Only moments before dinner, Griffin received the call he had been anticipating, the call he had dreaded. He excused himself, left the dining room, and took the call in the privacy of his den. The Beauty Queen Killer had struck again. The woman’s body had been found yesterday shortly before noon in a motel room in Bessemer, Alabama, outside Birmingham.
WBNN morning talk show hostess, LaShae Goodloe, had been decapitated.
Anger boiled inside Griff. Only years of mastering the art of meditation, as well as various other mental and physical arts, allowed him to gain control of his rage and channel it properly. But even now, there were times when he had to remind himself that the ultimate goal was justice, not revenge.
“The husband was questioned for hours,” Griff’s D.C. contact told him. “It seems they were separated and the husband has a notoriously bad temper.”
“But he didn’t kill his wife?” Griff asked. “You’re sure?”
“LaShae Goodloe was a former Miss Birmingham, and she was still young and very attractive. Her talent was singing, so he chopped off her head and left a single red rose lying between her breasts. Sounds like our guy to me. Besides, the husband has an alibi. Confirmed.”
“I suppose Nic is already on her way to Birmingham?”
“You suppose correctly.”
With only the basic information, Griffin knew he needed to make some quick decisions that involved Lindsay and Judd. Sanders would handle the mundane necessities— seeing to it that the Powell jet was fueled and ready to take off, making hotel reservations in Birmingham, and arranging for a car. Rick Carson would do a background check on the principal players—the victim, her family, friends, and associates, as well as the detectives in charge of the case.
Knowledge was power. A different kind of power than great wealth, but equally important. And one could often be used to acquire the other.
Since Nic Baxter had already hightailed it to Birmingham, Griff saw no point in racing to Alabama tonight. Tomorrow would be soon enough. By then, the local police would know more than they did today, and Rick would probably have the name of a useful informant.
Griff didn’t have to worry about dotting i’s and crossing t’s. That would be done for him by his employees. His one major decision was whether to involve Lindsay in this new BQK case. He could easily contact Judd himself or have Rick or one of the other Powell agents get in touch with him.
Lindsay needed a break—from the BQK cases and from Judd. The best thing he could do for her was leave her out of the loop this time around.
“Griffin?” Yvette stood in the den doorway. “Is everything all right?”
“I hope y’all didn’t wait dinner for me.”
“The others didn’t,” she replied as she approached him. “I thought perhaps your phone call was not good news.”
“You’re right. It wasn’t. The BQ Killer has struck again.”
Sandi Ford locked the doors of her dance studio on Main Street in downtown Parsons, Louisiana, at precisely seven-ten and walked to her SUV parked out front. She had been taking private students three evenings a week, from six until seven, after her regular classes ended. Her twelve-year-old twin girls, Joy and Jeri, both needed braces; her eight-year-old, Shaun, had broken his leg playing soccer, and Earl Ray’s insurance had a $1,500 per person deductible. While Earl Ray’s paycheck had increased very little over the past five years, his insurance premiums had steadily increased and the benefits drastic ally dwindled. She had no choice but to earn some extra money. Despite the fact that she and Earl Ray both worked tirelessly, their debts kept mounting, and it hadn’t helped that the raise her husband had been counting on had fallen through only last week.
Sandi opened the Tahoe’s driver’s-side door and climbed behind the wheel. They had purchased the used SUV three years ago, before gas prices had gone through the roof, and they simply couldn’t afford to trade it in on another vehicle, not when they had only six months of payments left. Besides, she needed the room in the SUV, not only for hauling around her own three children and their friends, but for transporting the equipment for her dance troupe when they performed in contests.
The drive from downtown Parsons to their home on First Street took less than five minutes. The old Queen Anne Victorian she and Earl Ray had bought and lovingly restored in the first years of their marriage had been and still was Sandi’s dream house. She just wished they could afford to fill it with the antiques she so loved.
Someday.
When the kids were grown and out of college.
