CHAPTER 26
SHERIFF NOBLE’S
HOUSE
MAESTRO, VIRGINIA
THURSDAY EVENING
MAESTRO, VIRGINIA
THURSDAY EVENING
RAFE MOWED ACROSS his corn on the cob without
stopping. Rob, not to be outdone, managed an even wider swath of
his own, four rows of kernels at a time. For a moment, Ruth thought
he was going to choke. She clapped him on the back and handed him a
glass of water, then gave him a thumbs-up when he sat back and
smiled contentedly at his brother.
“Neither of you took a single breath,” Ruth said.
“That’s remarkable. Next time I’m going to find really, really big
ears of corn and test your limits.”
Dix looked up from his own corn at his boys, then
over at Ruth. The boys acted natural around her, not at all
prickly, as they often did when they thought a woman was
threatening to take their mother’s place.
She’d known them since Friday night. It was
amazing how comfortable they all were.
Dix said, leaning back in his chair, “Do you know
I can’t remember ever felling an ear of corn in under six
seconds?”
“We did it faster, right, Ruth?”
Ruth laughed. “I wasn’t timing you but I bet you
beat that. My older brother and I always competed to see who could
be the grossest as well as the fastest. Drove our parents
crazy.”
Rob said, “Grandpa Chappy usually laughs when we
do a gross-out for him, like stuffing chewed-up green beans in
front of your bottom teeth and peeling down your lip. Uncle Tony
gets all uptight and Aunt Cynthia looks like she wants to lock us
in a closet.”
“How about your uncle Gordon?” Ruth heard the
words come out of her mouth before she even realized what she’d
asked.
“Uncle Gordon? Hmm.” Rob looked over at Rafe, then
said, “Fact is, we’ve never been gross around Uncle Gordon. He
always looks so perfect, you know?”
“So does your grandpa Chappy,” Ruth said.
“It’s not the same,” Rafe said, shaking his head.
“And when the two of them are together they’re so busy fighting we
might as well not even be there.”
“Isn’t that the truth,” Ruth said.
“How about you, Ruth? What did you and your
brother do that was real gross?”
“Well, my favorite gross-out was chugging a Coke
while I was ice skating. You come to a fast stop in front of one of
your friends and belch really loud right in their face.”
The boys laughed. Dix knew that until tonight his
sons had been putting up a brave front, trying to act as natural as
they could while all hell was breaking loose around them—three
people murdered in their town in less than a week while their
father was the one responsible for finding out who killed
them.
Rob stopped laughing first. He looked down at the
pile of baked beans on his plate.
Well, impossible to ignore reality forever, Dix
thought. He said easily, “Thanks for the visual, Ruth. When we go
skating, no soft drinks allowed,” but the boys looked
thoughtful.
Rafe said, “I saw Uncle Tony scratch his armpit
once, and when we were playing baseball, he was standing out in
center field and he scratched—”
Rob cut his brother off. “Not in front of
Ruth.”
“You’re right, Rob, too much information,” Ruth
said, and saluted him with her glass of tea.
Dix scooped another spoonful of green beans onto
his son’s plate. “Eat and don’t smash them in front of your bottom
teeth.”
Rafe shot his father a wary look and said faster
than Brewster could swing his tail, “I went to see Mr. Fulton, you
know, see where we might stand with his hiring me, you know, when
my report card comes out.”
“This is a hardware store, right?” Ruth
asked.
Rafe nodded. “Mr. Fulton said only six days had
passed and nothing was any different at his store, and when would I
have proof that my grades are up in English and biology.”
Brewster was trying to climb Ruth’s leg. She
leaned down to pet his head and slipped him a bit of hot dog. But
Brewster wasn’t hungry, he wanted attention. He rubbed the hot dog
on her shoe until she had to lift her feet off the floor to avoid
him. The boys laughed until she scooped Brewster up and hugged him
against her chest. “What are you up to, smearing hot dog all over
my shoe, making everybody laugh at me? I thought you were my
hero.”
“Some hero,” Rob said, piling more potato salad on
his plate. “Brewster was so small when he was a puppy we were
afraid we might roll over on him during the night and squash
him.”
Dix chuckled, one eye on Brewster. “He was hero
enough to find Ruth. I’ve rolled over on Brewster myself and he’s
survived. Now, Rafe, what did Mr. Fulton say about the job?”
Rafe swallowed a mouthful of hot dog bun. “Mr.
Fulton asked me to spell ‘valedictorian.’ That wasn’t fair,
Dad.”
“Did you even attempt it?” Ruth asked.
“Yeah, I did. I missed the e in the middle. It wasn’t fair,” he repeated.
His father said, “I gather Mr. Fulton didn’t hire
you?”
