al ie caught her breath. She nearly dropped the sheet and climbed back into his arms. But warning signals were ringing loudly in her head. She’d gone too far last night—too far for her job, and too far for her emotional wel -being.
“We have things to talk about.” She forced herself to look away as she returned to the subject of last night’s shooting.
“You haven’t received any threatening letters or cal s, have you?”
He seemed taken aback by her businesslike tone. “No.”
After dunking another dish towel in the pan of water, she gently washed his arm.
He didn’t speak while she worked, but she could feel his defenses snapping back into place. She’d seen a different side of Clay, a warm, loving side he didn’t show many people. It was difficult to watch him transform into the remote man she’d always known, and even harder to acknowledge that it was because she’d backed away from him first.
“Care to hazard a guess as to who might want you dead?” she asked.
“After last night, I’m sure your father wil top the list.”
“We’re not talking about that part of last night.” She set the wet towel and water aside.
He scowled. “We’re pretending it didn’t happen?”
She chose not to answer. “If you had to guess, who would you say shot you?”
“Joe,” he replied. “Except Joe would know better than to leave me alive, in case I ever found out it was him.” As Clay shoved a pil ow behind his back, the gold medal ion dangling on his chest glinted in the sunlight streaming through the window.
Al ie picked it up. She’d wondered about it before, felt it last night as he moved on top of her. “This is Catholic, right?”
He didn’t seem particularly eager to answer.
“Clay?”
“Saint Jude.”
“Pray for us,” she read. She could feel his eyes on her.
“Jude’s the patron saint of hopeless causes, isn’t he?”
“I don’t know.”
Al ie looked up at him. She was pretty sure she was right. She’d seen a similar medal ion on a homicide victim in Chicago. “But you’re not Catholic.”
He stared at her from beneath his thick lashes, and she got the impression that he was trying to figure her out, like that first night at his farm.
“Are you?” she asked.
“It belonged to my father.”
“He gave it to you?”
“No, my mother did. It was the only thing he left behind.”
The fact that he stil wore it indicated that Al ie had been right about the depth of the scars Lucas had inflicted on his young son. She didn’t like to think about the heartache Clay must have endured. She felt too drawn to him, especial y after last night.
She let the medal ion fal back against his chest and hurried to bandage his wounds. She needed to put some space between them as soon as possible.
“Did you find any evidence that your father’s having an affair?” he asked.
Al ie felt the tension between them but didn’t know how to relieve it. “No, nothing at al . Thank God. I actual y feel a little sheepish for doubting him.”
She expected Clay to say something to indicate that he was pleased for her. It was what almost anyone would do.
But his thoughts remained a mystery.
Finished, she stepped away from him. “Are you okay?”
she asked.
He met her gaze. “I don’t know.”
He wasn’t talking about his wound. She understood that.
She wasn’t sure she was okay, either. Something had happened last night beyond the physical act of making love, and it had affected them both.
Turning his attention to his wound, Clay tried to rotate his shoulder to see the back of his arm and muttered a curse.
“Don’t do that,” she said. “You could make it bleed again.”
“It’s fine.”
She drew the sheet around her a little higher. “What enticed you to come to the cabin?” she asked.
“What do you mean?”
“Did you receive a phone cal , tel ing you I was in trouble? Or a request to meet someone here?”
“No.”
She frowned in confusion. How else had the shooter brought Clay to this remote location? “So why’d you come?”
He regarded her level y. “You have to ask?”
“Tel me.”
“You were here.”
Al ie let her eyes sweep over him, trying to commit every detail to memory.
When he caught her admiring him, he held out his hand in subtle invitation.
Al ie tried to resist but couldn’t. Reaching out, she wove her fingers through his. Then he pul ed her toward him and began tugging on the sheet.
She didn’t stop him. She closed her eyes as the sheet fel to the floor. A moment later, she heard the bed creak as Clay leaned forward, felt his lips move along her col arbone, over her breasts, as light as a butterfly’s wings. “Clay…”
Pul ing her into his arms, he rol ed her over him, and laid her on her back. He was acting differently than he had last night, when they’d made love with such passion. Today Clay touched her with a reverence she’d never experienced.
She watched him take in al the details she’d been afraid to show him.
“Perfect,” he said, his hand fol owing his eyes. “Just like I imagined.”
What was she going to do? Al ie asked herself. She was fal ing in love.
She almost kept him from touching her. She had to return to real life. But that would come soon enough.
Instead, she sighed in blissful satisfaction as he began to love her.
Wrapping her arms around his neck, Al ie reveled in the scent and feel of him, in the heightened sensations only he could evoke—until someone tried to open the door. Then she cried out and stiffened in panic.
Clay tried to shield her body with his. But it didn’t help. A second later, she heard a crack. Then the door flew open and crashed against the inside wal , and Al ie’s heart nearly stopped.
Her father stood there, holding the ax handle he’d used to break the lock.
The look of contempt on McCormick’s face burned Clay worse than his gunshot wound, although he had to admit he had it coming. He’d known better than to touch Al ie. He just hadn’t been able to resist.
“Give us a minute,” he said gruffly. The anger he felt, mostly directed at himself, lent his words plenty of authority.
But he doubted Chief McCormick heard him. The older man was already backing away. He threw down the hatchet and stomped out, probably because he couldn’t bear what he’d just seen.
Al ie scrambled out from under Clay and grabbed her clothes. “I’l handle this.”
He buried his head beneath the pil ows, cursing his own weakness and stupidity.
“He’s al bark,” Al ie said. “He’l calm down.”
Clay had little hope of that. Stil , he stayed where he was as she pul ed on her wet jeans and shirt and hurried outside.
He expected to hear a blistering argument—but Chief McCormick didn’t even raise his voice. If she hadn’t left the door ajar, he probably wouldn’t even have been able to hear them.
“You’re fired,” he said. “Turn in your badge, your car and your gun as soon as you get back to town.”
Silence met this statement. Clay couldn’t believe it himself. Was Chief McCormick serious? What would Al ie do without a job? She had a child to care for—
McCormick’s grandchild!
He got out of bed and started dressing.
“I’m a good police officer. You can’t fire me because I slept with a man you don’t like,” she said.
“A man I don’t like? He’s a suspect in the only murder case we’ve got.”
“He’s also a man I’ve known since high school, and he was just like anyone else a few days ago. When I moved back here, you weren’t even interested in reopening the Barker case! It was al me, digging around to help Madeline.”
“Things have changed, and you know it.”
“Not in the name of justice. The Vincel is have their own agenda, that’s al .”
“And you think sleeping with Clay is going to help? Are you trying to ruin your life?” he retorted. “What about Whitney?”
“Whitney is my concern. I’l take care of her.”
“How? You don’t have a husband anymore. You don’t have a job. You don’t have a home of your own. Without me, you don’t have anything!”
Clay froze, waiting for Al ie’s response.
“You and Mom invited me back,” she said evenly. “You wanted me to move home as much as I wanted to come.”
“That was before.”
“Before what? ”
“Before you started acting like a bitch in heat!”
The hypocrisy of McCormick’s statement made the blood boil in Clay’s veins. At least he and Al ie were single.
At first Clay had thought Al ie would fare better if he let her deal with her father alone. But he couldn’t stand back and al ow McCormick to mistreat her. Clay was equal y responsible.
Striding out of the cabin, he leaped from the porch to the ground because he didn’t have the patience to bother with the steps. A bitch in heat? Al ie had slept with two people in her life. A few minutes earlier, she’d been too self-conscious to let him see her naked despite what they’d shared during the night. “Watch your mouth,” Clay warned.
“You stay out of it,” McCormick said. “This is between Al ie and me.”
“Not anymore.”
“You’re chal enging me, Montgomery?” Chief McCormick’s hand hovered near his gun, but Al ie moved between them.
“Stop it! I won’t have the two of you fighting.”
Clay assumed she’d explain the extenuating circumstances leading up to last night. But not Al ie. She was too proud to justify her actions. Tears glistened in her eyes, but her throat worked as she fought them back.
“We’re stranded,” she said. “If you’l just give us a ride to town, we’l figure out how to get our cars home.”
McCormick blinked several times, then focused on the toppled bookshelf visible through the open doorway. As if final y realizing that it hadn’t happened as part of their lovemaking, that much more had taken place at the cabin than finding his daughter in bed with a man he didn’t approve of, he turned to her. “What’s been going on here?”
“You can read the report,” Al ie said stiffly. “I’l file it when I turn in my badge.” Pivoting, she stalked past Clay and col ected her shoes from the cabin before marching over and climbing into the front seat of her father’s cruiser.
Clay remained where he was. He’d been worried about his mother putting his sisters at risk. But after nineteen years of caution, he was making some big mistakes of his own.
McCormick stomped around him and went into the cabin. Clay glanced over at the patrol car, but Al ie didn’t look back at him. She stared straight ahead, the set of her jaw testifying to her misery.
He could’ve avoided this whole debacle, Clay thought. If only he’d stayed home and minded his own business—the way he usual y did.
But then he remembered that the window of Al ie’s car had been broken before he’d arrived.
Maybe it was a good thing he’d come. Whoever had shot him might’ve attacked her had he not shown up—
“What’s this?”
Clay turned to see McCormick holding his shirt. It was so bloody he’d left it on the floor and donned his sweatshirt instead.
“What does it look like?” he said and got into the back of the cruiser.
Al ie’s mother hovered over her the entire time Al ie was packing her belongings. Al ie felt bad about the rift between her and her father, and was worried about how she’d support her daughter. But even if her father would al ow it, she couldn’t go back to the Stil water police force. They weren’t interested in devoting the man-hours it would take to actual y solve the Barker case. They were only looking for a quick escape from the pressure, a way to get Clay.
She needed her own space. Complicated as her life had become, that was clear.
“Why not move into the guesthouse?” her mother asked hopeful y. Wearing a pained expression, Evelyn had been waiting for the right moment to intercede. But Al ie hadn’t given her much of a chance. She’d been rushing from one drawer to the next. Whitney’s clothes and half of her own belongings were already jammed into a large suitcase she’d had to sit on to latch. The rest she was tossing into boxes she’d stored in the garage.
“No, thanks,” she muttered.
Her father had made himself scarce since their return to town. Al ie couldn’t guess what he was thinking. But she refused to be dependent on him any longer. She had some savings, enough to pay a security deposit and a few months’ rent. She’d start looking for work on Monday.
“Where are we going, Mommy?” Whitney asked, watching her with eyes almost as wide as Evelyn’s.
“Not far, sweetheart.” After she’d dropped off her badge and cruiser at the station, along with a report that explained the theft and subsequent shooting, Al ie had picked up a newspaper and placed a few cal s. Stil water didn’t have much of a rental market. But she’d managed to lease, on a month-to-month basis, a smal two-bedroom house.
The only problem was that it happened to be directly across the street from Jed Fowler’s.
Al ie wasn’t too happy about living in Jed’s neighborhood. But at least she’d be around the corner from Whitney’s school.
“Why are you making such a snap decision?” Evelyn asked. “Give your father time to cool off, then sit down and talk about this with him, like adults.”
Letting him cool off wouldn’t help. They were on opposite sides of this issue. She hated to uproot Whitney again, but she and her father couldn’t live under the same roof. The tension would be worse for her daughter than the change. “I have nothing more to say to him,” she said.
“You’re mad at Grandpa?” Whitney asked.
Al ie tried to temper her response. “We’re having a disagreement, that’s al .”
Whitney moved closer. “So you want to leave before he gets home?”
“That would be best.” She’d rather save Whitney from hearing an upsetting argument. She had other reasons for rushing, too. She was determined to canvass the cabin and surrounding woods for evidence—before the sheriff’s department could take over. She’d gone through the area once already, when Officer Grimes had taken her back to get her car. But she hadn’t wanted to run into Clay, who’d be coming back for his truck, so she’d made only a cursory pass. She was embarrassed that she’d lost her objectivity so quickly. And she wasn’t proud of herself for getting personal y involved in a case.
Whitney hugged Evelyn’s leg. “Wil I stil get to see Boppo?”
Seeing the panic in her daughter’s face, Al ie knelt in front of her. “Of course. Boppo can visit us whenever she likes.”
“Visit you?” Evelyn echoed. “I won’t be watching Whitney while you work?”
“Not until I get a job.”
“You quit the force?”
Al ie dumped the rest of her shoes on top of the quilt that had been a wedding gift. “No, Dad fired me. But…he was probably right to do so.” Otherwise, she would’ve caused even more trouble for him. And, hurt and angry though she was over what he’d said, she didn’t want to do that.
“What’s wrong with him?” Evelyn muttered, obviously confused.
Remembering the photograph stuck between her mattress and box spring, Al ie retrieved it and slipped it into her pocket. “He doesn’t like the company I’m keeping,” she said. Then she started dragging the first of her boxes down the hal .
Clay was cleaning up the dishes from his supper when he final y gave up trying to ignore his ringing phone.
“I’ve been trying to reach you al day. Where have you been?” his mother asked without any of the customary greetings.
Clay hadn’t wanted to talk to anyone until he’d decided how he was going to handle the situation with Al ie and her father. He couldn’t leave it as it was. She’d lost her job because of him. “I’ve been busy.”
“I came by earlier. No one was there.”
“I was out running errands.” He’d had Grace drive him to Jed’s shop, where he’d purchased two tires before she took him to the cabin to get his truck. Then he’d paid Joe a visit. Joe claimed he was in bed asleep when Clay was shot. But there wasn’t anyone to corroborate his whereabouts. So it wasn’t easy to give him the benefit of the doubt.
“Word has it you were shot last night,” Irene said.
“That would be true.” He was wearing a makeshift bandage he’d put on himself. But he didn’t plan to keep it on for long. The tape bothered him, and the wound was already beginning to heal.
“You didn’t think your mother might be worried about you?”
He slipped the pan he’d used to fry grits into the soapy water. “Who told you? Grace?”
“No. I haven’t been able to get hold of her, either.
Madeline overheard it at the grocery store. Can you imagine what that must’ve been like? To hear from a stranger that her brother had been shot? We’ve both been worried sick.”
“I’m sorry.” He’d had too much on his mind, hadn’t expected word to get out quite this fast. “Anyway, it’s nothing.” It was making love with Al ie afterward that had made a serious impact.
“What happened?”
“Someone took a shot at me from the trees.”
She gasped. “Who?”
“I don’t know. But I’m fine. The bul et passed through the flesh of my arm, that’s al .”
“Have you seen a doctor?”
He used a pot scrubber to get his pan clean. “There’s no need.”
“You were shot and you didn’t even go to the doctor?”
“I told you, I’m fine.”
“Where were you when this happened? At the farm?”
“At Chief McCormick’s cabin.”
She said nothing.
He paused in his work. “You’ve been there, haven’t you?”
“What do you think?”
He went back to scrubbing. “I think you should be glad you broke things off with McCormick when you did.”
“Why?”
“Al ie went there searching for proof that her father’s having an affair.”
“You told her?”
“Of course not. She’s beginning to suspect.”
“Why?”
“Did you give him a teddy bear mug?” he asked, rinsing the pan and setting it in the drainer.
There was an uncomfortable silence. “Yes…”
Clay let the water drain out of the sink. “There you go.”
“Did she find what she was looking for?”
If there’d been any doubt in Clay’s mind, the fear in his mother’s voice would’ve confirmed that she’d spent plenty of time at the cabin. “No. But make sure you never go back.”
“We broke up, remember?”
“Doesn’t hurt to give you a little warning.”
“Who would want to harm you?” she asked.
He ran some clear water through his rag, wrung it out and started wiping the counters. “The list isn’t as short as we might hope.”
“But…why now?”
“Al ie thinks someone’s afraid I’m not going to get what’s coming to me.”
“It has to be Joe,” she said. “That man’s awful. Just awful.”
Joe had been particularly hateful since Grace’s return nine months ago. Something about her triggered the worst in him. He wanted her and hated her at the same time. And now that Al ie was back, and she wasn’t siding with the Vincel is the way Joe thought she should, he was angrier than ever.
Joe…Clay shook his head. He didn’t have an alibi for last night. But why would he write Al ie a note, tel ing her to leave the past alone? Joe wanted her to investigate.
“I’m not convinced it was Joe.” Which was the only reason Joe was stil walking around in perfect health.
“Who else could it be?”
“I don’t know, but I need to talk to Chief McCormick.
Face-to-face. Can you tel him to pay me a visit? Tonight?”
“What?” she said.
“You heard me.”
“What do you want with him?”
Clay grabbed a towel to dry his dishes. “A trade.”
“What kind of trade?”
“Nothing you need to worry about.”
“Does it have to do with Al ie?” she asked.
“Maybe.”
“I heard you’re sleeping with her. Is that true?”
“The chief tel you that?”
“Of course not. We’re not talking. Anyway, he’s too protective of his daughter to tel anyone. Madeline heard it.”
“Who from?”
“She didn’t say.”
Clay winced at the twinge of pain he felt lifting his dishes into the cupboard and switched hands. The person who’d spread that gossip was most likely the person who’d shot him. Who else, besides the chief, knew he and Al ie had been together?
“It’s not true,” he said. He knew it’d be better for Al ie if he simply denied it and hoped she’d do the same.
There was a long silence. “Now you’re lying to me? ”
Hell. “We were together one night.”
“I see.”
“You’re the one who started the whole thing, so don’t give me any grief about it.”
“I never said you should sleep with her!”
“You didn’t act as if you’d be opposed to the idea.
Anyway, it’s not worth arguing about. We’re not seeing each other anymore.”
“Wel , I’m not seeing her father, either. So I can’t deliver your message.”
“Cal him.” Clay closed the cupboard and chucked his towel toward the hook where he normal y hung it. “You must have some way of getting in touch with him. Or I’l cal him myself.”
There was a long pause. “Clay, what’s going on?”
He started bagging up the garbage under his sink. “Is the chief aware that I know about the two of you?”
“Of course not.”
That explained why McCormick had felt free to disparage Al ie. “Maybe it’s time he found out.”
“No! Clay, I’ve done what you wanted me to do, now leave him alone.”
Clay tied the bag shut and dropped it. Much as he was tempted to use McCormick’s own mistakes against him, he couldn’t. Threatening to divulge the chief’s extramarital affair would only make McCormick angrier. And it would be a bluff, anyway. Clay could never real y tel because of the people it would hurt, including Al ie and his own mother.
In any event, he didn’t need to blackmail McCormick. He had something else the chief wanted, and he suspected McCormick wanted it badly enough to give Clay almost anything in return.
“Are you going to cal him, or am I?” he asked his mother.
“Wil you tel me what you’re doing?”
He kicked the garbage bag toward the back door. “I’m cleaning up my own mess.”
She sighed. “Fine. I’l cal him.”
“You have a private way of getting in touch?”
“I have a number that goes directly to a voice-mail account. He used to check it and cal me back when he could. Now I don’t know what he’l do.”
“He probably checks it more often than ever,” Clay said.
“Just tel him I’l be expecting him here at the house.”
14
Turning off his headlights, Chief McCormick sat at the side of the road and studied the farm where Clay Montgomery lived. He wasn’t convinced he was doing the right thing in coming here, especial y this late. After what had happened at the cabin that morning, he feared a confrontation might turn violent. But the message that Clay wanted to see him had come through Irene, which worried McCormick more than a little. She rarely mentioned her son. Most of the time, Dale managed to pretend she had only a distant connection to that whole business with Lee Barker.
Did this late-night summons mean she’d told Clay about the two of them?
That thought alone made Dale’s pulse race. Current circumstances were bad enough; he didn’t need any more trouble. Although he was relieved not to be sneaking around anymore, he couldn’t quit thinking about Irene, couldn’t stop missing her. The mayor was breathing down his neck, threatening his job if he didn’t charge someone with the death of Reverend Barker. And, according to the cal he’d received from his wife, Al ie and Whitney had moved out.
But he’d had to take a stand. He would not al ow her to get mixed up with Clay Montgomery. What kind of husband would Clay make? He was standoffish at best. And if he ever went to prison, justifiably or not, where would that leave Al ie and Whitney? Besides, considering his own past relationship with Irene, he’d be a fool to bring the two families together. In such proximity, the truth was bound to emerge. And he couldn’t have that. He was taken with Irene, craved her, but he didn’t love her the way he loved his wife.
Putting the transmission in gear, Dale pul ed slowly into the gravel driveway, wondering how he’d let his life come to this. He’d never planned on having an affair. He’d just grown so infatuated with Irene—and it had al stemmed from seeing her so often at Two Sisters, where they both ate lunch.
He remembered making eye contact, the tentative smiles they’d exchanged and how they’d begun to time their exit so they could walk out together. Even after she’d slipped him her number, it had taken him a ful two weeks to get up the nerve to cal her. Part of him—the decent part, he supposed—hadn’t wanted to break down. But in the end, he couldn’t resist, despite her al eged involvement in the Barker case.
That case hadn’t seemed so important back then. The investigation had stal ed out years earlier, and Dale had never dreamed it would become such an issue again.
Besides, the better he got to know Irene, the easier it was to ignore the whole Barker mess. The woman he knew would never purposely harm anyone.
But that didn’t mean she wouldn’t cover for Clay….
Maybe he’d shrugged off that possibility in the past, but he couldn’t anymore. The mayor was pressing him too hard.
His cel phone rang. He took it from the seat, hoping it was Irene. She wasn’t supposed to cal him on his cel but whenever his phone rang he couldn’t help wishing….
The number on the screen indicated that it was his wife.
Should he answer it or not? He wasn’t cheating on her anymore, but he had a feeling something terrible was about to happen.
Maybe because of that disastrous scene with Al ie…
He hit the Talk button. “Hel o?”
“Dale?”
“What?”
“It’s getting late. Where are you? Why haven’t you cal ed?”
“I’ve been busy.”
“Doing what?”
“Paperwork.”
“You usual y let me know if you can’t make it for dinner.”
“I’m sorry. I was…distracted.” Since Irene had broken off the relationship, he’d let down his guard, mostly because he felt fatalistic about the whole affair. If he put Clay in jail for Barker’s murder, what would stop Irene from tel ing whoever she wanted? At that point, she’d have nothing to lose and would probably retaliate. Maybe in the past they’d purposely avoided mention of their respective families. But he knew how much Irene loved her son.
“I just cal ed the station,” Evelyn said. “They told me you left twenty minutes ago. I thought you’d be home by now.”
“I’m out on patrol. I’l be there shortly.”
“You said you were doing paperwork.”
“I was.”
There was a slight pause. “Have you tried cal ing Al ie?”
“No.”
“Are you going to?”
He rubbed his temples, hoping to relieve the tension headache building behind his eyes. He felt terrible about what had happened. But he was doing Al ie a favor. He didn’t want to see his daughter hurt, and Clay was too dangerous for her—on many levels. “No.”
“Why not?”
“She knows why.”
“Dale—”
“I don’t want to talk about it.” If Al ie could walk out on them that easily, for the likes of Clay Montgomery, she didn’t deserve the help they’d offered her.
Evelyn hesitated, then backed off. He knew she’d bring it up later. No one could get around him like Evelyn. But he was grateful for the reprieve. “You sound tired,” she said.
“How are you feeling?”
“I’m fine,” he told her. But he wasn’t fine at al . Besides being angry at Al ie, he was disappointed in himself and lovesick for Irene. How had he let his obsession with another woman cloud his judgment so completely?
“Dinner’s waiting,” Evelyn said. “Hurry home, okay?”
He pictured the handful of peas and the miniature piece of fish he’d find on his plate and missed the candlelight steak dinners he’d once enjoyed, in a town several miles away, with Irene. “I’l be there as soon as I can.”
Hanging up, he got out of the car and approached the dark farmhouse as if it might spring to life and attack him.
The shiny windows acted like mirrors beneath the moonlight. He couldn’t see inside, but he imagined Clay looking out at him and shivered. Maybe Irene wasn’t capable of intentional y harming anyone. But her son was. In Dale’s opinion, Clay was capable of almost anything.
The door swung open before Dale could even reach it, and Irene’s son appeared, his large form silhouetted in the light spil ing from the hal way. The sound of a television resonated from some other room.
“Come in,” Clay said.
“We’l talk here,” Dale muttered. “What do you want?”
As Clay watched him, Dale tried to cover the fact that he was a little spooked. Clay had a way of putting people on edge. Maybe that was why most folks kept their distance.
Most folks except the women who frequented his place—
which now included Dale’s own daughter.
“I want to make a deal,” Clay said.
“I don’t make deals.”
“You’l be interested in this one.”
“Why?”
Clay shoved his hands in his pockets. He was wearing a long-sleeved shirt, so Dale couldn’t see his injury. The way he moved didn’t suggest he was in pain, but Clay was one tough son of a bitch. Dale could feel the younger man studying him, drawing conclusions Dale couldn’t even guess at. “It has to do with Al ie,” he said at last.
The hair on Dale’s arms stood up. He hated the thought of this man, who seemed so dark and mysterious, so dangerous, being intimately involved with his bright, attractive daughter. He hadn’t invited Al ie back to Stil water for that. “What about her?” he said, his words clipped.
“Hire her back—”
Dale narrowed his eyes. “You think you can tel me what to do?”
“—and you’l have my word that I won’t pursue the relationship.”
Dale let his eyebrows slide up. Why would Clay offer to walk away for so little? He hadn’t even mentioned the Barker case. “Anything else?” he asked.
“That’s it,” Clay replied. “No punishment, no bul shit.
Patch up your relationship and move on as if she’d never met me, and you won’t have to worry about me touching her again.”
“Fine,” Dale said immediately.
Clay’s half smile turned even more cynical than usual. “I thought we might be able to come to some sort of agreement. Thanks for stopping by,” he said and shut the door.
Dale stood on the porch in stunned silence. Clay hadn’t said anything about Irene. Did that mean he didn’t know?
Of course he didn’t know. Or surely a man like Clay would’ve used that information to improve his own position.
He wouldn’t have given Dale exactly what he wanted and asked for nothing in return.
Feeling the tension in his shoulders ease, Dale walked to his car and whistled the entire ride home. Maybe he’d survive the next few weeks after al .
Al ie didn’t feel quite at home in her new house. She hadn’t had a chance to unpack much of anything, couldn’t get comfortable lying on the hard floor in a sleeping bag, even though she was right next to Whitney. Her mother kept cal ing, begging her to reconsider and move home again.
When that failed, her brother had phoned her from Arizona to see if he could help her and Dale settle their differences.
And, on top of that, every time she heard the slightest sound, she jumped up to stare at Jed Fowler’s house.
God, that man gave her the creeps…. His truck had been parked in the driveway for hours, yet his place had been dark since nightfal . What did he do after he came home from work? Eat and go straight to bed? Light candles in the back instead of turning on a few lights?
Forcing herself to think of something else, Al ie left Whitney sleeping in her bag and wandered listlessly through the smal two-bedroom rental. She was making note of al the cleaning and organizing yet to be done.
Fortunately, her mother was bringing some furniture from the guesthouse in the morning. But she wasn’t sure when she’d be able to put her house together. She wanted to revisit the cabin tomorrow. She hadn’t been able to go back there today because someone from the sheriff’s department was already investigating. He’d cal ed to get a statement from her and indicated that he was going to contact Clay, as wel . He also said he’d found the shel casing and the slug.
The deputy she’d spoken to seemed competent enough.
But for Al ie, the incident was far too personal to leave the resolution to someone else.
A thump brought her back to the window. It was probably a cat or a raccoon jumping onto the roof—but her overactive imagination suggested it could be Jed’s car door.
Was he up?
She squinted, trying to decide whether she saw movement behind his dark windows. But the sound of an engine caught her attention, and it didn’t belong to Jed. Her father’s squad car was coming down the street.
“Great,” she muttered. She didn’t relish another confrontation. But now that she was living across the street from Jed and it was growing so late, she couldn’t help feeling slightly relieved to have company, even if it was her father.
She waited until he reached the front step. Then she opened the door so he wouldn’t ring the bel and wake Whitney.
“Did Clay already cal you?” he asked in apparent surprise.
Clay hadn’t cal ed. She’d heard from Madeline, several times, though. Tomorrow Clay’s stepsister was bringing a twin bed for Whitney she had in her garage, since Evelyn had only one bed to lend her. But Al ie hadn’t heard from Clay since her father had brought them to town. She knew they’d both been a little overwhelmed by what had happened before, and after, her father arrived. But she stil missed him. “I don’t know what you’re talking about. Was he supposed to cal me?” she said, pretending it didn’t bother her that he hadn’t.
“Er…no.” He brushed some dirt from his pant leg. “Why aren’t you asleep?”
“Why aren’t you asleep?” She folded her arms and leaned against the doorjamb. Maybe her new neighbor made her uneasy, but she wasn’t about to let her father know that her situation was less than perfect. The way he’d spoken to her at the cabin had been unforgivable. A bitch in heat?
“I’ve been doing damage control,” he said.
He clearly blamed her as the reason, and Al ie felt she had to accept some of the responsibility. She shouldn’t have gotten so involved with Clay. The fair, unbiased friendship she’d intended to offer had quickly spun out of control. But when he was hurt and bleeding, nothing seemed to matter except the relief of knowing he was stil alive.
“What do you want?” she asked briskly. What had happened had happened. There was no going back now.
Al ie didn’t think she’d go back, even if she could. She’d never had another night like that one.
Her father fiddled with his police belt, giving her the impression that what he had to say wasn’t easy to get out.
She would’ve guessed he was trying to extend her an apology—except he wasn’t the type to apologize. He meant wel but struggled when it came to expressing emotion.
“I’ve changed my mind,” he said with a scowl. “You can work at the station. But only as my personal assistant,” he added.
Al ie’s jaw dropped. “What?”
“You heard me. You want work, those are the terms. And be glad of them. I’ve never hired anyone else back.”
“I don’t remember you firing anyone.” She thought of Hendricks. “Even officers who deserve it.”
“This is Stil water.”
She rubbed her forehead. “How wel I remember.”
“So?” he said. “Take it or leave it.”
“No.” She closed the door, then stood amid the boxes fil ing her new living room, feeling frustrated with herself, her father, the whole situation.
Whitney coughed and stirred in her sleep, trying to kick off the cover of her sleeping bag. Afraid that her daughter was coming down with bronchitis, like last year, Al ie crossed the room and turned up the heat. It was poor timing if Whitney was getting sick, but they’d manage without Dale’s job offer. Even in Stil water.
She was about to lie down again and try to get some sleep. But her father didn’t drive off, as she’d expected. He knocked.
Grumbling a curse, Al ie went back to the door. “Yes?”
He muttered something she couldn’t make out.
“I can’t hear you,” she said.
“Stop being a stubborn fool.”
“Now I’m a stubborn fool? I thought I was a bitch in heat.”
He looked slightly ashamed. “I got a little carried away this morning.”
“You don’t say.”
His scowl returned. “You had no business sleeping with Clay. Word about the two of you is spreading al over town.
You think that’s going to help him, for folks to believe you’re partial to him? When everyone expected you to final y come up with the truth?”
She knew it wouldn’t help anyone. That was why she felt so bad. “You’re right. And I’m sorry for that. But I’m out of the spotlight now. I shouldn’t cause you any more trouble.”
“Dammit, Al ie.” A muscle twitched in his cheek. “Okay, you win. You can have your regular job back. Just stay away from Clay Montgomery.”
She needed to stop seeing Clay, at least until things settled down. Since he hadn’t cal ed her, she assumed he’d come to the same conclusion. But that didn’t mean she was going back to work for her father. She’d already crossed too many lines; she couldn’t be impartial in the investigation the mayor was insisting they launch. “I can’t, Dad. I wouldn’t be any good to you,” she said. “I think it’s best if I sit this one out.”
