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Blue Moon Rising
  • Текст добавлен: 6 октября 2016, 19:23

Текст книги "Blue Moon Rising"


Автор книги: Lilian Francken



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Текущая страница: 3 (всего у книги 7 страниц)

Dan closed the cell door. He locked it and then guided Ester back out of the cellblock. On his way out he took another look at the walls, a little embarrassed by all the grime and filth.



CHAPTER 6

Dan sat at his desk with his feet up reading the paper. Mac was busy talking to Conroy on the radio. Most days that was the extent of what the Sheriff’s duties entailed in Jefferson County.

“Your wife called,” Mac relayed.

“Is she in labor?” Conroy asked quickly.

“She’s at the doctor’s office,” Mac laughed. “Did you forget something?”

“Damn! Tell the Sheriff I’m going off duty for an hour.”

Mac turned to Dan, who nodded in agreement. The door swung open suddenly. Dan turned and quickly took his feet off the desk and sat up.

Charlie Ames entered the office with his son Jeffrey, who had to be all of sixteen. Charlie glanced around the room. He had never been in the Sheriff’s office before and wanted to make sure that Mac and Dan were the only ones in the room. He then pulled out a revolver and waved it around wildly. Jeffrey appeared as surprised to see the gun in his father’s hand as Mac and Dan.

Charlie slurred his words but managed to get out, “I want the son-of-a-bitch who killed my boy.”

Dan set the paper down slowly and then turned to Mac. He motioned for Mac not to move. Dan put his hands on the desk so they were in clear view while Mac pushed himself away from the radio and just stared up at Charlie, and waited. Jeffrey stepped back so he was up against the back wall.

Dan slowly stood and edged his way toward the cellblock door.

“Now, Charlie, you don’t want to do this.”

“How do you know what I want to do?” he snapped, swaying while waving the gun wildly. “I want to see the bastard who done that to my boy,” he said, wiping away a tear.

“We don’t have him yet.”

Charlie looked menacingly around the room before turning the revolver back at Dan. Dan had the cellblock door blocked by then.

“I heard you’re holding Junior Youngblood.”

“Pa, I told.”

“Shut up, boy!” Charlie snapped.

Dan held up his hands and then motioned Jeffrey to be silent. Once Jeffrey settled down somewhat, Dan turned his attention back to Charlie.

“He didn’t do it,” Dan said in a way that sounded sincere.

“Then why you holding him?” Charlie argued.

Dan turned to Mac and then Jeffrey. He motioned for them to stay put.

“I have him in protective custody,” was all Dan said in his defense.

“Don’t try to fancy-talk me.”

“I’m not.” Dan hesitated a moment. “Junior’s father agreed, jail was the safest place for him until I can sort things out.”

Charlie waved the revolver with one hand while the other hand reached in his pocket for a hankie and then he wiped away his tears.

“I saw what that bastard did.”

“I know how you feel,” Dan said, trying to sympathize with the grieving father.

“How can you know? Have you ever lost a child?”

“No.”

Charlie shook his head. “It was awful.”

Charlie continued waving the revolver and then, as if it was the first time he noticed the revolver in his hand, he tossed it onto the desk. Dan grabbed for Charlie. He quickly frisked him for more weapons and then turned Charlie around and got a whiff of his breath.

“How much have you been drinking?” Dan asked.

Dan let Charlie go. He picked up the gun and noticed the empty chambers. Jeffrey walked up to his father.

“All I want to do is forget,” Charlie cried.

Jeffrey turned to Dan. “You going to arrest him?”

Dan shook his head. “You two go home. Charlie, your wife needs you.”

Charlie’s face turned sad and pathetic at the mention of his wife.

“Cassie blamed me. She wanted the boy to stay home so she could protect him from the world.”

“Mothers are like that,” Dan said in Cassie’s defense.

“I got him the job with Senator Maxwell,” Charlie’s voice quivered. “Thought I was doing right by the boy.”

Dan turned to Mac. This was a new revelation. He turned back to Charlie.

“How long was he working for the Senator?”

“Richie and Junior both worked odd jobs for the Senator. They were both slow,” Charlie hesitated, a little embarrassed to admit to Richie’s mental capacity. “You know what I mean. The other boys used to pick on them.”

“Did he work yesterday?” Dan asked.

“I don’t know.”

Charlie turned to Jeffrey.

Jeffrey quickly spoke up. “Yes, I dropped him off around eight.”

“What’s a man to do?” Charlie asked.

