Authors: Carolyn Haines
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths, #Detective and mystery stories, #Mystery Fiction, #Crimes against, #Mississippi, #Women private investigators, #Delaney; Sarah Booth (Fictitious Character), #Women Private Investigators - Mississippi, #Women Plantation Owners, #African American Musicians, #African American Musicians - Crimes Against
When we were in the dim interior of Dahlia House's parlor, I poured the bourbon over ice and handed him his glass.
"To music," he said, and we both drank.
"Now let me get this straight. The widow of Ivory Keys wants to hire me to prove Scott Hampton, the man who was found with the murder weapon in his possession, not to mention some three thousand dollars in possibly stolen money, is innocent."
J. B. reached into his jeans pocket and pulled out a piece of paper. He unfolded it and handed it to me. It was a check for five thousand dollars signed by Ida Mae Keys.
"I told her your fee was ten thousand, and she said she'd pay the rest when you got Scott out of jail."
2
Freshly bathed, mascaraed. and unfortunately
enacting Truman Capote's description of ladies melting like marshmallows in the summer heat, I drove to the Sunflower County Courthouse with the roadster's a.c. on full throttle. A phone call to Ida Mae Keys had confirmed the singular fact that she wanted Scott Hampton out of jail and proven innocent. Ida Mae refused to expound on her reasons and had abruptly gotten off the phone, stating point-blank that she had no need to meet with me, just get on with the job.
Her check was safely tucked away in the old pie safe at Dahlia House, since I'd determined not to deposit it until I talked to Coleman. In my past P.I. conduct, I'd slipped across the fine line of ethics a few times, but I wasn't going to take money from an elderly black woman whose husband had just been killed if I couldn't help her.
Coleman Peters,
Coleman was freshly separated from his wife, an event I had not played a role in.
Actively
not played a role in. For the last twelve weeks, while my shoulder was healing, I'd done my best to stay out of his way. He'd come out to Dahlia House several times to check on me, but I had not put myself in his path. He had decisions to make that no one else had a right to interfere in.
As I parked beneath a pecan tree beside the First Baptist Church of Zinnia, I scanned the courthouse lawn. Memories came, unbidden, of childhood summer days when my father hauled my bicycle to the courthouse in the trunk of his car. While he worked as a judge, I was free to ride the streets of Zinnia. It had seemed such a big place then, with so many exciting possibilities to explore. Unlimited potential. Only ten years ago, I'd still felt that way about myself. But my stint in
As I crossed the street, I was thinking about what Jitty had said earlier about dreams. Somewhere along the way, had I become afraid to dream? It was a question to ponder.
The heat was intense and I was glad to step inside the courthouse. When my father had served as circuit court judge, there had been no air-conditioning in the building. Though I often took the troglodyte, no-progress stance and rejected modern improvements, air-conditioning was a true miracle. I stood for a moment under a vent, hoping to dry up the rivulet of sweat that had begun to slip down my spine and into my underpants. Melted was exactly how I felt.
The sheriff's office door was open, and a sound bite of conversation caught my attention.
"He's guilty as sin," the dispatcher said in a country twang veneered with sophistication. "He sits in the jail cell, feet propped on the bars, cool as a cucumber. If he feels anything, it sure ain't, I mean, isn't, remorse."
"He's hard," Deputy Dewayne Dattilo agreed. Dattilo was a new addition to the force, as was the dispatcher.
"He can play the guitar. I heard him a few times when I was out dancin'. He could make a girl's bones melt, if you know what I mean." The dispatcher's voice carried grudging admiration, topped off with a portion of sexual hunger. "He had the women squirmin' in their seats, or those of them who could stay seated. And that one crazy gal, man, she all but jumped on his leg."
"She's gonna be trouble," Dewayne said, and not without a little eagerness.
I entered and was greeted with wary curiosity from one and dislike from the other.
"Is Coleman in?" It was a courtesy question. I could see him at his desk in his office.
"I'll see." The dispatcher, known as Bo-Peep because of her overpermed, blondeened hair, went into Coleman's office and closed the door. I couldn't help but notice that she had a great figure and a walk that was all invitation. Coleman had hired her while I was at Dahlia House healing. She'd worked as a temp last winter. In those brief two weeks we'd developed a mutual animosity club. Now she was on the payroll full time, permanent.
Within minutes she came out and swayed over to the counter. "The sheriff says he can see you," she said. Leaning closer, she whispered, sotto voce, "He's gone back to his wife, though, so don't get your hopes up."
I brushed past her, determined not to show the shock I felt. Once in Coleman's office, I closed the door, composing myself as I turned around to face him. His blue eyes held sadness, matched by the long line of his mouth.
"Ida Mae Keys has hired me to prove Scott Hampton is innocent," I said, wanting to immediately put the visit on the footing of officialdom.
Coleman shook his head. "I like that old woman, and I hate to see her waste her money and your time. You've got a perfect record for solving cases, Sarah Booth. This is one you might want to walk away from. The evidence we have is circumstantial, but it's pretty damning."
"Fill me in." Concise, professional, that was the tone I had to maintain. I focused on the lines at the corners of his mouth that hadn't been there two months before. He might be back with Connie, but he wasn't a happy man.
