Fire and Blood
“Any chance this could be a coincidence?” Shannon
wanted to know.
“None,” I said flatly.
We’d managed to save one person last night, but
we hadn’t been there for Dale Graham. If the wicked twelve wanted
to make me feel guilty, they’d succeeded. But I knew this wasn’t
our fault. Bad things had been happening in
Kilmer since before I was born. I was just determined to get to the
bottom of it.
I stood looking at the smoking ruin of his house
on Rabbit Road and wanted to throw up. Nobody suggested I try to
read it to find out what happened here. Too much heat remained
trapped in the burnt timbers to make it feasible, even if I felt
like trying that particular trick again so soon. I didn’t.
Volunteer firemen poked through the wreckage,
looking for human remains. They seemed inappropriately cheerful, as
if they did this all the time. Then again, in Kilmer, they probably
did.
“Look at the grass and trees around the house,”
Jesse murmured.
I shifted focus, along with the other two. It
hit us all at the same time, but Chance articulated it. “A third of
the trees on his property caught fire, and all the green grass
burnt up.” “So Miss Minnie was right?” Shannon asked.
I felt a headache coming on. “Sort of. Just not
on a global scale.”
“That means we need to take her seriously,”
Jesse said. “However crazy that sounds.”
“An earthquake might not be literal.” Chance
seemed distant but thoughtful.
Most of me felt glad he had eased off—that he
was focused more on solving our problems. I wasn’t ready for
reconciliation, not when his power was on temporary hiatus and our
long-term problems hadn’t been resolved. When we left Kilmer for
good, his luck would return—and I would become a victim of the need
for cosmic balance again. I didn’t look forward to it.
“But what causes tremors?” Shannon fidgeted,
obviously not sure why we were hanging around the fire scene. I
guessed she wanted to be away from here before Sheriff Robinson
showed up and decided to hold us indefinitely for being
troublemaking pains in his sizable ass.
I thought about that, remembering the crappy
places I’d lived over the years, and said at the same time as
Jesse, “A train.”
Chance nodded, excitement sparking like gold
flecks in his eyes. “Shannon, are there any houses built close to
the train tracks in town? Close enough that they’d shake when the
train goes by?”
“Yep,” she said. “There used to be a station, a
long time ago, but it closed down in—lemme think . . .” She broke
off, pondering for a full minute. “In 1911. Now there’s just a
cargo line that goes by twice a week.”
“Do you know the way?” Jesse asked.
She nodded. “I used to hang out with a kid who
lived out there, but my mom made me stop because he wasn’t a
desirable acquaintance.” I could tell from her tone that she was
quoting her mother verbatim. “It’s the worst part of Kilmer.”
Saldana tossed her the keys. “Here you go.” At
her stunned expression, he asked, “You do
know how to drive?”
She was speechless, staring at him for a long
minute before she managed to say, “Well, yeah. My dad taught me. I
have a license too, but I don’t have a car, and the last few
months, I’ve been grounded for one reason or another.”
He smiled at her. “Then you need the practice,
and it’ll be easier if you just take us there. That okay with
you?”
Her smile could’ve blinded the lot of us. “Sure.
Get in.” Jesse Saldana would make a great dad, I decided, as I
headed toward the workers raking the wreckage. He wasn’t quite old
enough to be parenting Shannon, but he had the older-brother role
polished to a fine sheen.
“I’ll be right back,” I said over my
shoulder.
I picked my way toward the wreckage of Dale’s
house. Ash sifted from the broken beams, and smoke still curled
from the foundation. There were five men raking the place down;
none of them looked pleased at my approach.
“What do you think happened?” I asked the lead
volunteer.
Sooty-faced and weary, he shrugged. “My guess?
He fell asleep with a lit cigarette. It would’ve spread faster if
he was drinking.”
That was the official story
they spread about my mama, too. Miz Ruth had said as much a few
days back. That seemed an unlikely coincidence.
“Have you recovered his body?” Maybe it was
macabre, but I had to know.
The volunteer shook his head. “Not yet. We’ll
keep looking.”
First happy news I’d had all day. “Thanks. Good
luck.”
Maybe Dale Graham hadn’t been home when they
torched his house. I could hope, right? And maybe he had his
journal with him, wherever he was. Playing dead might be the
smartest thing he could do.
I pulled Butch out of my handbag and put him
down. “Remember the hippie we ate pie with at the diner?”
He yapped once.
“Sniff around and see if you can find
him.”
It was probably a long shot. The acrid smoke
would likely overwhelm any subtler smells, but Butch appeared keen
to try. He put his nose to the ground and sniffed all around the
wreckage in a large perimeter, and then trotted toward the road. He
barked and then lifted a leg on the mailbox.
I didn’t know what to make of that. “He got his
mail yesterday?”
Butch gave the affirmative yap. I wasn’t sure
how that helped us, but I bent to scratch behind his ears and told
him, “Good dog.”
Then I scooped him up, sprinted for the
Forester, and climbed in back, where I found Jesse. With his bad
arm, he might’ve wanted help with the driving and was too much of a
man to say so. The idea made me smile.
“What?” Jesse asked.
