Holly Blues (17 page)

Read Holly Blues Online

Authors: Susan Wittig Albert

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General

BOOK: Holly Blues
12.23Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
“Yeah, well, if I remember right, several of your old boyfriends came to our wedding.” Another sarcastic chuckle. “They were first in line to kiss the bride. Remember? In fact, one of them spent quite a few minutes kissing the bride, enthusiastically, as I recall. Was that Myers? Did he finally figure out that you’re single again and decide to get back in the game? I guess some guys never learn.”
“Please, Mike, stop.” She was speaking just above a whisper, and her voice was raw and edgy. “This isn’t easy for me. I need you to do something, and I don’t quite . . . I mean, I know I shouldn’t . . .” She swallowed audibly. “You’re in Omaha. Right?”
She needed him to do something for her. Something she knew she shouldn’t ask. How many times had he heard that? And when he did what she wanted (which he almost always did, even though he damn well knew better), what did he get? More freakin’ trouble, that’s what.
Cautiously, he said, “Yeah, I’m in Omaha. On business. What about it?”
“I need you to drive down to Sanders, Mike. I want you to talk to somebody.”
Sanders? Now, that was a joke. A real side-splitter. “You gotta be kidding, Sal.” He looked out the window. “It’s snowing here, and colder than the north end of Hades. I’m not going anywhere except to the bookstore for a couple of books and then back to the motel. I’ve got a meeting tomorrow afternoon, and then it’s out to the airport and home. And when I get there, you and I are going to have a talk about that jerk who called the house last night.”
She ignored that. “Really, Mike, it won’t take you that long to drive.” She was using the tone she always used when she was trying to work a con job on him. “It’s only a hundred and twenty miles. Two hours, tops. It’s one o’clock now. You could be there by three and back to Omaha by bedtime. All I need you to do is talk to this person. Her name is Joyce Dillard.”
“You want to talk to somebody, pick up the phone and talk to her yourself. Anyway, it’s a hundred and
forty
miles.” McQuaid glanced through the window. “And it’s snowing like a blasted sonuvagun. The roads will be a mess. Why in the world would I—”
“Not I-29. It won’t be bad at all. They keep it plowed because of the trucks. And I’ve tried calling Joyce. She doesn’t answer. Anyway, I want somebody else to hear what she has to say. I mean, I want
you
to hear it. You’re a cop. You’ll know what to do next.”
A cop? “Hear what? What’s all this about, Sally?”
“It’s complicated. I can’t go into it over the phone. You’ll understand when you . . . when you talk to her.”
He frowned. “Does this have to do with Myers?”
“Please, Mike. Just say you’ll talk to her. Please.”
“Myers,” he persisted. “You told China that he’s a former boyfriend. Is that true?”
“Yes, sort of. I mean, I dated him, a long time ago.” There was a pause on the other end of the line. Then Sally said, very low, “You have to talk to Joyce Dillard, Mike. She . . . She says she knows who killed my parents.”
Everything around him seemed to become very still. No sound, no motion. He held the phone to his ear, staring at a reddish brown spot on the tablecloth. Spaghetti sauce. Next to the spot was a second, orangy yellow. Italian dressing. The two spots blurred, merged, went out of focus.
Sally’s parents were killed ten years ago. No, more like eleven, because Brian was four or five and he and Sally were breaking up. He was still with the Houston PD, and she was drinking and taking antidepressants in those wildly dangerous up-and-down cycles that usually end up all the way down, with a fatal overdose and a cold body on a slab in the morgue. Juanita was around sometimes, too, going on buying binges, filling the closets with expensive clothes and dozens of pairs of shoes. He’d stuck with it as long as he could, hating to admit that his marriage was a failure, bitterly ashamed that he hadn’t been able to give Sally enough of what she needed and she’d had to make up for it by buying all those clothes. But he’d finally reached the point where he couldn’t stand it any longer. He’d taken Brian to Seguin to stay with his parents, got a cheap apartment closer to the station, and filed for divorce.
That’s when it happened, a couple of weeks after he moved out. The word hadn’t come from Sally but from Leslie, who called him at work to tell him that the Strahorns had been shot to death and their sizable cash stash stolen. He was used to death—in fact, that was one of the bitternesses Sally kept throwing up to him when they argued, that his skin was a cop’s skin, bulletproof, tough as rhino hide, and that none of her suffering ever got through to him. Maybe she was right.