His thick eyebrows rumpled. “It’s a job. What about Whitney? How wil you put food on the table?”
“I’l manage.”
“She’s my granddaughter.”
“She’l be fine.”
They stood staring at each other. Al ie was so caught up in the moment that at first she didn’t realize Jed Fowler had poked his head out of the house across the street. Even when she sensed him watching, she couldn’t be completely sure she wasn’t imagining it. The streetlight was too far away to reveal what he was looking at.
“I’ve got to get some sleep,” she said, wanting to go back inside and lock the door against both men.
“That’s it? You won’t come back?” her father asked.
“I won’t come back.”
He drew himself up straight. “Suit yourself,” he said and stalked to his cruiser.
Reverend Portenski tried not to show the depth of his concern as he listened to Evelyn McCormick. He usual y enjoyed her visits. They shared books, debated the nature of God, planned various outreach efforts on behalf of the church.
But this was the first time she’d ever come to him in tears.
“I don’t know what to do, Reverend,” she said. “Dale can be harsh, but he’s always been a good father.”
“There’s no doubt about that,” he concurred.
“So I’m not complaining.”
“Of course not.” Portenski could tel Evelyn didn’t want to malign her husband’s character—and yet she was angry with him.
“It’s just that I’m afraid what he’s done wil only tempt Al ie to get more involved with Clay. I mean, without our influence, what’s to stop her?”
Nodding, Portenski conjured up an expression of understanding and commiseration, but his mind had turned to the Polaroid pictures he’d put back in the hole beneath the floorboards. Those pictures constituted a pretty powerful motive for murder. Al ie, as a police officer, would know that instantly. If she ever saw them…
Did she realize who she was flirting with? That she was ruining her relationship with her parents for a man who could soon be dragged off to prison? The Vincel is were pressing hard for just that.
“She’s always been a good girl,” Evelyn went on. “Dale’s pushed her too far, that’s al .”
“How does Dale feel about the situation?”
“He admits saying some things he’s not proud of.”
“I see.”
“If only he’d waited until later, when we could’ve spoken calmly with her, the situation might’ve turned out differently. I mean, she would’ve had to listen to reason. We al know what Clay’s done.”
Portenski didn’t respond to that comment. “Women seem to like Clay.”
“Wel , he’s a handsome man, but considering his past…”
“Has he broken off his relationship with Beth Ann?”
Portenski asked.
“That’s what I’m hearing.”
“And now he has his eye on Al ie.”
“Apparently.”
“Chances are, the affair wil be brief,” he said, hoping to convince himself of that, as wel . He didn’t like holding the missing piece of the puzzle, didn’t like the responsibility it placed on his shoulders. He was damned if he revealed the pictures, and damned if he didn’t.
“But a lot can happen, even in a brief relationship,”
Evelyn argued. “It’l destroy what’s left of her reputation, make her an enemy to most of our friends.” She lowered her voice. “And what if she were to get pregnant?”
Portenski shuddered at the thought. He’d always been partial to young Al ie. “Al ie’s very levelheaded. Surely she understands the dangers.”
“Normal y, I’d agree with you. But her divorce was hard.
She’s on the rebound and…vulnerable in a way she’s never been vulnerable before.”
“I see.”
“Do you think I should send Dale over to her house again?” Evelyn asked.
“Wil he go? Is there any chance the two of them could work this out on their own?”
She twisted the tissue he’d given her. “I’d have more confidence in that if they weren’t so darn alike. Now that they’re at a standoff, this could go on forever.”
“Why not talk to Al ie yourself?”
“I’ve tried, Reverend. I’ve asked her to move home, for Whitney’s sake, for my sake, for her sake. Danny’s cal ed her, too. And I’m worried about Whitney—she’s had a terrible cold al week. But Al ie won’t hear of it.”
“How’s Al ie getting by financial y?”
“Her savings, I guess. I helped furnish the house, but she won’t even let me buy groceries for her.”
“Wil she let you see Whitney?”
“Yes, and I’l babysit once Al ie finds work, of course, but I had to insist on that much.”
“Where does she plan to work?”
“She’s trying to get on with the Iuka police force.”
“Wil she be able to? Without a recommendation from Dale?”
“I’m sure she’l use her track record at her old department in Chicago.”
Portenski rubbed his chin, trying to decide the best way to proceed. “Are you sure she’s stil seeing Clay?”
“It was less than a week ago that Dale found them at the cabin together. And it’s true, you know, the rumors that they were…intimate.” Tears streamed down her cheeks.
“Maybe her fal ing out with the two of you has opened her eyes.”
Evelyn chuckled bitterly as she dabbed at her face. “No.
If anything, it’s made her more determined to go her own way. Dale has al but thrown her into that Montgomery boy’s arms.”
Portenski got out of his chair and rounded his desk, pausing at the corner. “Evelyn…”
“Yes?”
“Wil you let me know if the relationship continues?”
She hesitated. “What are you going to do?”
He’d given away too much. Averting his gaze, he fixed a peaceful smile on his face. “I’m going to pray for her.” For all of us.
Evelyn nodded and stood up to leave. “Right. Of course.
Thank you, Reverend.”
Portenski patted her shoulder as they said goodbye at the door, then slowly returned to his desk. He couldn’t stand by and al ow any member of his flock to get hurt by what had happened in the past—not while he had the power to stop it. Could he?
Sinking into his chair, he pressed his thumb and forefinger to his eyes. He knew what those Polaroids would do, to Grace, to Clay, to Irene, to Madeline and, especial y, to his beloved church. Barker’s deception and perversions would try the faith of the whole congregation.
But Al ie was the daughter of a good friend, a good woman.
Maybe this was God’s way of final y making his wil known.
Al ie parked and got out of her car. This was her fifth trip to her father’s fishing hideaway in as many days, but the sight of that cabin stil evoked memories of Clay and the time they’d spent there. Not that she needed much of a trigger to recal those hours. She’d hardly been able to think of anything else. Especial y when the house grew quiet at night…But she hadn’t heard from him since.
“It’s for the best,” she told herself and tried to focus on what she’d come up here to do—finish her search of the crime scene. But, just in case, she paused long enough to check the messages on her new cel phone. Although she’d had the window of her car fixed, her purse, phone and keys hadn’t turned up yet. Unfortunately, neither had her gun.
She had three messages. The first was from her mother.
Allie, please. I don’t know why you’re being so stubborn.
You should at least move into the guesthouse. Think of how much easier it’d be for—
She cut Evelyn off in midsentence. She wasn’t moving home under any circumstances.
Feeling a nervous flutter in her stomach, she went on to the second message, hoping, in spite of herself, that it was from Clay. As far as she knew, he didn’t have her new number, but he could get it from one of his sisters easily enough.
It wasn’t from Clay. It was from Madeline. She’d been adding various pieces of furniture to Al ie’s motley col ection. But this wasn’t about furniture. Although her brother was okay, she was stil very upset about the shooting. Do you know who did it yet, Allie?
The last message wasn’t from Clay, either. Hendricks was responding to a cal she’d made to him earlier. Al ie found it a bit ironic that Hendricks, a man she’d never admired and didn’t real y like, was now nicer to her than any of the other men with whom she’d worked. He seemed more intrigued than offended by the fact that she’d turned traitor to those who ran Stil water.
No one’s brought in your purse. Sorry about that, he said. I hope you canceled your credit cards and changed your locks. And, according to what I hear, the sheriff doesn’t have any leads on whoever shot your good buddy.
The emphasis he placed on good buddy made Al ie cringe. If she’d had any il usions that they were actual y friends, his words would have shown her the reality. He wasn’t on her side. No one was. Now that she’d aligned herself with Clay, she could scarcely walk down the street without receiving a dirty look from someone. She’d expected it, of course—and yet it stung.
“Welcome to life as the Montgomerys know it,” she muttered to herself.
Your father wouldn’t want me to share this with you, of course, Hendricks continued. But since you asked, I’ve been up at the cabin with a deputy from the sheriff’s department a coupla times. The casing and slug they found came from a .9mm Glock, so it was probably your gun. No big shock there. But that shooter must’ve known what he was doing ’cause he didn’t leave us a scrap of evidence that would tell us anything we don’t already know.
Al ie wasn’t surprised. She hadn’t found any prints on the note, either. Whoever had pul ed it from whatever printer it’d come from had worn gloves.
Let me know if there’s anything else you need. It’s not the same here without you.
She frowned at his deceptively friendly tone. He wasn’t sincere, but it real y wasn’t the same for Al ie, either. She loved police work and hadn’t received a response to the résumé she’d submitted in Iuka. But it was too late to go back to her old job. Besides, she stil couldn’t tolerate the politics behind what was happening at the station in Stil water.
Double-checking to make sure those were the only messages she had, she hung up. Was she just another idiot in a long string of idiots to lose her heart to the darkly mysterious Clay Montgomery?
Not wanting to face the probable answer to that question, she dropped her phone inside her purse, then set her camera bag on the ground and retrieved her most expensive lens. Over the past four days, she’d spent the hours Whitney was in school examining the crime scene, going over it inch by painstaking inch. But, like the sheriff’s department, she’d come up empty-handed. There was no blood where the perp had broken her car window, no recognizable tire tracks in the woods, no sign of her gun, no fibers caught on a tree branch, no footprints, nothing.
Hiking both bags onto her shoulder, she scoured the clearing once again. Then she climbed up the hil behind the cabin to look down on the scene as a whole. Some areas along the river were so overgrown she couldn’t pass through them. But if the perpetrator had thrown some object into the river—like her gun—it might’ve snagged on a rock or a root on its way downstream.
If she could find a place from which to take a few pictures, a perch with enough visibility, she could use her powerful telephoto lens to capture parts of the river that were up to a quarter of a mile away. Then she could load the photos onto her computer and study them up close.
There was only a slight chance, she decided as she struggled to find the right view. But she wasn’t about to give up. Whoever had stolen her gun and attempted to kil Clay had no respect for her training and background.
She planned to change that. For the sake of her wounded pride. But mostly because of what had been done to Clay. As much as she told herself she was stupid to care about him, the memory of hearing that gunshot made her blood run cold.
“I’l get the bastard who did it,” she promised and hunkered down on an outcropping of rock. It wasn’t the perfect angle but—she peered through the lens of her camera—it wasn’t bad. She took a few shots, then clambered farther up the hil , swatting at the mosquitoes that were so prevalent in early summer.
She was just climbing onto a particularly large rock to get some more pictures when a spot of red caught her eye.
At first she discounted it as unrelated to the case. It was highly unlikely the perpetrator had come this far from the road and the cabin.
But then, as she stared at it, she realized what it was.
15
“Final y! My God, Clay, are you al right?”
At the sound of his youngest sister’s voice, Clay shifted the phone to his other ear, shoved a kitchen chair out from the table with his foot, and slouched into it. He’d been lifting weights again, concentrating on building up the strength in his legs while giving his arm a chance to heal. Lately he always seemed to be prowling around the house, looking for something rigorous enough to occupy his mind and his body, and lifting seemed to be his most effective diversion.
Especial y during the past five days, while he’d been trying so hard to keep his promise to Chief McCormick. He didn’t see any point in phoning Al ie to say they couldn’t see each other again. It was better to leave the situation exactly as it was. Hearing her voice would only weaken his resolve.
“I’m fine,” he told Mol y, bal ing up the T-shirt he’d removed just before she cal ed and using it to mop his forehead.
“I heard someone shot you!”
Clay had taken off the bandages he’d worn the first two days, and could see that the wound had already scabbed over. “It’s only a scratch.”
“That’s not what Grace told me.”
“Are you going to take Henny-penny’s word for it, or mine?” he asked with a lazy smile.
“Henny-penny’s, I guess, because Mom’s been just as worried as Grace.”
In the middle of her suffering over the loss of her married boyfriend, maybe. Clay didn’t know who was feeling more deprived these days—he or his mother.
“And Madeline’s been more upset than both of them,”
Mol y added.
“I’m fine. You’l see for yourself when you get here. You’re stil coming, right?”
“I fly in next week. Has the sheriff’s department figured out who shot at you?”
“No. They’re relying on our local department for help, and I don’t get the impression the Stil water P.D. is too interested in solving the case.”
“Why not?”
“This may come as a surprise, but I’m not as popular as our beloved stepfather was.”
“Shows you what they know. There’s no comparison between the kind of man you are and the monster Barker was.”
“Yeah, wel , that’s the best-kept secret in town, remember?”
“I remember. What’s the latest word on Grace’s baby?
Any labor pains?”
His chair squeaked against the hardwood floor as he shifted. “Not yet. But she’s only two days overdue.”
“Only? Doesn’t that mean she’s done?”
“Jeez, you know less about having babies than I do,” he said with a laugh. “What, there are no newborns in the Big Apple?”
“Al my friends are single. Besides, I make it a point not to worry about that sort of thing. There’l be plenty of time for that later.”
For her, maybe. He propped his legs on the opposite chair. “Don’t want those maternal instincts kicking in just yet, eh?”
“Not until I find the right man.”
“From what I hear, you’re not looking very hard.”
“You’re older than I am,” she said.
Exactly. But when he saw where the conversation was going, he made an effort to guide it back to safer ground.
“The doctor said he’l let Grace go for two weeks before he induces.”
“Induces? Wow, I think you’re the first man I’ve ever heard use that term—about having a baby, I mean.”
He chuckled. “You know me. I’m up on al things feminine, thanks to my softer side.”
“You mean the one most people don’t know about?”
“Crying isn’t good for my image.”
“I don’t think anything could harm your image,” she said wryly.
“How’s New York?”
“It’s the place to be. I’m stil waiting for you to visit me here, by the way.”
“Maybe I’l do that someday,” he said, although they both knew chances were better that he wouldn’t.
The phone clicked, tel ing Clay he had another cal , but he didn’t bother to check who it was. Probably Beth Ann.
Again. He’d contacted her earlier to determine whether or not she’d had anything to do with the shooting. She’d adamantly denied it, and provided him with an alibi that had been easy to verify—she’d been at the pool hal the night of the shooting. Then she’d cal ed him several times to make sure he believed her. She’d even offered to bring him some homemade soup. When he’d insisted he didn’t need soup, she’d launched into a big spiel about how they should at least be friends.
They hadn’t been friends when they were sleeping together. He didn’t see why that would change now that they weren’t. But he’d told her he might cal her later, just so he could get off the phone.
“You could bring Al ie McCormick to the city with you,”
Mol y said.
Clay tossed his sweat-dampened T-shirt across the room. Evidently Grace, Irene and Madeline had been doing some talking. “Why would I want to do that?”
“Because you like her.”
“Who says?”
“You’d have to like her, to sleep with a cop. Not to mention that she’s the daughter of the man our mother’s having an affair with.”
“Mom broke off that relationship.”
“I know, but do you think that’s going to make any difference to Al ie if she finds out?”
“I’m hoping it’l mean she won’t find out.”
“I don’t blame you.” She spoke to someone in the background, then came back on the line. “So does she know how you feel?”
“Mol y, I don’t even know how I feel,” he said, growing exasperated. “Anyway, it doesn’t matter.”
“Why?”
“Why do you think?”
“Clay—” Mol y started. Fortunately, Clay’s cal waiting beeped again. And this time, he was eager for the interruption.
“Hang on a sec.”
He was pretty sure she muttered something about how he was a stubborn son of a bitch who didn’t know what was good for him, but he didn’t hear the rest of it because he switched to his other cal in the middle of her diatribe.
“Hel o?”
“It’s me.” Grace.
“What’s up?”
“The baby’s coming.”
He jumped to his feet. “Now?”
She laughed. “Yes, but don’t freak out, okay? It’s going to take some time. I just wanted to tel you we’re on our way to the hospital. Would you like to come along or wait for word at home?”
“What about the boys? Do you need me to watch them?”
“No. We’ve got a sitter lined up.”
“Then I’l grab a shower and head over to the hospital,”
he said. “Mol y’s on the other line. I’l let her know it’s time.”
“Great. Tel her I’m looking forward to seeing her next week.”
As Grace hung up, Clay wondered what it must be like for Kennedy—to know he was about to be a father again.
Was it as satisfying as Clay imagined it would be?
“Clay?” Mol y said.
Taking the stairs two at a time, Clay hurried to his room.
“Yeah, I’m back.”
“Who was it?”
“Grace. She’s having the baby.”
“You’re kidding me! Right this minute?”
He started running the water in the shower. “Sometime tonight.”
“How exciting! Did you think she’d ever be this happy?
That she’d ever recover from…what happened?”
“No.” He peeled off his shorts and kicked them aside.
“You’re part of the reason she’s recovered so wel . You know that, don’t you?”
No. He only knew he was part of the reason she’d been hurt in the first place. Although Clay understood that it was Barker’s fault, not his, he couldn’t get past the fact that he’d left his sisters vulnerable the night it al went wrong. “Gotta go, Mol y,” he said, pausing at the shower door.
“Cal me later?”
“I wil ,” he replied.
And he did, at midnight, when he was staring into the smal , red face of his newborn niece.
Al ie sat at her kitchen table, glaring at the red bal cap she’d found near the cabin. She knew it belonged to Jed Fowler. For one thing, it had the logo of his auto shop stitched on the front. For another, she’d seen him wearing it at least a dozen times.
But why would Jed shoot Clay? It didn’t make sense. If he wanted to hurt Clay, al he had to do was implicate him in Barker’s disappearance. Public opinion being what it was, his word would probably be enough to put Clay away for a very long time. After al , Jed was there that night.
Instead, Fowler was the only person in town to stand by the Montgomerys.
Al ie rubbed her lip, trying to piece it al together. Logic told her he wouldn’t shoot Clay, but she couldn’t think of any reason for him to be near the cabin. And she’d seen him at Grace’s fruit-and-vegetable stand right before she drove to the cabin. Had he fol owed her there, as she suspected he’d fol owed her a few days earlier?
She wanted to discuss it with Clay. But he hadn’t responded to the message she’d left him last Tuesday, and she was reluctant to cal him again. She didn’t want to pester him like some lovesick fool. She understood now that last weekend had meant much more to her than it did to him.
Or maybe their relationship was just more complicated than he was wil ing to tolerate. If that was the case, she could sympathize with his concerns.
She stared at the phone, tapping her fingers on the table. Currently employed or not, she was a cop. She needed to take charge of the situation despite her feelings.
Maybe Clay knew something about Jed that would help her sort this out.
Final y overcoming her pride, she picked up the phone.
It rang five times before his answering machine came on.
This is Clay Montgomery. Leave your name and number at the beep.
She noticed he didn’t promise to return his cal s. “Clay, it’s me. I’d like to talk to you, if you’ve got a minute. It’s about the shooting,” she said. Then she left her number, again, and disconnected.
What now? she wondered. She was tempted to get a flashlight and poke around inside her neighbor’s truck and garage, looking for her gun. But did she real y want to break the law?
With a sigh, she went back to the phone. She hated to turn Jed’s hat over to the police department that had so recently fired her. But she needed a search warrant to go any further with what she had, and she certainly wasn’t going to get one by approaching the judge as a civilian.
Hendricks answered, as she’d expected him to. “’Lo?”
“Hendricks? It’s Al ie.”
“Did you get my message?”
“I did, thanks. Listen, I have something you might be interested in.”
“What’s that?”
“Jed Fowler’s basebal cap.”
“What would I want with that?”
She toyed nervously with the drawstring of her pajama bottoms. “I found it at the cabin today.”
There was a long pause. “I didn’t see it when I was there, Al ie.”
She hesitated, surprised by his response. “It was up on the hil .”
“You’re sure?”
“What’s that supposed to mean?” she demanded.
“Nothing. I just can’t imagine why Jed’s cap would be at the cabin. That’s al .”
Al ie stood and began to wipe off the counters. She’d done most of the dishes earlier but had been too preoccupied with Jed’s cap to finish the job. “Maybe we should find out why,” she suggested.
“How do you propose to do that?”
“Have the sheriff’s department get a search warrant for Jed’s house and vehicle. See if he has my gun.”
“They’re not gonna go after a search warrant.”
“Why not?”
“Because now that they’ve taken al the statements and col ected the evidence, they’re relying on us to finish up.
And your father knows Jed would never shoot Clay.”
She turned off the water she’d been running in the sink.
“Do you have any other suspects?”
“Not yet, but that won’t make any difference.”
“Why not?”
“Your father has more important things to do.”
Al ie dropped the wet rag she’d been using to clean the kitchen table. “What’s more important than attempted murder?”
“Murder one.”
“What are you talking about?” she asked.
“The D.A.’s final y agreed to prosecute. Your father’s planning to charge Clay with Barker’s murder.”
Al ie’s stomach knotted painful y. “When?”
“First thing tomorrow morning.”
Holding the new baby was a bittersweet experience. The complete innocence, even the scent of the child evoked a mixture of tenderness and hope that warred with the darker feelings that were far more familiar to Clay. He was unaccustomed to these emotions but stil didn’t want to go home to the secrets that haunted him. He longed to feel as normal men did—to feel as he had when he was holding Al ie naked against him. Alive. On fire. Crazy with the desire to possess more of her than her body and to let her possess more of him. He wanted to let himself care, to possess more of him. He wanted to let himself care, to grab hold of someone and hang on. At last.
Unfortunately, that was the one thing he couldn’t do. He’d promised Al ie’s father he wouldn’t contact her, and he planned to keep that promise. Everyone knew she was better off without him. He knew it, too. And yet, when he returned to Stil water, he went out of his way to drive by her parents’ house. He even considered cal ing her cel phone.
If she picked up, maybe he’d ask her to come outside so he could tel her about the baby.
He imagined her sexy mouth curving into a smile when he gave her the news. She had her own child; she’d understand. He wouldn’t touch her. He just wanted to tell her.
But when he didn’t see her car in the driveway, he realized she must be at work and decided to leave wel enough alone. For the good of everyone, he had to be satisfied with the life he led, had to relegate himself to relationships like the one he’d had with Beth Ann. Maybe he’d grown tired of the emptiness—and maybe those relationships had their pitfal s—but superficial associations were better than having no love life at al , weren’t they?
Braking for the light at Fourth and Main, he glanced to the left, which led to his farm, then to the right, which would take him to the trailer park where Beth Ann lived. If he relented and started seeing her again, would he get over Al ie?
Probably not, but at least he’d be able to fil the empty hours so he wouldn’t think of her so often.
Remembering the plaintive sound of Beth Ann’s voice when she’d asked to see him earlier, he turned toward her house. He knew better than to sleep with her, refused to let her trap him. But there were stil ways she could help him forget….
“Mommy, what are we doing?”
“Just taking a drive, baby.” Al ie reached behind the seat to adjust the blanket she’d brought to cover Whitney. She hated waking her daughter and dragging her from bed in the middle of the night. Whitney wasn’t quite over her cough. But Al ie couldn’t leave her home by herself and Clay wasn’t answering his phone. She had to rouse him from bed if he was sleeping, or find him if he wasn’t at home. She didn’t want her father’s appearance on his doorstep in the morning to come without warning.
Once she told him what was happening, and he understood the odds stacked against him, maybe he’d skip town. Al ie hoped so. Why should he stay? He wouldn’t get a fair trial. And she preferred not to watch what the Vincel is and their friends had in store for him.
“Mommy?” Whitney said.
Al ie turned onto Main Street. “What?”
“Can I take off my seat belt? I want to lie down.”
“No.”
“But I’m sleepy.”
“Sorry, sweetheart. We won’t be long, okay?” Al ie tapped the steering wheel with her fingernails while she waited at the next light, eager to reach Clay’s farm. But then she realized that the pool hal was stil open and decided to check there before heading out of town.
“Is this where we’re going?” Whitney asked in confusion when Al ie turned down the narrow side street that led to the back parking lot.
“No,” she murmured. “I’m looking for a black truck.”
But Clay’s vehicle wasn’t among the fifteen or so that remained. Al ie was about to turn around, when Joe Vincel i and his brother Roger came out of the building.
She paused, watching them. They swayed as if they’d had too much to drink, then Joe pivoted to shout at someone who lingered in the doorway.
Al ie frowned as he laughed. He was certainly in high spirits. Had he heard about Clay? Were he and his brother out celebrating their victory?
Joe’s gloating turned Al ie’s stomach. She turned her car around, but Joe noticed her before she could drive off. He waved to Roger to block the road so that she couldn’t exit the lot.
“What the hel are you doing?” she asked, rol ing down her window.
He put a hand on her roof and leaned in. “I was hoping you had your boyfriend with you.”
“I don’t have a boyfriend.”
“Jeez, does that mean you’l sleep with me, too?” he said, and he and his brother laughed uproariously.
Al ie clenched her jaw. “Do you mind? I have my kid in the car.”
“What, you don’t want her to hear what Mommy’s been up to? Can’t say as I blame you.”
“You’ve been enough of an embarrassment to your parents,” Roger chimed in.
“Get out of my way,” she said. “Both of you.”
Joe chal enged her with a haughty smirk. “What if we don’t want to?”
“Then you’re going to wind up getting yourselves arrested.”
“Not by you, babe.”
“Last I heard, you no longer had a badge,” Roger added.
Joe leaned closer, close enough that Al ie could smel the beer on his breath. “You must’ve wanted Clay pretty bad, huh? Tel me, was it as good as you hoped?”
Al ie forced a cocky grin. “As good as it gets.”
Joe’s eyes narrowed. “Wel , I hope that’l be enough to tide you over, then, because there won’t be any more where that came from. Clay’s going to prison. For life.”
“Says who?”
“You know it’s true.”
“Maybe you’l join him there,” she snapped.
The smile disappeared from Joe’s face. “Why do you say that?”
“Attempted murder is a serious crime.”
“It wasn’t my cap you found in the woods,” he taunted.
Al ie’s heart skipped a beat. No one knew about the cap except Hendricks. He must’ve cal ed Joe the moment she hung up.
Or maybe that cap was a plant. An attempt to get rid of Clay and the one man who’d tried to protect him for the past nineteen years.
“If you’re behind that shooting, you’d better watch out,”
she said.
“Because…”
“Because I’m going to nail your ass to the wal .”
“Is that a threat?” He glanced at his brother. “I think that was a threat, don’t you?”
Al ie longed to wipe the smug expressions from their faces. “It’s the truth.”
“You’re not in Kansas anymore, Dorothy.” Joe pounded the roof of her car.
Keeping her foot firmly on the brake, Al ie punched the gas at the same time. The sudden revving of her engine and the powerful lurch of her car frightened Joe enough that he stepped back and Roger dived to the side.
Laughing for the Vincel is’ benefit, Al ie drove away.
“Who were those men, Mommy?” Whitney asked, sounding frightened as their tires squealed around the corner.
Al ie rol ed up her window. “They’re bad guys, honey.”
“Are they going to hurt us?”
“No. If I have my way, they’re going to jail.”
“Oh.”
Al ie checked her rearview mirror to see Whitney snuggling deeper into the blanket.
“Can we go home now?” she asked with a yawn.
“In a few minutes,” she replied.
She drove to Clay’s house, but when she arrived, she found al the lights out and his truck gone. Where was he?
She drove by his mother’s duplex, Grace and Kennedy’s historic mansion, Madeline’s quaint cottage, even the smal retail space Madeline leased for the newspaper—al with no luck.
At that point, Al ie couldn’t think of anywhere else to look.
She sat, letting her car idle in the church parking lot, until she realized there was one more place. The thought of finding Clay there made her il . But it would certainly explain why she hadn’t heard from him.
“Clay? It’s real y you?” Beth Ann squinted against the porch light she’d turned on. “What are you doing here?”
“Just…dropping by,” he finished lamely. He wasn’t entirely sure why he’d come, except that he needed to talk to someone, to share the news about the baby and what it’d been like at the hospital. Grace and Kennedy had been glowing with happiness. His mother had forgotten her misery long enough to marvel over her first grandchild. And Madeline had barely been able to choke back the tears as she held her little niece. Mol y was the only one who’d been missing, and she was coming next week. For once, being with his family had felt…healthy, normal. Like any other family. It made him believe there was hope, made him yearn for a family of his own….
“Are you okay?” Beth Ann asked tentatively.
“I’m fine.”
“Come in.”
The moment he stepped inside, she slipped her arms around his waist and pressed her cheek to his chest. “It’s good to see you,” she murmured.
Clay tolerated the hug but immediately felt cornered.
Coming here wasn’t what he’d thought it would be. Too much had changed over the past few weeks. He didn’t even feel like the same man.
But now that he was here, he forced himself to sit and accept a glass of wine.
“Are you tired?” she asked when he’d drained it and set it aside. “Do you want to go to bed?” She grinned enticingly. “I’l give you a blow job.”
She was assuming they’d pick up where they’d left off.
He tried to talk himself into doing just that, into taking Beth Ann into the bedroom and using everything but the kind of sex that created a baby to obliterate what he was thinking and feeling. But he couldn’t. He didn’t want Beth Ann. He wanted Al ie.
God, what had he done to himself, going to that cabin?
“What’s wrong?” she said when he didn’t answer.
“Nothing.” He made an effort to wipe the scowl from his face. “Did I tel you Grace had her baby tonight?”
“No. What is it?”
“A little girl.”
“Real y?”
He nodded, but he could tel Beth Ann didn’t particularly care about Grace or the baby. Neither did she make an effort to understand how important the whole experience had been to him. She was trying to figure out why he was tel ing her this so she could use it to get what she wanted.
“That’s good.”
“Kennedy said Grace did great.”
She nodded, but seemed preoccupied.
“What is it?” he asked.
“Are you and Al ie…over for good?”
“We’re not going to talk about Al ie,” he said.
She offered him a quick, placating smile. “Okay, we won’t, but I just want to tel you that…I know what happened between you two at the cabin.”
He watched her, wondering where she was going with this.
“And I won’t lie,” she went on. “It bothers me. A lot. But—”
she smiled “—at least you’re back where you belong.”
The moment she said it, Clay knew she was wrong. He wasn’t back. He felt nothing, not even sexual desire. “No, Beth Ann. I—you said you wanted to be friends. I just came to tel you about the baby.”
Her jaw hardened. “Does that mean you’re stil seeing her? Is that why she rented that house? So you can stay over anytime you want, and she won’t have to answer to her father?”
Clay sat forward. “What are you talking about? Al ie lives with her parents.”
“Not anymore.” She sniffed, apparently feeling vindicated that he hadn’t known. “I guess you should’ve left her alone, huh?”
“What happened?” He’d purposely kept to himself the past week, hoping the rumors would die down and al ow life to return to normal for Al ie. But he’d talked to his sisters, seen Madeline at the hospital tonight. Did they know? If so, why hadn’t anyone told him?
They’d probably been too preoccupied with the baby. Or they had avoided the subject because they knew he’d feel responsible.
“She and her father aren’t speaking.”
“She’s not back on the force?” McCormick had agreed…
“No.”
“How do you know?”
“Her mother told Pol y Zufelt’s mother who told Pol y.”
Pol y worked at the Piggly Wiggly with Beth Ann. “So how’s Al ie managing?”
“Beats the heck out of me. Pol y told me she won’t even accept groceries from her parents.”
“Son of a bitch,” he muttered.
Beth Ann looked even less pleased. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
“What about her little girl?”
She wrapped her short, sheer robe more tightly around herself. “That’s what she has that I don’t, isn’t it? A child?
What is it al of a sudden, with you and children?”
He stood and headed for the door. “I’ve got to go.”
She fol owed him. “I’l give you a baby, Clay. I’ve already told you that. I’l give you anything you want.”
