“Because I don’t really know you.”
“I trust you with my daughter.” He looked dead serious.
“And I trust
you
with Meemaw’s old furniture and pipes.”
He gave a dismissive, one-note laugh. “Not quite the same thing, Cassidy.”
I gave a relieved sigh. He was back to calling me Cassidy. “No, I guess it isn’t,” I conceded.
A flurry of thoughts cascaded through my mind. I had no reason
not
to trust Will Flores. I definitely felt a kindred spirit in Gracie, and I was back in Bliss to stay, so I might as well start trying to connect with people.
This wasn’t Lower Manhattan where people looked straight ahead as they plowed through the crowded city, avoiding contact with strangers. This was small-town Texas where men tipped their cowboy hats, said, “Howdy do,” and met at Johnny Joe’s for coffee and doughnuts every Wednesday. Women moved in groups, spending mornings at their kids’ schools adorned in their sequined spirit wear, hightailing it to a Carol Anderson by Invitation fashion show at a local coffeehouse, then heading off to Bible study. I was straddling a line between two worlds, but I needed to edge my way back over to the Bliss side.
Meemaw’s voice sounded loud and clear in my head.
I wouldn’t mislead you, Harlow. Leap fearlessly.
Leap fearlessly.
It was one of her favorite sayings. “If you don’t take a risk, you’ll never realize the potential reward,” she explained when I was little. I’d used the same line on her when she questioned why I was leaving Bliss.
“You’re not leaping,” she said. “You’re running.” I still didn’t understand how she knew the difference when I couldn’t even comprehend it myself.
“Harlow?” He crouched down in front of me and took my fisted hands in his. “Are you okay?”
His dark eyes weren’t quite as dark close up, or maybe he’d just let his guard down for a moment and let the light shine through. They glowed with little flecks of amber like they were lit from behind.
The eyes are the window to the soul
, Meemaw always said. Looking at Will, I knew it was true. My great-grandmother had already discovered what I was just now seeing—he was a man so locked up and protective of himself and his daughter that he didn’t let anyone inside. But there were cracks in the surface if only someone could work her way into them.
I had a sudden vision of myself hunched over my sewing machine, working on some mysterious garment. I couldn’t see what it was, but I knew it was for Will and that making it for him would somehow allow him to let me in.
“Harlow.” He snapped his fingers in front of my face.
I blinked, jerking out of my thoughts. “Sorry.”
“Where were you?”
“Do you wear plaid?” I asked in response, though I had no idea where the question came from.
“Do I wear plaid?” he repeated, like he had to really think about it.
“Because I think you’d look good in plaid.” Actually I
knew
he would.
He shook his head, looking baffled. “Hmm. I’ll give that some thought.” He held my wrist, running his thumb over the bump in the velvet bag in my hand. “You’re walking around with a diamond that’s probably worth more than Keith’s Lincoln. That’s not a particularly good decision.”
“Yeah, I figured that out, but I didn’t want to leave it alone.”
He nodded like maybe he understood my thinking. “What’s going on? Spill it, Cassidy.”
Leap fearlessly.
And so I did.
Chapter 44
Will leaned against the bathroom wall, never taking his eyes off me. “So you really think Nate Kincaid might have killed her?”
I couldn’t answer that directly. With a mobster lawyer in the mix, I wondered if Nate would get his hands dirty, or if he’d have someone else do his dirty work. “What if she stole something of his—could he have, you know, taken care of it? Of her?”
He nodded toward the bag in my hand. “You’re talking about the ring?”
“Like you said, it’s worth a lot of money. Did you see the size of that diamond?”
“If it’s even real,” he said. “Fakes look pretty good these days.”
Mirror, mirror, on the wall . . .
The slide show image of Miriam and Nell holding a mirror flashed behind my eyes. A chill crawled up my spine. “The mirror.”
“What mirror?”
“The day after the murder, Thelma Louise got loose, remember?”
“The goat.”
“I found that little hand mirror and it was all scratched up. Were you at the funeral?”
He nodded, and I suddenly knew the stare I’d felt in the church had been his.
“That mirror was in one of the slide show pictures.”
He didn’t look convinced. “You sure it was the same?”
