Stranger in My House (A Murder In Texas) (11 page)

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Authors: Mari Manning

Tags: #Romantic Suspense, #Mari Marring, #Entangled, #Murder in Texas, #small town, #Mari Manning, #Texas, #Murder, #Cowboy, #Select Suspense, #hidden identity, #police officer, #Romance, #twins, #virgin, #Mystery

BOOK: Stranger in My House (A Murder In Texas)
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Chapter Ten

Kirby lay across Frankie’s bed, nursing the remnants of her headache instead of doing something. She wanted to call Frankie, but the thought of listening to her screech about the sleeping pills made Kirby’s head throb. She should be watching the comings and goings in the west wing. She should be up on the ridge looking for signs of an intruder.

Through the open window, a hot breeze stirred, carrying Seth’s bark. “Manny! Forget the hoeing. Let’s get these crates stacked.”

Seth. They were partners. Right? He knew her real identity, but he’d promised to keep it to himself. No. Not promised, exactly. Still, he seemed intrigued enough to keep quiet at least until he was convinced she was not messing with him. “Grab the second wagon.” Seth shouted again.

When had she started thinking of him as Seth?

She shuffled to the window to look at him.

He was piling wood crates on a tractor. His damp T-shirt clung to his wide shoulders. He bent to grab a box off the ground, and his jeans squeezed his muscled legs and thighs. They’d feel solid against her hips…if he held her close…which was
not
going to happen.

Creak.

She swung her head away from the barn and looked down. A narrow door, hidden by honeysuckle and viburnum, inched open outside the west wing. A bent figure emerged. Mr. Shaw. He strode into the acre of woods wedged between the house and the lavender fields. Alone.

She’d sure like another chance to ask him some questions.

Sucking in her breath, Kirby eased her sore feet into Miss Bea’s scuffed black oxfords and crept down the stairs. Only the macaw noticed her. “Hell’s bells. She’s here, she’s here.”

“Shush, you stupid bird.” Kirby drifted past him.

She slipped into the kitchen. Mounds of dough rose under floured tea towels, lentils soaked in a ceramic bowl, lettuce dripped from a chipped enamel colander. No Brittany. And no Miss Bea.

The path to Mr. Shaw had been left unguarded.

Woo-hoo.

The cool morning air lingered in the trees and swirled around Kirby’s legs. The fresh scent of pine filled her lungs. Two sparrows chirped wildly. It was quiet here, and the ranch seemed far away.

She moved among the loblolly pines and red oak, squinting into the gloom and calling softly, “Cousin Eenie? Cousin Eenie?”

“What are you doing here?”

Kirby spun. Mr. Shaw appeared behind her. He leaned on a gnarled cane, his thin body swallowed by a pair of khakis and a western-style shirt. But his gaze was sharp and wary. “What are you doing here?” he asked again. A California undertone flattened his Texas drawl.

“I wanted to talk to you.”

“There’s no more money, Frances. Didn’t Bea tell you?”

The Mercedes and the beautiful suite. Kirby had never considered their true cost. Frankie was the heiress to a fifty-thousand-acre ranch. Under the circumstances, a Mercedes made sense, didn’t it? Then she thought about the twisted fruit trees in the orchard and the field of lavender burning under the cruel Texas sun and the dilapidated house.

Shaw Valley Ranch was running low on funds. Had someone decided the ranch balance sheet would look a whole lot better if Charleen and Frankie were out of the picture? “I didn’t come to ask for money.”

“Then what?” His eyes narrowed.

“I wanted to talk. My momma’s missing, you know.”

His pale blue eyes bored into her. Then he nodded. “Walk with me.”

“Do you come here a lot? The woods, I mean.” She fell into step beside him.

“Sometimes I need to get out of the house. Take my thoughts for an airing. Bea worries that I’ll fall and break a bone, so I stay put mostly. But today she’s in her office. Monthly accounting must be attended to.”

“Is that door locked?

“I have a key.” An eyebrow rose. “As you know.”

