Name Withheld : A J.p. Beaumont Mystery (9780061760907) (26 page)

BOOK: Name Withheld : A J.p. Beaumont Mystery (9780061760907)
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I
t was six o'clock the next morning by the time Peters and I finally dragged our weary butts back home. My Rollaboard suitcase was already packed and sitting by the door.

“Your plane's at nine o'clock,” Ralph Ames said. “You could maybe even grab two winks.”

“I can sleep on the plane. What I can't get in the air is a decent breakfast.”

“You hit the shower,” Ralph told me. “By the time you're dressed, breakfast will be ready.”

When I finished dressing and came back out to the kitchen, coffee was made and two matching waffle irons sat warming on my counter. With a phone to his ear and evidently waiting on hold, Ralph was mixing up waffle batter.

“Where did those come from?” I asked, indicating the waffle irons as I poured myself a cup of coffee. “I don't own any waffle irons.”

Ralph grinned. “You do now,” he said. “It's a bread-and-butter gift. I suppose I should say a waffle-and-butter gift.”

I started to say something else, but whoever had put him on hold must have come back on the line. “I'm here,” he said. “Go ahead.”

Leaving him a little privacy, I went into the living room and sat down on the recliner. I was dog-assed tired. I fell sound asleep and Ralph had to wake me when the waffles were ready. Over breakfast—the waffles were delicious—I gave him the highlights of the previous night's activities. Telling him about Ron's part in the proceedings reminded me of something else.

“What about Hilda Chisholm?” I asked him.

“Oh, that,” he said. “That's who I was on the phone about when you came out of the shower. Do you remember someone by the name of Arnold Duckworth?”

“Not that I know of. Should I?”

“You evidently sent him to the slammer a few years back. He and his partner had a lucrative business growing pot in the basement of a house over in the University District. They got into some kind of beef and Arnold beat the other guy to death with a shovel. You nailed him for second-degree murder. He's still in prison up in Monroe.”

“What does Arnold Duckworth have to do with Hilda Chisholm?”

“He's Hilda's brother, her baby brother.”

I choked on a tiny sip of coffee. “Are you kidding?”

“Not at all. What you told me this woman was doing was so far off the charts that there had to be something to it. I did some behind-the-scenes checking. We're not altogether out of the woods on this thing. There'll still be an investigation, of course, but you can be reasonably certain that Hilda Chisholm won't be running the show. I shouldn't have any difficulty convincing Child Protective Services that she has a serious conflict of interest here. You go on down to California and let me worry about it.”

For a minute or so after he finished talking, I just sat there staring at him.

“Is something wrong?” he asked finally.

“Nothing's wrong,” I returned. “Not a damned thing.”

W
ith Hilda Chisholm off my back, I headed for California. As the plane left Sea-Tac Airport, I was wondering if Sam Arnold and Ron Peters would be able to finish nailing Deanna Compton without either Detective Kramer's and my totally indispensable help. Hard as it is for me to admit it, Seattle P.D. did just fine. Arnold, Ron, and several others eventually uncovered the fact that all the while Wolf had been bringing in the investment money, expecting to end up with part ownership of an important company as his reward, Bill Whitten and Deanna Compton had been gathering the monies into a separate fund.

When Don Wolf figured that out and was preparing to take that information to the D.G.I. board of directors, Whitten and Compton decided to get rid of him and his proof as well. Lizbeth Wolf, sick with pneumonia and sound asleep in
her husband's apartment, was an accidental victim—somebody who died for no other reason than being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

In the days after the murders of both Don and Lizbeth Wolf, Whitten and his lady love Deanna had been transferring funds out of the country—to Colombia. Their airplane tickets, had they ever had a chance to use them, would have transferred them there as well. And with Latty Gibson as a likely suspect to take the murder rap, they might have gotten away with it, had it not been for Virginia Marks and Grace Highsmith.

The private detective's investigation had come far too close to the truth, necessitating her death as well. And Grace, by virtue of having access to Virginia's findings, had also been targeted. I had to give Grace Highsmith credit for her single-minded determination to protect Latty from all comers, cops and killers alike.

By the time somebody finally got around to charging Deanna Compton for her part in the three murders; by the time they charged her with the theft of Lizbeth Wolf's engagement ring, which Deanna Compton was still wearing at the time of her arrest; by the time they finally located Don Wolf/Daniel James Wilkes' real family who, even after all those years, still lived in Tulsa, Oklahoma—I had long since stopped thinking about the case. By then, I had been in California for a week and a half and was far too preoccupied with more important things.

Hospitals are for people who are sick and plan
to get better. Hospices are for people who are sick and plan to die. You'd expect that the latter would be very depressing places, but for some strange reason, they aren't. Once somebody's sick enough to be in a hospice, most of the masks come off. People are free to be who and what they really are, at least that's how it seemed to work with Karen.