He didn’t even pause. “No one can give me what I want,”
he said and walked out.
Al ie pul ed up in front of BethAnn’s mobile home just as Clay was coming out the door. She’d tried to prepare herself for how she might feel if she actual y found him here.
But the sight of his truck in the drive had been enough to make her sick. Seeing him in the flesh, with Beth Ann at the door wearing some sort of lingerie, nearly knocked the wind out of her.
“What an idiot,” she muttered, leaning her forehead against the steering wheel.
“What’s wrong, Mommy?” Whitney asked from the back seat.
“Nothing,” she said. Clay hadn’t made her any promises.
She shouldn’t have expected anything else. It was just that
—after what they’d experienced—she couldn’t imagine letting another man touch her.
He started toward her car, looking surprised and confused. Al ie told herself to rol down her window and say what she’d come to say. Get it over with and forget him. But she couldn’t. The lump in her throat made it impossible to speak with any clarity, and she didn’t want him to know how badly he’d hurt her.
Swal owing the tears that threatened, she drove off and left him standing at the curb.
16
Clay cal ed Al ie a dozen times before she final y picked up.
“Hel o?”
“It’s me,” he said.
“I know.”
Of course she did. Or she would’ve answered a long time ago. It was nearly three in the morning. “I want to see you. Can I come over?”
“No.”
He said nothing. He knew she’d jumped to the wrong conclusion when she’d seen him at BethAnn’s house. But he didn’t attempt to justify his actions. He’d gone there to mess around with Beth Ann. He just hadn’t been able to do it. Besides, what difference would it make? If thinking the worst helped Al ie stay away from him, she was better off.
“How did you know I was at Beth Ann’s tonight?” he asked.
“I didn’t.” She hesitated. “I was searching for you.
Everywhere. It was…the last place I could think of to look.”
He ran a finger slowly over one eyebrow. “Why did you want to find me?”
During the ensuing silence, he could sense her reluctance to continue. But final y, she said, “They’re coming after you tomorrow.”
“They?”
“My father and probably a couple of other officers.”
“They have another search warrant?”
“An arrest warrant.”
Clay had always known it could come to this. But now?
As far as he knew, the police didn’t have any more evidence than they’d had al along.
“What’s changed?” he asked.
He heard her sigh. “The political climate. If this was happening anywhere else, they wouldn’t have a prayer of getting a conviction.”
“But here?”
“Where are you going to get an unbiased jury? Everyone already believes you’re guilty.”
Clay glanced around the kitchen, where almost everything had occurred that fateful night, and heard once again his stepfather’s angry voice and outright lies, his mother’s screams. He saw Grace in the corner, her face chalk-white as the tears she was silently crying dripped from her chin. Mol y had huddled beside her. Then there were the powerful blows of his stepfather when he’d tried to step in to defend his mother, and his desperation to conquer or be conquered. Clay had known in those few minutes that he couldn’t let his stepfather win. Maybe he was only a kid, but he alone stood between his mother and sisters and the man who was a danger to them.
And the violence wasn’t the worst of it. What fol owed topped even that—the panic that came with realization, the permanence of what had happened, the blood splattered everywhere, the heavy lifeless body Clay had had to drag from the house.
Clay’s muscles stil ached when he thought of al the digging he’d done that night. He’d been physical y and emotional y exhausted, had wanted to lie in bed for a week
—then wake up and learn it’d been a terrible nightmare.
But it had been real. Al of it. He’d had to get up the next morning and the next and soldier on as if nothing had happened. There was no one else to take the lead, to provide the support his family needed.
Closing his eyes, he drew a calming breath. “Thanks for letting me know.”
“That’s it?” she responded.
“There’s nothing more I can say, Al ie.”
“Then why not use the time you’ve got left to get out of town? Go to Alaska, like your father did, or somewhere else, and don’t come back.”
Clay pinched his neck, hoping to ease the tension in his muscles. “You’re tel ing me to run?”
“I’m scared for you. Go now. Before they can arrest you.”
“That’s interesting, coming from a law-and-order type.”
“As far as I’m concerned, they’re not playing by the rules.
Why should we?”
We. He jammed a hand through his hair. He didn’t want her in this with him. After what she thought she’d seen at Beth Ann’s, she should hate him, hope for the worst.
“There’s no ‘we,’ Al ie. I’m in this alone. Do you hear?”
Silence. He cursed, wishing he could offer her…
something. But tel ing her how he felt would only make this harder on both of them. “I can’t go anywhere,” he added.
She sniffed, which made him wonder if she was crying.
“Why not?”
Because the police would get another search warrant and find what was in his cel ar. Then there’d be no question about what had happened. He’d have a much better chance going up against the flimsy evidence they already possessed. “The time’s come to put an end to this, don’t you think? The reverend went missing, and the town wants someone to pay. If I stand trial, chances are they’l leave my mother and sisters alone.”
“But you didn’t kil him.”
Her words caused a terrible longing. “How do you know?”
“I know. And I hate that what happened between us last weekend is probably what’s angered everyone enough to do this. We shouldn’t have…”
She let her words dwindle away, but he finished for her.
“Made love?”
“Yes.”
He smiled in spite of what tomorrow would bring. “Are you kidding? When I close my eyes, I can stil taste you, feel you—”
“Clay, don’t,” she said, her voice breathless.
“Whatever comes next, I don’t regret it,” he said and hung up.
The fol owing morning, Al ie was awakened by a cal from Grace Archer.
“Your father just arrested my brother,” she said.
Al ie scrubbed the fatigue from her face. The hour or so she’d been sleeping since getting Whitney off to school wasn’t nearly enough, not when such a bad day loomed before her. She’d spent the entire night worrying about what would happen to Clay and wishing she could do something to stop it. But she didn’t have any answers. “How’d you get my new number?” she asked distantly, stal ing, trying to head off the poignant emotions that were already descending on her like a heavy burden she’d barely put down and had to take up again.
“Madeline.”
With a sigh, she relaxed into her pil ow. “I’m sorry, Grace…for Clay.”
There was a long pause. “How sorry?” she asked at last.
The question took Al ie aback. “I don’t know what you mean.”
“At Evonne’s, you said you were on my side.”
She pushed herself up on one elbow. “I am.”
“Do you care about my brother?”
Al ie didn’t real y want to face that question. But if answering it honestly meant she might be able to enlist Grace’s help and support…“I’m in love with him,” she said.
There was another significant pause. Then Grace spoke again. “Can you come to my house tonight?”
“What for?”
“Madeline says you’re out of work.”
“And…”
“I have a job offer for you.”
“Doing what?”
“Clay’s going to need a good investigator, isn’t he?”
Al ie threw off the covers and sat up. “Wil you be handling his defense?”
“Of course.”
“But you’re just about to have a baby.”
“I had her last night. Her name is Lauren Elizabeth, and she’s beautiful. Perfect.”
Had Al ie not been so exhausted, she would’ve smiled at the pride in Grace’s voice. “Congratulations. How are you feeling?”
“Fine. Except for this.”
“So you’re out of the hospital?”
“Kennedy wil be taking me home in a few hours.”
She was cal ing Al ie from her hospital bed? “Are you sure you shouldn’t rest for a week or two, enjoy your new baby and let someone else handle—”
“Nothing’s going to stand in the way of helping my brother,” she stated flatly. “I’m not letting two whole weeks slip by without taking advantage of them.”
Suddenly Al ie felt more alert. “What’s his bail amount?”
“They haven’t set it yet,” she said. “The bastards—
excuse me—the police arrested him on Friday, knowing he won’t be arraigned until Tuesday.”
“Which means he has to spend four days in jail.”
“Exactly. But regardless of the bail amount, I’m getting him out. I’l raise the money, even if I have to sel my own house.”
Al ie bit her lip as she considered the odds. It’d be her, the Montgomerys, Grace’s husband Kennedy—and possibly Jed Fowler, except that finding his cap at the cabin suggested she might be a fool to trust him—against the whole town, including Al ie’s own father.
Shit. She fel back into bed and covered her eyes with one arm. “What time do you want me at your place?”
“Seven.”
“Okay,” she said, resolute. “The D.A.’s going to be sorry he ever pursued this case, right?”
“If we’re lucky,” Grace said, but she sounded more determined than optimistic.
After Al ie disconnected, she stayed where she was, staring up at the ceiling. She’d just admitted how she felt about Clay. Was she crazy? She’d seen him coming out of Beth Ann’s trailer last night!
But she wasn’t basing her decision to help in his defense on whether or not he returned her feelings. She was basing it on the fact that she believed he was innocent.
That gave her no choice.
Al ie stepped back behind the curtains as a car turned down her street. She’d been waiting for Jed Fowler to get home from work so she could talk to him about his cap, but the Buick that rol ed past belonged to a neighbor on the far corner. Jed didn’t show up for another fifteen minutes—but when she saw him pul into his driveway, she left the house and crossed the street.
Fortunately, she didn’t have to worry about her daughter.
After school, she’d taken Whitney to her Boppo’s. Whitney had been begging to go, and Al ie didn’t want her there for the conversation with Jed or at Grace’s later tonight. Why risk having Whitney repeat what she’d heard to Evelyn and Dale?
Although Al ie was pretty sure Jed knew she was waiting for him, he took his time getting out of his truck. He’d asked her not to come to his place without a subpoena. But she needed answers now more than ever. If she could figure out who’d shot Clay, she might be able to raise enough doubt and uncertainty about the motivation behind Clay’s arrest to get the D.A. to drop the case.
“Did you hear?” she said when Jed final y opened his door.
He squinted at her, and she guessed he was remembering that he’d told her not to come over again.
“They arrested Clay Montgomery this morning. For the murder of Reverend Barker.”
He shook his head—in disgust or disbelief, she didn’t know—grabbed his lunch pail from his truck and started for the house.
“I have something that belongs to you,” Al ie cal ed after him.
When he turned back, she pul ed his red cap out of her new purse. “Look familiar?”
“Where’d you get that?” he asked, wiping the grease-covered fingers of his free hand on his gray coveral s.
“At my father’s fishing cabin.”
His lips formed a grim line.
“You know where that is, don’t you?” she asked.
“Nope.”
She made a show of studying his cap. “Then how did your hat get up there?”
He shoved his lunch box under one arm. “No idea.
Haven’t seen it for several days.”
“Where’d you leave it last?”
“Don’t know.”
“In the truck?”
“Maybe.”
“At your shop?”
He shrugged.
“Someone broke into my car, stole my gun and shot Clay with it,” she said. “At the cabin.”
He didn’t respond.
“I don’t suppose you know who might’ve done that.”
“The Vincel is are saying you shot him yourself,” he said.
Al ie stiffened in surprise. “Why would I do that?”
“To muddy the waters, I guess.”
“Muddy the waters?”
“Pretend there’s someone else who’s trying to keep the truth from coming out.”
She thought of the blood pouring down Clay’s arm.
“That’s quite a chance to take with someone’s life, don’t you think?”
“It’s amazing what some people wil do,” he said.
For love? Was that why he’d tried to confess?
She wanted to ask. But he disappeared inside the house, leaving her standing in his driveway.
McCormick had been expecting Irene’s cal . He’d known she wouldn’t sit back and take her son’s arrest without some reaction. But he’d expected her to use the number he’d given her—not contact him at the station. When Hendricks announced that Irene Montgomery was on the line, demanding to speak with him, Dale nearly had a heart attack. The mayor, the Vincel is, Beth Ann, even some of the folks who’d given statements on the Barker case years ago, were gathered around him, celebrating Clay’s arrest.
“Okay…uh…thank you,” he said to Hendricks as al eyes turned toward him, even those of his wife.
Assuming an impersonal expression, he picked up the receiver. “Chief McCormick.”
“How could you?” Irene said.
Glancing around the crowded room, he cleared his throat to buy a few seconds to prepare his response. “Yes, that’s true, Mrs. Montgomery. I’m sorry, but there’s been some new evidence that’s come to light—”
“What evidence?” she snapped.
“A witness who—”
“Beth Ann?” she screeched. “She’s a damn liar, and you know it!”
He strove to keep his voice steady, calm. “I’l be happy to explain everything to you. But now’s not a good time. I’ve got a lot of people here at the station. Let me cal you back.”
“No! Dale—”
“I’m afraid I have to insist.”
She started to cry. “When?”
“As soon as possible.”
“You’d better,” she said and hung up.
Evelyn stepped close to him as he set the phone back in its cradle. “I feel sorry for her,” she murmured. “What must it be like to have your son hauled off to jail?”
“I’m sure she knew he was guilty al along,” Joe said, confirming Dale’s impression that he’d been listening in.
“Right, Beth Ann?”
Beth Ann no longer seemed so eager to go after Clay, but Joe was putting pressure on her to stick with her story.
“Right,” she muttered.
“He said they al knew about it,” Joe clarified. “Al the Montgomerys. Beth Ann already told me that.”
They’d been citing Beth Ann’s testimony as the case breaker, but Dale doubted she was tel ing the truth. Clay might be dangerous, but he wasn’t an idiot. He wouldn’t tel Beth Ann what she claimed he had. But now that she’d made her statement, the whole town had proclaimed it as gospel—the truth at last—and made her a minicelebrity.
She’d become a pariah if she changed her story.
She wasn’t the most credible witness in the world. But her testimony fit the circumstantial evidence and selective snippets of testimony taken from several other witnesses.
Thanks to the active involvement of Stil water’s most influential citizens and the exchange of a few favors, that might be enough to get a conviction.
Dale simply wanted to forget about Barker, and he believed the only way to do that was to try the most likely culprit. In the best-case scenario, Clay would be acquitted and could never be charged with Barker’s murder again. In the worst, Clay would go to prison. If that happened, Irene would need a strong male figure in her life. As self-serving as that was, Dale couldn’t overlook it.
He moved through the crowd, smiling, shaking hands and nodding as he accepted congratulations al around.
Everyone acted as if the trial was already over and Clay had been convicted. But Dale knew Al ie was right. They didn’t have much of a case. This would be a battle of political power over due process.
“We’ve got him now…. It’s about damn time…. There’s nothing wrong with being sure on something like this. A man’s future is at stake…. The point is he didn’t get away with it.”
Most of the time, Dale didn’t even bother looking up to see who was talking. “What a damn mess,” he muttered to himself, then felt his wife’s hand on his arm.
“Is something wrong, dear?” she asked in concern.
“No, nothing,” he replied. They spoke about the judge being the mayor’s uncle, and the fact that Hendricks’s father sat on the County Board of Supervisors, both of which would help the prosecution. Then, after Dale reassured Evelyn a second time that he was fine, she left to attend her book group.
He excused himself as soon as she was gone. Once he’d climbed into his squad car and closed the door, he cal ed Irene.
“Irene, honey, I’m sorry,” he said when she answered.
“There was nothing I could do about Clay. You know that, don’t you?”
“You didn’t even warn me,” she said.
He cringed at the tears in her voice. “You told me not to cal you anymore. I was trying to honor your wishes.”
“By arresting my son?”
He ran a hand over the whiskers on his chin. In al the excitement, he’d forgotten to shave this morning. “I didn’t want to arrest him. I’ve tried to protect you, and him. It’s just…since Grace moved back, the Vincel is have been buzzing like a hornet’s nest—”
“Don’t give me that,” she said. “This isn’t because of Grace. It’s because of Al ie. You’re punishing my son for not staying away from your daughter.”
He didn’t want Clay and Al ie together, but he couldn’t admit it to her. “That’s not true.”
“What can I do?” she cried. “How can I stop this?”
Dale had reached the outskirts of town, where he felt more secure. He drove down a deserted country road, then cut the engine. “Nothing, babe. Nothing at al .”
“I’l come back to you if that’l help.”
“I wish it was that easy.”
“You want me, don’t you?”
So badly, he ached inside. Only she could satisfy him.
But he couldn’t help Clay. It was up to the attorneys now. “I want you,” he said. “But I can’t let Clay out of jail. I’m not the one who’s running this show. It’s the mayor and Supervisor Hendricks, honey.”
She was openly sobbing now. “What am I going to do?”
“Stand by him,” he said. “The D.A. doesn’t have much of a case. It’s al circumstantial.”
She sniffed. “Do you think he’l get off?”
“Maybe,” he said, hedging because, now that things had gone so far, he had no idea what might happen. Grace, or whoever handled Clay’s defense, would no doubt fight to have the trial moved to a different location, where his opponents didn’t have so much control. But he doubted she’d succeed. If Grace argued that there was significant prejudice against her brother, the prosecution would point to the fact that they’d waited nearly twenty years to charge him. That certainly didn’t make them appear overeager.
Irene’s voice turned to a hopeful whisper. “Do you stil love me?”
As much as Irene liked to talk about the possibility, he knew he’d never leave his wife. But, in a way, he did love her. If he’d met her in another time, another place, if he was a younger man…“Yes. You know that. I’l do anything I can for you, okay? I’l try to get you anything you need.”
“I need you. I can’t go through this alone.”
She made him feel so strong and capable. He knew he was being sil y, acting like he didn’t have any sense, but Lord, was he addicted to her. “I’l be there for you.”
“But we shouldn’t see each other.”
“You just said you need me.”
“I do.”
There was a long pause. Surely she wouldn’t change her mind again.
“One battle at a time, right?” she eventual y said.
He breathed a sigh of relief. “One battle at a time,” he replied. Then he cal ed the florist in Corinth and ordered Irene a dozen long-stemmed red roses.
“What would you like on the card?” the woman asked.
“I can’t wait to be with you,” he said. “Cal me when you’re ready.”
Al ie wasn’t sure what to expect when she arrived at the beautiful old Georgian where Grace lived. Set off the highway south of town, it was the only historic building in Stil water besides the old post office. The yard was large and wel groomed, with lots of mature trees and a fountain.
Stepping stones passed through a rose-covered trel is and went around to the back of the house, and a tree swing that had been there since Al ie was in high school hung from a giant oak on the side. In front, three wide steps led to a deep veranda that was partial y covered with wisteria vines.
Al ie wondered what it was like to have grown up in such poverty and then to have married so rich. Grace seemed happy. But—Al ie thought of Clay in jail—the taint of some things never went away.
As she crossed the porch, Al ie noticed two pairs of smal rubber boots at the far end of the veranda near a single glass door that probably led to a bathroom or mudroom. But it was the carved, double doors in front of her that opened when she rang the bel .
“Thank you for coming,” Grace said and beckoned her inside a grand foyer.
Grace had her hair in a messy knot and wasn’t wearing any makeup, but she had deep blue eyes like Clay’s and the same elegant structure to her face. Few women looked so beautiful right after giving birth. Perhaps Grace wasn’t as slender as usual, but she’d always had a curvaceous figure, and a few extra pounds only added to that effect.
“Good to see you,” Al ie said. “How’s the baby?”
Grace smiled. “Fine. She’s sleeping in her bassinet upstairs. I’l bring her down and let you take a peek at her when we’re finished here.”
“And the boys? Are they around?”
“No, I had Kennedy take them over to Grandma and Grandpa Archer’s for a visit. They didn’t want to leave the baby, of course, but I’m not ready to let her go out.”
Al ie remembered the joy she’d experienced at Whitney’s birth. She also remembered wanting to share that joy with her husband—and how negatively he’d reacted. He’d spent most of the first few months working late or going out with his buddies because he couldn’t stand the care and devotion she lavished on their child.
“There’s nothing like having a baby,” she murmured.
“No,” Grace said. “There isn’t.”
Al ie adjusted the strap of her purse. “I’m sorry about Clay. And I’m especial y sorry that it had to happen at a time like this.”
Worry clouded Grace’s eyes. “I doubt the timing was a coincidence.”
“You think the mayor and the Vincel is were hoping to catch you at a weak moment?”
“I do. They’re hoping I won’t be available to help him. But I won’t let them get away with what they’re doing. Clay doesn’t deserve to go to prison.”
“I know.”
“We’l meet in here,” Grace said, taking her to a drawing room that contained a large sofa and two chairs. Two wal s were covered by built-in bookshelves and the other two wal s had very large windows with expensive, heavy draperies. Al ie might have commented on the beauty of the room, which was tasteful y decorated in cranberry, green and ivory, but there were two people seated on the sofa staring up at her. Two people she hadn’t expected to see: Madeline Barker and Irene Montgomery.
“Hi, Al ie,” Madeline said. “Come and sit down.”
“Good to see you, Maddy,” she said.
“I’m so glad you’re wil ing to help us.”
Irene’s red, splotchy face suggested she’d been crying.
Al ie tried to convince herself that Clay’s mother was only upset about his arrest. But the way her lips tightened made Al ie think Irene blamed her for what had happened to Clay.
No doubt al three women had heard about the time she’d spent at the cabin with him. And no doubt they al knew how her father had reacted to finding them together—
or she wouldn’t be in need of a job.
Feeling extremely self-conscious, she took a seat in one of the chairs across from them.
“His arraignment’s on Tuesday,” Grace announced, adjusting the volume on the baby monitor which sat on the smal table next to her.
“Any idea what they’l be asking for bail?” Al ie asked, since she was likely the only one who hadn’t heard anything about this.
“I’m guessing half a mil ion.”
“That’s outrageous!” Madeline cried.
Grace’s eyes glittered with righteous indignation.
“Kennedy told me they’re going to claim he’s a danger to society.”
“How does Kennedy know that?” Al ie asked.
“His mother told him. She’s so wel connected she hears everything.”
Al ie tried not to look at Irene. “And if they get a high bail…”
“We’l cover it,” Grace said. “Clay mortgaged the farm to be able to clean the place up and do some repairs, but it’s been several years since he did that and it wasn’t a large note to begin with. He has plenty of equity. So we’l refinance when I run out of my own money.”
“He has clear title to the property?” Al ie asked.
“He bought us out a few years ago,” Madeline explained.
“Getting back to the subject…from what Kennedy’s mother says, they’re going to throw everything at us they possibly can,” Grace said.
“Beth Ann’s testimony won’t stand up,” Madeline said.
“Beth Ann’s sticking with her story?” Al ie asked in amazement. She’d assumed that Clay’s visit to Beth Ann’s trailer might have changed the other woman’s mind.
“That’s the rumor,” Grace said.
“Aren’t—aren’t they stil seeing each other?” Al ie felt herself flush as she became the center of attention.
Madeline stared at her blankly. “He’s seeing you, isn’t he?”
“Not real y,” Al ie admitted.
Irene dabbed at fresh tears. “The Vincel is are using Beth Ann, and she’s not strong enough or smart enough to stop it. They’l coach her, and the attorneys wil coach her.
You said that yourself just a minute ago, Grace.”
Grace ignored her mother. “What else do they have that’s new, Al ie?”
“Nothing,” she said. “Unless they can come up with the remains, a murder weapon, fiber evidence, something, I don’t think they have much.”
“Jed Fowler could change his testimony,” Grace said.
“What makes you think he might do that?” Al ie asked.
“Someone cal ed here this morning.”
“Who?” Al ie and Madeline spoke in unison.
“He wouldn’t identify himself.”
They al scooted forward. “What’d he say?”
“That Jed’s the one who shot Clay at the cabin.”
“No! Jed would never hurt Clay,” Madeline argued.
Al ie didn’t respond. She stared at Grace. “Is that al he said?”
“No, he claimed there was proof but then disconnected before he told me what it was.”
Jed’s cap. Joe had known about it last night at the pool hal , soon after Al ie had told Hendricks she’d found it. Had Joe or Hendricks cal ed Grace?
If so…Al ie’s jaw tightened. Hendricks had acted as if the cap was unimportant. But maybe he didn’t know that it played a significant role in what was happening. That someone was going to use it to lean on Jed, hoping to persuade him to change his story so they could build a stronger case against Clay.
Al ie’s heart began to pound as she saw the bril iance behind such a plan. If the situation was what she imagined it might be, Joe, the mayor or whoever else was out to get Clay, had played her like a pawn. They knew she’d take the attack at the cabin personal y, that she’d search for evidence. So they’d planted what they wanted her to find.
And not only had she found it, she’d reported it and turned it in. She’d done that a few minutes ago, on her way to Grace’s house. The fact that she’d found the cap, someone who was friendly with Clay and an ex-police officer to boot, lent Clay’s opponents even more credibility.
Al ie didn’t think Joe was smart enough to manipulate the situation to that extent. And the mayor didn’t have sufficient motivation—did she? Who else wanted Clay prosecuted badly enough to remove Jed’s testimony from his defense?
“What is it?” Grace asked.
Al ie covered her face and shook her head.
“What?” Madeline prompted. “I know Jed would never do anything to hurt Clay. It had to be a…a crank cal or something.”
“Or something,” Al ie repeated. “I have a feeling someone’s trying to get Jed to change his story.”
“He wouldn’t do that,” Irene said. “He tried to confess to Barker’s murder so Clay wouldn’t go to jail.”
“Do you know why?” Al ie looked squarely at Irene for the first time since she’d arrived.
“No. No one ever knows why Jed does what he does.
But he’s proven his loyalty.”
Grace picked up where her mother had left off. “Exactly.
So what could they threaten him with that would be worse than what he’s already risked?”
It’s amazing what some people will do…
Fowler had seemed almost…disgusted when he made that statement. Why? Was he referring to what he’d tried to do to save Irene and her kids from harm?
Al ie dropped her hands. “We’re probably okay, unless…Is there any reason he might be angry with you, Mrs. Montgomery?”
Irene straightened the ruffle on her purple blouse. “Me?
Of course not. I rarely see him, and we usual y don’t speak when we do bump into each other.”
“He’s painful y shy with women,” Al ie said. “But he had to be trying to protect you when he confessed. I can’t think of any other reason he’d do what he did.”
Irene gave a little shrug. “I have no idea why he’d care about me. We hardly know each other.”
“Could it be that he’s admired you? From afar?”
“I wouldn’t know,” she insisted.
“So you’ve had no argument with him? You’ve never done anything that might make him feel angry or disaffected?”
“Like what?”
“Like being seen with another man?”
Irene’s eyes flicked toward Grace. To Al ie, it seemed that they were fil ed with sudden fear, as if something had just occurred to her. But she didn’t say what it was. “No, nothing.”
17
“I might have made a mistake.”
Those were not the first words Clay wanted to hear after spending twenty-four hours in jail. Especial y from Grace.
He took the seat provided for him in the smal , windowless room set aside for attorney–client conferences and regarded his sister. “You look great,” he said. “How’s the baby?”
“Good.” She bent closer. “Did you hear me?”
“Did Lauren come home from the hospital with you?” he asked.
Grace gave him an impatient scowl. “Yes. She’s doing fine. I’m doing fine. The weather’s been unseasonably warm. Listen, we don’t have very long. Would you please focus on the reason I’m here?”
He stretched his legs out in front of him. “You have a brand-new baby. You shouldn’t have to be doing this right now.”
“You shouldn’t have to be doing it, either,” she said.
“You shouldn’t have to be doing it, either,” she said.
“I don’t have a choice.”
“Wel , I’m not going to sit back and enjoy Lauren while you’re locked up.” She arched an eyebrow in chal enge.
“So could we talk about the problem at hand?”
“What’s there to say? You’l try to get the trial moved someplace else, where I’l have a better chance. The other side wil contest it, but the judge is Mayor Nibley’s uncle, so they’l win. Then you’l have to fight to get a few jurors who won’t say, ‘Roast him,’ before they’ve even heard the testimony or seen the evidence, and—”
“I hired Al ie to help me investigate,” she interrupted.
Slouching lower in his seat, Clay pressed his thumb and finger against his closed eyelids. Okay, so this was the mistake. “What were you thinking?”
“I wanted someone who was talented and capable, and who was passionate about defending you.”
“Granted, that doesn’t leave you a large pool of people to draw from. But there’re always strangers. You know, professionals who hire out?”
“She is a professional, Clay.”
He wanted to remember Al ie the way she’d been at the cabin, didn’t want her mixed up in the mess that was brewing. If she joined forces with his sister, her father would never forgive her. Neither would a lot of other people in Stil water. And what was the point? What difference could she real y make? The trial wouldn’t be fair in the first place.
“I don’t care. You can’t involve her.”
Grace fiddled with the pen she’d taken out of her briefcase, then tossed it on top of her blank legal pad and shoved back her chair. “It’s too late. She’s already involved.”
“Aw, hel . Grace—”
She put up a hand. “Let me finish. When she came over last night, Mom and Madeline both—”
“Mom?” Clay echoed. “Grace, Mom’s not strong enough to handle this right now. You have to tel her it’l al work out and exclude her from any conversation that isn’t entirely optimistic.”
“I realize that. But after they arrested you, it was al I could do to stop her from marching down to the police station and confessing.”
“That would only get us all in trouble.”
“I explained that. But she’s frantic. I have to include her.”
He shifted uncomfortably in his seat. He didn’t like being locked up. He’d been limited before, but at least he’d had his work and his cars and an occasional trip to town. In here, it felt like al hel was about to break loose and he wouldn’t have the chance to fight back. “I suppose Madeline wouldn’t let you exclude her, either?”
“Of course not. They’re worried about you. They have to feel as if they’re helping.”
“Which only makes your job harder.”
“When has dealing with our past ever been easy?”
He sighed. “True.”
The door opened, and a deputy poked his head in. “You okay in here, ma’am?”
“I’m fine,” Grace said.
The man smiled appreciatively at Clay’s attractive sister.
“Let me know if he gives you any trouble.”
“Get out,” Clay snapped.
The glitter in the deputy’s eyes suggested he was going to respond, but Grace quickly moved between them.
“Please, you’re not helping.”
“Your client had better watch his step,” he growled, but he closed the door.
Grace waited several seconds, then picked up where they’d left off. “Anyway, Madeline thinks she’l be able to help.”
Clay’s stepsister had been his savior and his worst enemy. She hotly defended him against anyone who implied that he’d ever done anything wrong. Her loyalty and Jed Fowler’s was what had kept him out of jail this long. But Madeline was also one of the people who wouldn’t give up searching, wouldn’t let anyone forget. Thanks to her—and the Vincel is, of course—suspicion swirled around Clay constantly, and probably always would, whether he went to trial or not. “In what way can she help?”
“She’s planning to post a notice in the paper, offering a reward for any information leading to the arrest of the man who shot you.”
“Who’s putting up the reward?”
“Kennedy.”
Clay studied her. “What do Kennedy’s parents have to say about that?”
“We didn’t ask them. We don’t care. You’re family to Kennedy now.”
Clay shook his head. “He’l do anything for you.”
She final y smiled. “Yes, but he’s doing this for you.”
“So my defense team consists of an ex-assistant district attorney with a new baby, my overwrought mother, a stepsister who can’t know the real truth and a cop I got fired.”
“So far.”
He stretched his neck. “That’s quite a team.”
She regarded him steadily. “It’s better than you make it sound. Al ie’s definitely an asset.”
“Too bad you have to fire her,” he said.
Grace rubbed a finger over her bottom lip. “I know it’s risky to include her, but—”
He leaned forward. “Risky? It’s idiotic! Are you trying to beat the charges or put me away for good?” Clay had more pressing reasons to get her off the case—but he didn’t want to tel Grace just how much he cared about Al ie.
“Clay, she’l keep digging whether we join forces with her or not. After Mom and Madeline left last night, she told me about the note someone left at the cabin, and that she found Jed’s basebal cap nearby.”
“Jed’s? That has to be a mistake.”
“It’s not.”
“But Jed wouldn’t shoot me. And he’d have no reason to leave Al ie that note.”
“Al ie thinks it’s a setup.”
“What would anyone have to gain by implicating Jed?”