But this got through like a knife in the gut. He had loved Mama Lucy for her sweetness and patience, and respected Mr. Strahorn for all he knew about Kansas crops and weather and the tough times farmers faced. He had admired them for making a life where life had put them, and loving their kids and supporting the town. And now they were dead, senselessly, stupidly, brutally dead, in an apple-pie, lace-doily, flag-flying town where everybody square-danced at the VFW on Saturday night and worshipped in church on Sunday.
Sally hadn’t handled it well, of course. The murders had spiraled her into an even wilder tailspin, and she had forbidden him to go to Sanders for the funeral: “Not
your
family,” she had spat at him. “Not anymore.”
Leslie had felt differently. She had begged him to come, but he hadn’t, since the sight of him would have sent Sally over the edge for sure. Leslie was a good girl, the apple of her parents’ eyes, and Brian loved her because she read to him and made him laugh in a way his mother never did. Later, after Leslie moved to Texas, to Lake City, she always invited Brian to spend a summer month or so with her. For a while, McQuaid had even thought that the two of them—he and Leslie—might get romantically involved, which would have made Brian happy. But they’d held back because of Sally, and then he’d met China, and that was the end of that.
Anyway. After the murders he had kept in touch with the Strahorn case—through Leslie, since Sally hadn’t wanted anything to do with him. When Les reported that the Sanders police seemed to be pretty much out of leads, he’d toyed with the notion of taking a couple of weeks off and driving up there to see what he could dig up. But he’d decided against it. Sanders wasn’t his turf. He’d only antagonize the local police, and likely for nothing. If the murders could be solved, they’d do it. And then the divorce had gone through and he’d brought Brian back from Seguin to live with him, and life had gotten so complicated that everything else—Sally’s latest follies, Juanita’s wildness, even the Strahorns’ murders—faded into the background.
And now the murders were foreground again, front and center. The two blurry spots on the tablecloth separated, became what they were, spaghetti sauce and Italian dressing. A dish clattered in the kitchen. The restaurant door opened and a woman in a green coat came in, her hair dusted with snowflakes. She said something to the hostess, and they laughed.
“Dillard claims she knows who killed your parents?” McQuaid demanded roughly. “Did she say who? Does she have any evidence?”
“She gave me a name, but I’d rather not say. She told me where to find the gun, and some other evidence. But I don’t want . . .” She stopped. “I’d rather you talked to her.”
“When did she tell you this?”
“Not long ago. A few days.”
“Where? How did you connect with her?”
“I went to Sanders. I was trying to—that is, I was hoping to . . .” Sally’s voice trailed away.
“Hoping to what?”
The words came out in a rush, propelled by (he thought) her effort to overcome her natural propensity to lie. “I was working for the newspaper in Kansas City. I was stuck in Advertising, but I heard about a reporting job opening up. I’ve always wanted to get back into reporting, and I thought if I could write a really good story, a true-crime story with a local angle, I’d maybe have a shot at it. Sanders is local to KC—it’s in the same media market. So I went back home and talked to a few—”
“You were using your parents’ murders to get a
job
?” McQuaid demanded incredulously.
“Not their murders.” Sally was heated. “That would be despicable.”
“Yeah, it would,” McQuaid said, disgusted. But despicable wouldn’t keep Sally from doing whatever the hell she wanted to do. Wouldn’t keep her from trying to rope him into it, either.
“I wouldn’t do that, Mike, honest,” she said plaintively. “I was going to focus on the police investigation, from a human-interest point of view.
My
point of view, as a daughter. That’s entirely different. And totally legitimate. Lots of books get written by family members after a tragedy.”
Oh, so it wasn’t just a job she was after, he thought in even greater disgust. It was a book contract. Next to being an actress, being a writer had been Sally’s dream. Trust her to have her eyes on the grand prize, always. And he didn’t buy her claim that she was focusing on the investigation. If she wanted a book deal, or even just the job, she’d have to include the lurid stuff, the murders. The bodies, the blood, the sickening horror of it. That would be her hook—that, and the fact that she was the victims’ daughter. Sally, poor, poor Sally, the victims’ grieving daughter.
So what exactly did she want from him? He scowled, thinking back over what she had said.
“This Dillard woman,” he said. “How’d you get connected with her?”