Her room was sunny and warm. It overlooked an immaculately kept expanse of lawn dotted with graceful palm trees. There were brilliantly colored flower beds all around. Patio doors opened out on a vividly vital world where a perpetually filled bird feeder brought a never-ending parade of feathered visitors. Sometimes, when I was sitting there in that dazzlingly bright room during my allotted visiting hours, we would go for thirty minutes at a time without saying a word.

“Birds are fascinating,” I said one day. “I wonder why I've never noticed them before.”

“Because you never took the time,” Karen said.

My experience with my mother's final illness had been so appallingly awful, that coming into it, I didn't know if I'd be able to handle being around Karen at all. Cancer is a ruthless opponent, no matter what, but I learned that the philosophy of treatment has come a long way since my mother's time. Maybe it doesn't work exactly the same way everywhere, but in the hospice facility in Rancho Cucamonga, Karen got to call the shots. Literally. I think there were times when she
chose to decrease her medication dosages, opting for lucidity over pain control. I'm not sure that given the same circumstances, I would have been tough enough to make the same choices myself, but I blessed her for it. It gave us a chance to talk, to say things that had needed saying. For years.

“Time,” she murmured thoughtfully a long time later. “That's why I divorced you, you know.”

It was simply a statement of fact. There was no anger or accusation, no acrimony, and no self-pity, either. What goes on in hospices leaves no strength or energy to drag around any unnecessary emotional baggage.

“I know,” I said. “With the job and all there was never enough of that.”

Karen smiled. “With the job and the booze there was never enough time for me,” she corrected.

But this wasn't a fight. It was a conversation. I didn't bother to say I was sorry, because we both knew I was.

“Did you know I fell off the wagon a couple of days ago?” I asked a few minutes later.

“No, but you got back on, didn't you?”

“Yes.”

“Good.”

More time passed. An hour, maybe. I believe she slept for a while, but when she woke up again, she resumed the conversation, almost in midthought. “When I found Dave, Beau, I
couldn't believe my luck. From the moment we met, he always put me first.”

“He's a good guy,” I acknowledged without rancor. “A real good guy.”

“But I'm worried about him,” Karen said.

“Worried? Why?”

“Because I'm afraid he'll be lost without me. I'm afraid he'll fall apart.”

“He'll be fine, Karen,” I reassured her. “He's a smart man, a solid man.”

“But you'll look out for him, won't you?”

“Yes,” I said. “I'll do my best.”

Dave showed up a little while later. It was his time. We had divided up the days so that one or the other of the kids was there in the mornings, I took the afternoon shift, and Dave did the evenings.

That was the last time I talked to her. By noon the next day, Karen Beaumont Livingston had drifted into a coma. I stayed away after that. From then on, Dave and Kelly and Scott were at her side around the clock, and rightfully so. Three nights later, Dave came home at eleven o'clock—early for him. His eyes were red; his hair was standing on end.

“It's over,” he said. “Mind if I have a drink?”

“Go ahead,” I said. “Help yourself.”

“I knew it was coming,” he said a few minutes later. “I thought I was prepared. But I'm not. I feel so lost. What am I going to do?” Unchecked
tears streamed down his face as he turned away from me.

“You'll be all right, Dave,” I told him. “That's what families are for. And friends.”

J. A. JANCE is the
New York Times
bestselling author of the J. P. Beaumont series, the Joanna Brady series, three interrelated thrillers featuring the Walker family, and
Edge of Evil
. Born in South Dakota and brought up in Bisbee, Arizona, Jance lives with her husband in Seattle, Washington, and Tucson, Arizona.

www.jajance.com

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BESTSELLING AUTHOR
J.A. JANCE

“J.A. Jance is among the best—if not the best.”

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A
LSO BY
J. A. J
ANCE

Joanna Brady Mysteries

Desert Heat

Tombstone Courage

Shoot/Don't Shoot

Dead to Rights

Skeleton Canyon

Rattlesnake Crossing

Outlaw Mountain

Devil's Claw

Paradise Lost

Partner in Crime

Exit Wounds

J. P. Beaumont Mysteries

Until Proven Guilty

Injustice for All

Trial by Fury

Taking the Fifth

Improbable Cause

A More Perfect Union

Dismissed with Prejudice

Minor in Possession

Payment in Kind

Without Due Process

Failure to Appear

Lying in Wait

Name Withheld

Breach of Duty

Birds of Prey

Partner in Crime

Long Time Gone

and

Hour of the Hunter

Kiss of the Bees

Day of the Dead

Copyright

This book is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogue are drawn from the author's imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

NAME WITHHELD
. Copyright © 2006 by J.A. Jance. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

ePub edition July 2006 ISBN 9780061760907

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