“It’s a way to obfuscate the truth, a way to send anyone who’s trying to track down the real offender on a wild-goose chase. And whoever doesn’t like you probably doesn’t like Jed, either. So he’s expendable. After al , his insistence that our dear old stepdad didn’t come home that night is what’s stood between you and prosecution al these years.”
“That and the fact that they have no physical evidence,”
Clay pointed out dryly.
“At this stage, it’s not about evidence. It’s about an old grudge.”
Sobering, Clay moved closer to the table. He’d lose his mind if they sent him to prison. He could take almost anything, but he couldn’t take being locked up. “I know.”
“Al ie thinks, and I agree, that our opponents might be trying to lean on Jed, to tel him they won’t go after him for attempted murder or some other charge if he’l testify against you.”
Clay frowned. He wasn’t sure why Jed Fowler had been such a good friend to them, but the mechanic had to know more about the night Barker died than he’d ever said.
Otherwise, he wouldn’t have tried to confess when they dug up Butch’s bones, which Clay had purposely relocated after he’d moved Barker’s body to the cel ar. “We’ve never had a close relationship with Jed. We don’t even know why he’s stood by us. Which makes him a question mark. We can’t predict what he’l do.”
She toyed with the pen she’d dropped a moment earlier.
“Al ie said something else that concerns me.”
“What’s that?” Clay was growing more agitated. He’d expected to be up against the circumstantial evidence he already knew about. He’d had no idea there’d be more.
Whoever was out to get him was going to great lengths to insure he went away for life.
“She asked Mom if Jed’s ever seen her with another man.”
A jolt of alarm brought Clay to his feet. “Why would she ask that?”
“She believes Jed’s secretly admired Mom for years.”
“We’ve guessed as much.”
“True. But listen to this. She thinks we’l be okay—unless Jed’s become disaffected with her for some reason.”
Clay paced the smal room. “Is she suggesting that’s already happened?”
“No, but she’s wondering about it.”
Muttering another curse, Clay shook his head. Little did Al ie know Irene had been seeing another man— her own father. She was going to get hurt. He could feel it coming and chafed at his helplessness to stop it. “This just gets better and better, doesn’t it?”
The jingle of her cel phone woke Al ie from a deep sleep. She fumbled through her bedding, searching for it, and nearly knocked the lamp off her nightstand. It wasn’t until she heard her daughter running toward her, the ring growing louder, that she realized she’d left it out in the kitchen and Whitney was bringing it to her.
Rubbing her eyes, she rol ed over as her daughter reached the side of her bed, saw that it was broad daylight and panicked. “Oh, no! Are we late?”
“For what?” Whitney asked.
“For school!”
Her daughter laughed. “It’s Saturday, sil y. I don’t have school on Saturday.”
“Right. Thank goodness.” Taking the phone, Al ie slumped back onto her pil ows and covered the mouthpiece while she asked Whitney what she was doing.
“Watching cartoons,” Whitney said and ran into the living room.
Al ie watched her go, relieved to see that she seemed to be adjusting to the move, then put the phone to her ear.
“Hel o?”
“Al ie?”
It was her mother. Which came as no surprise. Since she’d moved out, Evelyn checked in with her often and brought more furniture each time. “Hi, what’s up?”
“Why didn’t you wake me when you picked up Whitney last night?”
“I didn’t want to disturb you.”
“I wouldn’t have minded.”
“There wasn’t any need.”
“But it would’ve given us a chance to talk.”
Her father had been at home. Al ie hadn’t been eager to wake anyone. “We can talk now, can’t we?”
“I guess,” she said. “How are things over there? Do you have enough to eat?”
“We’re fine.”
“Maybe we should go out today and get some groceries
—a few staples. Then I won’t have to worry so much about you. It might take a while to find work, you know.”
Al ie considered the job she’d just accepted. She knew her mother wouldn’t be pleased to hear that she was helping with Clay’s defense, but she didn’t see any point in trying to hide it. Gossip being what it was in Stil water, Evelyn and everyone else would probably know by the end of the day.
“Actual y, I already have a job,” she said.
Evelyn immediately pounced on that. “Really?
Wonderful. Where?”
Al ie swal owed a groan. “I’m helping Grace with Clay’s case.”
Silence. Al ie gripped the phone a little tighter but refused to speak first. Final y, Evelyn said, “You’re kidding, aren’t you?”
“No, I’m not.”
“Al ie, this…this obsession of yours with Clay Montgomery has gone far enough, don’t you think?”
“Obsession?”
Her mother ignored her. “It’s up to the courts to decide his fate now.”
“How can they come to the right conclusion without the facts, Mom?”
“What facts? You’re a good detective, Al ie. But even you haven’t been able to come up with anything new.”
“I can’t give up. Someone just tried to kil him. What’s going on is not as clear-cut as everyone would like to believe.”
“You know it was Joe who shot Clay. So take your old job back and go after him. He deserves it. But then forget about Clay.”
“I’m not convinced it was Joe.”
“Then you should be. When I was at the Piggly Wiggly a few minutes ago, I heard Joe’s ex-wife tel Francine Eastman she thinks Joe has your gun. She said she stopped by to get some money he owes her and saw something that looked like a gun at his house.”
“Why hasn’t she reported it?”
“There’s been nothing but trouble between those two.
And she’s just getting her life back. She doesn’t want to step into the middle of this.”
“No one does! But what’s happening is a farce. Al the people who’ve been out to get Clay are final y gaining the upper hand. And I’m not going to watch the Vincel is and others with a personal agenda use the law for their own purposes.”
“Can’t you see what Clay’s doing?” Evelyn argued. “Do you think he’s been lavishing his attention on you because he likes you?”
Al ie felt her jaw drop but was too offended to be able to respond right away.
“Clay doesn’t like anyone,” her mother went on. “He’s using you. He knows he needs al ies—solid, reputable al ies—so he’s trying to elicit your support, hoping you can save him. And he doesn’t care if he ruins you in the process.”
“That’s not true,” Al ie said. “Clay doesn’t suck up to anyone, for any reason. He doesn’t even want me in his life.
He told me—” What good would it do to explain this to her mother? The people of Stil water wanted a scapegoat and they thought they’d found the perfect candidate. “Never mind.”
“Think about the number of women he’s slept with,”
Evelyn said. “You’re just another conquest to him. A calculated conquest because now, in addition to getting exactly what he wanted from you at the cabin, you’re going to help him.”
Al ie hung up. She knew she shouldn’t. Her mother was her last support. But Al ie was so angry, she couldn’t stop herself.
“Mommy?” Whitney cal ed.
Al ie forced back the rush of emotions that were assaulting her al at once. “What, honey?”
“Did Boppo ask you?”
“Ask me what?”
“If I can stay with her tonight?”
Al ie didn’t know what to say. They hadn’t gotten that far.
“Did she?” Whitney pressed.
The phone rang again. Al ie answered instead of answering her daughter.
“Are you real y choosing Clay over your family?” her mother asked.
Al ie cursed silently. “Of course not.”
“You are if you’re going to help the Montgomerys. Your father wil take it as a personal affront, and although I’ve tried to remain neutral, this wil compel me to choose his side. Do you realize that? I have to be loyal to my husband.”
“This isn’t about loyalty. At least not entirely. I need the job,” Al ie said.
“If you weren’t being so stubborn, you could go back to work for your father.”
Working for the police department would give her a lot more stability. She’d have a long-term income and benefits, which she wasn’t going to get helping Grace. And she had Whitney to think of. Her responsibility to her daughter and the emotional pressure she faced from everyone else would make it infinitely easier to fal in line with her parents.
Except that no one seemed to care about actual y solving the case. They wanted someone to punish for Barker’s disappearance so that the Vincel is would final y be satisfied and everyone could go on with their lives. And, unlike his mother and sisters, Clay was defiant, angry. In fact, the depth of the anger running through him was a little frightening at times. That made it easy for some people to believe he was capable of such a crime. But Al ie cared about the truth.
Or maybe she just cared about Clay.
“I can’t,” she said.
“Not even for Whitney’s sake?” Evelyn asked.
Al ie hugged her extra pil ow to her chest. “I’l make sure she gets everything she needs.”
“But she loves us. Putting a rift between you and us wil hurt her.”
“Mom, we don’t even know what happened to Barker.
Clay deserves a fair trial, don’t you think?”
Her mother’s voice rose. “He’l have his sister to defend him. She’s never lost a case.”
“She’s never had so much at stake before, or been up against odds like this!”
“Let her deal with it! She’l be fine without you.”
“I have to do what I think is right,” Al ie insisted.
There was a long silence, then her mother said, “Are you sure it’s your conscience you’re trying to satisfy?” And this time it was Evelyn who hung up.
“Mom-my?” Whitney wailed, losing patience. “Why won’t you answer me?”
Al ie wanted to throw her phone across the room but set it gently on the nightstand instead. “I’m sorry, honey,” she cal ed back. “You can’t stay with Boppo tonight. She forgot that she already has other plans.”
“But she just asked me! We were going to bake cookies!”
“Why don’t I see if your friend Emily can spend the night with us?”
“What about Boppo?” Whitney asked.
“Maybe you can go there next week,” Al ie said. “But it’s not looking good,” she muttered to herself. Then she turned her thoughts to what her mother had said about her gun.
Cindy thought she’d seen it at Joe’s house? Considering that Joe had the strongest motivation to shoot Clay, and he had no alibi, she thought the police could establish probable cause for a search warrant. But the situation being what it was, she knew she’d never convince her father to try. He wouldn’t act against the Vincel is right now.
No one would.
And that meant she had to do something herself, and she had to do it fast—before Joe got rid of the evidence.
“Whitney?” she cal ed.
“What, Mommy?”
“We’l make arrangements for you to stay with Emily, instead. Okay?”
Dale stood in the shed where he kept his tools and glanced at his watch. He’d just finished edging the lawn. It was part of his Saturday-morning routine, a routine that usual y relaxed him. But he was growing anxious. Irene should’ve received the flowers by now. Typical y, she responded right away when he gave her something; he was hoping that was stil the case. He had to see her. If they could be together, even if it was just one more time, it’d be easier to deal with everything else going on in his life. His estrangement from Al ie. The mayor and the Vincel is interfering with his job. The shooting at the cabin.
Wiping his hands on a paper towel that he promptly tossed in the trash can by the door, he reached into his pocket for his cel phone and dialed the voice-mail account he’d set up for her use.
Sure enough, he had a message.
Feeling a tremor of hope, he pressed “one” to hear it.
But his wife’s voice intruded, coming from behind him.
“Dale, what’s taking you so long out here?”
He turned to find Evelyn standing in the doorway. He was tempted to close the phone and shove it in his pocket, but Evelyn trusted him so much she wasn’t particularly nosy.
And Irene was beginning to mention the “beautiful roses.”
He motioned for Evelyn to be quiet. “I’m checking my voice-mail to see if anyone needs me at the station,” he lied, his heart thumping with more than its usual share of guilt.
Evelyn was always very respectful of his wishes, but today she ignored his plea for silence. Wringing her hands, she scowled and said, “I’ve got to see Reverend Portenski.
I’l be back in a few minutes.”
Obviously, she was unhappy. He would’ve asked her what was wrong. But Irene was tel ing him how much she loved him, how much she longed to be with him—and how she planned to remove the skimpy lingerie he’d bought her the next time they were together.
Instead of stopping Evelyn, Dale breathed a sigh of relief as she pul ed out of the driveway and then dialed Irene.
“Hel o?”
“It’s me,” he said.
“How come you’re cal ing me now? You’re usual y home on a Saturday morning.”
“Evelyn’s out.”
“Thank you for the flowers,” she said. “And the note. I needed the note more than anything.”
“I want to make love to you,” he said.
“Now?”
If they had time, he would. But the cabin was too far, and after what had happened there, he didn’t dare take her back, anyway. Their favorite little hotel in Corinth wasn’t much closer, not close enough for a quick rendezvous.
“Soon. It’l give me something to look forward to.”
“I don’t want to wait,” she said, her voice pleading. “I need you now.”
He was afraid she’d change her mind about seeing him if he didn’t arrange something in the next few days. “I’d say we could get together tonight, but I’m not sure where we could go that would be safe, darling.”
“You have that guesthouse.”
He was desperate, but not crazy. “Not there.”
“Come on. No one’l see us.”
“It’s right next to my house, for crying out loud.”
“No, it’s not. It’s down by the pond. You can’t even see it from your house. You’ve told me often enough that you’d like to move me there.”
That was wishful thinking, and she knew it. But she could be so childlike. He tried a different line of reasoning. “That wouldn’t be any fun. I’d have a heart attack from the stress.”
She started crying. “If I’m that bad for you, forget it.
Forget everything—”
“Irene, stop,” he begged. “I want to touch you so badly I can’t think of anything else. It’s just—” Suddenly he had an idea. “Wait. What about the farm?”
“The farm?” she echoed, sniffling.
“It’s empty now, isn’t it? And it’s private. I could go the back way and hide my car in the barn.”
“No. Mol y wil be in town this afternoon. She flew in early because of Clay. She’s renting a car in Nashvil e right now.”
“She’l be staying at the farm?”
“She could. She usual y stays with Clay.”
“But Clay’s not there this weekend. She won’t stay at the farm alone.”
“That’s true,” she admitted. “And she’l be excited to see Grace’s new baby. I’m sure she’l stay with Grace. But they’l expect me to be with them this evening.”
“You can get away. Say you’ve got a headache, that you’re going home to bed and leave a bit early.”
“But someone’s bound to see the lights in the farmhouse,” she said.
“Then we won’t turn on any lights. You can hide your car in the barn, too.”
She didn’t answer.
“It’s perfect, honey,” he pleaded. “It’s close and it’s private. Where else is there?”
“But Clay’s in jail—”
“Not for long. Grace wil get him out.” He knew Irene would assume he meant for good, when he was only talking about making bail. But he didn’t want to get specific; she was too worried about her son.
“He won’t like it,” she said.
“How wil it hurt him?”
Silence.
“He doesn’t know about us, right?”
“Of course not,” she said immediately.
“Good. Then meet me there tonight.”
“What wil you tel your wife?”
“I’l say that one of my men cal ed in sick and I’ve got to fil in.”
“What time?”
“Ten.”
He heard a soft sigh. “If that’s what you want.”
“It’s what I want. And bring that nightie you were talking about in the message,” he added.
The lumps in the cheap mattress dug into Clay’s back as he stared at the bunk above his. Fortunately, the county lockup was mostly empty, so he didn’t have a cel mate. He could imagine how much worse his stay would be with two or three other guys sharing the same smal space—the lack of privacy, the smel , the noise. Of course, he had al that to look forward to, and more, if he went to prison. But for now, he could take comfort in the fact that there was no one besides the jailer who delivered his meals to interrupt his thoughts.
He kicked at a piece of lint on the ground. Actual y, having twenty-four hours a day strictly to himself might not be so good. Because he couldn’t stop thinking about Al ie.
And her little girl. They’d be better off if Al ie didn’t try to help him. The fact that she was wil ing to take a stand against everyone she knew and loved, for his sake, made Clay yearn for things he couldn’t have. And he hated the thought of her being mistreated, which would surely happen if she continued to take his side.
Rotating the shoulder of his hurt arm, he pinched the site of his bul et wound to stop the unmerciful itching that had started this morning. It was healing wel , but the situation could’ve been very different. There were those who hated him and everyone associated with him. His sisters and mother couldn’t change their affiliation, of course. But Al ie could. If he was locked up, he’d be unable to protect her.
She probably understood that, but he doubted she understood how important it was to him to keep her safe.
He didn’t want to drag her down with him.
That was the worst part of jail, he decided. It wasn’t the luxuries and comforts he was missing. It was being so damn helpless. He could do nothing to insure the happiness of those he loved, and after so long he didn’t know how to live for anything else.
“Grace had better do as I told her,” he muttered, rol ing off the bed to walk around his cel . He’d instructed his sister to tel Al ie to get a real job, that Clay didn’t want anything to do with her. He knew he was being harsh, but he had to be harsh. Otherwise, Al ie wouldn’t listen. And the momentary sting those words might cause would be infinitely kinder than screwing up her life. Let her make up with her folks, go back to the force, find a suitable father for Whitney. A man who could give her everything Clay couldn’t.
For a moment, Clay let himself imagine being that man.
Coming in from the farm to sleep with her at night. Helping raise her little girl. Making Al ie pregnant with his own child.
With a faint smile, he remembered the red-faced bundle that was Grace’s baby, Lauren, and the way Lauren had turned her tiny mouth toward him when he’d touched her cheek. Holding that baby had shown him, more clearly than ever, exactly what was important in life. Most men took their ability, their right, to have a family for granted. They had no idea how badly they’d want that if they couldn’t have it.
Regardless of his future, Clay wanted a good life for Al ie. But he had a feeling Grace wouldn’t deliver his message. His sister was stronger now than she’d ever been, more confident in her own decisions. For some reason, she thought Al ie’s participation might make a difference.
Grace was going to give his defense everything she had
—and that included Al ie, whether he liked it or not.
18
Joe usual y spent Saturday evenings drinking with his buddies. According to his ex-wife, he drank too much. But tonight, Al ie was grateful for his rather reliable interest in heading to the pool hal . As she stood with her back to the fence behind Stil water Sand and Gravel and gazed through the trees, she could see that the house his parents provided for him was completely dark.
Leaving her car, which she’d hidden among the giant piles of sand and rock crowding the machinery, Al ie moved closer. She didn’t feel particularly good about breaking and entering. But she didn’t see that she had any better choice.
Before coming over here, she’d cal ed Hendricks and tried the sheriff’s department, and they’d simply referred her back to her father.
Wearing tennis shoes, jeans and a dark shirt, Al ie slipped through the tal white ash and silver maple trees that lined the back of Joe’s yard and approached the screened-in porch. She had a flashlight, but she didn’t want to use it until she was inside. Fortunately, the moon was nearly ful , so she could make out most objects in her path. She just hoped Joe didn’t have a dog.
Reaching the back of the house, Al ie stood by the screen and listened careful y for any noises from inside.
The night was as quiet as it was stil .
He’s gone. She tried to open the screen door.
It was locked.
Cursing under her breath, Al ie began to dig through the large canvas bag she’d brought with her. She’d put a smal knife in there, as wel as her flashlight and some other tools.
She could slice a hole in the screen, reach through and unlatch the old-fashioned catch. But she abandoned that plan almost as soon as she thought of it. If Joe spotted the hole later, he might become suspicious, and she didn’t see any reason to give her little search away, especial y if she didn’t have to. Surely she could find an open window somewhere. Few people in Stil water bothered with tight security. And the month of June was already upon them, with its oppressive heat and humidity.
Wiping the nervous perspiration from her top lip, she began to circle the house. She didn’t find anything very hopeful on the first floor, but a second-story window stood open. She guessed it was Joe’s bedroom. She could see the curtains flutter ever so slightly and assumed he’d left a fan running.
The problem was getting up to that window without being seen from the street. It was at the front of the house, right above the porch and facing the highway; there were no trees to give her cover.
She bit her lip, trying to decide what to do. Did she cut the screen or try to climb up to the second story?
This time of night, there wasn’t much traffic….
Seeing no cars in either direction, she pul ed the strap of her bag over her head so she could wear it across her body and began to climb onto the porch railing. The trel is that continued up from there didn’t seem too sturdy, but she was fairly certain it’d bear her weight. Once she was on the roof, getting to the window would be—The sound of an engine reached Al ie’s ears as she clung to the side of the house.
She calculated how long it’d take her to get to the window and how long it’d take her to climb back down and decided she didn’t have time to do either. That engine was growing louder by the second.
Forgetting her fear of fal ing, she scooted up the trel is, clambered onto the porch roof and lay flat. Cringing, she waited for the vehicle to pass.
But it didn’t pass. It slowed and turned in at the driveway.
Joe was home.
Dammit! Al ie held perfectly stil as the engine died.
Then the truck door opened and slammed, and footsteps approached the house. Keys jingled directly below her as Joe crossed the porch. She told herself to get the hel out of there as soon as he stepped inside the house. But that open window was only a few feet away. If he stayed downstairs for a few minutes, she could take a peek….
Gathering her nerve, she crawled over to the window and listened again, in case he had a dog. The sound of a television drifted up to her, but no barking, whining or thumping. No “hel o pooch” from Joe.
Quickly climbing over the ledge, she dropped silently into a room that contained a whirring fan, a rumpled bed, a chest of drawers and a desk scattered with papers. His closet stood open and had dirty laundry spil ing out of it; another foot of discarded clothing covered the floor.
Hurrying to the fan, Al ie turned it off so she could hear if Joe came up the stairs. Then she pul ed out her flashlight and used his desk chair to search the top shelves of the closet. She found a smal bundle wrapped in a T-shirt that felt promising. But when she opened it, she discovered a bunch of sex toys, including a giant vibrator and some S&M
paraphernalia.
“Definitely not what I wanted to know about you,” she muttered. Shoving the bundle back where she’d found it, she turned her attention to Joe’s dresser. There was a recent issue of a girlie magazine tossed in with his underwear. Below that, she spotted an old high school yearbook. She almost pushed it aside, too. But she could stil hear the television downstairs, so she slowed long enough to flip through it.
It was from Joe’s senior year. In the front pages, some of his male friends had drawn crude pictures. Kennedy had told him to take it easy over the summer. And various girls had written the usual sentiments. “I can’t believe it’s over.
Cal me, okay?” There was a long love note from Cindy, Joe’s girlfriend at the time and the woman he ended up marrying and divorcing—twice.
Why would Joe have his high school yearbook in his underwear drawer? she wondered. He and Cindy must have broken up and reunited half a dozen times since they were teens, which meant he’d been moving back and forth between the house they’d shared and this one. Al ie would’ve expected something so old and inconsequential, at least at this point in their lives, to fal by the wayside. Or end up in the attic or garage. But Joe kept it with his personal items.
Al ie found that very interesting. Especial y when she realized that there was one particular page in the senior portrait section that had a packaged condom as a bookmark. It was the page with Grace Montgomery’s photograph. Her picture was a simple snapshot, not a fancy portrait from one of the expensive studios like most of the others. But it wouldn’t have stood out al that much if someone, presumably Joe, hadn’t written across her face:
“Fucking bitch, you’l get yours.”
Was this a recent addition? The condom didn’t look that old. Al ie got the impression the writing wasn’t, either.
That Joe blamed Grace for taking his best friend away from him was no secret. He and Kennedy had hung out together al through high school and beyond, until Grace had returned to town last year and Kennedy had fal en in love with her. But the emotion behind the sentiment Joe had expressed toward Grace in the yearbook seemed more malevolent than resentful.
Then Al ie heard a creak on the stairs.
She cocked her head, listening to be sure. The footsteps came closer. Turning off her flashlight, she threw the book back in the drawer and closed it, jammed her bag under Joe’s bed and wiggled in behind it. The dust made it difficult to breathe, but she was too scared to breathe, anyway. She wasn’t sure she was far enough under the bed to avoid being seen. Joe had so much junk under there, including what felt like a couple of dishes, she couldn’t move any farther.
The light went on. With her cheek pressed to the carpet, Al ie could see Joe’s feet as he entered the room and prayed he wouldn’t notice that she’d turned off the fan.
He didn’t seem to. The springs above her creaked as he sat down to remove his boots.
Thank God. He was going to bed. Once he fel asleep, she’d slip out and search the rest of the house.
But he didn’t disrobe. He put on a pair of tennis shoes and cal ed someone.
“You ready?…Hel , no, it’l take longer than that…I’m beginning to believe he’s buried in that damn barn…. So?
Maybe Jed was in on it. They must’ve buried him somewhere close by. They wouldn’t have had time to do anything else…Where did you see her?…Doesn’t matter.
She won’t be at the farm. She’l be with Grace or her mother…Right. Just don’t let anyone see you pul in. If Clay finds out we were there, he’l bury us right next to my uncle…You should’ve seen what he did to Tim Fox when he caught him messing around with Grace…. I don’t care how long ago it was, I know him better than you do…. Yeah….
Doesn’t matter. Kennedy wil post as much as it takes….
We could always finish up tomorrow or the next night, if we have to…. That’s good…Okay…Don’t forget to bring a shovel.”
He hung up, grabbed something off his dresser and walked out.
Al ie started to scramble out from under the bed. She was choking on dust and shocked by what she’d just heard.
But Joe returned a second later to turn off the light.
Reverend Portenski paced back and forth in his study.
Evelyn McCormick had left hours earlier but, hard as he’d tried to forget her visit, he couldn’t. She was a good woman and so worried about her daughter. She’d come to him looking for peace, advice, support.
Should he do what was best for him? Or for her? And what about everyone else?
He had to come forward, didn’t he? He’d been able to justify his silence this long only because he couldn’t have saved the girls the Reverend Barker had abused. He didn’t even recognize them; Portenski hadn’t moved to town until he’d heard about the opening at the church. Those Polaroids had been old when he’d found them, the children in them al grown up. And except for Grace, he doubted the victims were stil living in the area, because no one had ever filed any complaints.
What was done was done, right? Keeping his mouth shut protected Madeline from a very harsh reality, the church from a terrible shame, and the Vincel is, who were a proud family, from the worst possible humiliation. They wouldn’t want these pictures to come out, even if it meant Clay would go to jail for the rest of his life. This town had long touted Barker as a saint.
The Montgomerys wouldn’t be eager to see them made public, either. Grace was a sensitive soul who’d barely survived what had happened to her. Portenski didn’t want to bring her any more unhappiness. She’d asked him to help her brother, and he wanted to do that. Maybe he was uncomfortable around Clay, but a part of him admired the younger man’s strength. Another part sympathized with the tough decisions he’d made.
But how could he protect the Montgomerys, the Vincel is and the McCormicks?
Portenski tugged at his bottom lip. What should he do?
With a sigh, he knelt down and began to pray.
“Father, enlighten my mind. Instruct thy servant that I might be fair to al involved.”
He paused, searching, waiting for the answer. There was nothing in his mind except silence. Then, at last, a thought crystal ized.
“Truth is the secret of eloquence and of virtue, the basis of moral authority; it is the highest summit of art and of life.”
Henri Frederic Amiel, a nineteenth-century Swiss philosopher had written those words. Portenski knew they hadn’t come directly from God’s mouth. But why should he remember them now, unless they were intended as his answer?
Amiel had written something else that merited consideration. “The man who insists upon seeing with perfect clearness before he decides, never decides.
Accept life and you must accept regret.”
It was a sign, Portenski decided. A sign that the time had come to act; whether he would later regret it or not.
Al ie froze halfway out from under the bed, terrified that Joe had spotted her. But he didn’t do anything to indicate he had. He flipped off the light, then jogged down the stairs, slammed the door and started his truck. He was too focused on what he was about to do—which, as far as she could tel , was search Clay’s farm.
Let him search. He won’t find anything. The police had already searched twice. Clay was innocent.
Getting up, she began going through the rest of Joe’s drawers. She’d use the time to look for her gun….
But she stopped only a second later. Clay was innocent of cold-blooded murder. In her heart, she knew that had to be true and refused to believe her emotions were clouding her judgment. But he harbored more than his share of secrets. She was frightened of what those secrets might be, and how they might be interpreted if they got out. He must have some reason for protecting the farm as vigilantly as he did.
What would Joe and whoever he was meeting find?
She wasn’t sure. But she couldn’t take the chance that they’d come up with something they could use against Clay.
Abandoning her own search, she rushed downstairs, let herself out the back door and ran for her car. She had to stop them before it was too late.
Al ie was pretty sure she’d arrived in time. She’d tried contacting Grace and Madeline while she was on the road, to ask them to meet her at the farm. But Grace’s line was busy, and she hadn’t been able to reach Madeline. As a last-ditch effort, she’d cal ed Madeline’s boyfriend, Kirk.
He’d said Mol y had come to town and they were al at Grace’s. Since she couldn’t reach anyone, he’d promised to meet her himself, but she’d obviously arrived before everyone else—including Vincel i. The farm looked deserted.
Parking in front, she hurried to the house. The door was locked. She went around back, choosing the soft earth rather than the wraparound porch so the boards wouldn’t creak, and scaled the steps. The back door was locked, too.
Standing by the chicken coop, she gazed up at the second story and thought she saw a glimmer of light in some distant room—a bathroom, maybe? It winked out so fast, she decided it had to be the moon reflecting off a window.
Or was she imagining things?
She was uneasy enough to conjure up almost any sight or sound. She knew Joe had a mean streak. Providing Cindy was right about her gun, it was Joe who’d nearly kil ed Clay. If he found Al ie here, maybe she’d become his next target.
Shot with her own gun. Not a nice thought. But she had to admit it was possible. Joe hated the Montgomerys, and hate was a very powerful motivator.
She tried to cal her father for backup. He seemed to believe Clay was the only person in Stil water capable of violence, despite the theft and shooting at the cabin. But she knew Dale would come, anyway. If she could get hold of him.
On the third ring, her cal transferred to voice-mail.
“Damn,” she muttered, but Kirk would be here shortly.
While she waited, she decided to check for cars. The farm was far enough from town that Joe and whoever was with him would’ve had to drive. And if they were smart, they wouldn’t park too far away, in case they needed to leave in a hurry. Their best parking options would be the dirt road along the back of the property, the open area where Clay kept his heavy equipment, behind the barn or down by the creek.
Al ie moved automatical y toward the barn, since Joe had mentioned it and it was closest. But she hadn’t yet reached the building when she noticed that the large sliding door Clay had instal ed so he could drive his cars in and out with ease wasn’t closed al the way.
Clay wouldn’t go anywhere with that door open. He was far too private and too cautious.
“Damn Joe,” she whispered. He’d beaten her here, after al . Were they already digging? He’d said something about starting in the barn. But there was no light peeking through the door. Surely they wouldn’t dig in the dark.
The house…
She turned back, now confident that the glimmer of light she’d seen earlier had been more than the moon’s reflection. But at the last second, she decided to do Joe and his friend the same favor they’d done Clay at the cabin, and flatten their tires. Even if Joe wasn’t the one who’d shot Clay, he deserved a little payback. And that way, if they heard her coming, they couldn’t escape quickly and lie about the fact that they were here.
Taking the flashlight and knife from her bag, she ducked into the pitch-black of the barn.
Something smal darted past her. The fact that it might’ve been a mouse nearly made her scream.
“It’s okay,” she muttered, managing to reel in her reaction. “Calm down.”
Snapping on her flashlight, she turned to face the cars parked close to Clay’s classic Jaguar. But what she saw stunned her, and it took several seconds to make sense of it. Joe’s truck wasn’t anywhere to be seen. It was Irene Montgomery’s blue Honda that sat in front of her, which wouldn’t have been such a terrible surprise—except that her father’s cruiser was parked beside it. She could see the decorated baby-food lid Whitney had made him in school hanging from the rearview mirror.
Why? Why would they both be here? If they were meeting for some legitimate reason, they wouldn’t feel the need to hide their vehicles….
Al ie pictured the fear that had entered Irene’s face at Grace’s, when she was asked if Jed had ever seen her with another man, and a sick feeling began in the pit of her stomach. “No,” she whispered. “No.”
She listened to her heartbeat for several seconds before she could get her feet to move. She didn’t want to go to the house. She was afraid of what she might see. She knew now where that bright red lipstick she’d found in her father’s car had come from. It was exactly the same shade Irene wore almost every day.
But she had to do something. Joe was on his way. If finding her car in the driveway wasn’t enough to stop them from snooping around—
“Oh, God,” she groaned, hurrying cautiously out of the barn. She had to get her father and Irene away from the farm. If they were caught, her father would be ruined, her mother devastated as wel as publicly humiliated. And the vengeance this town would exact from the Montgomerys would send Clay to prison in spite of the most bril iant defense they could muster.