“Beaded edging and ribbons? Absolutely. Nell would have needed to know if that diamond was real before she tried to sell it, right? Diamonds cut glass. She used a mirror to test it.”
“She could have damaged the diamond,” he said, as if that shot down my theory.
“Maybe, but she was probably willing to risk it. She had to know what she was dealing with, a thousand-dollar cubic zirconia or a forty-thousand-dollar diamond.”
“So she tested it a hundred times? That mirror was completely scratched up.”
Once would have been enough, so I didn’t have an answer to that.
“So you think Nate killed her because she stole the ring?”
“I think it’s a pretty good motive, only she hid the ring so he never got it back.”
“You’re assuming they were having an affair,” he said. “That would be the only way she’d have had opportunity.”
Yep. That was the one major unknown in my theory. If Nate and Nell weren’t seeing each other, then I was back to square one.
An hour later, the ring was back inside the navy velvet bag, the bag was wrapped in a napkin, and Will and I were sitting across from the sheriff. Sitting there with him, I could see why Mama might fall for him, but it still rankled me that he was keeping their relationship under wraps.
He rested his elbows on the arms of his chair, steepling his fingers under his chin. “You givin’ up dressmakin’ in favor of detectin’?” he asked me when I’d finished ticking off what I’d discovered about Nell and her death.
“No,” I said. “You giving up bachelorhood to make an honest woman of my mother?” I had to clench my fingers over the edge of the chair arms to stop myself from slapping a hand over my mouth. I couldn’t believe I’d said that aloud.
I knew I’d crossed a line, but now it was out there, good or bad, and I was on the edge of my seat wondering how the sheriff would respond.
“Remind me never to get on your bad side,” Will murmured under his breath to me.
The sheriff’s leathery face was usually hard to read, but not this time. He looked shaken up, like he’d fallen off the bull, but he recovered soon enough. “Young lady,” he chastised, “you best get your facts straight before you go sayin’ stuff like that. I’d climb to the top of the water tower—you know a little somethin’ about that, don’tcha?—and tell the whole county how I feel about your mama, but she won’t have none of it.” He leaned forward, looking me square in the eyes. “I mean to marry that woman, Harlow, mark my words. Hell, I gave her a ring. Asked her a hundred times already. What does she do? Wears it on her right hand and says she needs time. I’ll give Tessa all the time in the world, but it’s not me keepin’ a lid on things.”
You could have knocked me over with a feather.
Mama
was the one keeping their relationship under wraps? “That’s an
engagement
ring you gave her?” How could she have made light of it? She’d been holding out for true love ever since my father left her alone with Red and me. Why would she hold back with the sheriff?
He nodded, giving a wan smile. “You go on and ask her when she’s gonna make an honest man outta me, why don’tcha.”
That conversation would take some planning, but I said, “Yes, sir, I’ll do that,” all the while holding my breath, worried he’d kick me out of his office.
“Since I have you here,” he said, “I wanna show you somethin’.” He slid a sheet of paper across the desk to me. “Take a look.”
He sat back, bending his leg to rest his right ankle on his left knee. Hoss McClaine wasn’t just any old cowboy. He was the sheriff, and he had a job to do. He’d let my rash judgment of him slide and had gotten back to the murder at hand. Just like that, I switched sides. What in the world was Mama doing holding out on a good man like this? I knew it would take some work, but one way or another, I’d get her to see the light.
I picked up the paper and quickly scanned the handwritten list, going through it more slowly the second time around.
Nell Gellen
Josie Sandoval
Ruthann McDaniels
Karen Mitchell
Lori Kincaid
Miriam Kincaid
Nate Kincaid
Keith Kincaid
Zinnia James
Wanita Lemure
Helen Abernathy
Dulce Sandoval
Maria Garcia
I slid the list back to him. “Assuming Wanita Lemure and Helen Abernathy were the ladies with Zinnia James, it’s everyone who was in Buttons and Bows the day Nell was killed. Except for Miriam and Keith Kincaid.”
“Keith Kincaid didn’t come in the shop?”
“He was still out of the country, as far as I know.”