Dan patted Charlie on the back. He could see the man was grieving for a lost son. However, he had to keep in mind he still had Jeffrey to look out for, and spending time in jail would not put food on the table for his family.

“You had no control over what happened. Right now you have to take care of Cassie and Jeffrey here. You let me worry about catching the bastard who did that to Richie.”

“I want two minutes alone with him when you catch him.”

Dan raised his eyebrows. “You know I can’t do that. He’ll be punished to the full extent of the law. I promise you that much.”

“It don’t make me feel any better. Bible says an eye for an eye.”

“We don’t live by those laws anymore. We’re civilized now.”

Charlie broke down in sobs. “It ain’t natural what he done to my boy. No civilized person would do that. He should be made to suffer.”

Dan turned to Jeffrey. “You make sure you drive him home.”

Jeffrey nodded as Charlie walked dejectedly to the door with slumped shoulders. Charlie hesitated a moment and then walked out.

As the door closed shut, it quickly opened again and Martha Witherspoon walked in carrying a paper bag. Martha walked over to Dan’s desk and dumped broken glass onto the newspaper lying there.

Martha’s face had fine crows-feet lines more noticeable in the corners of her mouth and eyes. Her jet-black hair was pulled back in an unattractive bun that added years to an already weather-beaten face. She had on a floral housedress that emphasized her overweight frame. Martha’s eyes were wild with anger.

“I want that little Joey McDuffy locked up!” she snapped.

Dan stared at the broken glass on his desk and then up at Martha.

“He’s only eleven.”

“That little tyrant has been terrorizing me for weeks now.”

Dan walked up to Martha and took hold of her arm. Martha just looked up at Dan with helpless eyes that fluttered for a moment. You could tell she was mesmerized by the man in uniform who touched her just then.

“Now Martha, you know Joey’s the best paperboy we’ve had in years.”

“I don’t care. This is the second window he’s broken now.”

“Are you sure?” Dan asked.

Martha appeared startled that Dan would question her. They had been neighbors for years and Kay was always the go-to-person when something was needed at the church circle.

“As sure as I can be,” Martha finally snapped. “I found the window broken soon after he delivered the paper. Both times.”

“Have you had trouble with any of the other kids in the neighborhood?”

Martha looked up at Dan and thought a moment. “There was only the Miller boy. But that was a few weeks ago.”

“Right about the time your windows started getting broken?”

Dan knew the Miller family well. They had a way of getting even with you if you called them out on anything. It went way back to when Dan was in high school with Clay Miller. For some reason the family motto was “We don’t get mad, we get even.” Dan avoided any confrontation with the family for that particular reason.

Martha looked up at Dan with a look of surprise. It was as if a light bulb went off. In fact it made more sense that it was the Miller boy instead of Joey.

“I just figured it was Joey doing it because I asked him to put the paper in the paper holder under the mailbox,” Martha said, smiling shyly up at Dan. “I don’t bend so well anymore.”

Dan caught Mac with a smirk on his face and gave him a quick frown. It boggled Dan’s mind that all the women who seemed to be pursuing him were at least fifteen years his senior. His plan was not to become some woman’s boy toy, at least not yet. Dan turned back to Martha.

“Has he been putting the papers there?” Dan asked.

Martha mashed her eyes up at Dan. “Why yes,” she said finally. “And to think I accused that poor boy of all this trouble.”

“It was an honest mistake,” Dan argued.

“You’re so good at what you do.”

Dan shrugged his shoulders. “I wouldn’t say that. On my way home tonight I’ll take a spin by the Millers and have a talk with the boy.”

Mac tried not to laugh, but the whole situation with Martha had become a joke around the office. She and Mabel Wilcox had been pursuing Dan with a passion the last six months, and if it were not for those two they might have had to lay off one of the officers because of lack of work.

“Did Kelly tell you I dropped off another tuna casserole?”

Dan cleared his throat nervously. Out of the corner of his eye he could see Mac snickering. He desperately tried to gain his composure before he too started to laugh.

“Yes. You shouldn’t be going through the trouble.”

“Why, Sheriff, it’s no trouble. It’s a pleasure cooking for you.” She looked up at Dan and smiled. “You spend long hours protecting us. It’s the least I can do.”

Dan walked over to the hat rack. He grabbed his hat and then hurried over to the door.

“That reminds me,” he said quickly. “I’m late for a meeting with the medical examiner.”

Martha just stared at Dan admiringly while he rushed out the door. Mac quickly busied himself with the radio so Martha wouldn’t find an excuse to sit and wait for Dan to return.



