Authors: Rolynn Anderson
Tags: #Contemporary, #suspense, #Family Life/Oriented, #Small Town
Parker took the plastic bag from Ivor and fingered the bullet, its metal surfaces cool like death. “She could have died because of me.”
Shutting off his flashlight, Ivor slapped Parker on the back. “Let’s get back to the Center and escort her home like she wants. We knock on some doors tonight. Tomorrow we’ll take a look at the crime scene in the light of day, talk to more witnesses and find ourselves the shooter.”
****
Liv woke with a start and yowled in pain, her arm on fire. “Oh God, oh God, oh God, that hurts,” she said, stilled in her bed. She glanced at the clock. 6:00 a.m. The pain pills sat smack in front of the alarm clock, too far away for her to reach with her good arm without forcing her bad arm to jiggle. “I’d rather die here in agony than move my arm.”
“Brilliant plan,” came a voice from her bedroom doorway.
“Parker?”
“Yup.” He padded over to her bed, hair tousled, eyes half-mast.
Barefoot?
“Were you sleeping in my living room?”
“‘Sleeping’ might be a stretch. Ivor’s out pounding on doors so I took over the watch.”
She looked down at her hospital gown, the one she’d worn home with Parker and Ivor as her escorts. Parker had stayed over, which meant…damn. “I was noisy last night.”
Raising his eyebrow, he said, “A bit.”
“Should have stayed at the Center, huh?”
He grabbed the pain pills, shook one out and presented it to her with water.
The agony involved in taking the pill brought tears to her eyes. Waiting for the pain pill to kick in - she didn’t know if she could bear it. Damn, she should have stayed at the hospital. Stupid, stupid. She closed her eyes tightly, refusing to let the tears escape.
“Flesh wounds hurt like hell,” he said, taking her good hand. “I’ve seen grown men cry from the pain.”
She opened her eyes. “Not you? You’ve never been shot?”
His expression sad, he shook his head and said, “I would have taken that bullet for you, Liv. If I hadn’t picked you up…”
“But last night you weren’t sure who the target was.”
“I’ve been thinking it over all night. I’m ninety-nine percent sure I was meant to be under the crosshairs. Someone doesn’t want me investigating Olson’s murder.”
The shiver that overtook Liv’s body was violent enough to jar her bad arm. “Yeouch.” She held her breath to quiet her body. “What’s your next move?”
“I’ve made a lot of phone calls. My office is sending me some help, especially while I’m in Seattle following leads.”
A weight settled on her chest. “For how long?”
“A couple days. I could take you with me and drop you off with friends in Seattle, but you’re in no shape to fly anywhere.”
“Absolutely not. You’re the one who should jet out of here to a safer place.” The very act of pointing at him with her good hand sent a lightning bolt of pain down her wounded arm. “Ouch!”
Parker grabbed the back of her desk chair and rolled it next to the bed.
“Don’t sit on that. It’s broken.”
“What?”
“It’s quirky. When I jerk to the left, the chair mechanism releases. I know how to sit on it…you don’t. Come over here.” She pointed to a space on her bed. “Don’t jiggle.”
Parker sat down carefully. “Your mother’s coming over in about an hour to make your breakfast.”
“You woke my mom? She needs her sleep, Parker, I—”
“No protesting allowed. My Dad’s going to take a break from fishing and help keep an eye on you and your mom.”
“But—”
“Chet worked security. He knows what to do. Ivor’s deputizing him and giving him a gun.”
“What?”
“Ivor has a tiny staff, Liv. He’s got a captain and a sergeant, and a few officers, a couple of them part time. He needs Chet.” Parker looked at his watch. “Ivor and I will review the crime scene this morning before I fly to Seattle. You two develop a list of who was in Lito’s Landing last night, then Ivor will figure out who might have followed us down the alley toting a 45.”
A wave of dread overwhelmed Liv. She squeezed Parker’s hand so hard that the effort hurt her damaged arm. “Ow,” she cried.
If I let him go, if I let him leave me, I’ll never see him again. Yet, he’ll be safe. That’s something.
“Livy.”
The way he said her name allowed her to breathe again. “What?”
“The pills and the pain are messing with your head. I’ll be fine and you’ll feel a lot better by tomorrow. I promise.” He kissed her on the forehead. “I’ll take a shower and make a few more phone calls. Try to be nice to your mother and Chet, okay?” Out of his pocket, he pulled a tape recorder. “The next time you wake up, you’re going to be upset you can’t type. Use this to compose. And sleep, too. You’re allowed.”