“He got in right before the foundation gala,” Will said. “I was just getting there myself when he pulled up. Helped him carry a suitcase in.”
The sheriff steepled his fingers again, the creases on his forehead deepening as he thought. “That’s what he said, but he took a private plane and I can’t get verification that he was on the flight he says he was on.”
The scene from my shop played like a movie in my head. Lori Kincaid had stopped in the doorway as she came in, waving at someone in the Lincoln Town Car. What had Mrs. Kincaid said about their cars? No one could drive the Lincoln except . . . ?
Why hadn’t I listened more closely?
“What about Derek?” the sheriff asked.
“Until today, I hadn’t seen him in years,” I said, adding a silent
Thank God
. “Of course, I’ve been gone most of that time.”
“Haven’t seen him lately. Six months, at least,” Will said.
“And what about George Taylor?”
“I see him every now and then,” Will said.
The name was familiar. I racked my brain, miraculously pulling the information from somewhere in my memory bank. Ruthann had mentioned a George Taylor. “I’ve heard the name, but I don’t know him.”
“You’ve heard the name where?”
“It’s all secondhand information, Sheriff.” I didn’t want to spread rumors about a man I’d never met.
“I’ll keep that in mind,” he said.
“The bridesmaids were talking about him,” I said, when it was clear I had no choice. “One of them said she heard through the grapevine that he’d said he and Nate had”—I made the same air quotes Ruthann had—“fished in the same pond. With Nell,” I added.
Will scooted his chair closer to the desk. “Do you think George has something to do with this?”
The sheriff shrugged. “Nell Gellen was pregnant by some mysterious boyfriend. You say she was gonna make an announcement at the rehearsal dinner. The thing is, Nate Kincaid admits he dated Nell in the past. He sat right in that chair,” he said, pointing to Will, “and swore up and down that they’d never had . . .” He looked away for a split second while he said, “. . .
relations
.” Then he said gruffly, “I don’t have proof one way or another, but I believed him.”
“But Josie told me you were gunning for Nate. You should have seen her. She was on the verge of a nervous breakdown.”
The sheriff cocked his head and gave a mocking laugh. “I’m not a fool, Harlow. I didn’t
tell
them I believed his story.”
Right. “No, sir, I guess you wouldn’t. What about Nell’s will?”
“What about it?”
“I heard she had one. Did you find it?” And if it was never signed, then what?
“She had one, dated a few months back. No family to speak of,” the sheriff said, “so it should hold up. She bequeathed her fifty percent interest in Seed-n-Bead to Josefina Sandoval.”
Mixed emotions swirled through me. The inheritance meant another motive for Josie, or a stable future in case things didn’t work out with Nate. “Does she know?”
He flipped his wrist to look at his watch. “She will in about half an hour.”
“What about the murder, Sheriff?” Will asked.
“Nate Kincaid,” he said flatly, “has an alibi.”
Everything screeched to a halt. “He does?”
The sheriff nodded. “He was on a flight out of DFW at six thirty that night and got back just before nine the next morning. He couldn’t have killed Nell. He was in the middle of something big the day she was killed.” He puckered his thin lips and whistled, low and prolonged, giving Will and me both pointed looks.
Will leaned forward. “No kidding. He’s a whistle-blower?”
“Made a few phone calls,” McClaine said. “Definitely looks that way.”
I followed the unraveling thread of what they were saying. “How can he be an informant for something? Wait—you mean he’s blowing the whistle on his own family’s company? About what?”
“Don’t know, don’t care,” the sheriff said. “It’ll come out. Eventually. But it means he’s no longer a suspect.”
My mind reeled. So someone in the Kincaid family was doing something illegal and didn’t know Nate was about to blow the whistle. It meant the wedding could go on, but Josie was walking into a mess of trouble with that family. Not to mention that someone was still getting away with murder.
Chapter 45
I’d spent the remaining days before the wedding putting the final touches on the wedding party’s dresses. I attached another hundred pearls to Josie’s gown. Doublechecked the stitching on Ruthann’s zipper. Measured and remeasured from the waistline of Karen’s dress to the hem. Slip-stitched the hem of Miriam’s frock. Pressed Holly’s dress.