She parked in the driveway behind Earl Ray’s ten-year-old Ford pickup. They had planned to build a two-car garage, but just couldn’t seem to work it into their budget. Their very tight budget.
Draping her bag over her shoulder, Sandi got out of the Tahoe, locked it, and headed straight for the backdoor. The minute she entered the kitchen, the wonderful aroma of tomato sauce, heavily laden with oregano, filled her nostrils. Earl Ray glanced up from where he was putting a tray of uncooked bread sticks into the oven and smiled at her. The first night they met—on a blind date fourteen years ago—she had fallen in love with his smile. At thirty-seven, Earl Ray’s dark hair was beginning to thin and he had a small beer belly, but he was still good-looking, still sexy. If possible, she loved him more now than she had when they first married.
He closed the oven door and set the timer, then tossed the oven mitt on the counter. Sandi hung her bag on the coatrack near the backdoor.
“We’re having spaghetti for supper,” he told her. “Shaun is watching TV in the den and doing his homework. The girls are upstairs cleaning their room.”
Sandi went over and put her arm around Earl Ray, hugged him, and then kissed his cheek. “It would seem you have everything under control.”
He swatted her on the behind. She giggled.
“I’ve got a bottle of that wine you like chilling in the refrigerator,” he said. “Maybe after the kids are down for the night, you and I—”
She kissed him again. Seriously. Putting a little tongue into it. He cupped her buttocks and pressed her into his erection.
“Ah, gee, I wish you two wouldn’t do that,” Shaun said as he entered the kitchen. “Stuff like that’s liable to warp a little kid like me.”
Laughing at their son’s overly dramatic statement, Sandi and Earl Ray broke apart. Sandi walked over to Shaun and ruffled his thick auburn curls.
“One of these days, you’ll want some girl to kiss you,” Sandi said.
“Yuck. Not me. Not ever.”
Glancing at her husband, she asked, “How soon will dinner be ready?”
“Give me ten minutes,” Earl Ray said. “Why don’t you go sit down and rest until then?” He motioned to Shaun. “Run upstairs and tell your sisters to wash up and get ready for supper.”
“Ah, do I have to?” Shaun whined.
“Go!” Earl Ray ordered.
Frowning, Shaun meandered out of the kitchen. The slow, steady clump, clump, clump of his athletic shoes hitting the steps as he climbed the backstairs echoed through the old house.
“Thanks, honey,” Sandi said. “I’ve been on my feet all afternoon. I’d love nothing better than to sit down for a few minutes.”
“I wish you hadn’t had to take on those extra lessons. If my raise had come through—”
“That wasn’t your fault. You can’t help it if the union voted to accept the company’s offer,” Sandi said. “Besides, I’m enjoying giving these one-on-one lessons. Would you believe that one of my private students, Renae Yates, knew that I was once Miss Teen USA? It seems her mother was a student at Parsons State back when I was there.”
An odd expression crossed Earl Ray’s face. Fleeting. Momentary. If she hadn’t been looking right at him, she would have missed it.
“What’s wrong?” she asked.
“Nothing. It’s just sometimes I wonder if you ever think about … well, if you’ve ever wished you’d done more with your dancing.”
“I did. I own a dance studio, don’t I?”
“You know what I mean. You have so much talent. If we hadn’t gotten married—”
“I wouldn’t change a thing. Besides, I never was as talented as you thought I was. Or my mother thought I was.”
Earl Ray chuckled. “I believe your mother still blames me that you’re not a prima ballerina with some high-falutin’ dance company in New York.”
Sandi blew her husband a kiss as she headed for the den. As a kid, she’d had high expectations. Her mother’s dream for her to become a professional ballerina had somehow become her dream, too. She’d loved to dance, but by the time she was eighteen, she’d had to admit to herself that she lacked both the incredible talent and the relentless drive it took to succeed. Even now, her mother was convinced that Sandi had sacrificed herself for marriage and motherhood. No matter how many times she told her mother that she was happy, that she wouldn’t trade her life for anyone else’s, her mom refused to believe her.