Liv smiled at his thoughtfulness. “Brilliant plan,” she said, repeating his first words of the morning. Her eyelids felt heavy and she sighed, letting the pain pill do its magic. “Par…ker, be full…be care….”
“I know. You’re going to kill me if I don’t.”
****
“Let’s take a drive, Mr. Cameron.” Parker stood at the counter of the Coffee Hüs, his focus on the coffee shop manager, Josh Cameron. “Susanna can hold the fort for a half hour, can’t she? We’ll talk while you give me a tour.”
Josh glanced at Susanna and when he got a shrug from her, he yanked his keys out of his jeans, grabbed an Indian weave jacket off a stool and said, “Jeep’s in back.”
Without another word, Cameron drove north on Nordic Drive and stopped the car at a viewing spot on Hungry Point. He kept the engine and the windshield wipers running to clear Parker’s view of Wrangell Narrows on the left, and Frederick Sound on the right.
“This keeps you in Petersburg.”
“In the summer, I watch the humpbacks summersault on the Sound.” He pointed his thumb to the south. “The entrance to Hungry Point Trail is right behind us. I like Raven’s Roost Trail off the airport, too. But those are appetizers. Awesome ten-hour hike on Kupreanof Island; tougher is the Petersburg Mountain Trail, but the views are worth it. My name is Cameron…I have my camera
on
at all times.” He tapped on the steering wheel. “I like to make my own trails, walking and climbing places people haven’t trammeled for a century.”
“Too hot for you in California?”
Cameron didn’t blink. “You’d think they’d appreciate a college-educated pothead in California.” He gripped the spokes of the wheel. “I have a couple outstandings in SF.”
“Five years ago. Clean here, the chief says.”
“I don’t sell, Detective. Nobody cares about my private vices in Petersburg. I manage the Coffee Hüs for the hotel, I hike, I have all the weed I want; everybody minds their own business.” He shook his shoulder-length brown dreads, a slow smile finishing his hippy look. “Dude, Alaska is full of people like me.”
“Do you have a gun?”
“I’m smarter than that. But I know why you’re asking. How’s Liv?”
“She’s got some healing to do. Twenty stitches in the arm from a gunshot wound. No clue who the shooter is.”
Cameron shook his head. “First a drowning, now this.”
“Let’s talk about Everett.”
Cameron backed out of the viewpoint area and drove the car south on Sandy Beach Road. “I didn’t know him well. Women were his weed.”
“You and Tilly?”
“No law against screwing. If there were, Everett would be in for life.” He pointed to the left. “This is Sandy Beach Park. Nice petroglyphs right over there, on the beach as well as on those boulders. Some prehistoric fish traps, too, carbon-dated from 2,000 years ago.”
Parker squinted at the site, gave an appreciative nod and gestured for Josh to move on. “Folks in town thought Tilly and Ev would get back together.”
“Not so sure of that. Susanna had plans to suck money out of Ev. Told everyone about her imminent prosperity, to the point I was looking for a replacement for her sour, sorry ass.”
Parker chuckled, watching an Alaska plane buzz overhead as they drove up Haugen Drive. “This airport keeps Petersburg from being a backwater town.”
“Brings in riff-raff like me. But more important,” he said, slowing down, “It provides an easy outlet. When the rain or snow gets to be too much, people can fly places where it’s warm and sunny. Me? I like it here all seasons.” Cameron took a right on 12
th
street. “This is the Tlingit and Haida Housing. Tribal Reservation. They’ve lived on the Mitkof Peninsula longer than anyone. Deserve it more than me.”
When they drove by the Bethesda Fellowship on the corner of 8
th
and Haugen, Cameron said, “Ten churches in a town of three thousand. Folks like to ask a higher power for abundant fish, calm seas, and healthy children. Lots of reasons to pray. Mine is: keep off my trails and ditch blue tarp. Too much of that damn plastic spoiling the natural look of this country.” He smiled. “Now, I don’t have a rule about women, as in ‘keep away from my girlfriends.’ I might have rules about weed and my trails, but I know better than to be proprietary about the other sex.”
“Thoughts about Tilly?”
“Funny and fun. Profane.”
“Susanna?”
“Entitled. Full of anger. She-bear. Wouldn’t touch her.”
“Liv.” Parker looked straight ahead, but felt Cameron’s gaze.
“A puzzle. I fit in this environment; she’s a mismatch. For one thing, she doesn’t engage, especially with men.”
“Multiple choice: Liv, Tilly, Susanna, Mallen. Which one could have been responsible for Ev’s death?”
“Asking one criminal to tag another, huh?”
Parker shrugged. “If I had to pick a woman, which one?”
“All of the above.”