How could her father do this? she asked herself over and over.
Despite the lump rising in her throat, Al ie searched the area between the chicken coop and the shed, listening for voices or movement. She heard nothing. So she locked the barn door behind her, to slow Joe down, and approached the house.
Irene…and her father.
Shaking her head as if she could rid her mind of that painful thought, Al ie moved as quietly as possible. If she wasn’t careful, she could draw Joe’s attention to the house when she’d rather leave him trying to jimmy the lock on the barn. But that meant she’d have to find her own way in, warn Dale and Irene and help them sneak out. She could simply tel them to hide, but if Kirk didn’t arrive soon, Joe would break the lock on the barn, discover the cars and instigate a search for the living instead of the dead.
Slipping the crowbar she’d brought out of her bag, she wedged it between the back door and the frame, cast a final, wary glance over her shoulder, and tried to force it open.
The resulting noise made her cringe. It sounded so loud she thought Joe and her father would both come running and meet her right there on the porch.
If her father heard anything, however, he was too afraid to give his presence away. And she saw no sign of Joe.
“Good news,” she mumbled. It might’ve been good news, if only she’d been able to get in. But the door held.
After another silent curse, Al ie tried the crowbar again and, despite the noise, final y met with success.
So much for stealth. And so much for Clay’s privacy.
Three different parties would likely be tramping through his house tonight. She could only imagine how much he’d like that.
Stepping inside, she replaced the crowbar in her bag and used a kitchen chair to hold the door shut behind her.
She didn’t want Joe to see it hanging open. Then, careful to keep the beam pointed at the floor, she turned on her flashlight and hurried through the kitchen to the stairs. She was tempted to cal out a warning, but refrained. She didn’t dare. She wasn’t sure who might hear her.
Al ie had never gone so far into Clay’s house. It bothered her that he wasn’t here. But she didn’t have time to dwel on the sense of loss that made her heart feel even heavier.
Instead, she ran up the stairs as quietly as she could.
The rooms off the second-story hal way were al open.
Except two.
She’d find her father behind one of them with a woman who wasn’t her mother. Shit…
Taking a deep breath, she opened the first door. It was Clay’s room, and it was empty. The subtle masculine scent that lingered brought him back to her, made her remember that night at the cabin when he’d held her naked against him. She longed to be with him again. Even now. But he was in jail, and might be going to prison for good.
Meanwhile, her father was having an affair. And Joe was pressing his advantage.
The world had gone crazy. Everything was wrong. But Al ie couldn’t let panic and pain defeat her. She had to find her father and Irene. The rest she could deal with later.
Moving to the other door, she tried to open it but found it locked. They had to be there.
She knocked softly. No response.
“Dad, it’s me, Al ie. Open up.”
Nothing.
“Dad, listen. Joe’s on his way here,” she murmured as close to the panel as she could get. “He’s planning to search for his uncle’s remains. If he finds your cars, he’l start looking for a lot more than that. You’ve got to come downstairs with me and pretend we had a meeting here.”
She heard movement. Had they received her message?
Were they scrambling to get dressed? She couldn’t be sure. “Dad? Did you hear me? I locked the barn, which is where he plans to start, but I doubt that’l detain him for long.” She hesitated. “Hel o? Answer me! Joe is—”
“Not as stupid as you think,” someone interrupted from behind her.
Al ie’s heart lodged in her throat as she turned to see the man she’d been hoping to avoid step out of a third room and flip on the light.
“How’d you know I was coming here tonight?” he asked.
Al ie did her best to bluff. “Clay’s behind bars, isn’t he? I figured you’d take advantage of his absence.”
He didn’t seem completely convinced she was tel ing the truth, but he was too excited about having the upper hand to dwel on the mystery. “It’s a good thing I’m here,” he said.
“This explains so much, doesn’t it? Now I understand why your father never wanted to investigate the people who murdered my uncle. He was too busy getting down and dirty with Clay’s mother and her big tits.” Joe shook his head.
“Tsk, tsk. Poor Evelyn. How’s that going to look? A churchgoing man like Dale. The chief of police, no less.
Nope, can’t be good.”
Al ie glared at him. “You’re trespassing. You have no right to be here.”
He raised an eyebrow. “And you do?”
“More right than you’ve got. At least Clay likes me.”
He chuckled. “Yeah, we’ve al heard how much.”
“How’d you get in?” she asked. There were no sounds coming from the bedroom, so she was trying to stal for time, hoping her father and Irene had managed to climb out and were right now scurrying away.
“It was easier to break a window in the basement than to bother with the door, I’l tel you that much.”
“Who’s here with you?”
“What makes you think I’m not alone?”
What she’d overheard. But she couldn’t say that. “Joe, listen—”
Kirk pounded on the door downstairs. “Al ie? Al ie, are you in there?”
“That’s enough,” Joe said. Painful y gripping her arm, he dragged her against him as he banged the flashlight he carried in one hand on the door. “Hey, McCormick. I’ve got your little girl out here.”
Al ie tried to wriggle free, to let Kirk in, but Joe held her fast. “Are you the one who shot Clay?” she asked Joe.
Laughing, he shook his head. “Are you kidding? Assault with a deadly weapon is a crime.”
“Cindy saw my gun at your house.”
“Cindy’s a stupid bitch. She didn’t see anything.”
She could hear Kirk coming in through the back. “You hate Clay enough to do just about anything.”
“I won’t cry when he goes to prison for life,” he muttered and hit the door again. “McCormick! I know you’re in there.”
“You’re letting hate twist you into a monster,” she told Joe.
“And your father’s a saint? Like the Montgomerys? No doubt he’s trying to crawl out the window right now. But he won’t get far before he runs into Roger,” he said and that was when she knew Joe’s brother was waiting outside, blocking her father and Irene’s only escape.
“Al ie?” Kirk ran up the stairs.
“You’re too late,” Joe said, and he was right. The shril cry of a siren broke the silence, drawing closer and closer.
Then the sound died abruptly.
“You called the police?” Al ie cried.
“In addition to a few other key individuals. Figured this could use a little documentation,” he replied with a grin.
Kirk made him release her, but it was only a few minutes later that Officers Hendricks and Pontiff, together with Al ie’s mother, came hurrying up the stairs—Pontiff first, then Evelyn and a huffing and puffing Hendricks.
“What is it?” Evelyn asked when she spotted Al ie. “Why was I supposed to meet you here?”
Al ie made sure her expression told Joe what she thought of him. The unfeeling bastard had dragged her mother out to see this firsthand.
“Sometimes the truth hurts,” he murmured carelessly in her ear.
Kirk reached out to steady her, but Al ie couldn’t hold back the tears. Especial y as she watched Hendricks and Joe force open the door to the bedroom and turn on the light. Sure enough, her father was inside. He had his clothes on, but there was a lipstick smudge on his shirt, his face was beet red and his hair mussed.
Although Dale was trying to shield her from view, Irene was there, too, and looked even worse. Her hair, which was normal y teased high, was completely flat on one side, and her mascara was running with her tears.
But the worst was yet to come. Striding into the room, Joe picked up a scrap of fabric that had been shoved under the bed. “What’s this?” he said and held it up for al to see.
It was a tiny sheer teddy.
19
As the sun came up, Al ie sat at her kitchen table, staring into the cup of coffee that had grown cold more than an hour ago. She’d brought her mother home with her and tried to feed her—with no success. Final y, she’d given her a sedative and put her to bed in Whitney’s room. She already knew she’d never forget Evelyn’s gasp of pain as they both stood facing the proof of Dale’s infidelity.
The images that once again entered Al ie’s mind threatened to make her il . Pushing her coffee away, she squeezed her eyes shut in an attempt to block out the worst of what she’d seen and heard. But it was no good.
Everything came back to her: her father’s halting apology, Irene crying that Dale was the only man she’d ever loved, Joe cal ing them both the most degrading of names, Kirk almost punching him, the mayor showing up in the midst of the chaos. It was difficult to believe that less than a year before, Al ie had been married and living in Chicago, and longing for Stil water as if it was stil the perfect haven it’d always been for her.
Maybe she and Sam hadn’t had the best relationship, but her life had been far saner than it was now. She was divorced, Dale and Evelyn would probably soon fol ow, she’d lost her job, and her father was about to join her in the ranks of the unemployed. Beyond al that, she loved a man who was, most likely, going to prison.
God, she wanted to be with Clay….
“Home’s supposed to be…safe,” she muttered. She’d come back to Stil water to recoup, rebuild. Instead, she felt as if her life had fal en apart bit by bit—and at a faster rate after she’d returned than before.
She wondered how her brother would take the news of what had happened last night. Briefly, she considered cal ing him, but couldn’t make herself go through with it. She had to come to terms with this new reality first. Actual y, she wasn’t sure how she’d ever tel Daniel that their father had been sleeping with Irene Montgomery. Finding out that Dale was having an affair was bad enough. Betrayal was never easy to accept. But cheating with Irene Montgomery? That created al sorts of additional complications.
If Al ie had her guess, it was only a matter of time until Joe began to fight for another search of the farm, saying that her father had purposely avoided the barn when they were digging there before. As she left this morning, he was already claiming that Dale knew al about Barker and had been keeping quiet for Irene’s sake.
Al ie remembered her father’s comment that the Montgomerys had been through enough. Did he know what had happened?
Covering a yawn, she got up and tried to busy herself by cleaning up—throwing out the leftover eggs she’d cooked for her mother, washing the dishes, putting them away. But she had no energy, could hardly move. Thinking about the conversation she had to have with her daughter when she picked Whitney up from Emily’s in a few hours didn’t help.
How was she going to explain why Boppo was coming to live with them? And later in the day, Al ie had a meeting with Grace. They’d arranged it yesterday. Would Clay’s sister be surprised about Dale and Irene? Or did she already know about the affair? What about Madeline and Mol y? And Clay? Surely Kirk had cal ed them al by now.
Except Clay, of course.
Remembering Clay’s evasive answers when she’d told him that she was afraid her father might be cheating on her mother, and his reluctance to come to the cabin after that, she guessed Clay had known al along. It bothered her that he’d heard her deepest fears and hadn’t leveled with her—
but not because she couldn’t understand why. His silence emphasized the fact that he had other people to protect, other people who meant more to him than she did.
Of course. What they’d had was…fleeting, unreal. A one-time encounter. She knew that and yet she had a hard time real y believing it. Making love with Clay had felt so powerful, so visceral and meaningful.
Suddenly claustrophic, Al ie dried her wet hands and walked outside. It was a mild Sunday morning. No one on her street seemed to be up yet.
She sat in the plastic chair she’d placed on her porch and stared across the street at Jed Fowler’s. She had to find out who shot Clay. She also had to prove that Clay wasn’t guilty of murder and that her father hadn’t turned a blind eye to the fact that he was.
A neighbor’s cat jumped from the top of her mailbox to the ground, reminding her that she hadn’t retrieved yesterday’s mail. Chances were good that there’d only be a stack of bil s. But, like Madeline, she was expecting her tax return. Thinking the money might help her survive until her life improved, she walked down the driveway and checked inside the box.
There was a large package jammed inside. After struggling to pul it out, she realized it hadn’t come through the mail. It had no return address or postage. Just her name in big bold letters across the front.
Who’d delivered this? And when?
She checked the box again, and found a page of coupons and a few bil s. Nothing else.
Instinctively, she looked around her, but whoever had brought it was long gone.
When she opened the package, she could see why.
The man the jailer led down the narrow gray hal outside Clay’s cel stood several inches tal er than Clay, which made him six-eight or so. Shackled and wearing handcuffs, he was on his way to the empty cage next door, but he was smiling as if his arrest and subsequent lockup didn’t bother him at al .
Leaning against the bars of his own cel , Clay watched, wondering why this Goliath of a man seemed so damn happy. It couldn’t be because anyone was making him feel welcome here. The jailer handled him more roughly than he had Clay and responded curtly to every question.
“When’s dinner?” the man asked. “I’m looking forward to my three squares a day, you know? It’s a bitch on the outside. You gotta feed yourself.”
“You’l eat when it comes,” the jailer responded. The officer’s disgust was obvious, but his rudeness didn’t disturb the new inmate. The man laughed as the jailer clanked the door shut and stalked off. Then he turned to Clay.
“How’s the food?” he asked.
“Terrible,” Clay said. “Is it supposed to be good?”
The man shrugged. “Sometimes it’s not bad. Beats foraging out of a garbage can.”
Clay studied him in return. “Is that what you normal y do?”
“Hel , no. It’s just a little trick I learned.”
Clay pushed away from the bars and moved closer.
“Trick?”
“There’s always something worse. If you think about what’s worse, what you have doesn’t seem so bad.”
“You should go on the Positive Mental Attitude circuit,”
he said, flopping onto his bed. “Except I don’t think your attitude is winning you any points with the police.”
The man waved an indifferent hand. “Who cares about those assholes? Anyway, I don’t want to do public speaking. I can make a lot more money robbing banks, and for that I don’t have to sel tickets.”
Propping his head on his hands, Clay tried to make himself comfortable. “That’s what you’re in for? Robbery?”
“Armed robbery. And an accidental shooting they’re cal ing assault with a deadly weapon.”
“Accidental,” Clay repeated.
“That’s what I said.”
Tired of the square pattern on the mattress above him, Clay sized up the newcomer again. “Isn’t it hard to be a bank robber when you’re so tal ? You don’t exactly blend into a crowd.”
“Oh, maybe that’s what’s wrong,” he said, smacking his forehead.
Clay couldn’t help laughing. “Wel , if you decide to go straight, there’s always basketbal .”
“Not an option for me, amigo. I can’t handle a bal to save my life. And you can blame my mother for that.”
“Your mother? ”
“Wel , you can’t blame my dad. No one knows who he is.”
Clay thought of his own father. “Sometimes even that’s a blessing.”
“Maybe.”
“That doesn’t explain why you can’t play basketbal .”
“When my mother decided to turn her life around and became devout, my life did not improve. From that point forward, she wouldn’t al ow me to own a bal .”
Clay leaned up on one elbow. “Why not?”
“She didn’t believe in sports. They’re competitive,” he said with another shrug. “Someone has to lose.”
“It’s a cruel world,” Clay said.
“Exactly.”
“I suppose everyone wins in a bank robbery?”
“She doesn’t know about my career. She’s living in a cult in Oregon and refuses to acknowledge me.”
Clay shook his head at what this man had been through.
“You’re right. There’s always something worse.”
“Glad I could make you feel better about your life,” he said with a hoot of laughter.
They fel silent for several minutes, and Clay relaxed, hoping to doze off. It wasn’t as if he was getting much sleep when he was constantly worrying about Al ie and his family and what might be happening at the farm.
“What are you in for, anyway?”
Clay opened his eyes. The other inmate had wandered right up to the bars separating them. “Me? Nothing. I’m falsely accused.”
“Aren’t we al .”
Now that he’d been interrupted, Clay doubted he could drift off again, so he sat up. “Want to tel me how you accidental y shot someone?”
“The shooting wasn’t the part that was accidental,” he admitted.
“Oh?” Clay raised his eyebrows. “Then which part was?”
“The part where I let the dumbass see me,” he said, laughing some more.
This man had tried to kil a witness. On purpose. Clay no longer found the situation funny. “Attempted murder?”
“That’s what they claim,” he replied with a wink.
“That’s what they claim,” Clay muttered to himself.
Obviously, he was locked up with someone who, despite his apparent good nature, had no conscience.
Suddenly, Clay didn’t feel like talking anymore. He couldn’t relate to this man. They had nothing in common, and he hoped they never would.
Lying back, he threw an arm over his eyes to signal the end of the conversation. He’d be out of here soon, he told himself. Tuesday would have to come eventual y. There was no reason to think about this inmate or the fact that he’d meet a lot more men who were an even greater danger to society if he went to prison. But as he let his mind wander, he realized something that hadn’t occurred to him before.
He’d assumed that whoever shot him at the cabin had acted out of anger or vengeance.
But what if the motivation behind the shooting was more random than that? The guy in the next cel had tried to kil a man just for being in the wrong place at the wrong time. The shooter at the cabin might have been doing the same.
Which meant Clay must have seen something, or come close to seeing something, that could give the guy away.
Now if only he could remember the people and cars he’d spotted as he approached the cabin that night…
“Are you okay?” Madeline asked.
Al ie tightened her grip on the cel phone. She’d gone to Clay’s farm for privacy. Now that her mother was at her house, she craved some time alone, a few minutes to deal with her own emotions. Especial y after seeing the pictures she’d found in the package that had been delievered to her earlier.
Taking them from her purse, she lined them up very careful y on Clay’s kitchen counter. She’d had them al day and yet it stil made her teeth chatter and her body quake to look at them.
She forced herself to answer Madeline in a calm voice.
“I’m fine.”
“You must be heartbroken.”
Al ie hugged herself. Madeline had no idea. But Clay’s stepsister wasn’t referring to the pictures. It wasn’t difficult to guess she didn’t know about them. She was talking about the scandal involving Al ie’s father that had erupted last night. In typical Stil water fashion, word was rol ing through town like a tidal wave, and Al ie was as humiliated and embarrassed as she’d expected to be. When she thought of her father in that room with Irene, she stil felt a very poignant ache in her chest.
But these pictures…They were more heartbreaking than almost anything else could possibly be. They’d upset her so badly she couldn’t even keep her appointment with Grace.
She didn’t know what to say to Clay’s sister. Should she bring up the abuse Grace had suffered? Tel her about the pictures?
“It hasn’t been easy,” she said into the phone. “But…
somehow my mother and I wil get through it .” How had Grace survived? How did the family cope?
“I have to admit I suspected Mom was seeing someone.
She’s been a little secretive for…gee, months and months.
But I never dreamed…” Madeline let her words fal away and tried again. “I mean, I feel guilty by association.
Ashamed. I want to apologize.”
Al ie managed to keep her brain working wel enough to answer, but it took a real effort. Her mind had drifted to Barker’s Bible and the supposed “love” he felt for his stepdaughter. It wasn’t love. He’d been sexual y obsessed.
“There’s no need for you to feel guilty, Maddy,” she said.
“I know you’re not responsible for what your father, I mean
—” she cleared her throat “— stepmother has done.”
Maddy seemed a bit confused by Al ie’s mistake but didn’t comment on it. “I didn’t know, I swear.”
“Did Clay?” Al ie asked, gazing through his kitchen window toward the barn outside.
“I doubt it.”
She turned to glance around the kitchen. She’d had to kick out the cardboard they’d used to cover the broken window downstairs in order to get in. But it had been worth it to find a place where she could be alone and was unlikely to be disturbed. Her mother was refusing to accept Dale’s cal s or speak of the affair. And she was ignoring Al ie—as though Al ie was to blame for the situation—and lavishing one hundred percent of her attention on Whitney. Evelyn was trying to buffer herself from the pain. But Al ie knew she’d have to deal with it at some point and worried that this would only put off her recovery.
Then there was Joe. Al ie was afraid that even though his chances of getting a search warrant had improved by a large margin, he’d be back late tonight to find what he could. Clay’s absence was too good an opportunity to pass up.
“I’m sure Grace didn’t know, either,” Madeline was saying. “She would’ve told me.”
Al ie picked up a Polaroid of Grace at twelve or thirteen years old. She couldn’t tel where it had been taken but Grace was naked and spread eagled, her wrists and ankles tied. Another showed Barker with his mouth between her legs, his head slightly distorted as if he’d held the camera out and taken the picture himself.
Of course Grace would tel Madeline if their mother was having an affair, Al ie thought sarcastical y. Clay and Grace told Madeline everything, right?
Swal owing a sigh, Al ie shook her head. Madeline had no idea. The Montgomerys loved her and treated her wel , but they kept their secrets to themselves.
And she could see why. There were pictures here that revealed such depravity she couldn’t even bear to pick them up.
Swiping her arm across the counter, she sent them fluttering to the floor. She didn’t try to hold back her tears.
What she’d seen wounded her in a way she’d never been hurt before. How could any man, least of al a minister, do what Barker had done? Experience had taught Al ie how evil some people could be. In Chicago, she’d gained quite an education in that department. But this was different. The perpetrator wasn’t a stranger. He was a man who’d dressed up as Santa Claus and dangled her on his knee, a man who’d encouraged her to be chaste and good and to save herself for marriage—the worst kind of hypocrite.
And the victims! Although older than Al ie, they were women she’d known. Rosy Lee Harper had overdosed on sleeping pil s at sixteen. Al ie stil remembered getting out of school to attend her funeral. And Katie Swanson had run away at—Al ie couldn’t quite remember because she’d been so young at the time—fifteen? Almost everyone in town had gathered to help find her, even Barker. He’d led the search! They’d combed the entire area until they received word that she’d been found dead on the highway, the victim of a hit and run. Both girls came from very poor families who’d relied heavily on the support of their minister.
Al ie pressed her lips tightly together to squelch a sob.
God, what Barker had done, what he’d caused. Poor Grace. She was the lone survivor.
Was that because of Clay?
Al ie’s conversation with Madeline had been fil ed with more silence than words. Madeline was being patient, but Al ie shouldn’t have answered the phone. She’d just…
wanted to reach out to someone. She’d irrational y hoped that Madeline would set the world right again, or at least explain why. But the only person who could do that had disappeared nineteen years ago.
“I’d better run,” Al ie said at last. Madeline couldn’t save her from the confusion and pain. No one could—and she wasn’t even involved. She was just viewing the evidence.
“Al ie…”
From the sympathetic way she said her name, Al ie knew Madeline had heard the tears in her voice. “I’m okay,”
she said.
“I’m so sorry.”
“Don’t be. We can’t control what other people do.”
“I know, but…please cal me if I can help.”
“I wil ,” she promised and disconnected. Then she col ected al the pictures and shoved them back in her purse, because she couldn’t stand to look at them anymore.
What was she going to do? If she turned them over to the police, they’d convince everyone that Barker had come to some violent end—and they’d give Clay a very compel ing reason to have harmed him.
What happened the night the reverend went missing?
Al ie wondered for the mil ionth time. Had Clay discovered what Barker was doing to Grace and put a very decisive stop to it? Only yesterday, she would’ve bet her soul that Clay hadn’t been the one to kil his stepfather.
But today, after seeing the pictures, she believed that if anything could make Clay resort to murder, what Barker had done was it.
A bump jolted Al ie out of a deep sleep. Blinking, she gazed around her, taking in the neat but sparsely furnished room, bathed in a dim, eerie glow. The light in the adjoining kitchen was the only one she’d left on, but after a moment she could tel that she was in Clay’s living room. She’d fal en asleep on the couch.
Sitting up, she tried to identify the noise that had disturbed her. The darkness felt heavy, oppressive. It was late. Too late for friendly visitors.
Had she heard a cat, jumping from the railing to the porch? Or was it…a car door?
It hadn’t been a big bump. It was more of a quiet—
Thump.
There it was again. Nerves prickling, Al ie reached for her purse and hugged it close to her body. Joe’s goals in coming to the farm would have nothing to do with her purse.
She doubted he’d glance twice at it. But she had to protect it, just in case. She couldn’t let those pictures fal into the wrong hands—
Swish…Click…
That was no cat. Someone was in the house.
Thrusting her purse under the couch where it wouldn’t be seen, she grabbed the closest lamp. Then she crept silently to the wal near the opening to the kitchen and pressed herself against it. The movements she heard seemed to be coming from the area around the back door.
Creak…creak…creak, creak, creak…Someone was crossing the kitchen floor.
Heart pumping, Al ie leaned forward and peered around the door frame to see who it was. She held the lamp high, ready to bring it crashing down on the head of the intruder.
But what she saw surprised her. It was Grace, carrying her new baby in an infant seat.
“Grace?” she said, immediately lowering the lamp.
“Hi.”
Al ie put the lamp back on the end table and stepped into the light, feeling particularly rumpled and red-eyed.
“How’d you get in?” Before they’d left last night, Kirk had hammered a few boards across the broken door. She could see that those boards were stil intact and couldn’t picture Grace climbing through the window with her baby.
“I have a key to the mudroom.” She nodded toward the smal room just off the kitchen.
“Is something wrong?” Al ie asked.
Grace gazed at her steadily, then put her sleeping baby on the floor near her feet and sat at the kitchen table. “A lot is wrong, isn’t it?” she said with a weary smile. “But I’m not here with any more bad news. I sent Kennedy over to make sure the farm was secure, and he saw your car in the driveway.”
“I’m sorry. I should’ve told you I’d be here. I didn’t mean to make you come out so late at night.”
“The baby was fussy, anyway. When she gets like this, I take her for a car ride.” She adjusted Elizabeth’s blanket.
“Puts her right to sleep.”
Al ie envied Grace’s sweet infant the bliss of being unaware. “I was afraid Joe might come back,” she explained.
“I know.”
Silence fel for several minutes. Then Grace cleared her throat. “How’s your mother?”
“She’s been better, of course.”
“And you?” she asked. “Are you okay?”
Al ie wished everyone would quit asking her that. She was disappointed, hurt, upset and worried—about her mother, her father and Clay. But Grace had suffered a soul-deep kind of pain, and at such a tender age. It’d been worse than anything Al ie could have imagined. Yet Grace had received no friendship or support. She’d been reviled and gossiped about and judged—even accused of having hurt Barker! “No, I’m not okay,” she said softly.
Grace nodded. “I’m sorry. If it had to happen, I wish it was someone else and not my mother who was involved.”
Natural defensiveness made it difficult not to blame Irene for more than was probably fair. Especial y since Al ie didn’t know her al that wel . But in a situation like this, the fault couldn’t lie with only one person. And, after those pictures, the affair seemed less important than it otherwise would have. Al ie couldn’t stop thinking about what had happened to Grace and the other two girls in those photos.
“It’s not the affair that has me upset,” she blurted out.
Grace’s eyes widened.
“I mean, it’s heartbreaking, but…” Al ie could no longer find the words to express what she was feeling. She didn’t want to make Grace acknowledge something that had to be excruciating for her. But Clay’s defense hinged on his lawyer sister. If they were going to work together to help him, they had to be honest with each other, didn’t they?
Whoever had delivered those photographs had done it for a reason. Al ie wasn’t the only one to have seen them.
“Grace…” She forced the name around the lump in her throat but broke down immediately after.
Concern brought a worried frown to Grace’s elegant face as she stood and came toward her. “What is it, Al ie?
Is it about Clay?”
Wishing she could gain control of her wayward emotions, Al ie wiped her tears with the back of her hand. “I know, Grace,” she said, forcing back the sobs. “I know what Barker did to you.”
Grace turned pale and teetered on her feet as if she might col apse. Al ie started to reach out to her—but Grace stepped back, straightened and tilted her chin at such a defiant angle that she appeared absolutely regal, far above anything so degrading as the obscene images in those photographs.
“How?” she asked, her voice toneless.
Al ie longed to embrace her, to comfort her if possible—
and to reassure herself that they were both okay, despite everything. She needed some antidote to the anger pounding through her. She wanted to take on the world, to fight anyone who even looked at Grace wrong.
She could imagine those same emotions amplified in Clay, who loved Grace so much and had always tried to protect her. He must’ve felt like a failure when he realized; he must’ve sworn that nothing so vile would ever get past him again.
And then he must have—
Al ie refused to think it. He wasn’t the only person who could’ve acted. But now she knew it had to be one of the Montgomerys. If Clay wasn’t the actual culprit, he was protecting whoever it was.
“Someone left a package in my m-mailbox. It contained
—” Al ie struggled with more tears “—p-pictures,” she choked out.
“Portenski.” Grace swayed as if the mention of those pictures had been a physical blow. Again, Al ie wanted to touch her, to reassure her, but she suspected Clay’s sister needed the space, and that physical contact, no matter how wel intentioned, would be the wrong thing to do.
“Did you say Portenski? ” she asked. “You think Portenski gave them to me?”
“It had to be him,” she whispered. “He must’ve found them at the church.”
“When?”
“I don’t know.”
“Was the camera there, too?”
“No.” Grace stared at her for several long seconds, but Al ie guessed she wasn’t real y seeing her at al .
“Grace?” she said gently. “I’m sorry. I’m sorry for everything, even though I know sorry isn’t nearly good enough.”
Grace’s throat worked as she swal owed, but there were no tears in her blue eyes. “You didn’t tel Madeline…”
“Of course not.”
“So what are you going to do with the pictures?”
“What do you think I should do?” Al ie asked.
Grace hesitated. “If I say burn them, wil you tel the police I asked you to destroy evidence?”
Al ie shook her head. She wasn’t going to tel the police anything. They weren’t striving for justice, only to make the right people happy.
“Then burn them,” Grace whispered vehemently.
Al ie curled her fingers around Grace’s ice-cold hand.
Grace didn’t respond, but she didn’t withdraw, either. “What if Portenski has more?”
“If he wanted to turn them over to the police, he would’ve done it already. He wouldn’t have given them to you.”
Nodding, Al ie let her breath go. That made sense. She didn’t understand why he’d entrusted her with them, but—
A thought suddenly occurred to her. “Are you sure they didn’t come from Jed?” The pictures, the note at the cabin…Maybe he knew the truth, too, and sympathized with Grace.
“I can’t see how,” Grace said. “But…maybe. Maybe he found—” her voice broke “— them while he was working in the barn.”
“Then maybe Barker did come back that night. Maybe an argument ensued, and—”
“Jed didn’t kil him.”
Al ie felt a chil rol down her spine. From the way Grace had spoken, she knew who did. If Al ie had ever doubted it, she didn’t anymore. “If it wasn’t Jed, who was it?” she asked.
A ghost of a smile touched Grace’s lips. “Not Clay,” she said. Then she picked up her baby and left. She didn’t ask to see the pictures, didn’t ask to witness Al ie burning them.
But Al ie did exactly that, right there in Clay’s fireplace. She watched every disgusting photo twist and writhe in the heat, as she hoped Barker was twisting and writhing in hel , then go up in smoke.
Except for the photos of Barker with the other two girls.
Al ie decided to keep those safe. She knew they were a risk to Madeline’s happiness. That Clay and Grace would rather she destroyed them, too. But there could come a day when the truth won out. Then the Montgomerys would need the evidence for their side.
20
Clay stood at the periphery of the dance floor, drinking a beer. It felt so good to be out of jail, he didn’t care if he moved from that spot al night. Mol y was in town to see the baby, but Grace and Lauren had gone to sleep early, so Clay had taken his youngest sister dancing.
Right now, coming to the pool hal felt like a pretty great idea. Mol y seemed to be having fun dancing with a cowboy who’d just moved to Stil water.
Clay smiled as he watched her. He enjoyed Mol y’s laughter and animated conversation for a lot of reasons, but mostly because it had so little to do with the past, or what he was enduring in the present. Of everyone in his family, she seemed the least affected by what had happened the night Barker died. She’d been so young at the time, she hadn’t understood what their stepfather had done to Grace.
She only knew there’d been an argument and a terrible accident, and that they’d had to cover it up because they couldn’t risk having their mother carted off to prison.
Without Irene, they would’ve been split up and forced into foster care.
Leaning one shoulder against the wal , Clay took another long pul on his beer. As an adult, Mol y probably knew more about the abuse that had occurred than she had as a child. But it was stil largely in a cerebral sense. Grace refused to talk about Barker, so Clay guessed Mol y had never heard the gruesome details. Neither had she seen the pictures he and his mother had found and destroyed that night in Barker’s office. Unlike Grace, who’d acted like an automaton during those long hours, running and fetching everything he and Irene asked for, even helping scrub up the blood because they were so desperate for time, Mol y had covered her ears and run off to her bedroom, where she’d stayed until the fol owing morning, when it was al over.
