CHAPTER 19
CHAPPY HOLCOMBE SAT at the head of the
spit-polished Chippendale dining table. “Well, how about it,
Cynthia, do you think Twister was sleeping with your good friend
Erin Bushnell?”
Cynthia Holcombe finished chewing her breadstick,
swallowed, and regarded her father-in-law as if he’d made a tacky
joke. “No, I don’t,” was all she said. She picked up another
breadstick, as if in self-defense.
Chappy waved his fork at his daughter-in-law.
“Fact is, I don’t, either. Cynthia, you’re the one I’d swear old
Twister wants to sleep with, given all those lusty looks he tosses
your way.”
“Dad, please,” Tony said, but his voice was more
resigned than angry or embarrassed.
“All right, all right,” Chappy said. “Mrs. Goss,
where’s our lunch?”
“Yours is right here, Chappy.” Mrs. Goss,
fiftyish, was blessed with striking, heavy black hair she wore
loose and curling down her back, like a gypsy. A long bright yellow
velvet skirt swished gracefully around her ankles, a peasant
blouse, cut low, the final touch. She leaned down to set a platter
of shrimp salad at Chappy’s right hand, her cleavage not three
inches from his face.
“Looks good,” Chappy said, “even the salad.”
“Control yourself,” Mrs. Goss said and swished
back to the kitchen.
“You’re in for a treat, Agent,” Chappy said to
Ruth. “Mrs. Goss makes the best shrimp salad in Virginia, and she
knows it.”
“That may be,” Cynthia said. “But she should wear
an apron over her ridiculous hippie outfits.”
“She’s a gypsy, not a hippie,” Chappy said,
annoyance in his dark eyes if not in his voice. “She doesn’t press
her bosom in your face, Cynthia, only mine. Otherwise I wouldn’t
see any bosoms at all. Leave her alone.”
Mrs. Goss finished serving, seemingly oblivious,
and left them to it, her large silver hoop earrings flashing in the
sunlight.
“Cynthia, tell me about Erin Bushnell,” Dix said.
“Tony said you two were like sisters.”
Cynthia replied calmly, “Tony is out of date. Erin
and I got along nicely until she started eyeing my husband. Her
death, well, it’s a great shock, as you can imagine, because at one
time we were quite close. I still grieve for her.”
Dix said, “So Tony didn’t know how you felt? He
saw your grief and believed you and Erin were still as close as
before?”
“Erin never came on to me, Cynthia, never,” Tony
said.
“I saw her pull you into the moonlight last
Tuesday night at that cocktail party Gloria Stanford threw. It was
cold that night, but that didn’t stop either of you.”
Tony speared a shrimp on his fork and stared at
it. “I don’t even remember that. I’m surprised you noticed, since
you were flirting with Uncle Gordon.”
Chappy set his fork on his plate, leaned back in
his chair, and laughed until it was the only sound in the dining
room. He said to Ruth on a hiccup, “You look shell-shocked, Agent
Warnecki. It’s always a circus between the two of them.”
One of Dix’s black eyebrows shot up. “Add you to
the mix, Chappy, and we’ve got the wild animal act.”
“Nah, I’m as tame as your little Brewster.”
“Brewster thinks he’s a Doberman.”
Tony asked Dix, “You find out yet who hired those
guys to kill Agent Warnecki on Saturday night?”
The question brought the conversation to a halt.
Ruth could hear Mrs. Goss humming in the kitchen.
Chappy said into the heart of the silence, “Dix
probably doesn’t want to talk about it, Tony. Fact is, identifying
them may not be possible. I heard the bodies were badly burned.
That right, Dix?”
Dix shrugged. “We’ll see. The FBI forensic lab is
using their fingerprint recognition program on the partial prints
we have. We’re looking for where the men might have come from. We
may have something more to go on soon.”
“But you’ve got no leads now, right, Dix?” Chappy
asked him.
“Oh, we’re managing to keep busy,” Dix said
easily, sitting back and lacing his fingers over his belly.
Chappy suddenly said, “Dix, I heard you found poor
old Walt McGuffey murdered in his own house. Another shock like
that and you’ll have to bury me. Who would want to kill him? Oh, I
see. Someone must have thought Walt saw something he shouldn’t
since he lives near the other entrance to Winkel’s Cave.”
“That’s possible,” Dix said. “Walt was a fine
gentleman, and Christie really loved him. He was devastated when
she disappeared.” He didn’t mention finding Ruth’s Beemer in the
shed. He turned to Cynthia. “I find it surprising that you and Erin
Bushnell were such good friends. I haven’t seen you make friends
with any women in town.”