“How’s the injury?”
He glanced at the bandage wrapped around his
biceps. “I’ll be fine; just a graze. It looks worse than it
is.”
“I was worried about you.”
“Yeah? Well, the feeling’s mutual.” Jesse took
my hand, and I took comfort in that tiny spark. He raised it gently
to his lips; the heat sent shivers all through me.
Shannon pulled off the gravel drive and onto the
county road smoothly. She looked small behind the wheel of the SUV,
but she didn’t seem nervous. Chance asked her something, and she
spared him a glance to answer. I couldn’t make out their words for
the rush of the road beneath the tires and the soft crackle of
blurry music on the radio. I’d never feel the same about AM/FM
stations after meeting her. I wondered idly if she could tune in to
the dead in a vehicle too.
For a few moments, I let myself enjoy the heat
of his hand in mine, and then I pulled back. Touching him was a
distraction I didn’t need.
“Couple things we need to talk about,” Jesse
said quietly. “Sheriff Robinson? I got no sense of guilt off him
last night. Even when you made your parting shot, all I felt from
him was fear . . . bone-deep terror, in fact. Much worse than the
night we sprung Chance from jail.”
“So he knows something’s wrong, but he’s not
part of it,” I surmised. “Why do you think he threw away those
missing persons forms?”
Saldana shrugged. “Don’t know. Maybe he didn’t
want proof of his dereliction of duty, but he didn’t want to go
poking around out in the woods, either. I’m not infallible.” By his
bleak expression, I could tell he was thinking of his dead partner.
“But I don’t think I’m wrong this time.”
Frankly, if fear of the forest motivated the
sheriff, I couldn’t blame him. I wouldn’t want to lead a search
party out there, either. Too bad, because that was exactly what I
needed to do. The only way to gather evidence was to go out there
ourselves; I didn’t expect to like what we found.
“Good to know. If push comes to shove, Robinson
might back us if he wants to get some of his spine back.”
Jesse nodded. “Possible.”
I watched the scenery for a while, green-brown
trees passing in a blur. The filtered air felt damp and cool, as if
it blew in from the distant sea. Then it occurred to me that I had
no idea how the shooter had managed to peg him.
“How’d you get hit, anyway?” I’d thought he had
good cover behind the hedge.
For a moment, Jesse studied his hands, seeming
unwilling to answer. He said at last, “I stood up to distract the
shooter when you went back onto the porch and through the window
like a crazy person.”
My breath left me. “You got shot for me?”
He scowled. “I would’ve done the same for Chance
or Shannon.”
“I know,” I said, smiling.
That was the kind of man he was. He took his
vows to protect and serve very seriously. Living with him might be
just as difficult as being with Chance, but for different reasons.
When I’d told him that some women had a hard time handling the
constant danger their men were exposed to, I hadn’t been
exaggerating to make him feel better. The divorce statistics spoke
for themselves.
Shannon parked the SUV. “We’re here.”
I clambered out of the Forester and decided she
was right. This was the worst part of Kilmer, a section I’d never
seen before. It was literally on the other side of the tracks, and
the houses built closest must have shaken like blazes when the
train came through. Like, say, in an
earthquake?
Once more, I deposited Butch on the ground. “You
were with me when I went into the gas station, right?”
He yapped in confirmation.
“You remember what the guy smelled like?”
The Chihuahua tilted his head in thoughtful
consideration, and it was cute as hell. After a moment, he barked
once.
“Can I trust you to sniff around for him?”
Butch yapped twice, but I swear it was
sarcastic.
I laughed. “Okay, sorry. I shouldn’t have even
asked. Let me know if you find anything.”
He trotted off without deigning to reply.
It would help if we knew what we were looking
for. As it was, we strolled through the run-down clapboard houses,
admiring the patchy lawns, filthy gutters, and interesting piles of
junk. Though I wasn’t inclined to agree with Sandra Cheney on
principle, I could almost sympathize with her desire to keep
Shannon from hanging around here. The whole neighborhood stank of
despair and decay.
“So we had the fire,” Chance said, thinking
aloud. “The burnt trees and grass. We found the ‘earthquake’ site.
What are we missing?”
“Blood,” I murmured immediately.
“There was blood when I got shot,” Jesse
muttered.
Shannon added, “Hail.”
Jesse thought for a moment, and we paused to
give him a chance. “Miss Minnie said she saw the four horsemen
coming and going.”
“People don’t ride horses through town,” Shannon
objected. “Even in Kilmer, it can’t have been dudes on
horse-back.”
“So what did she see?” I
asked.
Unfortunately, nobody could come up with an
answer. We continued in a meandering path around the two streets
that made up this country ghetto. I kicked at a clump of pig-weed
straggling up at the edge of the road.
“When does the next train come by?” Chance asked
Shannon.
“Tuesday and Saturday, just before six
a.m.”
I suspected she’d know that only if she’d spent
the night with her scruffy “friend” at some point, but that wasn’t
our business. Time had gotten away from me, so I mentally tabulated
how long we’d been there.
“It’s Thursday?” I asked aloud, none too sure of
my calculations.
Jesse agreed with a nod. “So no trains
today.”