Less than two years ago, she’d told Clay that The Night was more like a bad dream for her than anything else.
Lucky girl…
He saw Mol y staring at him over the shoulder of the cowboy she was dancing with, and tipped the top of his beer bottle her way.
She waved, indicating that she wanted him to join her on the dance floor. But he shook his head. He wasn’t interested in finding a partner. Maybe he was out of jail, which made him feel practical y euphoric, but he was only out on bail. He faced a difficult trial in the not so distant future. And that wasn’t al he had to worry about. Since the discovery of her affair with Dale McCormick, Irene had closeted herself in her little duplex and wouldn’t come out.
According to Madeline, she hadn’t even been to work.
Clay would’ve visited his mother and attempted to console her, but he was angry with her for going back to McCormick and making a bad situation even worse. For hurting Al ie…
He grimaced. Somehow, every thought led him back to the police chief’s daughter. Although Grace said she was okay, he wanted to contact her to see for himself. But he couldn’t. How could he expect her to pick up her old life and move on as if he didn’t exist if he was stil cal ing her?
“Hi, Clay. You’re looking good.”
Helaina, a woman he used to date, had sauntered up to him.
He nodded but barely acknowledged her beyond that.
He didn’t want to encourage her to hang around.
Unfortunately, she didn’t seem to notice that his response lacked enthusiasm. “I’m surprised to see you out and about,” she said.
“Why?” He held up his bottle. “Might as wel enjoy a beer while I can stil order one, eh?”
She sidled closer, reminding him of a cat eager to rub up against him. “Do you real y think they’re gonna put you away?”
“I think they’re gonna try.”
Her bottom lip came out. “It’l be a real loss to womankind if they succeed.”
He cocked an eyebrow at her suggestive tone, and she responded with a sultry smile. “Having a beer is good. But there are other things you should do while you have the chance,” she murmured, moving so that her breasts brushed his arm.
The fact that he might soon be permanently denied the pleasure of a woman made Clay crave sex more than ever.
But not with Helaina. Or any of the other women he’d known in the past. He wanted Al ie—so badly he dreamed of her almost every night. “Thanks, but I’ve got my sister here with me,” he said.
“She’s not big enough to find her own way home?”
“It wouldn’t be very nice of me to leave her, would it? She just got into town this morning.”
Helaina’s heart-shaped face flushed with disappointment, but she shrugged. “You have my number.”
He started to give her a noncommittal response—but the words congealed in his throat. The door across the room had opened and Al ie walked in. She was wearing an attractive skirt that hit her above the knees, along with a pair of cowboy boots and a tight-fitting brown sweater. And she was alone. He knew she hadn’t come to socialize when a frown of concentration wrinkled her forehead and she began to search the crowd.
Helaina fol owed his gaze. “What?” she said. “Don’t tel me you’re stil seeing Miss Goody two-shoes.”
“I’m not seeing anyone.” For Al ie’s sake, he wanted the rumors to die down. But she’d already spotted him and was coming straight toward him.
“Can we step outside?” she asked as soon as she reached him. “I’d like to talk to you for a moment.”
Clay could feel Helaina’s attention, knew she was listening to every word. “Not tonight,” he said.
Al ie blinked in surprise. “Excuse me, but I’m not asking you to dance. This is important.”
He scowled. “It can’t be important. We don’t have any business together.”
“Oooh,” Helaina said, her voice lively with interest.
Al ie’s eyes cut to her, then returned to him. “What, exactly, are you trying to prove? I’m doing my best to help you.”
“I don’t need you,” he replied, sounding as indifferent as he could. “For anything.”
Al ie’s chest lifted, as though she had to gasp for breath, as if he’d just stabbed her or something. But the way his heart pounded and his stomach tensed, Clay knew he was probably feeling worse. He hated himself for saying what he’d said. It was the biggest lie he’d ever told, but he saw no alternative. As soon as he got out of jail, he’d left Al ie a message tel ing her to find another job. She’d left him a message saying she wasn’t walking away from his case whether she had a job or not.
The only way to get her to give up on trying to save him was to convince her he wasn’t worth saving.
She glared at him for several seconds, during which he forced himself to act as careless as possible. He even saluted her before taking another drink of his beer. But it was Helaina, laughing behind her hand, that seemed to be the final straw.
Tears fil ed Al ie’s eyes, but she raised her chin and spoke clearly. “Whatever you want,” she said and stalked off.
As Al ie hurried through the crowd, the crushing pain made it difficult to breathe. Several people tried to stop her.
She paused to respond to a few, mechanical y going through the usual greetings, but it was mostly a blur. Grace had told her that Clay believed whoever had shot him had done it to avoid being identified. So she’d gone back to the cabin and interviewed every gas station attendant and store clerk along the route. Ralph Ling, an attendant at the gas station just before the turnoff to the lake, had some very interesting things to say. But what could she do if Clay refused to listen?
I don’t need you…for anything. Those words hurt so much, she could hardly bear to think of them. And the angry glares she received from many of the people who used to smile didn’t help.
Final y reaching the gravel parking lot behind the pool hal , she headed for her car. She just wanted to know that Clay wouldn’t go to prison for a crime he didn’t commit.
And she wanted…
God, she wanted more than that. She wanted him. There was no use denying it. Beth Ann had been right. Al ie had assumed she’d be fine because she’d known what to expect. But she’d been overconfident.
There’s no one else, at least no one like him….
No kidding, she thought bitterly. She tried to wrench open her car door, but a male hand closed over hers before she could.
Clay had tried to let Al ie go. He’d stood perfectly stil while she disappeared into the crowd. Hadn’t moved when someone cal ed to Helaina, drawing her away. Hadn’t so much as flinched when someone behind him said, “He cast Al ie aside already? Me, I would’ve given her a few more days, taken her back to my house and—”
Because he couldn’t tolerate hearing the end of that statement, Clay had bolted to the bar to order another drink. But he hadn’t stopped there, the way he’d intended.
He’d kept on walking, past the pool tables, the dartboards and the restrooms. Before he knew it, he was in the parking lot and jogging to catch up with her.
“I’m sorry,” he whispered, turning her to face him. “I’m so sorry.”
Her eyes were ful of confusion and pain when they lifted to his, which shredded the last of his restraint. He told himself to explain, to somehow convince her to leave. But he couldn’t get the words out.
Bending his head, he kissed her instead—instantly drowning in the wet warmth of her mouth.
“I’m no good for you, Al ie,” he murmured. Some distant voice in his head told him it wasn’t too late to put her in the car and send her off. But he was desperate to feel her against him. And she was kissing him back as if she felt the same driving urgency. They couldn’t touch each other intimately enough, couldn’t get close enough.
Dimly, he could hear the music in the pool hal and realized he needed to find them some privacy. So he led her inside a smal shed, where the owner of Good Times kept some lawn-and-garden equipment.
He barely managed to shut the door and wedge a narrow saw blade in the latch so it couldn’t be opened from the outside, before he sat her on a crudely made shelf and greedily slid his hands up her skirt.
Al ie gasped and spread her legs, and he felt his body’s instant response. “I lie awake at night craving the taste and feel of you,” he whispered. “I want you more than I’ve ever wanted anyone.”
He felt her move, sensed that she was reaching above them. Then he heard a snap and light flooded the smal , crowded room. She’d found the pul -chain to the bulb on the ceiling. “I want to watch you make love to me,” she said. “I want to see it this time, your face, your body, everything.”
Clay guided her hand to his pants, then held his breath as she undid the buttons. Her eyes never wavered from his until she was finished. Then she looked down—and he thought he’d never seen a sexier smile.
“Can you come home with me?” Clay whispered, easing her back onto the shelf.
Al ie was covered in a light sheen of sweat and feeling weak from the bone-melting pleasure. Her clothes were halfway on and halfway off, and she stil had her legs wrapped around his waist.
“I need to check on Whitney. If she and my mom are asleep, and everything’s okay, I’l drive over. For a little while.”
He pul ed up his pants and started helping her dress.
“This is crazy,” he said. “This is setting us both up for a terrible disappointment. You know that.”
She stopped fussing with her clothes and reached up to smooth the hair off his forehead. “I only know that I’m in love with you.”
He winced as if it hurt him to hear her say it. “I don’t want you to be in love with me. I don’t want to feel the pain of missing you. And I don’t want you to feel it, either. I have nothing to offer you. Don’t you understand that?”
“Al I’m asking is that you love me in return.”
“And what good is that?” he asked bitterly. “Wil it keep you safe and warm? No. Wil it mean we can be together?
No. I’m going to prison!”
“You’re not there yet,” she said stubbornly.
He shoved an impatient hand through the hair she’d just smoothed. “Let’s be honest. You’re a police officer. What are my chances?”
“I don’t know,” she said, refusing to go where he was trying to lead her. “A lot could happen before and during the trial.”
He buttoned his pants in quick impatient movements.
“You’re avoiding reality.”
“I’m being optimistic.” She finished righting her bra and sweater, then hopped off the shelf and pul ed down her skirt.
He caught her chin to make her look up at him. “Al ie, if you don’t stay away from me and make things right with your parents, where wil you be if I go to prison? Do you think I want to imagine people around here thumbing their noses at you? Treating you like shit for loving me? Do you think I want to be responsible for the rift between you and everyone you care about?”
“Maybe I won’t stay here,” she said. “But wherever I go, I’l be waiting for you.”
He froze as if he couldn’t believe what she’d just said.
Then a tormented expression crossed his face, and she could’ve sworn she saw tears glistening in his eyes.
He snapped off the light before she could real y tel . “I want more than that for you,” he whispered hoarsely, but she had the impression that, for himself, he craved exactly what she’d promised him. And that was enough to give her hope.
“You’re not the only one who has a choice,” she said quietly.
It was Mol y who answered the door when Al ie arrived at the farm. Al ie felt a little sil y standing on the doorstep at nearly one-thirty in the morning, but Clay’s youngest sister didn’t seem to think anything of it.
“Hi,” she said. “Come on in. Clay’s in the kitchen whipping up some eggs and grits and bacon.”
Al ie nodded. The scent of bacon seemed to pervade the whole house. “Smel s great.”
Mol y gave her an exaggerated grimace. “Yeah, wel , we’l see how it turns out.”
Faced with Al ie’s questioning look, Mol y quickly explained. “I was going to make it, but he took the spatula away from me. You know how he is—large and in charge!”
She’d raised her voice on the last sentence so Clay would be sure to hear her. “How many eggs did you expect me to let you ruin?” he asked from the kitchen.
“So I burned a few,” she said with a shrug. “I live in New York. I eat out. But I would’ve gotten the hang of it eventual y.”
“I’m hungry,” he grumbled. “I didn’t want to wait al night.”
Al ie chuckled at their banter as she fol owed Clay’s sister into the kitchen. Then Clay turned toward her, wearing the comfortable-looking, wel -worn jeans he’d had on at Good Times and a simple white T-shirt, and her heart leaped into her throat. Everything about him appealed to her—his rugged face, his muscular body, his fierce independence, his stubborn pride, his determination to take on the whole world if necessary…and the way he made love. Especial y the way he made love. He knew how to be just the right amount of gentle and just the right amount of rough.
She felt warm thinking about what had occurred in the toolshed earlier. No wonder Beth Ann was having such a difficult time getting over him.
“What?” Clay said, watching her closely.
“I was thinking about the night Beth Ann was here and cal ed the police on you,” she lied.
One eyebrow slid up in a sardonic expression. “You were smiling.”
“It was the first time I’d ever had a half-naked woman come charging at me from the shadows. And the glower on your face when you answered the door—”
“What I remember is that you made me strip for you,”
Clay interrupted pointedly. “And the fact that you were taking an awful lot of pictures. You wanted to see my chest.
You wanted to see my back. I’m surprised you didn’t have me flex for you.”
Al ie could tel Clay thought he’d bested her, that she’d back off because of Mol y. But she wasn’t quite finished yet.
“It was worth it,” she said wistful y. “I stil have one of those pictures tucked between my mattresses.”
“You’re kidding,” he said.
She gave him a teasing grin. “Maybe, maybe not.”
“I’m going to check,” he promised.
Mol y glanced from Al ie to Clay, then frowned at the food Clay was neglecting. “Wait a second. Am I going to have to finish breakfast?”
Clay turned back to his work. “Hel , no. Then we’l never get fed.”
“I don’t think it’s food you want right now,” Mol y grumbled.
Clay threw Al ie a guilty look but finished the eggs and bacon.
“How long are you staying?” Al ie asked Clay’s sister as Clay handed them each a plate.
“I fly back on Sunday.”
“What do you think of the new baby?”
“She’s beautiful. I just wish…”
“What?” Al ie coaxed.
“That Clay and Grace didn’t have to worry about the trial.
That I didn’t have to worry about it, either.”
Mention of the future put an immediate damper on everyone’s mood. “It’l be al right,” Al ie insisted.
Mol y ate the last of her food and went to rinse her plate at the sink. “I think it’s great, you know. The way you’re sticking by him.”
If only she could find something that would save him.
“Thanks.”
When they were finished eating, Clay stacked their plates on the counter, then took her hand. “I’m getting tired.
Let’s go up to bed while I stil have some energy.”
Al ie resisted his attempt to pul her toward the stairs.
She couldn’t imagine marching up to his bedroom and making love with him while his sister was in the house and knew exactly what they were doing. “Actual y, I should get home.”
He scowled. “Real y?”
“Real y. But I…was hoping we could talk for a few minutes before I go.”
“We could talk upstairs in my bed,” he said hopeful y.
She laughed. “I was thinking of here or in the living room.”
“I’l let you two be alone,” Mol y said. “I’m beat.”
“Good night,” Al ie said.
Mol y waved as she headed up the stairs. “’Night.”
Clay took the chair next to Al ie, stretched out his long legs and locked his hands behind his head. The definition in his arms and chest made Al ie’s mouth go dry. Had she been crazy to turn down a trip to his bedroom? Probably.
But Mol y was so close….
“What is it?” he asked.
Besides the fact that she wanted to undress him right here in the kitchen? “You know the last gas station before you leave the highway to go to the cabin?”
The expression in Clay’s eyes changed, intensified. “Of course. I stopped there. That’s where I bought the condoms we used.”
Al ie was glad Mol y had left. “It is?”
“Yeah.”
“Did you see anyone you recognized?”
Clay’s forehead furrowed. “No. I’ve gone over every second of that night. Al I remember about the place is that the attendant was muttering about some guy getting blood on the floor. But whoever it was had already pul ed out when I arrived.”
“You didn’t see him?”
“We might’ve passed. I wasn’t real y paying attention. I was too busy arguing with myself.”
“About what?”
“I knew I didn’t have any business planning to sleep with you,” he said with a grin. “But I also didn’t want to show up unprepared in case the temptation proved too great.”
She laughed. “It’s a good thing you came prepared.”
“I’m stil prepared,” he said softly.
Desire coiled tightly inside Al ie. She wanted to let Clay lead her upstairs, but she knew she’d be too embarrassed to face Mol y in the morning. “I’d better get home,” she said.
“Mol y doesn’t care, Al ie.”
“I know. It’s just…” She felt her cheeks grow hot at the thought of Mol y overhearing them.
“Jeez, you are a straight arrow,” he said with a laugh.
“No! I’m not.” She shrugged. “Okay, maybe I am.”
He pul ed her chair around so they were facing each other, maneuvering her weight as easily as he might transfer a sack of groceries from one spot to another. “It’s okay. I like that about you. So what did you find at the gas station?”
“The attendant, Ralph Ling, remembered something interesting.”
“What?”
“A man came in around midnight with blood dripping from his hand. He hurried into the bathroom to clean himself up but, like you said, Ling wasn’t too pleased about the mess because he’d have to mop again.”
Resting his elbows on his knees, Clay took her hands in his. “Did Ling say who this man was?”
“He’d never seen him before.”
“Why was the guy bleeding?”
“He told Ling he’d stopped at the side of the road to let his dog have a potty break but accidental y dropped the leash. The dog bounded into the woods, and he fel while chasing after it.”
“He fel in the woods? Or he cut his arm when he broke your window?”
“Exactly,” Al ie said.
“Did Ling see the injury?”
“I’m afraid not.”
Clay rubbed the inside of her wrists with his thumbs.
“What about the dog? Did Ling see the dog?”
“Ling watched the guy drive off and said, unless it was a very smal dog, he was alone. And no stray dogs have shown up in the area since.”
“That’s odd, isn’t it?”
“Besides that, Ling said the guy was acting a little weird.”
Clay raised his eyes to hers. “In what way?”
“He wore a basebal cap pul ed very low. When he approached the register to buy some Band-Aids, he pul ed it even lower and turned his head away, as if he was worried about the security camera.”
“There was a camera?” Dropping her hands, Clay stood.
“Tel me he was filmed.”
“Ling thinks he might’ve been. But they cycle the tapes, so he’s not sure whether or not it’s been destroyed. Even if he found it, he needed the owner’s permission to give it to me, and we couldn’t reach him.”
“When wil you hear?”
“I got a message from him just before I walked into Good Times tonight. I’m supposed to pick it up tomorrow afternoon.”
Clay rubbed the back of his neck. “What about the sheriff’s investigation? Haven’t they talked to this Ling?”
Al ie hated to tel Clay this, but she knew it probably wouldn’t surprise him. “I don’t think the sheriff’s department is doing anything to find the man who shot you. They’re pretty much leaving it to my father.”
“Professional courtesy?”
“Something like that.”
He crossed to the sink and gazed out at the night, but he didn’t say anything, so she continued. “Right now, I’m actual y glad. If they were investigating in earnest, they might’ve gotten hold of the tape. Now we’l get it.”
“Have you told Grace about Ling?” he asked without turning.
“No. I tried cal ing her on my way back to town, but got her answering machine. Then I tried you, with the same result. That’s when I drove by the pool hal and saw your truck.”
“She’l be happy,” he said.
“This could mean a lot to al of us.”
He sighed. “It’s late. I’d better let you head home.”
She nodded, and he walked her out to her car. The heat was growing more intense as June progressed, and with it the oppressive humidity. But Al ie liked the scent of damp earth and confederate jasimine that embraced her at the farm.
“It’s nice here, isn’t it?”
“It beats prison,” he replied, opening the car door for her.
She started to get in, but he gave her arm a gentle yank to get her to look back at him. “How are you handling your father’s affair?”
“With your mother? ” she asked wryly.
His expression was difficult to read, but that was more often the case than not. And tonight they were in darkness, except for the security light on the barn. “Yeah,” he said.
“You knew, didn’t you? You already knew the night I told you what I suspected.”
He nodded. “I tried to stop it, but…some people can’t avoid a brick wal even when they see it coming.”
Was she one of those people? Clay had been trying to warn her that fal ing in love with him would only cause her pain. He’d put her on notice at almost every opportunity.
Was he right? Would she live to regret losing her heart to such a man?
Probably.
“I know the feeling,” she said.
He stared down at her. “It’s not too late.”
“Are you kidding? It was too late the night Beth Ann cal ed me to the farm.”
Lifting her chin with one finger, he kissed her tenderly.
“Then you real y do have my picture between your mattresses,” he teased.
She delved her hands into his thick hair and stood on tiptoe to kiss him again, more aggressively. “You don’t know that.”
He shook his head and let go of her. “Cal me when you get home, so I’l know you’re al right.”
“I wil .”
He caught her arm. “Al ie?”
“What?”
“Wil you come over for dinner tomorrow night?”
There was something different in his voice, something that said the invitation wasn’t as simple as it seemed.
“Sure,” she said cautiously.
“And bring Whitney?” he asked.
Whitney? Al ie swal owed hard. As long as she kept Whitney separate from Clay, her daughter’s life would remain relatively untouched, no matter what happened. But if Al ie brought Whitney to the farm and let her meet him…
She opened her mouth to say she’d think about it. But she knew he was testing her, to see if she’d meant the promises she’d made, and the flicker of hope in his eyes was too much for her. She couldn’t bear to extinguish it. “Of course,” she said.
“I’l be good to her,” he promised solemnly. “You know that, don’t you?”
“I know that.”
“Good night.” He gave her a quick peck and waited for her to get behind the wheel before closing her door.
Al ie backed out of the driveway and headed toward town, but once she knew her tail ights could no longer be seen from the farm, she pul ed off onto the shoulder and sat staring into the darkness al around her. Clay was starting to open up, to grab hold of the relationship.
Had she been reckless in making the reassurances and declarations she’d made, in giving him hope?
She cringed at the thought. He’d lived his life in a certain way because that was how he could bear it. She had no business mixing things up, making him vulnerable.
And yet, they deserved to fight for what they felt, didn’t they?
Taking a deep breath, Al ie started her car and continued home. She couldn’t change anything now. She cared too much about him to even try.
Once she arrived, she crept into her room and into bed.
Whitney occasional y spent the night in Evelyn’s room, but tonight she slept in Al ie’s bed.
Al ie was glad to have her there. She needed to hold her daughter close. Gathering Whitney’s smal body into the curve of hers, Al ie kissed her temple.
“I love you,” she whispered and prayed she was making the right decision about including Whitney in her relationship with Clay.
21
Al ie could hear her father’s voice in the kitchen.
“No. Please, tel me he’s not here!” She groaned and rol ed onto her stomach to bury her head beneath the pil ow.
But she could stil hear the argument between her parents and knew she had to get up and play referee or there was no tel ing what kind of scene her daughter might witness.
Whitney had to be out there. She wasn’t in bed.
Al ie put on her robe and marched into the kitchen. Her mother stood against the counter in her own robe, arms folded stubbornly across her chest. Her father faced her mother, wearing his police uniform. According to Grace, the town had given Dale his termination papers, so he wouldn’t be wearing the uniform much longer.
Al ie wondered what he was going to do then and almost felt sorry for him. Some people can’t avoid a brick wall even when they see it coming…. She agreed, and yet she found it difficult to forgive Dale. Maybe it was because he’d always set himself up as an example, so when he made a mistake it was more shocking than if someone else had.
Especial y a mistake of this magnitude.
“Is there any chance I could persuade the two of you to take a drive together?” she asked, nodding meaningful y toward Whitney, who was sitting at the kitchen table downing a bowl of cold cereal while staring up at them with wide eyes.
“Don’t leave,” Whitney said. “I want to hear.”
Al ie raised her eyebrows at her mother.
“There’s no need,” Evelyn said. “Your father was on his way out.”
“No, I wasn’t,” he retorted. “I just got here.”
Evelyn stiffened. “I want you to go.”
Dale sighed heavily. “You have to talk to me sometime, Evelyn. Whether you like it or not, you’re stil my wife.”
“Not for long.”
He looked crestfal en at the vehemence of her response.
“Please…I—I know I deserve the way you feel about me, but at least hear me out.”
Al ie hated to see her father, who’d always been so confident, humbled to such a degree. But he’d brought it on himself. There was nothing she could do to help him. Right now she didn’t even want to help him. Or maybe she did. It was al so confusing.
“What’s there to say?” Evelyn asked.
“I’m sorry. I’ve been trying to tel you that since—” he glanced nervously at Whitney “—since you found out. But you wouldn’t let me.”
“You think that’s enough?” Evelyn marveled. “I’m sorry? ”
For the first time, the expression on her face revealed how truly devastated she was. “We had forty years together, Dale. Forty years you threw away for—”
“Mom!” Al ie interrupted, afraid of the word she might choose to finish that sentence. “Can’t you at least step outside? If nothing else, you can talk about the division of property.”
“I’l get half of everything,” her mother said. “I’ve been a loyal wife since the day I married him.”
“I made a mistake,” he said miserably.
Evelyn clamped her shaking hands together. “Are you tel ing me—” she hesitated “—you saw her only once?”
Dale didn’t respond.
“No, of course not.” The emotional strain was taking its tol , and Evelyn was beginning to break down. While Al ie thought that was probably good—her mother needed to deal with her grief instead of denying it—Al ie real y didn’t want this happening in front of her daughter. It could make an indelible—and damaging—impression.
“Never mind, Whitney and I wil go for a drive,” she said.
Evelyn held up a hand to stop her. “No, your father’s the one who has to go.”
“But Grandpa’s sorry,” Whitney said. “Can’t he stay, Boppo? Can’t you make him breakfast like before?”
Evelyn didn’t answer. She was too busy staring at her husband. “You must care about her,” she whispered. “I can’t believe you’d do what you did to me unless you cared about her.”
His gaze fel to the floor. “I do care. I won’t lie about that.
But I care a lot more about you.”
Silence fil ed the room as tears began to slip down Evelyn’s cheeks.
Al ie felt more torn and confused than ever, but she reached out to console her mother.
Evelyn resisted her touch and managed to blink away her tears. “Then why?” she asked Dale. “Why did you do it?”
He hung his head. “I—I’m getting old and fal ing apart. I didn’t want to see it. I didn’t want to diet and check my blood pressure and see myself in the mirror as I real y am, to acknowledge that I’ve lost more hair and gained more weight. Irene made me forget al that. She fed me cheesecake and wine and…and I felt like a younger, stronger version of myself. I know that’s not much of an answer. It doesn’t real y make sense to me, either. But it’s al I can come up with.”
“You look good to me, Grandpa,” Whitney said.
He smiled sadly at her.
“I don’t know what to say,” Evelyn replied. “I don’t know how I feel or if we can get over this.”
“Wil you at least try?” he asked earnestly.
Al ie knew that, in a town the size of Stil water, the embarrassment alone had to be overwhelming. And that was only one of the emotions her mother must be feeling.
“I’l think about it,” Evelyn said. “That’s al I can promise.”
“Thank you,” he said. “Would you come home?”
Evelyn shook her head, and he backed off right away.
“Just think about it.”
“She wil ,” Al ie said. “And now you should go.”
He started for the door. Al ie fol owed to let him out. She wasn’t sure how she felt toward her father, but she knew there was love for him inside her somewhere. It was just mixed up with everything else.
After he’d stepped outside, he turned back. “You should know something, Al ie,” he said.
“What?” She expected him to tel her not to judge him too harshly, that everyone makes mistakes. Or that he’d appreciate her help in trying to talk to Evelyn. But nothing prepared her for what actual y came out of his mouth.
“I think it was Hendricks who shot Clay.”
It took a moment for those words to register. “You’ve got to be kidding me.”
“No.”
“What makes you think so?”
“Yesterday, I found your gun hidden in the evidence room, yet I’ve seen no report of its having been turned in.”
The evidence room was usual y locked, and al the officers had access to the key. “That means it could be anyone on the force,” she said.
“No. Hendricks is the only one who works alone. I’d bet money it was him.”
“But why would he want to kil Clay?”
“Maybe he didn’t,” he said. “Maybe he wanted the money for a down payment on a new truck.”
“He’s driving one?”
“I saw it a few hours ago.”
Al ie waited impatiently for Madeline to pick up the phone.
Clay’s stepsister answered on the fourth ring. “Stillwater Independent.”
“Maddy?”
“Yeah?”
“It’s Al ie.”
“What’s up, Al ie?”
“Has the reward you posted for information on the shooting turned up any leads?”
“No.”
“None?”
“Not one. I would’ve cal ed you right away. Why?”
Al ie swal owed a sigh. “Just checking.”
There was a slight pause. “I’m sorry.”
“We’re al sorry,” she said.
The clutter and absolute filth of Hendricks’s house was appal ing, and so was the stench. It was al Al ie could do not to cal after his wife, who’d answered the door and gone to get him, that she’d meet him in the front yard.
A teenage boy and girl lounged on the worn orange couches in the family room to her left, playing video games.
It was early afternoon, but they were stil wearing T-shirts and pajama bottoms and hadn’t combed their hair. To her right, a toddler with a sagging diaper and no other clothes foraged in the kitchen cupboards, pul ing out one cereal box after another and eating what he wanted.
The stairs creaked. Trying not to gag when the toddler ate something off the floor, Al ie looked up to see Hendricks’s wife, Col een, returning. “He said he’l cal you later, when he wakes up. He’s exhausted. You know how it is when you work graveyard.”
Al ie hesitated. She was about to insist on speaking to him now. With everything that’d been going on, she was desperate for answers. But she figured it might be smart to get the tape first and see what was on it. She’d have a lot more leverage if Hendricks showed up clearly enough to be identified. “No problem,” she said. “Let me give you my new number.”
It took a while, but after digging through several drawers in the kitchen and living room, Col een final y came up with a pen and paper and wrote down Al ie’s number.
“How’s that cut on your husband’s hand?” Al ie asked as they walked to the door.
Col een shook her head. “It’s healing, but it needed six stitches.”
Al ie caught her breath. She’d been bluffing, but the bluff had paid off. “That’s what I heard,” she said sympathetical y. “How did it happen?”
“At work.”
“At the department or—”
She must’ve sounded a little too eager, because Col een’s simple, trusting smile faded and her expression grew guarded. “I’m not sure. You’l have to ask him.”
“I’l do that.” Al ie stepped out and waved toward the brand new Ford F–150 sitting in the weed-fil ed driveway.
“Nice truck. Maybe I’l be able save enough for one of those someday.”
“It’s nice, but I’m a little worried about the payments.”
“You financed it?” Al ie asked.
“Of course,” Col een said, then the door closed with a decisive click.
“Do you have it?” Clay asked.
Al ie transferred the phone to her other ear and glanced at the tape on the passenger seat of her car. “I do.”
“What does it show?”
She could hear the caution in his voice, the effort he was making not to expect too much. “The tape’s old and grainy,”
she said. “But I can see a heavyset man buying Band-Aids.
He’s acting fidgety and wearing a basebal cap.”
“A red one?”
“The tape’s black-and-white. But it’s not Jed’s hat, if that’s what you’re wondering. It has a different logo.”
“Is there any way to tel who it is?”
Al ie slowed to navigate a particularly tight curve. “From the man’s build, it looks an awful lot like Hendricks.”
“Who?”
“Officer Hendricks,” she said and explained what her father had told her earlier.
“But why would Hendricks steal your gun and leave you that note?” Clay asked.
She turned down the music she had playing in the background. “I think he was trying to be clever, to make me believe it was you.”
“So you’d final y fal in line with the Vincel is and everyone else?”
“I guess. I was the lone holdout, and he was trying to convert me.”
“Why? He doesn’t real y have a vested interest in the situation. He’s not related to the Vincel is. He sees them at church and they’re sociable to him. But he’s married with kids. I’ve never even seen him with Joe or his brother.”
“Money,” Al ie explained. “The Vincel is or someone else paid him to do it.”
There was a long silence, as if Clay was thinking it through.
“If you hadn’t stopped at the same gas station, he probably wouldn’t have shot you,” she went on. “I don’t think you were actual y supposed to be involved.”
“He must’ve seen me when I pul ed in and thought I saw him, too.”
“That’s my guess.”
“So he returned to the cabin to make sure I didn’t tel anyone.” He paused. “For a cop, he didn’t do a very good job of silencing me.”
“It was so dark, and what he was doing probably scared the hel out of him. The next day, when he realized you weren’t dead, it was too late to be any more thorough. But I doubt he would’ve had the nerve to try again, anyway.”
“By now, he must think he got away clean.”
“Since the video isn’t clear enough to prove it was him beyond a reasonable doubt, maybe he will get away clean,”
she said sadly.
“Did you check the inside of your car before you had the window fixed? See if he left any blood behind?”
The day was growing warm. Al ie could feel her clothes sticking to her and adjusted the air-conditioning vents to hit her more directly. “I checked. There wasn’t anything. But—”
An idea suddenly occurred to her. “What about the gas station?”