CHAPTER 7

Dan walked into the medical examiner’s lab. Nancy stood at the far end of the room near the examining table. The overhead light illuminated the table. Nancy turned and looked surprised to see Dan.

“Who let you in?” she asked with a puzzled look on her face.

“No one, the door was open,” Dan said.

“You can’t be here.”

“Why?” Dan asked.

Nancy motioned to the corpse on the table. “Isn’t it obvious?”

“Chambers always discussed the case while he worked.”

“I’m not Chambers and maybe that’s why he’s no longer here.”

Dan looked at Nancy a moment and then finally responded. “We both know why Chambers is no longer the medical examiner and it had nothing to do with me sitting in on examinations.” Dan hesitated for a moment. “Besides, you called to say that you wanted to talk to me. I would have thought you were done by now.”

Dan glanced at the clock on the wall and then turned back to Nancy.

“Something came up, and I called only to set up a meeting with you, preferably tomorrow.”

Dan took a step closer to the examining table. A sheet covered the lower half of the corpse.

“What did you find so far?” Dan asked, disregarding what she had just said.

Nancy shook her head and then turned to the table. “The body was unusually clean considering where it was dumped except for a few minute fibers under one fingernail.”

Nancy picked up the slide tray. “And I found this animal hair between two toes that the assailant missed.”

“Maybe it came from where we found the body,” Dan added.

“No. I doubt that. There was no indication any animal was near the body. I’m not sure, but I think it’s from a black bear.”

Dan looked puzzled. “When will you know for sure,” he asked quickly.

“Later.”

“If it was a black bear, all I need to do now is find the fireplace it’s lying in front of,” Dan joked. “What was the cause of death?”

“The more he struggled the tighter the rope got around his neck until finally he died of Asphyxiation.”

“With all those cuts?”

“They were superficial. There was only one that could have been fatal, but he was already dead when he sustained it.”

“Are you saying what I think you are saying?”

“Yeah, the person watched him struggle until he died and then stabbed him to make sure he was dead.”

“What kind of person does that to a fellow human being?”

“A very sick person,” Nancy said. She rolled her eyes as she approached the tray with instruments. “You should see some of the bodies I’ve worked on.” Nancy hesitated a moment as she turned back to Dan and added. “I sent some tissue samples down for DNA.”

Dan gave the body a once-over. He understood now why Charlie was so upset. He did not know how he would handle it if something like this every happened to Kelly.

“Not a pretty sight.”

“You’re right there. I’ll have the evidence to convict, all you have to do is find the bastard who did this.”

“What about the rope?” Dan inquired.

“You can buy it at any hardware store.”

“You seemed pretty interested in the knot. What about it?”

“The rope tied to the feet had what’s called a surgeon’s knot,” Nancy remarked and then hesitated. “For obvious reasons.”

“So our guy has a medical background?”

“Not necessarily. He could also be a Boy Scout.”

Dan looked at Nancy a moment and then glanced at his watch while Nancy reached for the scalpel. She was about to make an incision when Dan stepped closer to the table. Dan studied her for the longest time. There was something comfortable about talking with her that he hadn’t felt in a while.

“Doc.”

“It’s Nancy, if you don’t mind.”

“I’ve got to go out to Senator Maxwell’s house.”

Nancy suddenly had a funny look on her face. She turned away from Dan and avoided his gaze.

“Why did you give me that look?” Dan asks.

“It’s nothing.”

“Come on,” Dan goaded. “What is it?”

Nancy shrugged. “It’s nothing.”

“I’m not playing games. I want to know. What is it?” Dan asked one more time.

“It was just that a few years back in Little Rock, his son was implicated in this case I was on.”

“Alan?” Dan appeared puzzled for a moment because he had not realized Alan was ever in trouble.

Nancy held up her hand. Dan stared at the scalpel in the other hand.

“Nothing came of it. I shouldn’t be repeating it.”

“I never heard anything about it.”

“Like I said, it was nothing.”

“What was the case?”

“I don’t even remember, it was so long ago,” Nancy said, as she shook her head. “He was cleared.”

“But something made you think about him.”

Nancy motioned with her hands for him to leave. “If you don’t mind, I have work to do.”

Dan studied Nancy a moment and then turned and walked out. He didn’t know her well enough to have her trust him yet. In time he would get that information out of her, but for now he would respect her desire not to divulge that case.

Once the door shut behind Dan, Nancy set the scalpel down and walked over to the phone. She punched in a few numbers and then waited.