“I grew up with three women at home, Dix,” Cynthia
said, “and they were world-class bitches all, if that gives you
some idea of why I never bothered. I believed Erin was different,
but she wasn’t. Yes, she made a show of affection for Uncle Gordon,
but only to throw me off her real objective, which was my own
husband. That’s why she spent so much time with me here, at Tara.
She wanted to see you, Tony.”
“Or maybe,” Chappy said, voice sly, “both of you
had the hots for old Twister.”
“That’s not funny, Chappy. He’s nearly as old as
you are,” Cynthia said. “How much longer before you grow up?”
Dix said quickly, “So you think Ginger’s wrong
about Erin loving Dr. Holcombe, Cynthia?”
Cynthia shrugged one of her thin, elegant
shoulders under her dark red St. John knit top. “Ginger would say
anything to make you happy, wouldn’t she, Dix? Everyone but you
knows she’d love to jump your bones. Now, her mother, Gloria
Stanford, she’s another matter.”
After dropping that bomb, Cynthia gave her full
attention to her shrimp salad.
Ruth took a sip of her white wine. “What about
you, Chappy, do you know if your brother was sleeping with anyone
else?”
Dix shot her a look, a ghost of a smile on his
mouth before he speared a water chestnut out of his shrimp
salad.
“Gloria and Twister sleeping together? Nah, maybe
a long time ago, but she’s way too old for him now,” Chappy said.
“Fact is, Twister likes ’em young. Even Cynthia’s long in the tooth
for Twister’s tastes. You best accept the end is in sight,
Cynthia.”
Ruth said, “So Erin Bushnell was the right age for
him?”
“Early twenties? Yeah, that’s right, but what do I
know, Agent Ruth? Really, what do I know? Me and Twister, we
haven’t gotten along since before you were born—too much alike, I
suppose, and it makes our pots bubble and boil. Sounds like it’s
time you ask him, watch him sputter a bit.” His smile was
malicious.
After Mrs. Goss had cleared off the table, she
brought in a big New York cheesecake and set it with some panache
in the middle of the table, and handed Chappy a knife. As he cut
them all slices, Ruth said, “I really like your house, Chappy. Why
did you name it Tara?”
“Because when I brought Tony and Christie’s mama
here I told her she’d never be hungry again.”
Tony said to Ruth, “My mother had a trust fund the
size of the Rhode Island State budget.”
Chappy laughed. “Makes a cute story. I like the
name Tara. It appeals to something way down deep inside me. The
architecture’s real close, except, of course, we’ve got lots of
nice big bathrooms.”
Thirty minutes later Dix pulled out onto the long
driveway. Ruth said, “We’ve already got fingerprints for those two
men and IAFIS is trying to match what we’ve got. Why all that fancy
talk about the FBI?”
Dix grunted, shoved on his dark aviator
glasses.
“Setting a cat among the pigeons, were you?”
He grinned at her. “Who knows what might come out
of that? The three of them always, I repeat, always put on a show for visitors. You start them on
a topic and they’ll go with it. I know it’s hard for you to
believe, but they were really rather tame today. Erin Bushnell’s
death took a lot of the fun out of it for them. Walt’s death,
too.”
Ruth nodded. “I agree there were strong feelings
about Erin, but I couldn’t figure out who felt what.”
“These folks are good. They’ve had years of
practice.”
“I’ve seen dysfunctional families before, and I’m
probably part of one myself, but those three are champions.”
Dix laughed. “You might have asked Chappy about
him and Erin, to see the looks on their faces.”
“I hate to ask you this, but do you think one of
your family could be involved in Erin’s murder?”
He was silent as he turned onto Mount Olive Road.
“When Christie disappeared, I thought about every possibility,
including someone in the family being involved. And after all these
years they’d have to do a whole lot to surprise me. But I don’t see
any of them killing somebody. And yes, I’ve been wrong lots of
times.”
A short time later, they stood in front of Helen
Rafferty’s desk. Dix slipped off his aviator glasses and smiled
down at Helen, who looked harried.
Dix said, leaning close, “I need to speak to you,
Helen. Five minutes, in the lounge?”
“I—Well, I don’t suppose you’ll take a rain check,
Sheriff?”
“I would prefer now. This is very
important.”
There were two employees in the Stanislaus
administration employee lounge, hunched over a green Formica table,
a bag of Fritos between them. Dix flipped out his badge and waved
them out.
Ruth sat beside Helen and looked at her for
several moments, judging her mood. She turned on her FBI interview
voice, calm, inviting. “Tell us about Dr. Holcombe and Erin
Bushnell, Ms. Rafferty.”
Helen looked from Ruth to Dix, who was standing
with his shoulders against the wall, arms crossed over his
chest.
She burst into tears.