Authors: Carolyn Haines
Tags: #Mystery, #Detective, #Mystery & Detective - Women Sleuths, #Mystery & Detective, #Delaney; Sarah Booth (Fictitious Character), #American Mystery & Suspense Fiction, #Fiction - Mystery, #Mississippi, #Women private investigators, #General, #Women Private Investigators - Mississippi, #Mystery Fiction, #Women Sleuths, #Suspense, #Fiction
"Thank goodness." She almost hummed with tension. "I was so afraid the high fever had damaged his brain."
I circled her with one arm and held her against my side, and we stood that way for nearly a minute.
At last she spoke. "He drank some water. You held his hand. Thank you, Sarah Booth. What did he tell you?"
I hesitated. "Things at the Carlisle place seemed normal, except for the weevils. It's apparent he went out into the cotton."
"And there wasn't a trace of evidence in the field?"
This was a sticky point, since Gordon had investigated the plantation after Oscar became ill. Before Gordon's report had been filed, he'd fallen sick. Only Bonnie Louise and Peyton had actually been on the Carlisle property since then.
"I need to examine the area," I said.
"You can't. It's too dangerous."
Arguing was pointless, and I didn't intend to stress Tinkie more. In my heart, though, I knew there was no other way. Someone had to go. While Bonnie Louise and Peyton might have the equipment, they didn't have the personal motivation that I did.
"One way or the other, we'll find an answer." If I had to beat it out of Luther Carlisle or Jimmy Janks--once we found him.
The worst possibility crossed my mind. What if Janks had dumped Cece at the plantation? What if she was lying
there now, sick or dying because of exposure to something we couldn't identify?
"I've got to get some rest," I said, edging down the hall.
"You aren't fooling me, Sarah Booth. I know that look. You're going to do something dangerous."
"No, I'm really exhausted. I was headed to bed when Coleman showed up and . . ."
"And what?"
"And asked me to help him." My answer was feeble and wouldn't satisfy Tinkie for longer than two minutes. "I really have to go."
"What did Coleman need your help on?"
I waved a hand. "A lead."
"You're hiding something."
If I didn't get away, she'd break me and I'd spill everything I knew. "Please, Tinkie. I'm beat."
I couldn't discern if it was pity or exhaustion that slipped across her features. "We'll talk tomorrow. If you do anything that endangers your life, Sarah Booth, we're finished. No more partners. No more friends. If something happens to you--"
She focused her attention on Oscar, her mouth set in a firm line.
I found myself stranded outside the hospital with no wheels. Coleman had dropped me off, and in my desperation to get away before I spilled my guts about Cece, I'd forgotten to borrow Tinkie's Caddy. Going back inside wasn't an option.
The night was cool and sweet, lightly scented with an early magnolia on the crisp air. Above me, the stars glittered
sharply. In high school I'd learned what made them sparkle. I couldn't remember such a long-ago lesson, nor did I want to. I preferred to enjoy the magic of their beauty.
Finding a ride home was almost more than I could manage. I could call Millie, but then I'd have to tell her Cece was missing and she'd spend the night worried. She had a cafe to run that demanded her full attention.
Harold was a possibility. Always urbane and never fussy, he would dress and pick me up with nary a complaint.
Coleman was busy. If he was making headway--any headway--I didn't want to disturb him.
Behind me the hospital door opened and Peyton walked toward me. "Ms. Delaney, are you okay?"
"I need a ride home."
"I'm happy to oblige." He pointed to a dark red SUV with the CDC logo on the side. I was so caught up in my own issues I'd failed to notice it in the parking lot.
"Thanks, Peyton." Here was opportunity--unexpected but greatly appreciated. "Would you happen to have one of those CDC hazmat suits that I could borrow?"
He opened the vehicle door for me. "You want to go to the Carlisle place?"
"Yes."
"I don't have one in the truck. Come by the office tomorrow and I'll see what I can do." He closed the door and went around to the driver's side.