“He told me to bring him my next report card. Then
he’d speak to you again.”
“Stup Fulton is full of surprises,” Dix said to
Ruth.
“Ah, he asked me what you’re doing about all this
violent stuff, Dad. I told him you and the three FBI agents are
working real hard on it. He just harrumphed.” He looked down at his
plate. This time his voice was as thin as the kitchen curtains.
“And there’s the kids at school. They’re saying that you’re not as
good as everyone says you are, that everyone in town’s getting
murdered.”
“Well,” Dix said, “you don’t look banged up so I
guess you didn’t get into any fights.”
“It was close,” Rafe muttered.
“I understand. But you managed to walk
away?”
It was Rob who said, “Sure, Dad. Right.”
Ruth had noticed the bruise on Rob’s knuckles. It
couldn’t have been all that bad a fight if his knuckles weren’t
skinned. She smiled brightly. “Hey, I saw a baseball and glove in
the hallway. Who’s the Barry Bonds?”
Rob said eagerly, “Me. Didn’t Dad tell you I’m
going to be the starting pitcher on the high-school team?”
“Sorry, Rob, I didn’t, but I sure intended to.”
Not that Rob really cared whether he had, Dix thought as Rob rushed
on. “The thing is, Ruth, I’m only a sophomore. Billy Caruthers
started last year as a junior, and he’s totally pissed the coach
picked me.”
Dix gave his son a long look.
Rob cleared his throat. “Ah, Dad, everyone says
it. Okay, Billy Caruthers was being a jerk—”
Dix said, “Rob, remember how your mom once washed
out your mouth with soap? That real strong soap that could peel the
skin right off your hands?”
Rob stared down at his plate. “Yeah, I remember.
It burned off all my nose hair.”
“You got the soap twice, Rob,” Rafe said, poking
his brother’s arm.
“You should have, too,” Rob said, and lifted his
fist toward his brother.
Dix said, “Boys?” in a quiet voice, and they
stopped dead in their tracks. “Good. Rob, finish it up now.”
“Okay, he was so mad he looked like he was gonna
burst.”
Dix gave him a thumbs-up. “I’ll give that a
pass.”
Ruth raised her glass. “Here’s to the next Derek
Lowe.”
“Hear! Hear!” Dix drank down the rest of his tea.
“You guys ready for some bread pudding?”
Ruth perked up. “Bread pudding? When did you have
time to make that, Dix?”
Rafe snickered. “Nah, Dad didn’t make it, it was
Ms. Denver, the physics teacher. She’s been after Dad since the
beginning of the school year. She’s a really good cook, so Rob and
I don’t mind except—”
“That’s enough, Rafe.”
Rafe subsided, slouching back in his chair.
Rob said, “Dad, you are going to catch the
killers, aren’t you?”
Dix looked at his eldest son. “What do you
think?”
Rob didn’t hesitate. “I told the kids you’d have
them in jail by Tuesday.”
“Well, that’s a motivator,” Dix said, with a
rueful glance at Ruth.
Ruth leaned forward, her elbows on the table. “I
agree with you, Rob. I’m thinking Tuesday is about right. But you
and Rafe both know it’s not quite that easy.”
“I’m thinking Monday, myself,” Dix said, and
folded his arms over his chest.
Ruth thought the boys would burst with pride at
this macho display.
Rob said, “Dude! Dad, we’re not kids. You can talk
stuff over with us, really. Everyone at school is talking about Ms.
Rafferty being killed in her bed, about how you found that student
buried in Winkel’s Cave.” He paused for a moment and cleared his
throat, but his voice was unsteady. “And about Mr. McGuffey. Oh
man, that was really bad.”
Dix’s own voice wasn’t all that steady, either.
“Walt was a fine man. I really liked him.”
Rafe said to Ruth, his voice still quavering, “Mom
always liked Mr. McGuffey. Last Thanksgiving he said Dad’s turkey
was as good as Mom’s, but he couldn’t do stuffing worth a damn. I
told him you couldn’t find Mom’s recipe.”
“I’ll give you one, Dix,” Ruth said, knowing they
were skating on very thin ice. The boys seemed both hyper and
scared, and trying not to show either. “Corn bread with water
chestnuts and cranberries.”
“I like water chestnuts,” Rafe said. “But I like
lots of sausage in my dressing, too.”
Ruth beamed when Rob said, “Maybe we can try it
your way, too, Ruth.”
DIX’S DOORBELL RANG not long after the boys went to
bed.
“You missed a great corn-on-the-cob gross-out,”
Dix said by way of a greeting.
“Let me get your coats,” Ruth said, peeling off
Sherlock’s leather jacket. She paused, then took a step back.