As we completed the loop and wound up back by
the Forester, Chance gave us something else to think about. “We
should be looking near the tracks. Right here, in fact.”
I agreed with that. Unless we were totally off
target, one of these ramshackle tract houses held something we
needed to know. Talk about an exercise in frustration. Only Miss
Minnie’s rambling had guided us here, and maybe we were crazy for
putting any stock in it at all. It was unlikely that Curtis Farrell
had lived anywhere near here.
We paced up and down the street four times
before Shannon said, “That one has a red front door. I mean, it’s
painted—badly, too.”
I saw what she meant. It looked as though
someone had slung a paint can to cover up some ugly graffiti. From
some angles, it also looked like splattered blood.
Chance saw it too. “Red as blood,” he noted as
we approached the broken cement driveway.
Butch came around the corner of the house,
wagging his tail fiercely. He yapped at me to tell me he’d found
the house. I stared in astonishment.
“Here? The gas station guy’s been here?”
The dog barked in confirmation, and I gave him a
rub. He leaped into my arms, and I stowed him away safely in my
bag.
We proceeded with caution. After all, it was
early; we were strangers, and most people around here had never
heard of gun control. Nothing stirred behind the curtains. While
the others made their way toward the house, I paused at the
mailbox, hoping to find out who lived here.
Jackpot. I found a
couple of utility bills for Curtis Farrell. I hadn’t dared hope we
would be this lucky. It would have been simpler to locate him in
the directory, assuming he was listed, but this confluence of
events suggested Miss Minnie knew something, layered beneath bits
of old Bible verse. I wished we could talk to her again, but I was
afraid of what more questions would do to her. I didn’t want to
hurt anyone while I was here. Well, nobody who was innocent , anyway.
But how brilliant. We needed to search his
house, and here we were.
When I caught up to the others, I found them
studying the front door. Jesse was asking, “Can you make out what
it says underneath the paint?”
Chance leaned in for a better look. “Mar . . .
and some numbers. Eight-three-six, I think.”
“March?” I offered. “Is it a date, you think? Or
a time?”
The others shrugged.
Shannon stepped to the side and peered through
the window between the gap in the ragged sheers. “I don’t think
anyone’s here. Are we going in?”
Since the guy was dead, it didn’t seem likely
anybody was home, unless Curtis had a roommate.
I cleared my throat. “I’m taking Jesse around
back. Chance, if the door happens to pop open while we’re gone,
give us a holler.” I thought that was better than making Jesse
watch him pick the lock. Even if he was suspended and well outside
his jurisdiction, I figured he probably didn’t want to see active
lawbreaking.
Rummaging in his pockets, Chance didn’t
acknowledge me as Jesse and I rounded the house. Shannon stayed
with him to watch him work.
“So your ex is a house-breaker too,” Jesse said,
sounding amused. “As I’ve said before, you have the most
interesting friends, Corine.”
I thought about Chuch, the ex-arms dealer,
married to Eva, the forger, and grinned. “Yeah. They sure come in
handy, don’t they?”
He smiled back, bitter chocolate eyes roving my
face in an appreciative manner. “I don’t think I should
comment.”
“That’s probably wise.”
We circled the house and found a bunch of
disgusting garbage cans that should have been set out weeks ago. If
I were truly devoted, I would have suggested going through them for
clues, but you couldn’t have paid me enough to touch one.
Instead of calling to us, Chance opened the back
door and waved us in. “The front was open,” he said mildly.
Jesse raised a brow. “Fancy that.”
“Small town,” I said. “People just don’t see the
need to lock up.”
I climbed two steps and crossed the sagging
porch, stepping into Farrell’s house. We’d gotten there before the
police, assuming the sheriff would even bother. The place looked
like a cyclone had hit it, though; clothes everywhere and dirty
dishes piled in the sink. Added to the trash in the back, it seemed
as if Curtis hadn’t been home in a while—at least, I couldn’t
imagine a human being living like that.
“Have a look around.” Jesse took charge as if
this were his crime scene. “I’ll take the kitchen. Corine, you
search the bathroom. Chance, take the bedroom, and Shannon, check
out the living room, please. I guarantee we don’t have to worry
about leaving DNA on the scene, but don’t touch anything with your
bare hands. They probably have a fingerprint kit even out here in
Hooterville.”
Shannon snickered, but she took his advice and
pulled the sleeves of her hoodie down past her hands as she headed
for the living room. Once in the bathroom, I did the same with my
sweater. Ew. I really had to search in there? It smelled like
something had died, and green fuzzy stuff grew in the grout between
the tiles. Man, I thought Jesse liked me better than that.
From within my handbag, Butch whined. The smell
was getting to him too. “There’s no help for it,” I told the dog.
“We have to be brave.”
I heard a thunk from the bedroom and peered out.
Using a broom handle, Chance poked gingerly at the piles of
clothing spread across the floor. He flashed me a wry smile. “I
think Shannon got the best deal in this division of labor.”
“Well, she’s young. He didn’t want to traumatize
her—oh dear God.” I caught my breath at the sight of a dead rat in
the cupboard beneath the sink.
It was going to be a long day.