“Tell me more about Norwegians and guns.” Parker placed Liv’s data sheet in front of Ivor. They sat in the airport café, waiting for Parker’s flight to take him to Seattle, the odor of coffee grounds mixing with jet fuel. “While I track each suspect’s trail in Seattle, you’re chasing down guns, right?”
“I’ve already begun.” Ivor let out a breath. “Norwegian parents taught their kids how to handle firearms when they first settled in Alaska, for all the reasons I told you before. Immigrants who came here after World War II were even more prepared, because Norway actively opposed the Germans. Every Norwegian was armed and the underground resistance against Hitler was huge. Gun savvy continues today in the home country and here in Alaska, where hunting, big fish, grizzly bears, and drunken fishermen add new dimensions to firearm use.”
Parker pointed to the top of the data sheet. ‘This list: Liv?”
“I taught her how to shoot.”
“Her mother. Harriet.”
“Better shot than Liv. Won a couple of awards. Gun in the store; gun at home.”
“Christ.”
Ivor put his finger on Halley’s name. “Like I said, all fishermen have guns and the skill to use them. Tuck is another for sure.”
“Mallen and Tilly.”
Looking thoughtful, Ivor said. “Mallen probably, though I can’t find a registration for her. Tilly, definitely. Her family likes to hunt moose. They share their kills with us.”
Parker rolled his eyes. “Ev’s present girlfriend, Susanna?”
“Maybe. Maybe not. No registration for her.”
“You’re checking to see if people who own guns fired theirs recently.”
Ivor shrugged.
“But the shooter probably ditched the gun he or she used.”
Nodding, Ivor said. “Who are you thinking?”
Parker pointed to Barber’s name on the chart.
Ivor raised an eyebrow. “Why?”
“Barber and Olson had an odd friendship that bears examining, and recently I’ve pissed the guy off by rescuing Liv from his clutches. Maybe he killed Olson; maybe he shot at me to stop the investigation.”
“The shooting sort of cinches the idea Everett’s death was no accident, doesn’t it?”
As Parker nodded, a roar from the runway had them turning to look out the window at the Alaska jet skimming the asphalt. His gut hollowed out at the thought of leaving Petersburg with so much up in the air. His investigation had barely begun, a shooter was on the loose and Liv was suffering from a gunshot probably meant for him. Then there was the tricky issue Ivor probably didn’t want to face. “Mallen.”
Ivor’s eyebrow went up. “What about her?”
“Anything I should know about you and Mallen that might impact our case?”
A flash of resentment, then, “We are friends, that’s all. She uses the workout equipment in my garage a couple times a week.” Ivor looked down. “I feel sorry for Mallen, trapped in this town.”
“You knew she had something going with Ev.”
He exhaled, his expression sad. “First I’d heard about them was the other night when my mom and Liv spilled the information. I never thought she’d fall for Ev, but trapped people do strange things.”
“Does that describe you, Ivor. Trapped?”
Ivor stared at Parker for the longest time. “That’s a misread you’ve made, but I can understand why.” He shook his head. “I want to keep this job. The cornered vibe you’re picking up comes from worry that if we can’t find who killed Ev, I’ll lose the one career, hell, the
only
profession I like.” Ivor spread his hands on the table. “You’re accusing me of bias. Of course I’m biased. I know everyone in this town and I like most of them. No objectivity there. But that doesn’t mean I have to recuse myself, for Christ’s sake!”
Parker held up a palm, regretting the conversation at the same time he was sure he had to ask the question. “Mallen has feelings for you that go beyond friendship. You know that.”
Giving a sad smile to accept the apology and the information, he stood, all business. “You’re checking out everyone’s movements in Seattle.”
“After which I fly to Fresno to follow the money for each person on my list.”
“If you find Ev’s killer, you might discover the person who shot at you and Liv.”
“Right.” Parker toyed with his coffee handle. “I should have explained to Liv I’m flying to Fresno from Seattle.”
“Time to tell her you’re a special agent, then?”
“Probably.”
“I’ll let her know the Feds are involved because of the across-state nature of the case. No need to tell her you’re from Treasury.”
“Best we’re aboveboard with Liv. Let her know I’m Treasury, but have her keep that detail to herself.” Parker got up and grabbed his carry-on bag. “Tell her I’m sorry about the pretense.” He gazed at the plane, with a heart-clutching thought that it might take him away from Petersburg forever. The Fresno office
could
pull him off the case because it
was
a colossal clusterfuck. He wondered: Did the career mean as much to him as the job meant to Ivor? Was it important to succeed as a boots-on-the-ground investigator?