“She’s a friend of . . . She’s somebody I knew in high school. Most of us left Sanders. You know what it’s like—there’s not much opportunity if you want to make something of your life. But Joyce stayed. Her father is on the town council, and the family is connected with just about everything. That’s why—” She cleared her throat. “I mean, I think she really does know, Mike.”
“So what did she tell you?” He didn’t try to keep the skepticism out of his voice.
“Uh-uh.
You
have to talk to her, Mike. You’re a cop. An ex-cop, I mean. You’ll know how to handle it.”
Yeah. That was Sally for you. Wanting to rope him in on her literary project. Wanting him to do the investigating for her, so she’d have something more to write about. God only knew what else she wanted. He took out his pen and wrote
Joyce Dillard
on the paper napkin. “Give me her number.”
“Wait a sec, and I’ll get it.” There was a short pause. “Here it is.”
He wrote it down. “Okay,” he said. “Anybody else in Sanders you’d like me to talk to?”
That got her attention. Her voice was suddenly eager. “Then you’ll go to Sanders? You’ll talk to Joyce?”
“I’ll
call
her,” McQuaid said firmly. He looked out the window onto the rapidly drifting street. “I told you, Sal. It’s snowing like hell here. The roads will be a mess.”
“But calling won’t work. You won’t be able to find out—”
“You’d be surprised at what I can find out. I’m an investigator, remember?” He paused, thinking about the stalker. “Where are you?”
There was a momentary silence. “In Pecan Springs,” she said guardedly. “Where else?”
No matter. He had her cell number. “Okay. You sit tight and stay out of trouble. You hear?”
Another silence, and then the connection was abruptly broken. McQuaid stared at the phone, tempted to call her back and make her say good-bye, like a grown-up. But she’d just say he was treating her like a child (which he was, because she was), so he resisted. He thought for a moment, then clicked on Sheriff Blackwell’s number. He got him on the second ring.
“China told me that you sent somebody out to have a look at the house last night,” McQuaid said. “Thanks, buddy.”
“No problem. Glad to do it.” Blackie paused. “Everything okay?”
“Probably. Hard to tell with Sally.” He reported what China had told him, ending with, “I don’t know what Myers is after. But to be safe, China is sending Caitie to Amy’s for the night, and Brian’s sleeping over with a friend. China and Sally will be at Ruby’s. Thought you ought to know—in case your deputy happens to notice any action out our way tonight. The house should be empty, except for the dog.” Howard could batch it for one night. He had his dog door for the necessities. He’d be okay.
“Will do,” Blackie said. “It’s a good idea to get the kids out of there.” He paused. “Are you thinking that this is maybe just another one of your ex’s little parlor games?”
McQuaid smiled crookedly to himself. He and the sheriff had played poker and fished together for years, and Blackie had heard too many of his tales about Sally’s wild antics. “Who the hell knows?” he replied. “Where Sally is concerned, there’s no predicting.”
“Yeah,” Blackie said. He paused, as if there might be more to say on the subject, then asked, in a different tone, “Did Sheila call you?”
McQuaid heard the tone. Something there. “No,” he said. “Why?”
“No particular reason.” Blackie cleared his throat. “Sheila and I are making another run at it.” Blackie was a man of few words, but McQuaid knew him well enough to know that this made him happy.
“Glad to hear it,” McQuaid said warmly. Blackie hadn’t been the same since he and Sheila split the year before. He had seemed lonely, almost desolate, not quite sure where he was going or why. “Hope it works out for you this time.”
Blackie chuckled. “Yeah. Me, too. It’s a risk. But in this life, everything’s a risk. Get a couple of good days, you feel like you hit a gold mine.”
“Amen to that,” McQuaid said. “Is that why you asked if Sheila had called me? To tell me that the two of you are back together?”
“No,” Blackie said. His voice changed. “Something else. I’ll let her tell you. Catch you later, buddy.”
McQuaid frowned as he clicked off the phone and slipped it into his pocket. Maybe he’d call Sheila. But maybe not. Sounded like trouble, and he was in no mood. He finished his coffee, settled with the waitress for his lunch, and shrugged into his coat. Outside, the snow was beginning to pile up on the roofs of parked cars and drift against the buildings. The temperature was dropping, the sidewalk glazing with ice. In the distance, muted by the snow, traffic growled on the freeway, punctuated by the wail of a siren, an accident, most likely. Bound to be plenty of that today.

Other books

Llámame bombón by Megan Maxwell
The Vintage Caper by Peter Mayle
Writing on the Wall by Mary McCarthy
One Little White Lie by Loretta Hill
Game of Queens by India Edghill
Iron Kissed by Patricia Briggs