Falling into the recliner in the den, Sandi sighed as she closed her eyes and let her mind drift. Not backward, but forward. To this fall when the Tahoe would be paid off. To next year when she would have socked away enough money for her and Earl Ray to take the kids to Disney World for a few days. To fifteen months from now when she could celebrate being cancer-free for five years.
Pudge listened as Ruddy told him, in detail, about luring LaShae Goodloe to her death. In the past, he had truly enjoyed hearing every grizzly detail, had loved hearing the excitement in his cousin’s voice. But tonight was different. His mind kept fading out, thinking about how close they were to the end of their five-year game. The score was so close that either of them could win. But Pudge had no intention of being the loser. If he could find a redhead next …
“I can understand now why you’ve used that method several times. My God, it’s exhilarating to take off someone’s head. I had no idea that so much blood would shoot out halfway across the room.”
“There are two major arteries in the neck that are severed when you take off someone’s head,” Pudge explained. “Did you touch her afterward?”
“Only to place the rose on her chest. Why do you ask?”
“Remember the Cotton Queen from Cullman last year? I laid my hand on her chest, after I’d cut off her head. Her heart was still beating. Slowly. Beating in tremors. Then in less than thirty seconds, it was over.”
“Next time, I’ll—”
“There probably won’t be a next time for you,” Pudge said. “Not unless your last kill is another singer.”
Ruddy sighed heavily. “I wish we hadn’t set a five-year time limit.”
“We agreed that we would adhere to the rules. And that includes the stipulation that the winner takes all.”
“I regret that we made such an unholy agreement.”
“The game had become boring,” Pudge reminded his cousin. “We had to up the stakes to keep the level of excitement high, to make it worth the effort.”
“You’re right. It’s just I hate the thought of having to …” He gulped. “If I win, I promise that I’ll make your penalty as quick and painless as possible,” Ruddy said.
“If you win.”
“I’m ahead now. LaShae Goodloe gave me ten more points. Even if you get a redhead next—”
“She’ll be a redhead.”
“You haven’t already chosen her, have you? That would be cheating and—”
“No, certainly not,” Pudge lied. Of course, he had chosen his next victim. But what Ruddy didn’t know, wouldn’t hurt either of them. Feeling quite self-satisfied, Pudge thought about the cute redhead from Parsons, Louisiana, practically in his backyard.
On the drive from Soddy-Daisy to the Walker hunting lodge in the next county, Lindsay had questioned her sanity. What was she doing? Why was she rushing to Judd this way?
When Griff had called an hour ago, she’d been playing Monopoly with Callie’s kids, enjoying herself tremendously. During the past few years as a Powell agent, she had almost forgotten what real life was like. Regular routines, regular people living regular lives. No cloak and dagger. No murder mysteries to solve. No ruthless killers who couldn’t be stopped.
“He’s killed again,” Griff had told her. “A former Miss Birmingham. He chopped off her head.”
Lindsay pulled her Trailblazer to a steady halt in front of the lodge. To her surprise, lights burned brightly inside the house. That meant Judd wasn’t sitting in the dark, as he so often did.
“Just as Derek predicted, our guy is killing more often. Not a month or two apart now, only a week or so,” Griff had said. “The more frenzied he becomes, the better our chances of catching him, especially if he makes just one major mistake.”
After getting out of her SUV, Lindsay yanked her coat off the passenger seat and put it on, then locked the vehicle and headed toward the front porch. As she approached the door, she thought she heard music.
Music? In Judd’s house? Not possible. He didn’t watch TV, didn’t read, seldom listened to music, didn’t do much of anything that was halfway normal.
“I thought twice about calling you,” Griff had said. “I figured you’d had all you could take of both Judd and the BQK cases. But Yvette thought I should call you, allow you to decide for yourself. You don’t have to do this. You can say no.”