“What’s wrong, guys? What happened?”
“Sorry,” Savich said shortly. “Lots on our minds,
no excuse.”
He and Sherlock followed Dix into the living room.
Savich held up his hand when Ruth opened her mouth. “No, Ruth,
Sean’s all right, we spoke to him earlier. He’s already decided he
wants a Yorkshire terrier whose name is going to be Astro.”
Sherlock was still acting a bit stiff, but she
tried, giving Ruth and Dix big smiles. “Last summer we talked about
putting down Astroturf in the backyard for a very miniature
miniature golf course. I guess Sean fell in love with the
word.”
But it had nothing to do with Astroturf or
anything else, Ruth thought, glancing at the two of them. She
looked from one carefully expressionless face to the other, saw the
strain in Dillon’s eyes, the red creeping up Sherlock’s cheeks,
which meant she wanted to kick someone—Dillon?
Dillon and Sherlock were the anchors of Ruth’s
professional life. She was immensely grateful to Dillon for
bringing her into the Criminal Apprehension Unit eighteen months
earlier. He was an intuitive, natural leader, tough as a rock,
honorable to the core. Sherlock was funny and insightful, sharp and
focused, and you could count on her no matter what. She had only
one speed—full steam ahead. Ruth had never seen them like this
before.
Then the light dawned. She said slowly, “I don’t
believe this, you guys have had a major argument, haven’t you. Even
if I told everyone in the unit, they’d demand I take a lie detector
test, which no one would believe because they know I can cheat lie
detectors in my sleep.” She looked at the ceiling. “I’m ready to
pass over, Lord, since I’ve now seen it all.” She wagged a finger
at Sherlock. “What did you do, Sherlock, drive the sacred
Porsche?”
“Very funny, Ruth,” Sherlock said. “You know,
every time I’ve driven that car I’ve gotten a speeding
ticket.”
“Nothing’s wrong,” Savich said, his voice too
loud. “Now, if you don’t mind, we’ve got some serious stuff to talk
about.”
Sherlock nodded. “Here’s the deal. We have to take
off early tomorrow for Quantico because—”
“Before we go there,” Savich interrupted her, “we
need to tell you what MAX found out about Moses Grace and Claudia.
Her last name is Smollett, emphasis on the last syllable.”
Ruth sat forward, serious as could be now. “That’s
an English name, isn’t it?”
Savich nodded. “Of all things, her mom was
English. Her name was Pauline Smollett. She came to the United
States when she was twenty-two. She was a high-school math teacher
in Cleveland, and never married, at least in this country. From the
police reports, she had a pretty colorful personal life, but she
managed to keep it separate from her job. She raised a child,
Claudia, out of wedlock by herself.”
“What happened to her?” Ruth asked.
“She was raped and murdered by a gang.”
Dix leaned forward, hands on his knees. “Police
reports? How did you find the connection, Savich?”
“When I called, I told you we had more work to
do,” Savich said matter-of-factly, then added, his voice dropping
ten degrees, “and that meant following up some information Claudia
gave Sherlock.”
Dix said, “Don’t you mean—You actually spoke to
Claudia, Sherlock?”
Sherlock’s chin went right up, a fire burned in
her eyes. “Yes, for quite a while. She called on Dillon’s cell
while he was in the shower.” She looked at her husband, eyes
narrowed, as if daring him to comment.
“She did indeed,” Savich said smoothly. “After her
mother’s death, Claudia ran away from home. We had enough details
for MAX to pull up a half dozen open cases with a similar profile,
and that’s how we found Pauline Smollett. It all fit.
“Claudia has a juvenile record of her own, and we
matched her ID photo with the picture of Annie Bender her mother
Elsa gave us. Claudia looks just like her.”
Sherlock continued. “Claudia Smollett was nine
years old when she started shoplifting cigarettes and booze from
the local 24/7. She got thrown out of school twice, once when she
burned a boy with a cigarette, and again when she broke another
kid’s arm. Then there was the usual juvenile rage, throwing a
textbook at a teacher, cursing out another, threatening her mother.
She was a wild kid who probably wouldn’t have made it even if her
mother had lived.
“She ran into Moses Grace moments after he
murdered a homeless man. They got drunk on bourbon in a motel, and
the rest is history. Claudia said the word ‘bourbon’ with a
Southern accent, and it seemed to me she ran into him somewhere in
the South.” She paused. “And Claudia isn’t eighteen. She turned
sixteen three weeks ago.”
Dix pushed his fingers through his hair. “She’s
about Rob’s age.”