“Carla, would you do me a favor. I worked on a case a few years back. Henderson was the name of the victim. Pull the file and fax me my report.” Nancy hesitated a moment while listening. “No, it’s nothing. I know they never solved the case. It’s just something came up and it made me think about that case now,” Nancy said as she glanced at the corpse. “Thanks.”

Nancy hung up the phone. She picked up the scalpel from the tray and walked over to the corpse. She had a lot of work to do yet, but knew in her heart she would find nothing more. It was like that with the Henderson case. It all led to a dead end.



CHAPTER 8

The squad car pulled up to the large country ranch house surrounded by trees and outhouses and barns in the distance. Workers were hauling out carpet pieces from the main house. Dan got out of the squad. He hurried up the walk to the porch and rang the doorbell. A couple of workers carried out another piece of carpet.

“You tearing the house apart?” Dan asked.

One of the workers turned to Dan. “No, Sheriff, just the one room.”

Dan reached up and touched the carpet piece the men were carrying. “Looks like good carpeting.”

“The Senator got tired of the color.”

“Must be nice. I couldn’t tell you what color carpeting was in my living room, let alone whether I liked it or not.”

Dan appeared puzzled. He stood at the door and looked in. Maria Maxwell, the Senator’s third wife, walked out. She was a voluptuous-looking blonde in her late thirties. Definitely what one would call a trophy wife. Especially in the tight fitting black spandex slacks with the oversized sweater that hung over one shoulder. She appeared relieved to see Dan.

“Thank goodness it’s just you,” she smiled widely. It was then she saw the confused look on Dan’s face. “I thought more workers were here. I don’t know what to expect anymore.”

“Is the Senator in?” Dan asked.

Maria’s face turned serious. “Is something wrong?”

“I just need to discuss a few things with him,” Dan remarked, turning to the workers loading the carpet pieces in a truck. “You wouldn’t happen to know if Richie Ames worked yesterday?”

Maria took a deep breath while rolling her shoulders back, exposing her breasts in a way most men found appealing. But when she did not get the usual response from Dan, she dropped her shoulders and then shrugged.

“That was awful what happened.”

Maria’s mannerisms became guarded. “I wasn’t here yesterday. I was in Little Rock at a Daughters of the West dinner. I pulled in early this morning.”

Dan glanced around. “Doing some remodeling?”

“I don’t know what’s gotten into him. We just fixed things up the way he wanted them last year. Now he’s ripping everything out and starting over again.”

Maria stepped aside and motioned Dan to follow her. “I think he’s in the study. Follow me.”

Dan took off his hat and followed Maria in. Maria led Dan into the study. The room was large with knotty pine paneling and an oversized earth stone fireplace that filled one wall. Half the carpeting had already been ripped up. Dan turned to the Senator, who was sitting behind the big oak desk sucking on a large smelly stogie while overseeing the work being done. Senator Maxwell was in his late sixties, with a receding hairline and a potbelly that protruded over his belt.

The Senator stood up while extending his hand. “Why, Dan, what brings you out this way?” he said.

“The Ames boy.” Dan watched the Senator’s reaction for a moment.

Dan shook the Senator’s hand. His fingers were fat and clammy. If the Senator had not been watching, Dan would have wiped his hand on his pants leg to wipe away the sweat.

“Too bad about that. He was a nice kid. A little slow, but a hard worker.”

Maria cleared her throat. Dan had not realized she was still in the room. Maria seemed a little perturbed with Dan because she could not get a rise out of him like she could with the other men around the ranch.

“If you don’t mind, I have to change for a meeting in town,” she added before the men could continue.

“It’s the Senator I wanted to talk to anyway.”

Maria turned around sharply and walked out, going unnoticed by either man.

“How long did Richie work for you?” Dan asked.

“About a year now. He did odd jobs around the ranch,” the Senator remarked.

“Do you remember seeing him yesterday?”

“No. Not really,” the Senator said and then held up his hands. “There’s always things to do in the barn.”

“Do you have anybody who would know for sure whether he was here?”

“Alan might have been around.”

Dan looked surprised. “How’s Alan doing these days?” Dan asked. He was curious about the Senator’s son.

“He has his good days,” the Senator responded and then rolled his eyes. “He hitched himself up with a widow. She got a pretty good inheritance from her husband. Now he lives off her.”

“It was too bad about the breakdown.”

The Senator looked at Dan for a moment. He studied him for the longest time before responding.

“He was a mama’s boy. What can you expect?”