She could have said no, but both Yvette and Griff had known she wouldn’t. When it came to anything to do with Judd Walker, she was shameless.
As she lifted her hand to knock, she heard the music again. Soft. Mournful. A heartfelt rendition of “Body and Soul” floated from inside the lodge, like smoke in the night air. Hesitating, she dropped her hand and stood there on the porch, her pulse racing. Remembering. She had given Judd several jazz CDs for Christmas the year before last, knowing how much he loved jazz. He had tossed the decoratively wrapped gift aside without opening it.
Was this music off one of the CDs she had given him?
When she knocked several times, the tune changed to “Send in the Clowns.” Soft, sweet, bluesy.
By the time she pounded her fist for the fourth time, the front door swung wide open. Lindsay gasped, not expecting Judd to respond so promptly.
They stood there staring at each other. Her heart sank. It was obvious that Judd hadn’t shaved in days. His hair was tousled, needing not only cutting but combing. His golden eyes were bloodshot, his face haggard. He looked like hell.
Her first instinct was to put her arms around him and comfort him.
She didn’t.
“What are you doing here?” he asked. His tone was neither hostile nor inviting.
He didn’t sound as if he was drunk.
“May I come in?” she asked.
He moved aside and swept his arm out in an inviting gesture. “Sure.”
When she entered the foyer, he closed the door behind her. The melancholy strains of piano, trumpet, and drums wafted out in the foyer from the sitting room on the left. She glanced through the open door and noticed a blazing fire in the massive stone fireplace.
Although she’d never been upstairs, she was quite familiar with the downstairs rooms: The two large sitting rooms flanking the foyer, the dining room, the kitchen, the three bedrooms, and a single bath with fixtures a good forty years old.
She noticed Judd had put his hands in his jeans pockets and his thumbs were hooked over the edge, nervously stroking the denim fabric.
“Want some coffee or maybe hot tea?” Judd asked.
Had she heard him correctly? Had he offered her something to drink? Had he actually been cordial?
“Nothing, thanks.”
“Take your coat?” he asked.
She unbuttoned the coat and handed it to him.
“Go on into the parlor,” he told her as he hung her coat on the hall tree in the foyer.
When she entered the sitting room on the left, she felt an odd sense of uncertainty. What was going on with Judd? Why was he being so nice to her?
“Have a seat,” he said.
Startled that he was so close, only a couple of feet behind her, she gasped, then whirled around and faced him.
“Griff called,” Lindsay said. “The Beauty Queen Killer has struck again.”
Judd nodded, but said nothing.
“A former Miss Birmingham. He cut off her head.”
Judd flinched.
“Griff’s flying to Birmingham in the morning,” she said.
“Okay.” He nodded. “Should we drive down or should we see if we can catch a morning flight out of Chattanooga?”
She stared at him, puzzled by his calm, rational manner. “Want to tell me what’s going on or should I assume you’re an alien who has taken over Judd Walker’s body.”
His lips twitched. Was it possible that Judd had almost smiled?
He took a couple of hesitant steps toward her. Her breath caught in her throat.
When only inches separated them, Lindsay felt a sense of panic.
Run! Now, while you still can.
“You shouldn’t have come here,” he told her, his voice low and calm.
“I thought about not coming,” she admitted. “Griff said he could call you or he could send Rick after you or … I had to come myself. You know that.”
“Yeah, I know.”
Placing her cupped hand over her mouth, she swallowed salty tears. She would not cry. Silly, silly woman! “I guess I’m like an old dog that keeps coming back after his master has kicked him for the twentieth time.”
Judd stared at her, a peculiar expression on his face. When he reached for her, she jerked away, startled by his action. But she couldn’t stop looking at him. He lifted his hand up and circled the back of her neck. Gently. When he pulled her closer, she didn’t resist. Couldn’t resist.
He lowered his head, bringing his lips in line with hers and whispered, “I’m sorry, sweetheart. You’ll never know how sorry I am.”