“What about it?”
“Hendricks didn’t do anything to clean up, right? He left that to the attendant.”
“Who was already getting out his mop when I arrived.”
“I admit it’s a long shot, but it’s possible he might’ve missed a spot or two, if not on the floor, then in the restroom. Maybe while I’m this close, I should go back and see.”
“Wil the owner let you snoop around like that?”
“I think so. He’s fascinated by the fact that I’m investigating a shooting.” Slowing, Al ie found a safe place to pul off the highway and turn around.
“Do you have what you need to col ect a sample if you find it?” Clay asked.
“Of course. I carry my forensics bag in my trunk.”
“Stil ?”
“Always.”
“But even if you find his DNA, what’s to stop Hendricks from saying he had a nosebleed there three months ago?”
Clay asked. “You told me the station cycles its security tapes, so we wouldn’t be able to go back and prove he was lying—that he wasn’t there earlier.”
“He doesn’t know that,” she said. “And his wife already admitted that he had a cut on his hand.”
“She did?”
“She clammed up right afterward, but I got that much.
Anyway, I think this is how we play it—we tel Hendricks you saw him the night you were shot. If we’re lucky, he’l panic and swear he’s never been to that particular gas station.
Chances are, before that night, he hadn’t. He’s certainly never been invited to the cabin. He drives my father crazy.”
“He drives everyone crazy.”
“Then we introduce the tape,” she continued, “showing a man of Hendricks’s exact height and weight buying Band-Aids, together with a DNA profile that puts him right where he said he’s never been. Hopeful y, that’l persuade him to give us what we real y want.”
“The name of the person who paid him.”
“That’s it,” Al ie said, but her mind wasn’t on the conversation anymore. A truck had come right up on her bumper and was honking to get her attention.
“Does Whitney like steak?” Clay asked, changing the subject.
Al ie twisted to look behind her, but the glare of the afternoon sun reflected off the windshield of the other vehicle, making it impossible to see the driver.
“Al ie?”
“Someone wants me to pul over,” she said.
“Why?”
“I don’t know. But if you don’t hear from me in five minutes, cal the police.”
Clay cal ed Al ie back immediately after she’d disconnected. He wanted to know who was flagging her down. Now. But she wasn’t answering.
Hello, this is Allie. Leave your name and number and I’ll get back to you as soon as possible.
Hanging up, he dialed again—and again got her recorded message. Final y, he pushed the phone across the table and stalked to the window above the sink, where he stared out, feeling pensive and uneasy.
He didn’t have a cel phone so he couldn’t leave. Should he wait for her to cal ? Continue trying to reach her?
Summon the cops, just in case?
It had only been three or four minutes, but he couldn’t wait any longer. He was going to cal the police, then head up there himself.
But the phone rang just as he picked it up.
“Al ie?” he said immediately.
“I’m fine,” she replied.
“What’s going on?”
“I can’t explain right now. Jed and I are going to the cabin. I’m sorry, but it looks as if I won’t be able to make dinner.”
“I’m not worried about dinner,” he said. “I’m worried about you. What does Jed want?”
“I’m not sure yet. But I’l cal you as soon as I know.”
“Should I come up there?”
“No. We’l be finished before you could ever reach us,”
she said and disconnected.
Clay wasn’t about to sit home and wonder. Grabbing his car keys, he charged out of the house—and right into a middle-aged man several inches shorter than he was who’d just climbed the stairs to the front door. With his graying dark hair tied back, he looked like some kind of Wil ie Nelson wannabe.
But even after twenty-five years, Clay recognized his own father.
Al ie couldn’t move, couldn’t breathe. She sat in the log chair she’d taken at the cabin, her stomach churning as she stared at Jed Fowler. “Why wouldn’t you speak to me when I came to your house?” she asked.
He didn’t answer, but he’d nearly run her off the road, trying to initiate this private meeting. When she’d realized who was driving the blue truck that had come so close, she’d stopped at the most public place she could find, a smal strip mal not far from the gas station where Hendricks had gone, and had her finger on the Send button of her phone, with 911 already programmed in. But Jed had managed to convince her that he merely had something to say, so she’d cal ed Clay to tel him who she was with and that she was fine. Then she and Jed had come to the cabin.
After al the effort he’d put into getting her alone, it was still difficult to drag anything out of him.
“Jed, please,” she said. “You have to speak more freely.
I…I need details. I have to understand.”
“I didn’t trust you,” he said simply.
“Why not?”
“I thought you’d go along with the rest of ’em.”
“The rest of them,” she repeated.
He shoved his hands in the pockets of his work coveral s. “The Vincel is. Your father. The mayor.”
“What makes you think I won’t?”
There was a two-or three-second lag before every answer, but at least Jed was willing to talk about the Barker case. That was something, after keeping his mouth shut for nineteen years. “I’ve been watching you,” he said at last.
She’d noticed. His unwavering attention had made her very uncomfortable and suspicious. So did the fact that he’d been fol owing her. To Clay’s farm. To Grace’s stand.
To the gas station where she’d picked up the tape. Today he’d been driving a truck someone must’ve brought in for repairs, because she hadn’t recognized it or she would’ve realized who he was a lot sooner.
“Are you the person who left me that package?” she asked.
He looked puzzled for a moment. Then the confusion cleared. “You mean the one in your mailbox?”
Her phone rang, but she turned it to silent and slipped it into her purse. She was final y getting somewhere and was afraid it would spook Jed if they were interrupted. “Yes.”
“It came from Portenski.”
Just as Grace had said.
“I saw him deliver it,” he added.
Jed had been watching her very closely indeed. He’d even been keeping an eye on her house while she slept!
“Do you know what was inside it?”
“No.”
“Pictures.”
He grimaced.
“Do you want me to tel you what was in them?”
“No.”
He said only that one word, but she could tel he was having a strong emotional reaction. “Why?”
He sighed heavily. “I can guess.”
“How?”
“I could tel by the way Barker looked at her.”
Al ie sat up straighter. “By the way he looked at whom? ”
“Grace. I was afraid it was happening again.”
A chil ran down Al ie’s spine. “Again? You knew it had happened before?”
He stared at the floor as if he was ashamed. “I could’ve stopped it.”
“But?”
“Eliza wouldn’t let me.”
Eliza. Jed was talking about Barker’s wife. The framed program he kept in his living room flashed through Al ie’s mind.
“But I had no proof,” he went on. “Only what she told me she suspected. And she was terrified of him. She wouldn’t let me say a word to anyone. She promised me, when she was ready, she’d have me take her away from Stil water.
She said that was when we’d turn in the pictures she’d found.”
More pictures? Or were they the same ones? “Were you and Eliza lovers?” she asked.
“Like your father and Mrs. Montgomery? No.”
There was no judgment in his words. He was merely clarifying. So Al ie felt comfortable doing that, too. “What was the nature of your relationship?”
“We were…friends,” he said simply. “She was always…
so sad. I…I wanted to help her. But…”
“But?”
“I didn’t act soon enough.”
“Or she gave up the fight before you could.”
“Is that what you think?” he asked, responding quickly for the first time. “That she took her own life?”
Al ie felt her eyes widen. “Isn’t that what you think?”
The way he clenched his jaw told her it wasn’t what he thought at al . He thought…“You’re not saying Barker killed her!”
When he didn’t deny it, Al ie knew that was exactly what he was saying. “That’s why you’ve got her picture in your living room,” she breathed as the truth dawned on her. “As a reminder.”
Again, he said nothing but Al ie knew she was right. That framed program was his tribute to a friend he’d cared about, a friend he felt he’d let down. “Is she the one who told you what Barker did to—” Al ie swal owed hard and forced the words out “—the girls?”
“She told me she found some pictures. Told me they were despicable. That her husband was worse than the devil himself. And that was the last day I saw her alive.”
Al ie’s heart raced as she tried to fit the various pieces together. Had Barker resorted to murder to cover up his sick obsession? Had he kil ed his wife, Madeline’s mother? Was Stil water’s beloved pastor a sadistic pedophile and a murderer?
“Why didn’t you go to the police after Eliza died?”
“With what?” he asked.
“You didn’t have the pictures?”
“No. And everyone considered Barker to be some kind of saint. Who would believe what I had to say?”
“That’s why you’ve stuck by the Montgomerys al this time,” she said.
“Barker deserved what he got.”
Al ie agreed, but that was up to a court to decide. Not the Montgomerys. As much as her heart sympathized with Grace and Clay, with al of them, she knew no court in Mississippi would condone the fact that they’d taken the law into their own hands.
“What happened the night Barker went missing?” she asked. She’d expected to keep prodding Jed, but now that he’d revealed as much as he had, he responded readily.
“The reverend came home early.”
Al ie covered her face with her hands. Did she real y want to hear this? There was a possibility that what she learned would forever stand between her and Clay. But could she hide from the truth? Could she risk her daughter’s wel -being on a man who had such dark secrets?
Of course not. As much as she wanted to trust blindly, she couldn’t.
Jed waited as if he understood her reluctance.
“And?” she said at last.
“I cal ed Irene at Ruby’s. That’s where she was, for choir practice.”
“How? Weren’t you out in the barn?”
“There was a phone there, right outside the door to Barker’s office.”
“I see. And what did you say?”
“Nothing.”
“You didn’t say anything.”
“What could I say?”
Al ie thought of Jed trying to tel Irene that he thought her husband was about to molest her daughter. “So what did you do?”
“I kept cal ing, asking for her and hanging up, trying to get her home, just in case he…”
His voice fel off, but Al ie knew what he meant.
“Then what?” she said.
“Irene came home. But when I started up to the house to speak with Barker about the tractor, I heard yel ing.”
“Go on.”
“I was afraid for Irene and the kids, so instead of heading back to the barn—” he frowned and scratched his sun-reddened neck “—I looked through the window.”
Al ie said a silent prayer that he wouldn’t tel her something she’d feel obligated to report to the authorities.
“And what did you see?”
“They were in the kitchen. Barker was beating Irene.
Then Clay got into it, trying to protect his mom.”
At sixteen. Poor Clay…Al ie could imagine him trying to fend off his mother’s attacker regardless of any disadvantage. She could also imagine where his actions might have led. “Did he…kil him?”
Al ie could scarcely hear for the beating of her heart.
Grace had told her no, and Al ie had believed her. But would Grace tel her the truth?
“No,” Jed replied. No… Relief flooded Al ie. Clay hadn’t done it. “But Barker would’ve kil ed Clay, if not for Irene,” he added.
“What was Barker doing?” she asked.
“Beating him bad. I was about to go in and break it up when Clay made a run for the living room. Barker grabbed him by the hair and pul ed him back. Then Irene panicked and picked up something—I couldn’t tel what it was, don’t know to this day—and brought it down on Barker’s head.”
Al ie’s eyes were riveted on Jed’s. “And then he dropped,” she finished.
“And then he dropped,” Jed echoed.
“You could see him?”
He nodded. “He wasn’t moving.”
It was beginning to get dark outside, so Al ie lit the kerosene lamp. She needed to do something with her hands. She felt so jittery, so rattled. “What happened after that?” she asked as she blew out the match.
“They buried him.”
“Where?”
“Behind the barn.”
The flicker of the lamp’s flame cast moving shadows on the table. “Weren’t they afraid you’d see them?”
“They were too afraid of everything else to worry about me, I suppose. They tried to move careful and quiet-like, but…”
“It was too late. You’d already seen what happened.”
Another nod.
“Only you didn’t let them know.”
“Figured we were al safer that way.”
“Why do you think they didn’t go to the police?”
Jed’s expression didn’t change. “For the same reason Eliza didn’t.”
“Grace might’ve told them about the pictures.”
“Who knows if she knew where to find them. And even if they had them…” He clucked his tongue, and Al ie knew what he was thinking. Even if they did, they were pictures that would humiliate a thirteen-year-old girl in the worst possible way. Pictures that would require she testify at her mother’s trial in a town where she and her family weren’t liked in the first place.
“You should’ve seen Grace that night,” he added.
Al ie doubted Grace would’ve been strong enough to go through a trial. And what if they’d lost? What if the court had ruled that Barker wasn’t kil ed in self-defense? What if the prosecutor managed to convince a jury that Irene had murdered her husband because she’d found out what he was doing to her daughter?
Al ie couldn’t remain sitting any longer. She stood up and circled the room, careful not to look at the bed. Clay’s blood was stil on the sheets; no one had cleaned up since he was shot. The last few times she’d gone to the cabin, she’d been too busy searching for evidence. “So why are you breaking your silence after so long?” she asked. “Why are you tel ing me? ”
Jed’s whiskers made a rasping sound against his cal used hand. “Because I don’t think Clay ever wil . And I don’t think he’l let Grace tel you, either.”
Al ie had to agree. Clay was too loyal to his family. And knowing Clay, he’d view it as a burden he wouldn’t want her to carry.
“I thought knowing the truth might help you defend him,”
Jed murmured.
“At least I know what we’re up against.”
“I had to do something this time. Clay doesn’t deserve to spend the rest of his life behind bars.”
And Jed didn’t need any additional regrets. Al ie understood. He’d spoken more words in the past hour than he’d probably ever strung together at one time, which proved how passionate he felt about Eliza and Barker and the Montgomerys. But Al ie had one more question. “So why didn’t the police find Barker’s remains when they searched the farm?” she asked.
Jed shrugged. “They should’ve. They were searching in the right place.”
And that was why Jed had confessed to Barker’s murder. Suddenly it al made sense. Jed hadn’t tried to confess because he was in love with Irene. He felt responsible because he hadn’t stopped Barker when Eliza had told him what Barker was.
What Barker was…Al ie shook her head in stunned disbelief. Madeline wanted the truth. But wasn’t a truth like that the worst thing a daughter could ever hear?
22
“Alaska isn’t like any place you’ve ever seen.” Lucas smiled as if Clay and Mol y had every reason to smile with him. Their father had been going on about the beauty of his adopted state and his love of flying ever since Mol y had invited him in. And he’d been talking as fast and animatedly as Clay remembered, as if Clay had given him some sort of welcome, which he hadn’t.
“With a mouth like that, you should’ve been a used-car salesman,” Clay said.
Mol y glanced nervously at him. Lucas merely blinked.
“What?”
Evidently, Clay’s response wasn’t one Lucas had been expecting. Clay was a little surprised himself. He’d dreamed of seeing his father ever since Lucas had left them. At first, he’d imagined a happy reunion, a day when his father would final y realize how much he loved his family and return to apologize and make everything better.
But after that summer when Clay and his mother and sisters had subsisted almost entirely on oatmeal and they hadn’t even been able to pay the electric bil , Clay’s dreams had become far less optimistic. During the Barker years, whenever he thought about meeting up with his father, there was always some degree of violence involved. Usual y, Clay threw a single punch that broke the old man’s jaw.
Clay was stil considering whether or not to make that dream a reality. But Mol y seemed more wil ing to accept him. And his father no longer looked like a worthy adversary, which came as quite a disappointment. Age was taking its tol , and he wasn’t nearly as big as Clay remembered.
“What did you say?” Lucas said, referring to Clay’s comment.
“Don’t mind him,” Mol y said quickly.
Until that moment, their father had avoided meeting Clay’s eyes.
“I said, with a mouth like that, you should’ve been a used-car salesman.”
Lucas chuckled uncomfortably. “Why’s that?”
Clay let his gaze drift over the Flying Makes Me Higher Than a Kite T-shirt, blue jeans and brand-new flip-flops his father was wearing. “Because I’ve never met anyone who fits the stereotype more—al talk and no integrity.”
“Clay—” Mol y started, but he ignored her, keeping Lucas pinned beneath his unswerving regard.
Their father wiped his forehead as if it was getting too hot in the room. And it was. The humidity was causing beads of sweat to trickle down the middle of Clay’s back.
“I deserved that,” he said. “You’ve got every reason to be angry, Clay. I understand—”
“You don’t understand anything,” Clay interrupted. “What makes you think you can step foot on my property?”
“I came because I wanted to help.”
Mol y moved closer to Clay. “He just got here,” she said softly.
“I don’t care.” Clay’s hands curled into fists in spite of his determination not to swing them. “We don’t need his help. I already did his job.” Not that Clay felt he’d managed very wel . He’d had so little to work with—not much maturity, very little wisdom and no resources. He’d had to become a man at thirteen. “If he’d never left, Grace wouldn’t have been hurt,” he pointed out. “We wouldn’t even have known Barker.”
Instead, they had to live with their stepfather’s remains in the cel ar, as wel as the terrible memories he’d created.
What a difference Lucas could’ve made—for everyone.
To his credit, Lucas put up a hand to silence Mol y instead of letting her argue for him. And he didn’t cower as Clay had expected. “I thought you could use some support,”
he said.
“Now? Where were you when Mol y was eight years old?
Where were you when Grace—” Clay’s throat constricted at the memory of her ghost-white face. How could Lucas love her and Mol y so much less than Clay did? Lucas was their father.
And how could Mol y talk to Lucas as if he’d done nothing wrong?
Clay couldn’t begin to understand, which only made his anger blaze hotter. Swal owing hard, he decided to end the conversation. Lucas didn’t deserve a single kind word from Mol y. He didn’t deserve anything. Their father simply hadn’t cared enough. What he’d wanted for himself had mattered more than al of them.
“It’s time for you to go,” Clay said. “We have nothing to say to you.”
Lucas smiled at Mol y. “You turned out to be a beautiful woman.”
“Shut up,” Clay said, disgusted.
“Maybe I shouldn’t have come back at…at this late date, Clay,” his father said. “But someone cal ed me, a female police officer. She was asking a bunch of questions, and I
—” he sighed “—I might’ve made some mistakes in what I said. I’ve been worried about that. I didn’t want to make the situation worse for you. I—I wanted you to know that if I blew it, it wasn’t intentional. My wife said I should—”
“Your wife? ” Clay echoed.
“Lorette.”
“That’s her name?” Mol y asked eagerly.
Clay clenched his teeth as Lucas nodded. Lorette. Who was this woman? he wondered. Whoever she was, she must be something special, something they weren’t. “Wel , you can tel Lorette that it was a nice thought, a kind thought of her to have for complete strangers. But like you said, you shouldn’t have come. As far as we’re concerned, you don’t exist.”
Mol y said nothing. Clay could feel how torn she was, how difficult she found it to lose her only chance to speak with their father. He’d tried to keep his mouth shut for her sake, had even let their father walk into his living room, which he’d never dreamed he’d do. But he couldn’t tolerate the man’s presence any longer.
Head bowed, his father stared at his shoes. “You’re right,” he said. “I’m sorry.”
“Go with him if you want,” Clay muttered to Mol y.
He couldn’t stop her, didn’t want to cause her any more pain. If she could accept so little from Lucas and be okay with it, he was happy for her.
But she didn’t go anywhere. She drew closer and slipped her hand in his, as if he was her father and not Lucas.
As Lucas started out the door, Clay expected to feel some sense of victory or relief. At last he’d seen the man who’d hurt him so deeply—and he’d sent him packing without a trace of kindness or forgiveness.
Lucas had deserved exactly what he’d gotten.
But, somehow, the encounter only made Clay feel worse.
“It’s okay,” Mol y said when he looked down at her.
“It’s not okay,” he said, and doubted it ever would be.
After Jed left, Al ie stripped the linen from the bed and hauled it out to her car so she could take it home and wash it. Then she went back inside to finish tidying up. If her parents split up, her father would have to sel the place and share the equity with her mother. And she and Clay were the last people to use the cabin. It was the least she could do.
The probability that her parents would get a divorce depressed Al ie, but the physical motions of straightening the cabin felt good. It meant she could put one thing right—
and in quick order. She wasn’t sure what to do about anything else, especial y the information she’d learned from Jed. She was relieved that Clay wasn’t responsible for Barker’s death, that she’d been right in that regard al along. But now she knew Clay was partial y responsible for the cover-up that had fol owed. Which put him at odds with the law, regardless of the fact that he was innocent of murder.
How had he and Irene disposed of Barker’s car? Would it ever turn up? And where had Clay or one of the other Montgomerys moved the body? Barker wasn’t behind the barn where Jed had told her he’d been buried.
His remains couldn’t be far. Clay wouldn’t risk having them discovered.
Al ie shook her head. Why did the skeletons in Clay’s closet have to be so literal? He could never leave the farm, or Stil water. She had to be crazy to get involved with a man like that.
But she was already involved, wasn’t she? She loved him in spite of his problems. He wasn’t an ordinary man.
Who else could have survived what Clay had been through without cracking under the pressure?
As far as she was concerned, he and the rest of the Montgomerys had suffered enough. She’d go back to Stil water and talk to Hendricks this evening. Once she proved that Joe or one of the other Vincel is had hired him to cause trouble for Clay, she’d have some leverage she could use to get the prosecution to back off. The mayor and the D.A. might be good friends with the Vincel is, but they wouldn’t want to be discredited. Proof that someone was out to get Clay should make them view their lack of evidence in a different light. Or maybe it’d encourage the judge to throw the case out of court.
“That’s it,” she mumbled as she wiped off the table.
“That’s what I’l do.” She’d stay the course, even though she knew she was heading past the point of no return. From now on, she would be, without reservations, completely on Clay’s side, whether their relationship worked out or not.
A noise from outside startled Al ie. Then the glimmer of headlights hit the window. At first she thought Jed had returned. But the man who knocked on the door wasn’t Jed.
It was Joe.
Jed had stood by him and his family for so long that Clay had difficulty believing he would ever hurt Al ie. He’d relaxed the moment he learned it was Jed who wanted to talk to her, and not Hendricks or any of the Vincel is. But she wasn’t back yet, and he was beginning to worry. He’d tried her cel phone, several times, and gotten her voice-mail.
“What’s wrong?” Mol y asked.
His sister had been quiet ever since their father had left.
Clay didn’t know what she was thinking, but he doubted she felt any better than he did.
He hated the doubts that nagged at him, didn’t want to take responsibility for her disappointment or make her feel obligated to remain loyal to him when her heart wanted something else.
“I’m going out to look for Al ie,” he said.
“Where is she?”
“I’m not sure. She’s not answering. But it’s getting late.
She should’ve been back by now.”
“What do you want me to do with dinner?”
“Eat and put the rest in the fridge.”
“You care about her a lot, don’t you?” she asked.
“No,” he said. He knew it was a lie. But every time he began to hope for something better, the past intruded once again.
“Oh, real y?” His sister folded her arms. “Because I think you’re in love with her. And I think she loves you, too.”
He scowled. “You don’t know anything.”
“I know you,” she said. But he didn’t respond. He walked out and left her standing in his living room.
She fol owed him as far as the door and turned on the porch light. “Do you want me to go with you?” she cal ed after him, but he shook his head.
Al ie didn’t invite Joe in; she didn’t want to be alone with him. The memories of the shooting that had occurred during her last stay at the cabin put her on edge. But she was convinced Joe had hired Hendricks to make Clay look bad, to make her suspicious of the Montgomerys, not to kil him. Hendricks had shot Clay on his own, right?
“I talked to your mother,” Joe said.
“After what you did at the farm, she was wil ing to speak to you?” Al ie asked incredulously.
His expression became a study in mock empathy. “Like I told her, I feel terrible that she was caught up in that nasty business.”
Al ie clenched her jaw. “You seemed pretty gleeful to me.”
“Only because it revealed Irene to be the whore that she is. You know what I think of the Montgomerys.”
That wasn’t al of it. Joe had been targeting Al ie, too, reveling in the fact that she and her mother felt hurt and betrayed. Couldn’t Evelyn see that?
“I stil can’t get over the fact that she told you I was here,”
Al ie said. When she’d cal ed Evelyn to check on Whitney, she’d mentioned where she was as a natural part of the conversation. But she hadn’t expected Evelyn to tel anyone, least of al Joe.
Obviously, her mother was more trusting than Al ie was.
But why wouldn’t she be? She’d known Joe and his family for years and years and, like Dale, she believed Clay to be the only threat to the community.
Joe stuffed a wad of tobacco in his cheek and walked back to lean against the gril e of his truck. “We had a real y nice chat, Evelyn and I,” he said. “I apologized for having to expose what Irene’s done to your family, and she talked about the Montgomerys and how they’ve hurt so many people.” It wasn’t easy to make out his expression in the dark, but she saw a flash of teeth, as if he was smiling.
“She talked about you, too, and your confusion over Clay right now. She’s real y upset about that, you know.”
Al ie wasn’t wil ing to have this conversation with him.
“Why are you here?” she asked bluntly.
“It’s nice.” He breathed deep. “Smel the pine, hear the cicadas.”
“You didn’t answer my question.”
“Is this where you fucked Clay? In that bed?” He jerked a thumb toward the bed she’d stripped, and she sensed a salaciousness in his interest.
“If you have something to say to me, say it,” she said.
He seemed to give up badgering her, for the moment.
“Hendricks cal ed me.”
She lifted her chin. “I thought he might.”
“He said you wanted to ask him some questions.”
“I do.”
He spat at the spongy earth. “’Bout what?”
Al ie felt cornered with the smal cabin at her back. She stepped farther out so she could run if need be. “About you.
You must know that or you wouldn’t be here.”
He took his time settling the chew in his cheek. “I didn’t pay him to kil Clay, if that’s what you think.”
She considered possible responses. She’d wanted Hendricks to confess before she spoke to Joe. The money for that truck had to come from somewhere. But Joe’s sudden appearance preempted the possibility of preparing for this confrontation. “Maybe you didn’t hire him to shoot Clay. But you paid him to scare me, didn’t you? To try and make me think it was Clay who was threatening me?”
He pushed away from the truck and moved into the sliver of lamplight cast through the open doorway. “No.”
“Then it had to be your family.”
His eyes turned cold and flat enough to raise the level of caution already surging through Al ie’s blood. “Had to be?”
he said, speaking around the bulge in his cheek.
Joe had caused trouble in the past, usual y when he was drunk. Although he didn’t seem drunk now, the Montgomerys—and particularly Clay—had long been a sore subject for him. He seemed to have grown more bitter toward them as the years passed.
“Who else would want me to think Clay had something to hide?” she asked, edging toward her car in case she decided to make a dash for it.
“The whole town thinks Clay has something to hide,” he said.
“So they all paid Hendricks to do what he did?” she countered.
Another stream of tobacco juice hit the ground as Joe cut off her retreat. “I told you, I didn’t hire Hendricks to do anything. Neither did my family.”
“Is that why you drove al the way here from Stil water?
To tel me you’re innocent?”
“To tel you you’re heading down the wrong path. I don’t need you creating problems for me.”
She mental y measured the distance to her car. Could she make it?
No, he’d be on her before she even opened the door….
“What could I do without proof?” she asked.
“You could try to convince my mother that I was involved.”
Al ie narrowed her gaze. “Don’t tel me you’re afraid it’l upset her. You’re not that considerate.”
He spat at her feet, barely missing her shoe. “She knows I hate the Montgomerys. With my luck, she’d believe you.”
“So?”
“So that better not happen.”
Why? Al ie wondered. Because then she’d cut him off financial y? Probably. He couldn’t survive without his parents’ support.
Al ie was final y beginning to understand. But, as much as she didn’t want to admit it, she got the impression Joe might be tel ing the truth, at least about his involvement in the shooting. “If you didn’t hire Hendricks, who did?” she asked skeptical y.
“Think about it,” he replied. “Who wants you to find Barker’s kil er even more than I do?”
“No one!”
He put a hand in front of her, ostensibly to lean against the post that supported the cabin’s smal overhang. But he managed to pen her in at the same time. “Wrong. Check my bank accounts, if you want to. I haven’t paid Hendricks a dime. Why would I? We’ve got Clay by the bal s already.”
Al ie shook her head. “Come on, Joe. The trial hasn’t even started.”
“We have another search warrant.” His teeth flashed again. “This one’s for the entire property—the house, the barn and outbuildings, the land. We won’t leave a single inch of dirt unturned.”
Al ie went cold inside. Jed had just told her the Montgomerys had buried the reverend behind the barn, but his remains weren’t there when the police searched before.
Where had they been moved? She guessed what was left of Barker was stil somewhere on the property. As bleak as the Montgomerys’ outlook seemed, they had a better chance if the police couldn’t prove beyond a reasonable doubt that there’d even been a murder.
“You didn’t have the warrant a month ago,” she pointed out. “And it bothered you that I wouldn’t go after Clay, although I didn’t have the evidence to justify it.”
“It didn’t bother me enough to waste two grand.”
“Is that how much Hendricks was paid?”
“I’m guessing it was about that much.”
Enough for a down payment, like her father said…“Stil , whoever—” Suddenly, Al ie fel silent. A snippet of conversation had popped into her mind: I’ll bet fifty, too. I’m expecting a big tax refund.
Enough to spare two thousand dol ars?
And then another snippet, from a different time and place: Has the reward you posted for information on the shooting turned up any leads?…No…None?…Not one.
True or merely self-preserving?
Could it have been Madeline? No! Clay’s stepsister wouldn’t do anything to make Clay look guilty. She defended him constantly.
But it was entirely possible that Madeline hadn’t seen hiring Hendricks as a risk to her stepbrother. Clay had told no one he was coming to the cabin. After his cal that Thursday night, even Al ie hadn’t been expecting him.
Maybe Madeline had believed a mysterious scare would simply increase Al ie’s determination to prove Clay wasn’t guilty.
Al ie remembered the way Madeline had acted about the shooting. She’d been so upset, she’d cal ed Al ie almost daily that first week.
Because she was afraid it might happen again, as she’d said? Or because she felt responsible?
Do you know who did it yet, Allie?
“Oh, boy,” Al ie muttered.
“Now you’re catching on,” Joe said.
“You think it was Madeline.”
“It was Madeline.”
“Hendricks told you that?”
“I got it out of him eventual y. He came to me, saying he was afraid you thought he’d shot Clay, that because of the rumors Cindy’s spreading about seeing your gun in my house, you thought it was both of us. I bet he was hoping I’d solve the problem by making sure you wouldn’t be able to tel anyone else.”
Al ie felt a shiver of fear. They were completely alone. It wouldn’t be hard for Joe to do just that.
“He acted as if he’d done me some kind of favor, planting Jed’s hat up here,” Joe went on. “As if I owed him for dropping that cap in the woods.”
“Why would Cindy say she saw my gun at your house if it wasn’t true?”
“Because she hates me.”
Covering her mouth, she mumbled through her fingers. “I can’t believe Maddy did it.”
“Cal her and see for yourself. Tel her you’ve got proof it was Hendricks and that he’s claiming it was her. See what she says.”
Al ie’s phone was inside. She hesitated, because she didn’t want to risk being cornered, but he handed her his.
She stared down at it for a moment, then dialed Madeline.
“Hel o?”
“Maddy, it’s Al ie.”
“Hi, Al ie. What’s going on?”
She glanced up at Joe. “I’m at my father’s cabin with Joe Vincel i.”
“Joe?”
“He says you hired Hendricks to scare me the night Clay was shot. Is that true?”
Silence. Al ie waited, but there was only more silence.
“Maddy, is that true?” she repeated. But she knew from Madeline’s lack of response that it was.
“I didn’t mean for Clay to get hurt,” she said, tears in her voice. “I didn’t even know he’d be up there. He—he’s always in town or at the farm.”
Closing her eyes, Al ie shook her head. “What were you trying to do?”
“I just—I was afraid you were giving up. I wanted you to keep looking. You’re the only one who might be able to find my father, Al ie. But…it was a mistake.”
“You nearly cost Clay his life!”