“Wasn’t he studying to be a doctor?” Dan asked.

The Senator waved his hand as if dismissing the remark. He was not happy about Alan or his inability to finish anything he started. Alan had been an embarrassment to him for years.

“That may have been one of the fields he was studying in. There were so many it was hard to keep track.”

Dan cleared his throat. He looked around a moment and then turned back to the Senator.

“Was there anybody else around?”

The Senator thought a moment. “My foreman was up in Little Rock buying cattle.”

Dan gave the Senator a curious look. “Did he go with your wife?”

The Senator’s eyes flashed with anger but Dan continued. “Maria said she was in Little Rock yesterday attending some dinner. I just figured they might have traveled together.”

“You thought wrong!” the Senator snapped sharply.

“So there was no one here yesterday to say whether Richie worked?”

“I guess not.”

“How did he get paid?” Dan asked.

“You’d have to talk to Jack, my foreman. He took care of that.”

Dan nervously looked around. “Where can I find him?” he asks.

“Out back someplace. I don’t stand over him while he works.”

With that, Dan showed himself out. He was always uncomfortable in the Senator’s presence. To him he represented the haves and Dan belonged to the have-nots. Alan had had everything handed to him on a silver platter while he had to work for everything he got.

Dan never regretted having to earn the things he acquired. He tended to appreciate them more. From what he heard about Alan after high school, things did not go easy. Good grades in college were not given out to you just because you were a Senator’s son. They had to be earned, something Alan never had a grasp of. Now to hear he spent his days living off the funds of a widow, only made him dislike Alan even more.

* * *

Dan walked out of the Senator’s house and walked across the drive to the barn. It was there that Jack Finnigan, the foreman, was busy feeding the horses. He picked up a bale of hay and tossed it onto the floor. Jack cut the twine and picked up a sliver of hay and spread it out onto the stall for bedding. Dan walked up to Jack while looking at the thoroughbreds.

“Nice-looking animals,” Dan remarked.

Jack turned to Dan and then smugly said. “The Senator only buys the best.”

Dan laughed. “Yeah. I met his wife.”

Jack shrugged while looking up at Dan and then wiped his brow. “You got something to say?”

“I find it odd that you and the Senator’s wife were in Little Rock on the same day and didn’t travel together.”

“Who said we didn’t?” Jack asked.

“The Senator didn’t know you did.”

“He doesn’t know everything.”

Dan studied Jack a moment. “Apparently not.” Dan hesitated a moment. “How long have the two of you been sleeping together?”

“The Senator tell you to ask me that?” Jack asked with a grin across his face.

“No. He’d like to think Maria only has eyes for him.”

Jack laughed mockingly. “That bitch has been in heat ever since she came of age.” Jack paused before continuing. “Mark my word, no one man will ever be able to satisfy that woman.”

“That bad.”

“On their honeymoon she slipped the Senator a Mickey Finn and then came down to the barn. I caught her doing a threesome with a few of the boys,” Jack licked his lips. “Figured I might as well get in on the action.”

Dan cleared his throat and then glanced around. “That isn’t why I’m here,” Dan quickly added. “I’m checking into the Ames boy. Was he here yesterday?”

“He was supposed to be. The Senator had a special job for him. Normally I like to be here to keep the boy on task.” Jack pointed to his head. “Not all there, if you know what I mean.”

“The Senator didn’t seem to remember.”

“Selective memory, you mean.”

“Yeah, I guess.”

Dan looked at Jack and in all actuality was puzzled by the remark, but did not want to appear so. Why the Senator out-and-out lied did not make sense unless he had something to hide. It was nice to know the truth, and when he’d sorted out everything, the Senator would have some explaining to do.

“So the Senator was going to keep an eye on him?”

“That’s what he said.”

“How do you keep track of the hours he works?” Dan asked.

Jack walked over to the shelf near the door. He picked up a tablet from the shelf and then handed it to Dan.

Dan thumbed through the pages. “Says here both Richie and Junior checked in at eight. Doesn’t show them leaving.

“That coincides with what Jeffrey, Richie’s brother, said. He dropped off his brother around eight. Is it unusual for the boys not to put down when they left?” Dan asked.

“Like I said, not all there. The two put together don’t make a whole,” Jack said, pointing to the other entries in the notebook. “Most of the time they didn’t mark it down.” Jack laughed. “The Senator was doing the boy’s father a favor by giving them work. It was more work for me having them under foot.”

Dan stared at the entries and then flipped through the pages and understood what Jack was saying.


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