"Murder weapon found in his possession. Just over three thousand dollars, which we believe was stolen from the club, also in his possession." Coleman sounded more tired than convinced.
"What was the murder weapon?"
"Prison-type shank. Handmade."
"Where'd you find it?"
"In the saddlebag of
"Anyone could have put the money in the bag," I pointed out.
"He had a bad attitude when we went out to talk to him. He refused to talk to us, and we had to get a search warrant. Let me just say that he didn't show a tremendous amount of regret or remorse when we told him Ivory was dead."
Scott Hampton seemed to be his own worst enemy. "And you've determined, beyond all doubt, that the shank belongs to
"Someone could have, but we don't believe that to be true."
"Prints?"
"None. It was wiped."
"How many times was Keys stabbed, and where?" Coleman knew I could get all of this information from Doc Sawyer, the man who would perform the autopsy.
He sighed. "Stabbed in the chest. Three times."
"Anything else?"
"He didn't die instantly." He hesitated. "And that's all I'm going to say about the actual crime."
He'd been fair in giving me as much as he felt he could. I felt a flurry of anger as I realized how much I'd come to count on Coleman's fairness.
"So robbery is the motive?" I snapped back into professional mode.
"Ivory had
"So you think he killed his benefactor for the money or to escape his contract?" I'd learned a few things in my brief stint as a P.I. Murder generally had one very specific motive. I wanted to know which one Coleman was going to try to prove when it came to a trial.
"We're still investigating."
"What about bond?" Ida Mae said she wanted Scott out as soon as possible.
"Friday. Judge Hartwell." His mouth hardened into a thin line as he said the name. Hartwell was only a justice court judge, but he had a reputation for rash and prejudicial behavior. "It's going to be high." He put the pencil down and placed his hands on the desk. "Let this one pass, Sarah Booth. It's going to get ugly. A lot of old scabs are going to be ripped off here."
His advice was meant as a kindness, but I wasn't in the mood to accept the crumbs of his generosity. The least he could have done was tell me himself that he was going back to his wife.
"Can I see
Coleman's eyebrows lifted at my tone. "Sure." He picked up a pencil and twirled it in his fingers, but his gaze held mine. "Is there something bothering you?"
"Not a thing." The wall of pride had erected itself with amazing speed. We had never spoken of our feelings for each other, so there were no words to take back.
"I've been meaning to come out to see you," he said.
His gaze fell to the blotter on his desk. He seemed fascinated by the scribbling there.
I could have helped him out, but I wasn't in a charitable frame of mind.
"Connie and I are gonna give it one more try," he said, finally looking at me.
"I hope it works out." Thunderation, what did he think I would say?
For a split second, he registered surprised regret. Then he caught himself and nodded. "I'll have Dewayne take you back to see
I could have put out my hand and touched his arm. The smallest gesture would have stopped him. But I had no right to make that move, and I let him walk past me without a word.
Scott Hampton was
everything I expected. His face, undeniably handsome, seemed fixed in a permanent sneer. His blond hair was gelled back, a la Elvis, giving him a strange dated appearance that was at odds with his eyes, which said he was a man of the moment.
"Mrs. Keys has hired me to prove you didn't kill her husband." I didn't bother to hide the doubt in my tone. Scott Hampton sat on his bunk, rocking slightly to a beat I couldn't hear. He didn't inspire compassion or confidence.
"Tell her to save her money." He stood up and walked to the bars.
I had not been aware of the full measure of his sexuality until he moved. He was a jungle cat, a predator. It was in his walk, in the way he held me with his eyes. He was a dangerous man, and he liked knowing that I knew it. The first hint of a smile touched his lips.
I held his gaze until mine slid down his body, exactly as he wanted it to. The tattoo on his left arm caught my interest. The skull and crossbones looked professionally done, though the black ink spoke of decoration acquired in prison.
"I can't help you if you won't help yourself," I said, finding the words from a million old television shows.
"I don't want your help," he countered as he lounged against the bars of the cell. "Give Ida Mae back her money and leave me alone."
"For some reason, she wants to believe you're innocent," I told him. "Maybe she's crazy, but that's what she believes."
"Do you make a living taking advantage of old folks or is this a special case?"
I felt as if he'd slapped me. "Listen,
"So I've heard. Do they still work the inmates in the cotton fields? I might come in handy, singing the blues. Back to the roots of the music, you might say."
I was suddenly tired. Scott Hampton was a man who buzzed with electricity. He sucked at my energy level. "This may be a joke to you, but I'm not working for you. You can help me or not. Either way it's up to Mrs. Keys. I'm going to tell her that I think you're a waste of time, but she decides what happens next."
"Make her decide to drop this thing," Scott said, his voice even but his eyes sending all kinds of warnings. He tried to hold my gaze, but a breeze outside the jail caught the branches of an old magnolia tree that stood not far from the statue of Johnny Reb, the bronze image that memorialized all the men who'd given their lives to noble ideals enforced with foolish violence. My gaze locked on the rope that swung so lazily from the graceful branches of the tree, a hangman's noose on the end.