"Could we run by there and get the suit tonight? I want to be sure . . ." A wave of nausea caught me unprepared, leaving as abruptly as it came.
"Sure of what?"
Phrasing was all important. Revealing the depth of my
fears would not benefit my cause. "A friend of mine is out of pocket. It occurred to me that she may have gone there."
"One thing I can assure you is that no one is on that property. You have my word. But I'm happy to take you there. Tomorrow. That's my best offer."
In the dark I could accomplish little, and if I continued to press, he might outright refuse. "Tomorrow, then. Why are you at the hospital at this time of night?" Peyton was on the job 24/7. His dedication was remarkable.
"I was running some tests and I needed to consult with Doc Sawyer."
I stopped in the process of buckling my seat belt. "Any results?"
He put the car in gear before he answered. "Progress, but no firm resolution."
Since he was driving, I had the luxury of studying his face. His lips were tightly compressed, his jawline firm and clear. Something--or someone--was eating him alive. The case had become personal for him. "What do you
think
you discovered?"
"It would appear someone has tampered with the DNA of those weevils."
"Like the cotton." Coincidence city here.
"Not exactly, but similar." He shot a look at me and then refocused on the road.
"You're saying someone deliberately created this new breed of beetle designed to devastate the cotton crop." Even as I said it, we drove past fields of new cotton. In the moonlight, the tiny plants stretched to the horizon, the future of many landowners.
He inhaled. "I'm saying it's possible."
"Another explanation is what?"
"Perhaps an experiment went awry."
That took longer to digest. "So someone could have
designed these weevils for a
good
cause and it somehow went bad?"
"It's possible." He was extremely defensive.
"Do you have an idea who may be behind this?"
"Absolutely not."
His response was so swift, so emphatic, I knew he was lying. He suspected someone, but he wouldn't share that name with me. Not voluntarily, at any rate.
"Have you connected the weevils to the illness?"
"No, but the connection has to be there. What else could it be, Sarah Booth? There are no soil contaminants, nothing in the water at the Carlisle plantation. The house has been tested for everything from radiation to chemical pesticides. I haven't found a damn thing."
The weariness in his voice revealed how his lack of success gnawed at him. Peyton was, perhaps, as driven as I was. He pulled up in front of Dahlia House.
"How did you find out about the mutation in the weevils?" I asked.
"The credit goes to Bonnie Louise. She made the breakthrough, with the help of her mentor at Mississippi State. Bonnie is a remarkable researcher, and the boll weevils have always been a primary interest of hers."
"Does Coleman know about this?"
"She's given him a full report." He chuckled softly. "She nearly killed herself getting over to the sheriff's office to report to him. Bonnie has it bad for the lawman."
I could only ignore his comment about Coleman. "Thanks for telling me about the report."
Peyton turned off the engine. "You're a loyal friend. Mrs. Richmond and Doc Sawyer sing your praises, Sarah Booth. They told me how much you gave up to return home and help your friend's husband. I wish Dr. Unger's report had been more conclusive. Beaucoup thought for
sure he'd be able to identify the mutations of the weevils and give us a course of action. Unfortunately, progress is going to be much slower than I'd hoped."
"Dr. Unger?"
"Jon Unger. He's an international authority on insect development and, as I mentioned, Bonnie's mentor. She's been consulting with him on this case." He rubbed his face. "Unger works with the government on high-profile matters. Beaucoup thinks he's the second coming."
Bonnie Louise had mentioned him, but she'd been under the impression Peyton admired his work. I didn't read it exactly that way. "Is he coming to Zinnia?" I asked.
"I don't know. Bonnie and I have taken different paths on this investigation. I've hardly seen her. Unger may have been here already. I just can't say." He looked like he was about to slump over the steering wheel from fatigue.
"Thanks, Peyton." I slipped out of the car. "Get some rest. I'll see you tomorrow."
He drove away, his taillights blinking red in the velvety Delta night.