Savich, fiddling with one of the sofa pillows,
nodded. “She’s a child, a crazy, unrestrained child. It turns out
my wife was right about the murdered homeless man. We found a
report of a man beaten to death in an alley about eight months ago
in Birmingham, Alabama. The police never found the assailant, but
another homeless man said he saw an old buzzard in bloodied army
fatigues, so my bucks are on Moses.”
“Claudia told me Moses wears army fatigues and old
black army boots, so it fits,” Sherlock said. “We notified the
Birmingham police, gave them what we’ve got. Unfortunately, they
didn’t have anything to give us in return.”
“Did you trace the call, Dillon? Do you know where
they are?” Ruth asked.
Savich said, “It’s good news, bad news. Claudia
called from a prepaid cell phone Moses purchased for cash at a
Radio Shack this morning. He activated it from a pay phone in the
parking lot. It’s anonymous that way since there’s no registered
owner, but the signal was loud and clear. And since they were
calling from a set location, we located them dead-on.”
“Where?” Dix asked.
Sherlock said, “At a Denny’s on Eighth Avenue and
Pfeiffer Street in Milltown, Maryland. Even though the local cops
got there in under five minutes, Moses and Claudia were gone.
Evidently Moses had left Claudia alone with the cell phone. When he
came back she was still talking to me. I heard his voice, could
tell he was angry at her for using it. So that means he knew we
could find him. He hit the road fast.” Sherlock sighed. “If only
he’d spent a bit more time in the men’s room, we could have joined
them for dinner.”
“Please tell me where the good news is in all of
this?” Ruth asked them.
Sherlock said, “Good news is we’ve got great
descriptions, down to Moses’s old black lace-up army boots, and
Claudia wasn’t exactly undercover. She had on low-cut plumber
jeans, a skimpy hot-pink top, and a fake fur jacket. They made
quite an impression on their waitress, who said Claudia was pretty
but she wore too much makeup, and that the old guy looked like he’d
spent a hundred years staked out in the sun.
“But the best information is from a waiter who was
outside smoking a cigarette when Moses and Claudia left the
restaurant. He was yelling at her, shaking the cell phone in her
face before he shoved her into a van.
“The waiter had Claudia in his sights until the
van disappeared from view. She waved at him from the passenger-side
window. He doesn’t remember much about the van—thinks it was a
Ford, real dirty. He was focused on Claudia. We might get something
more from him. I’d bet my next paycheck on it.”
Savich said, “Our Denny’s waiter is all set up to
have Dr. Hicks hypnotize him tomorrow morning at Quantico, and we
need to be there. I’m not certain if we’ll be back tomorrow
evening, depends on what shakes loose.
“Moses isn’t stupid. He might have figured we
could locate them even with a prepaid cell phone, as long as
Claudia stayed on the line.”
Sherlock picked it up. “And that would mean we’d
speak to people at the restaurant who saw them. So they might lie
low for a while. Still, every squad car in the area will have
Claudia’s picture by morning.”
Ruth clapped. “Dillon didn’t tell us what you’d
managed to do when he called earlier. This is great, Sherlock. Keep
it up and you’ll break the whole thing wide open.”
Sherlock said to Ruth, “Claudia wanted to talk to
Dillon, Ruth. She wants to have sex with him, actually. Dillon was
upset because he thinks I’m too delicate to hear the dirt Claudia
dishes out.”
Two pairs of female eyes went to Savich.
“There’s more to it than that, Ruth, and Sherlock
knows it.”
“Ah,” Dix said, sat back on the sofa, and crossed
his arms over his chest.
“Ah, what?” Savich asked him, never looking away
from his wife.
“So maybe all of this boils down to the fact that
you want to protect her.”
Sherlock turned on him. “From a crazy child on a
cell phone? Dillon has no right—”
Dix spoke over her. “I’d probably feel the same
way if Ruth were my wife. It’s simply the nature of the beast—both
of you must know that by now. It’s just instinct.”
Sherlock went on point, and Dix felt lucky Savich
was sitting between them. “Women have the same instinct, macho
man.”
Dix cleared his throat. “Well, I’m glad we cleared
that up without bloodshed. Would everyone look at the time. Is it
late, or what?”
There was a sprinkling of laughter, most of it
from Ruth, Dix thought, then a pound of silence.
Ruth jumped in to tell them she and Dix had spent
the rest of their afternoon with Gordon Holcombe. “We searched
every space in his office, house, and studio, every record. He was
cooperative, I’ll say that for him. We even spoke to three of his
former lovers on the phone. They were fine, all of them elsewhere
at the time of the murders.”
Dix said, “I’m going to talk to Gordon again
tomorrow.” He frowned down at his clasped hands. “I can’t get past
the fact that two of the victims were his lovers. Maybe he’s told
us all about the students, but Helen wasn’t a student, now was
she?”