She was sobbing openly now. “I feel so bad. I—I’m actual y glad you know. I was going to tel you myself, but…I was so afraid Clay wouldn’t love me anymore.”
“Maddy, he’l always love you.”
“I’ve lost too many people. And Hendricks! He’s such an idiot. He thought Clay had spotted him, but even if Clay did see him I would never have agreed with firing that gun!
Clay’s my brother. ”
Al ie didn’t know what to say. Madeline, in al her denial and confusion and desperation, had hired Hendricks to motivate Al ie to solve the case. And Hendricks had shot Clay on his own, out of fear of discovery. “Joe’s stil here. I’l cal you later, okay?”
Madeline didn’t answer. She was crying too hard.
“See?” Joe said as she handed him his phone.
Al ie ignored him. Lee Barker’s life—and death—had affected so many people.
“So you’re going to quit trying to pin it on me, right?
Forget that bul shit of Cindy’s and keep me out of it.”
She was stil col ecting her thoughts when he said,
“Because if you don’t, you’l be damn sorry.”
“Is that a threat?” she asked.
“What do you think?”
“Madeline knows I’m here with you.”
“So? Accidents happen. It’d be a real shame if your car was found in the bottom of a gul y, wouldn’t it? But these roads twist and turn something awful.”
Joe’s character had never been much to admire, but the disappointments and chal enges of his life had turned him into a darker version of what he could’ve been. She knew Grace was sincerely afraid of him, that he’d probably given her reason to be.
“The truth is out,” she said. “Why risk that kind of trouble?”
“Because I don’t like anyone getting in my way.”
He stil saw her as an impediment to his revenge against the Montgomerys.
“And they wouldn’t be able to prove anything,” he added.
“I’d make sure of that.”
“You’re not stupid enough to land yourself in jail when you already have the search warrant you’ve always wanted.
If Clay kil ed your uncle, that should be enough, shouldn’t it?”
He chewed, spat and chewed again. “You’re right. The body’s there, and I’m going to find it.”
The sudden lightening of his tone released the tension between them. He didn’t intend to hurt her. He didn’t need to. He had the D.A. pressing charges against Clay and a search warrant that would most likely turn up the proof they were lacking—while she had nothing.
“You look sad.” Joe bent his lanky body to make sure she could see his taunting smile. “Don’t tel me you final y realize that the man you’ve been protecting is real y going to prison.”
“Clay’s innocent,” she said stubbornly.
Joe laughed. “Face it, Al ie. You lose.” Grabbing her chin, he held it fast while he delivered a revoltingly wet, tobacco-tasting kiss.
“Get back!” She shoved him away, then grimaced as she wiped his saliva from her lips and cheek.
“How touching,” he said, his hand over his heart. “You’re saving yourself for Clay. You care so much about him. But if you think he cares about you, you’re wrong. He’s using you, babe. Pure and simple. Beth Ann says he doesn’t have a heart. Just a big dick.”
Stil laughing, he got in his truck and drove off.
As Al ie watched him go, depression settled in, as deep as the surrounding darkness. She’d been wrong. The shooting wasn’t connected to the Vincel is. Nothing she’d been chasing could help Clay.
Face it, Allie. You lose. And so did the man she loved.
23
When Clay passed Joe on the winding road that led to the cabin, he didn’t recognize him at first. It was too dark. But Joe’s was the only vehicle he’d seen since leaving the highway, and the make and model soon registered, turning the unease Clay had been feeling into al -out panic. What was Joe doing up here?
Again, Clay wished he had a cel phone. He’d never seen a need for one in the past. He hadn’t been interested in making himself accessible to people; he was usual y at the farm, anyway. But today he was handicapped without one. He’d been able to cal Al ie only once since he’d left his house—at a pay phone along the way. She hadn’t picked up and he hadn’t wanted to waste any more time.
Something was wrong. He could feel it. And the sight of Joe’s Explorer confirmed it.
“I’l kil him,” he muttered. If anything could turn him into the kind of man everyone already thought he was, it’d be finding Al ie hurt—or worse.
Tree branches slapped the windshield and scratched the sides of his truck as he barreled through the woods, indifferent to the potholes and rocks. He kept imagining Al ie shot as he’d been shot, bleeding….
But when he reached the cabin, his headlights showed her sitting on the front step, staring at the ground. A light gleamed behind her.
She looked up as he got out, but didn’t move.
“What happened?” Clay asked. “Why was Joe here?”
“They have another search warrant,” she replied. Then she stared past him into the darkness, and he saw the sheen of tears in her eyes.
So the Vincel is and their friends had been able to discredit her father’s handling of the investigation, just as Clay had feared.
Clay should’ve been used to such setbacks, numb to them. He’d battled the Vincel is since he was sixteen years old. But the news cut him so deeply, he knew he wasn’t the same unfeeling man he’d been before Al ie came back to town. Going to prison didn’t just mean going to prison anymore. He final y had something to live for, something to hope for, someone to care about.
And they were going to take that away from him.
He didn’t know what to say, how to express the emotions that were twisting his stomach and clogging his throat. “It’l be okay,” he said, trying to convince her. The only thing worse than his own suffering was the thought that she was hurting, too.
“It’s not going to be okay! You didn’t do it.”
He could tel by the conviction in her voice that something had changed. “How do you know?”
“Jed told me. He saw everything.”
Jed. Clay had always wondered. “Why hasn’t he told the police?” he asked.
“He was friends with Eliza. He thinks—” she paused to take a breath, “—he thinks Barker might have kil ed her.”
He said nothing.
“That doesn’t surprise you?”
“No. Nothing surprises me where he’s concerned.”
“I guess she was beginning to figure out what he real y was. Jed’s convinced he did it to shut her up.”
“It’l break Maddy’s heart if she ever learns.”
“Barker’s dead. I don’t see why she has to.”
Reaching up, she pul ed him down beside her, and they sat there together. After a few seconds, she said, “Where are they?”
“Where are what?” he replied.
“Barker’s remains.”
He’d never told another living soul where he’d moved them. Not even his sisters. And he couldn’t tel Al ie. She meant too much to him. “I can’t say.”
“If they’re at the farm, move them,” she said. “Tonight.”
The fact that she was stil so ready to stand by him made Clay wish he could take care of her the way she deserved.
But it was too late for that. It was too late for a lot of things.
“It won’t make any difference,” he said.
“I won’t give up.”
Leaning forward, he wiped away the tears sliding down her cheeks. “Don’t cry.”
“It’s not fair,” she said. “That…that sick bastard.”
He didn’t have to ask who she was talking about. “I want you to step back from this and reconcile with your parents.
Or move somewhere else. Find a new life entirely.”
“You want me to leave you to face this alone? Why? ”
Clay felt so weak and exposed, it made him angry.
“Because I can’t do anything to protect you from what’s about to happen, dammit! Don’t you understand that?”
“I’m not asking you to protect me!” she shouted back.
He jumped to his feet. “It’l be harder on you this way.”
“So you want to forget about what we feel? Walk away and let them win?”
“What’s our alternative?” he asked. “Do you want to marry a man who’s going to prison? Do you want to waste fifteen or twenty years waiting for me to get out? What kind of life would that be?”
She stood. “The life I want, if it means we can be together in the end.”
The fight suddenly drained out of Clay. “Al ie—”
“I just need to know one thing,” she interrupted. “And it had better be the most honest thing you’ve ever said to me.”
“What is it?”
“Do you feel the same? Are you wil ing to hang on regardless of what happens?”
When he didn’t answer, her voice dropped. “Do you love me, Clay?”
He knew the unselfish answer would be to say no. Then she’d move on; she’d have to. She’d eventual y get over the grief, fal in love with someone else, find a better life.
“Clay?”
Wrestling with himself, Clay let his forehead touch hers.
He could smel her perfume, feel her breath on his face—
and knew he wasn’t strong enough to lie to her. “Yes,” he said. And then he carried her into the cabin, where they were both crying and kissing and pul ing off their clothes, as if this was the only moment that mattered.
Al ie lay with her head on Clay’s chest. He was so stil she might have assumed he’d gone to sleep. But she knew he hadn’t. The depth of feeling they’d experienced while making love had left them more than a little awed. She knew she’d never given so much of herself to another human being and doubted Clay had, either.
“How long wil we have?” he asked.
“Together?”
He nodded. “Weeks? Months?”
“I don’t know. It depends on too many factors. The court battles. The judge.”
He didn’t respond immediately, but then he said, “You can have the farm. It’l give you and Whitney a place to live.
Or you can sel it and use the money to live somewhere else.”
He was stil worried about her, stil trying to protect and provide for her. She smiled as she pressed a kiss to his warm neck. “If they get a conviction, we’l see where they send you.”
He smoothed the hair off her forehead. “I like the way you make love,” he said.
“Yeah, wel , you could use some practice.”
He returned her teasing smile as his fingers brushed the side of her breast. “As long as I can practice on you.”
She sobered. “I’m going to hate it if they take you away from me.”
“We’l be too old to have children by the time I get out,”
he said.
She rested her chin on her hands, thinking about the future. “We could get pregnant now.”
“No,” he said, as if he wouldn’t even consider it.
“Why not?”
“I won’t leave you with two children to take care of.”
She touched the end of his nose with her finger. “Have a little confidence in me. I can do it.”
It was too hot for the sheet tangled around their feet. He gently shifted her as he kicked it to the bottom of the bed.
“And what wil my kids think of having a convict for a dad?”
She could hear the grimace in his voice and leaned up on her elbows so she could look into his face. “They’l know the truth, Clay.”
“And what’s the truth?”
“That you’re the best man I’ve ever known.”
He stared at her for a long moment, then removed the medal ion he wore around his neck and slipped it over her head.
She felt the satisfying warmth of the medal as it settled between her breasts. “Are you sure you don’t want to keep this with you?” she asked, deeply touched by the gesture.
He tucked her hair behind her ear. “I’m sure. If there real y is a saint who watches over people, I want him to look after you. Especial y if I can’t.”
He’d given her the one thing that meant the most to him, that represented the family he’d once had but lost.
She ran a finger lightly over his lips, then kissed him, and soon they were making love again. When it came time for Clay to put on a condom, Al ie tried to stop him, and she could tel he was tempted to let her. But, ultimately, he fol owed through.
“I’d worry too much about you,” he explained when they were resting in each other’s arms again. “We have enough going on already.”
She put her head on his shoulder, wishing they could remain as they were—forever. But soon the tree frogs seemed to grow louder, reminding Al ie that she should be getting home. She’d been gone more than usual lately and wanted to see her daughter. But she was reluctant to bring her time with Clay to an end. Every moment seemed so fleeting and precious.
“Are you going back to the gas station to search for Hendricks’s blood?” he asked.
“Yes.”
“What if you don’t find it?”
“I’l bluff and say I did in hopes of getting a confession.”
“Do you think he’l tel us who hired him?”
Al ie knew that once Hendricks was busted, he’d have no reason to keep it a secret. So she told Clay about Madeline.
When she was finished, he sighed. “She’s a victim in this, too,” he said. “I can’t blame her.”
“I know.”
“What do you think wil happen to her?” he asked.
“Not much. She didn’t mean for anyone to be hurt. She merely wanted to get my attention focused where she thought it should be. The fact that she’d sacrifice the money from her tax return tel s you how much her father’s disappearance is stil bothering her.”
“She broke into Jed’s auto shop last year, hoping to find some evidence that he was involved.”
“Poor thing.”
He ran his fingers lightly over her skin while they lay in companionable silence. Al ie was about to make herself get up, when he spoke again.
“How’d you know?” he asked.
“Know what?”
“The kind of man Barker was.”
“Grace didn’t tel you about the package I received from Reverend Portenski?”
Clay made her look at him. “You received a package from Portenski?”
“He didn’t let me know it was from him, but Grace guessed and Jed Fowler saw him put it in my mailbox.”
“What was in it?”
“Polaroids.”
She felt Clay stiffen. “Of Grace?”
She nodded.
“Portenski figures I kil ed Barker. Why’d he give them to you instead of taking them to the police?”
“I think he believes you deserve a second chance.”
He didn’t respond right away, leaving her to wonder what he made of her comment. “Where are they now?”
“Grace had me burn them.”
He relaxed. “That’s good.”
“I’m not so sure,” she said.
“I don’t need the prosecution producing those as my motive.”
“But they could’ve been helpful in your defense.
Especial y if the police dig up Barker’s remains. If we had the pictures, at least we could provide a sympathetic reason for what happened.”
“I don’t care,” Clay said. “I would never let the abuse she suffered be dragged into public view. And think about what it would do to Madeline to find out that the father she’s always loved wasn’t worth the air he breathed. His reputation as a good man has been the only thing she’s had to cling to. That, and us. But considering the circumstances, we’ve been as much a curse as a blessing.
Bad as the situation is for her now, it would be much worse if those pictures came out.”
“But what about you? ”
“Al ie, people in this area worshipped Barker. They wouldn’t be happy to discover he wasn’t the man they thought he was. Human nature being what it is, I certainly don’t think they’d go easier on me because I proved they’d al been taken for fools.”
Al ie knew that was true. But considering what the police were likely to find when they searched the farm, it might be worth the risk. Especial y if—
She sat up.
“What?” Clay asked.
“Nothing,” she replied, because she was positive he’d never let her do it if he knew. “It’s late. I have to get back to Whitney.”
The next morning, Al ie perched on the edge of an old-fashioned wingback chair, breathing in the scent of lemon furniture polish while facing Elaine, Roger and Joe Vincel i in the elder Vincel is’ living room. When she’d cal ed to ask for this meeting, Mrs. Vincel i had reluctantly complied. But now that Al ie had arrived, she could sense their curiosity.
“Marcus, get in here!” Elaine cal ed.
Her husband had been on the phone ever since Al ie was ushered into the house. He’d glanced up as she passed by the kitchen, but he hadn’t so much as nodded a greeting. Neither had he bothered to cut his conversation short. They’d al been doing their level best to prove that she wasn’t a priority, that they wouldn’t al ow her to disrupt their schedules or cause them the slightest inconvenience.
But she felt fairly certain they were about to change their minds.
“Can we get started?” Elaine asked.
Al ie straightened her white blouse. “When your husband joins us.”
“I already told you, I had nothing to do with it,” Joe muttered, scowling heavily when she met his questioning gaze.
“I know,” she replied politely and continued to wait.
Final y, Elaine seemed to lose patience. She hurried from the room and, a minute or two later, came back with her husband in tow.
“What is it?” he asked as he took a seat next to Elaine on their rose-colored sofa. “What could you possibly want with us?”
Al ie didn’t bother to reply. Instead, she withdrew a folder from the book bag on her shoulder, opened it and passed around copies she’d scanned and printed on her computer
—copies of four of the pictures Portenski had delivered to her mailbox. One showed a young girl with her legs tied apart and Barker forcing a dildo inside her, his face pressed low on her bel y so he could get into his own picture. It was a straightforward case of child rape. Another showed a man wearing Barker’s distinctive ring forcing his penis inside the mouth of an even younger girl.
Elaine Vincel i’s gasp told Al ie that what she saw shocked her as badly as Al ie had expected it to. But shock wasn’t capitulation and did nothing to ease Al ie’s nerves.
This meeting was her last hope.
“That’s Rose! And Kate Swanson!” Elaine exclaimed.
“Where did you get these?” Marcus demanded, jumping to his feet, instantly furious.
“Does it matter?” Al ie responded. She was quaking inside. She had so much riding on the next few minutes. But she tried to appear calm and col ected.
“Yes, it matters!” he shouted.
Again she replied in a civil voice. “Someone put them in my mailbox.”
“Who? Who would pass around this…this filth!”
“There was no return address,” she said.
Joe and Roger both looked as if they’d been struck dumb.
Joe managed to find his voice first. “This can’t be real,”
he muttered. “This can’t be—”
“Your uncle?” Al ie fil ed in. “I assure you it is. If it’s necessary to convince you, the authenticity of the actual photographs can be verified.”
The color had drained from Elaine’s face, and her hands were shaking. “Marcus, my brother would never do this.
Especial y not to children. Not to Rose and Katie. My brother was a preacher. He…”
Elaine couldn’t seem to continue.
“I don’t know what to say,” Marcus said, obviously just as stunned. “I can’t—he was our pastor. If we’d had a daughter, we would’ve sent her to his church.”
“Surely he would never harm… family.”
Judging by the expressions on their faces, they weren’t so sure. They could see that, contrary to Elaine’s assertion, he had hurt children.
“He always seemed so…good,” Elaine said helplessly.
Al ie almost felt guilty for the tears wel ing up in the other woman’s eyes. She wished Barker was around to see the pain and disgust he’d caused. But she doubted he’d care about anything except the destruction of his al -important reputation.
“Why are you showing us these?” Joe demanded. “What do you hope to gain?”
Feeling Clay’s medal ion around her neck, Al ie kept her focus on the elder Vincel is. They were most likely to consider al the ramifications of these pictures. “Me? I’m here to point out how unfortunate it would be if I had to present these in court,” she said.
“In court? ” Elaine repeated, her tears spil ing over.
“For everyone to see,” Al ie emphasized. “I’m sure al the major newspapers would pick up the story. A sexual sadist, a pedophile, using his position as a man of God to sexual y torture young women in a smal Mississippi town where that kind of crime is virtual y unheard of. It would cause quite a scandal.”
“He’l become a hiss and a byword,” Elaine whispered, quoting the Bible.
“Why be connected with something like that?” Al ie murmured earnestly. “Especial y when everyone thinks so highly of your family.” She paused for maximum effect, then continued. “Wouldn’t it be better to leave things as they are? He’s gone. The truth doesn’t have to come out. If only…”
“If only what? ” Joe said, his eyes narrowing.
Al ie took a deep breath and faced him. “If only you make sure that the case against Clay Montgomery is dropped. No search. No charges. If he kil ed your uncle, you now know why. Isn’t that enough?” she asked, turning back to Elaine.
Mrs. Vincel i looked as if she was on the verge of passing out. “I’ve always been so… proud of Lee.”
She broke into sobs and Al ie waited patiently for Marcus to comfort her. Joe and Roger had gathered up al the copies and were busy tearing them into bits too smal to be recognized. “That’s what I think of these,” Joe said.
Al ie didn’t reply. She didn’t care what happened to the copies. She only cared about what the Vincel is would decide.
“She won’t do it, Mom,” Joe said. “Clay won’t let her.
Think about it. These pictures wil hurt Maddy more than us.”
“Maddy!” his mother wailed, apprently just realizing that Barker’s daughter would be crushed, too.
“Don’t you think it’s a shame that Clay’s more concerned about Maddy than you are?” Al ie asked Joe.
“Go to hel !” he replied. “You’re not going to pul these out at the last minute. Clay won’t let you.”
Panic coursed through Al ie. Evidently, Joe knew Clay better than she’d given him credit for. “This isn’t up to Clay,”
she said. “It’s up to me. And I’m going to do everything I can to see that he doesn’t go to prison.”
“You’d hurt Maddy?” Roger asked.
Praying that she’d sound convincing, Al ie turned to meet his gaze. “I’d reveal the truth in a heartbeat,” she said without flinching. “One way or another, people are going to be hurt by this trial. That’s what I’m here to stop.”
Joe stepped in front of his parents. “She’s lying.”
Roger joined him. “He’s right. She’s bluffing.”
Elaine lifted tear-fil ed eyes. “Did Lee do this to…Clay’s sisters?”
“What do you think?” she asked.
“It doesn’t matter,” Joe insisted. “We’ve got Clay this time. We’re not going to let him get away.”
Al ie held her breath as she waited to see how the older Vincel is would respond. Final y, Marcus turned to his sons.
“If a man did this to my sister, I’d kil him, too.”
“We’re talking about murder,” Joe said. “Clay can’t take the law into his own hands.”
“He was only sixteen,” Elaine murmured.
“That’s true.” Al ie reached out to take her hand. “And it was an accident.”
Joe stabbed a finger in her direction. “She admitted it!
Did you hear her? She knows what happened. She just admitted it! ”
Elaine stood up. Her husband had to help her because she was more than a little shaky, but she managed to gather her composure. “I didn’t hear her say anything of the sort, Joseph.”
Joe and Roger both gaped at her. “What?”
“It’s a shame that we’ve made the mistake of accusing an innocent man. I’l talk to Mayor Nibley and the district attorney tomorrow and make sure we set the record straight.”
Al ie stared up at her in disbelief. She’d been banking on the Vincel i pride. But it was a woman’s compassion that would save Clay.
Her throat constricted. “Thank you,” she murmured.
“Clay’s a good man. I promise you that.”
“He couldn’t be any worse than my brother,” she echoed sadly, staring at the bits of paper covering the floor. Then her husband led her out.
Joe leaned close and lowered his voice. “This ain’t over,” he said furiously. But his father heard him and turned back.
“Yes, it is. You do or say anything to Clay or anyone connected to him, and we’l disown you, do you understand? This is family business, and you’l respect our wishes. Or you’l be on your own.”
Joe’s eyes flicked from Al ie to Roger and back. He opened his mouth to make a retort, but his father spoke again.
“From now on, we won’t mention your uncle Lee. Ever.
What he did is in the past. It’s over, and we’re going to leave it as dead and buried as he probably is. For Madeline’s sake, if no one else’s.”
A vein stood out on Joe’s forehead. “That’s it? ”
“That’s it,” Marcus replied. “Surely we can be as good as Clay Montgomery.” Then he disappeared down the hal with his wife, and Al ie kissed Clay’s medal ion as she let herself out.
Clay could hardly believe that it was al over, that he’d be able to remain on the farm where he belonged. It’d been only twenty-four hours since Al ie had cal ed him after leaving the Vincel is’ house but, sure enough, the district attorney had already dropped the charges.
He found it especial y ironic that without Portenski’s involvement, the situation would’ve been much different.
“The Lord giveth, and the Lord taketh away,” he muttered.
Only he’d done it in reverse order. Stil , maybe God was more forgiving than Clay had assumed.
The doorbel rang, and Clay’s heart hammered against his chest. He’d invited Al ie over for dinner—and she was bringing Whitney.
The moment he opened the door, he wanted to pul Al ie into his arms. But, in deference to her daughter’s presence, he kept his distance.
“Hi,” he said.
Whitney stared up at him, her pretty, brown eyes so much like her mother’s. “Hi!” she replied brightly.
He chuckled at her enthusiastic response.
“Whitney, this is Clay. Mommy’s…friend,” Al ie said.
“You’re really big!” Whitney breathed.
He arched an eyebrow at her. “And you’re a half-pint like your mother.”
She wrinkled her nose. “A what?”
He shifted his focus back to Al ie. “You’re just right.”
He held the door open, and Al ie smiled as she led her daughter into the living room. “Where’s Mol y?”
Clay felt his own smile disappear. “She went over to my mom’s.”
“What’s wrong?” she said.
He rubbed his neck. “My dad’l be there.”
“He didn’t go back to Alaska?”
Clay had mentioned Lucas’s visit when they’d talked on the phone yesterday. But at the time, he’d thought Lucas had gone home. “No.”
“How come he’s going to your mother’s house?”
“He cal ed and asked to see her.”
“I can’t believe she agreed.”
“Nothing she does surprises me anymore.”
“What about Grace?”
“She won’t see him.”
“Do you mind, about Mol y and your mother?”
“No. If they can forgive him, I suppose it’s a good thing,”
he said, but he wasn’t sure he real y felt that positive about it. He resented the way his father seemed to think he could just waltz back into their lives.
“They’re probably more curious than anything else,” Al ie said.
“Who knows?”
She slid her hand down his forearm and entwined her fingers with his. “What about you?” she asked. “Wil you ever be able to forgive him?”
He watched Whitney drift off, examining the unfamiliar room. “I don’t know. Definitely not right now.”
She didn’t tel him he should try. She didn’t pass any judgments on him at al . “You’l know when you’re ready.”
He nodded toward Whitney. “She’s pretty, like you.”
“I’m proud of her.”
“How’s your mom?” he asked.
“She’s going out with my father tonight. For the first time since The Big Event.”
He brought her into the kitchen, where he had a salad, baked potatoes and garlic bread waiting for dinner. The steaks were on the gril outside. “You think they’l be able to patch up their marriage?”
“They’re going to try.” She set her purse on the counter.
He liked seeing it there. It showed that she was starting to feel at home in his house. “It’l take time, but…maybe.”
Suddenly, Whitney let out a squeal and clapped her hands. “Look, Mommy! Outside! There’s a puppy! ”
“Puppy” came out as if there could be no better thing in the entire world. Clay’s surprise had just given itself away, but in the face of Whitney’s excitement, he didn’t care that the pup had announced his presence a little too soon.
“Can he come in?” she asked, looking up at him with such earnest hope he couldn’t have refused even if he’d wanted to.
“Sure.” Clay could see the three-month-old Labrador retriever he’d bought jumping up against the house, trying to reach the humans he’d spotted through the window. “It appears he likes you, too.”
“Is he yours?” Whitney asked. “He has a bow around his neck.”
Clay moved to the door. “That’s because he’s a present.”
Al ie glanced over at him, but it was Whitney who asked,
“For who?”
“For you.” He let the puppy in and she squealed in delight. Amid the licks and yelps and giggles of their mutual admiration, she managed to calm down enough to turn to her mother. “Can I have him, Mommy? Can I have him, please? Huh, Mommy? Please, oh, please, oh please! ”
“I’m sorry, honey,” Al ie said gently. “But we can’t have a dog at the rental house. The landlord won’t al ow it.”
Clay bent down to Whitney’s level and petted the puppy while he talked. “See, that’s the thing,” he said. “You can have him, but you and your mom would have to move in here with me so you could help take care of him.”
“We would?” she asked, suddenly leery. “What about Boppo?”
“Boppo?”
“Grandma McCormick,” Al ie supplied.
“She’d probably stay at the rental house,” Clay said.
“By herself?”
He offered Al ie a hopeful smile. “Unless she moves back with your grandpa.”
Whitney kept her eye on the wriggling puppy as if she feared he might disappear. “But Boppo wouldn’t like it if me and Mommy moved in with you, would she?”
“Not at first,” he agreed. “But she’d get used to it, and she wouldn’t mind nearly as much if your mommy and I got married.”
“Married?” Whitney breathed.
This was where Clay feared he’d run into opposition.
“How do you feel about that?”
“You’d be my new daddy? ”
“You wouldn’t have to think of me that way unless you wanted to,” he said. “We could be friends, until we get to know each other better.”
“So we’d live here and be friends and then I could have the puppy?”
Al ie was far too quiet. But he’d plunged in wholeheartedly, and it was too late to back out. “That’s right,” he said. But he knew Whitney would have much more than that. She’d have everything he could give her.
“Okay!” She made the decision that easily, and it wasn’t a moment later that she was rol ing around with the puppy, squealing as he licked her face. “He likes me!”
“You could’ve warned me,” Al ie murmured, looking a little shocked. “I sort of expected us to take things a bit slower.”
“Why? I already know what I want.” He ran his thumb along her jawline. “Don’t you?”
She met his gaze. “Yes, but—”
He slipped his arms around her and nuzzled her neck, hoping to encourage her to forgive him. “I’l be a good dad.”
She seemed more exasperated than upset. “I know you wil , but…you bribed her!”
“I have a bribe for you,” he promised.
She pul ed back to stare into his face. “A wedding ring?”
He grinned. “That, too.”
Epilogue
Clay held Whitney’s hand as they strol ed behind Al ie, who was pushing their cart, in the PigglyWiggly. He’d felt Beth Ann’s eyes fol owing them since they’d walked through the door, could almost hear her whispering when she turned to speak to Pol y, who worked in the deli section right next to the bakery. He had no idea what she might be saying—
what was there to say? He’d been married to Al ie for six months, and they were the best six months of his life.
Although they saw Beth Ann at church each Sunday, he hadn’t spoken to her, didn’t miss her in the least. But she always reacted to their presence.
“Daddy, can I have a doughnut?”
Clay looked down at the little girl who’d brought him to his knees in the first few weeks of their acquaintance.
Although he’d wanted a child, he’d never expected to love one this much.
“I don’t think so, babe,” he said. “You had ice cream earlier. And it’s almost time for dinner.”
“What if I only eat half of it?” she asked. “Or save it for tomorrow?”
He knew he should say no. But she was giving him the dimpled smile he couldn’t resist. “Please, Daddy?”
She probably thought “please” was the magic word. But it was the “Daddy” that got him.
“Listen to your father,” Al ie said, preoccupied with her shopping. But Clay had spoken at the same time—and already succumbed. “Okay. If you save it.”
Stopping, grocery list stil in hand, his wife turned to face him. “You’re giving in to her just like that?”
“Don’t I always?” he said with a grin.
Shaking her head, Al ie chuckled. “Who would ever have thought you’d be such a pushover?”
“You?” Pul ing her to him, he stole a kiss. He knew she wasn’t real y annoyed; she loved the way he treated Whitney. She was ready for another child, especial y since she’d decided to be a stay-at-home mom for a while. But he was the one who’d chosen to wait, so that Whitney could have a solid year, at least, alone with them.
“You’ve got to stop spoiling her,” Al ie said, halfheartedly.
“You get the milk and eggs, and we’l meet you at the checkout,” he said so she wouldn’t have to go to the bakery with them.
Frowning, Al ie glanced BethAnn’s way, confirming the fact that she was more opposed to the other woman’s proximity than to Whitney’s eating a doughnut. “Okay, but don’t let Beth Ann poison it,” she muttered for his ears alone.
He squeezed her arm, then led Whitney toward the display case that held the cakes and doughnuts.
When Beth Ann saw them coming, she stopped whispering and straightened to her ful height. She’d also unbuttoned the top two buttons of her uniform—as if it was so hot in the store she simply couldn’t keep her clothes on.
Even though it was the dead of winter…
Clay had no trouble ignoring her cleavage. He squatted in front of the glass, more interested in enjoying Whitney’s excitement over her treat. “Which one do you want, half-pint?” he asked.
“The long one. The one with brown frosting.”
“We’l have a maple bar,” he said to Beth Ann, rising.
Beth Ann reached into the case, pul ed out a maple bar and put it in a sack. But when he tried to take it from her, she wouldn’t let go. “How’ve you been?” she asked, her eyes hungry enough to make him pity her.
“Fine,” he said. “You?”
“Good.”
She offered him a brief smile. “I hear Al ie’s parents are living in Jackson.”
“That’s right.”
“I’m glad they were able to reconcile.”
“So are we.”
She licked her lips nervously. “What’s Chief McCormick doing now?”
Final y getting hold of the sack, Clay handed it to Whitney. “He’s been hired to handle security for a big company there. He likes it.”
“And her mother?”
“She’s teaching piano lessons.”
“That sounds ideal.”
“It seems to be working.” He started to move on, but she spoke again, giving him the impression she couldn’t bear to see him go.
“How’s your own mother?”
Irene was doing surprisingly wel , considering the heartbreak she’d suffered when Al ie’s father reconciled with his wife and relocated. “She’s keeping busy.”
“I run into her every once in a while. At the dress shop.”
Beth Ann smiled prettily at him again. “Anyway, it’s good to see you.”
“Take care.” He turned away, but he and Whitney hadn’t gone two feet before Al ie came rushing back to meet them. He could tel by the look on her face that something was wrong.
“What is it?” he asked.
She drew him farther away from Beth Ann and lowered her voice. “Grace just cal ed.”
“What did she say?”
She stared down at her cel phone for a moment, then met his gaze, her eyes fil ed with worry. “They just found Barker’s car in the quarry.”
ISBN: 978-1-55254-846-2
DEAD GIVEAWAY
Copyright © 2007 by Brenda Novak.
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