Sweetie and Chablis snoozed on the horse hair sofa in the parlor. Aunt Loulane would stroke out at the sight of the hound and the dustmop sprawled across the antique, whose history was almost as long as Dahlia House's. I merely felt bad that I'd had so little time to spend with the pooches.
Tiptoeing so as not to wake them, I decided to call Coleman from upstairs. I was bone tired. My body felt thick and sluggish, but my mind was like a panicked bird, flying in all directions. The sensation made me dizzy.
My foot was on the staircase when I felt Jitty's presence. Often she caught me by surprise, but this time I knew she was behind me.
"Please tell me you have some advice," I said. Normally I tried to avoid her dictates and sometimes obscure pointers, but I was willing to take help from any source,
even the Ghostly Divide. "Just no more Great Depression costumes. I can't take it."
Shifting to sit on the staircase, I faced her. Gone were the rags and dirt. Instead, Jitty was unadorned--she was
contemporary
. No ball gowns, no tie-dyed, no outlandish
Star Trek
suits. She wore jeans and . . . "Is that my favorite red top you're wearing?" I asked.
"Oh, this? I found it in the closet."
Times had to be tough in Casperville if she was raiding my closet. "What's wrong with you?"
She sank onto the step below me. "I'm scared for you, Sarah Booth."
"You're always the one quoting FDR. 'Nothing to fear but fear itself.' "
"My fear is that you're gonna take some rash action that'll haunt you the rest of your days."
"Actions won't haunt me. That's what you're for." She was genuinely worried. What ever fun I might have had at her expense, I couldn't enjoy it.
"The person behind all this woe is smart--and wicked--Sarah Booth. Not your normal run-of-the-mill criminal."
"Tell me something I don't know." I wished Jitty could resort to ghostly means to help me, but she couldn't. Or wouldn't.
"You're at a turnin' point in your life, Sarah Booth. A future that most women would kill to have is right there at your feet."
"That's true." How well I knew all the things I'd dreamed of--except for my family--were within my grasp.
"You've earned it. Success, love, a good man."
"What's wrong with you?" Jitty was always my champion
, in a punitive kind of way. But she was never serious, complimentary,
and
contemporary.
"Big dreams come with big risks. Lord, Sarah Booth, be careful."
If I walked to the kitchen window, I could see the family cemetery where the people I'd loved most in my life were buried. Since Aunt Loulane's death, I'd been alone. I'd chosen to be alone. But that was changing now. With Graf, I had a shot at a family. I had no intention of getting myself injured.
"Something bad is happening in Sunflower County," I conceded, "but I'm not directly involved. Sure, I'm trying to figure it out, but so is Coleman, Dewayne, the CDC, and Cece."
She didn't have to say anything else. Cece was, after all, the reason for her visit this night.
I rose slowly, aware again of a draining weariness. "I'm calling Coleman and going to bed. Morning will be here in a few hours."
"Sleep tight. Don't let the bedbugs bite." She faded on a jangle of her silver bracelets.
Coleman was still at the B&B when he answered his phone. "The good news is that the blood on the carpet in Janks's room doesn't belong to Cece."
I sank onto the bed, afraid to believe it. "You got a DNA sample that fast?"
"Simpler test. Wrong blood type. Cece is B negative. This is A positive."
"How did--"
"Doc did some blood work on Cece before she had her sex-change operation. He knew her type."
"Can you match the blood to Jimmy?"
"It's much easier to exclude someone by type than match them. Even if Janks is A positive, we can't say this is his blood. Doc doesn't have any records on Janks, but he's got someone checking databases. So far, nothing. There is some news, though."
"What?" I slipped out of my shoes and jeans.
"One of Gertrude's residents overheard a heated conversation coming from Janks's room around eleven o'clock this evening. Two male voices. There was the sound of something breaking, then a door slammed. The guest, a salesman from Slidell, Louisiana, didn't see anything, but we did find a broken glass in the bathroom trash. The blood on the glass is also A positive."