She’d been about to ask where the door led and who else had keys. But apparently Frankie knew all that, so why risk exposure? Kirby would ask Frankie herself when she called her tonight. “It’s nice out here in the woods,” she said to Mr. Shaw.

“And I’m with friends,” Mr. Shaw said.

Friends? Trees and bushes were his friends? A cardinal sang out from a nearby pine.
Ah.
“Like Bobby?”

He leaned heavily on his stick and frowned at her. “Stay away from him.”

His face lost focus, swimming across her vision like a sleepy porpoise. Her eardrums vibrated. Her head turned into a balloon floating above her neck. The trees spun around her. She groped for a trunk.
Darn sleeping pills.

“Are you okay, Frances?”

“I feel faint. I—I didn’t sleep well last night.”

“Bea told me what she did. She’s very sorry.” He pointed over her shoulder. “Let’s sit.” He gave her his arm, and she clung to it gratefully.

A glimmer of sunlight turned out to be a glade, a flash of white a limestone bench. Kirby sank to the cool rock, and Mr. Shaw lowered himself beside her.

He pulled a thin cigar from his pocket. “Only bad habit I have left. Bea doesn’t approve.” He lit it and took a long, luxurious puff. “How are you feeling?” he asked.

“Okay.”

“Bea said you rode Old Tom yesterday. Thought you didn’t care for the horses.”

“I like Old Tom. He’s got a big heart. I could feel it when I let him run.”

His eyes studied her curiously. “You seem different.”

Jump sideways, Kirby-nee.

She turned away and pretended to examine her nails. “Manny said Old Tom was named after your friend.”

He shifted beside her, his mood changing from curious to sad. “I’ve lost so many friends over the years, but some have come back. Tom was the one who saved my life back in L.A. after she lost her struggle. It was a dark time, but Tom made me come back to the ranch and found Bea to help with everything. He didn’t have to, but he stayed on. We built this into the first organic ranch in the area.”

“You said she. Who do you mean?”

Pain cracked open his broad face. “Come on, Frances. Just because I let Bea do my talking for me doesn’t mean I don’t know what goes on.”

“I didn’t mean to pry.”

“Didn’t you?” His cheeks flushed. “There’s good in you, Frances. I can see it your face, but you must change. Life has a habit of evening things out, and I don’t want you to be on the debit side when it happens to you.”

Her stomach did a flip. Was it the drugs or this odd conversation? She didn’t know. “How do I change?”

“Open yourself up to Shaw Valley. Learn to love the land. It will love you back.”

“I’m not sure what you are asking me to do.”

Mr. Shaw shook a bony finger at her. “The mighty always fade away. It is the humble servant who prevails. Think about this.”

A shadow crossed the halo of light above them. A dark figure flung itself from the trees. Kirby squealed, but Mr. Shaw straightened his arm. Bobby landed on his shoulder, chattering madly.

The arrival of Bobby seemed to quiet Mr. Shaw. He brushed a finger down the squirrel’s back. “I’m sitting with your nemesis, Bobby.”

Kirby clicked her tongue at Bobby. He crooked his head and chittered at her.

“I think Bobby is telling me that I’ve been too harsh with you.”

He had no idea. “Not really. Just a different side of me.”

“Perhaps this different side of you will reconsider selling the ranch when I die?”

This was none of her business. The ranch would belong to Charleen, and if Charleen hung on to it, then Frankie. And whatever Frankie decided to do with it, well, that was her right. Still, if Frankie and possibly Charleen were battling over the future of the ranch with Mr. Shaw, it might be a motive to get the women out of the way.

“It’s been in the family for a while, hasn’t it?”

He nodded. “Since 1870. My great-granddaddy, Ulysses Shaw, came here in search of open space. Sold a farm out east and bought a few hundred head of cattle. That’s how it started.”

“What would he think of your organic vision?”

He chuckled to himself. “Probably hang me from the nearest tree. Old Ulysses believed in rough justice for those who went against him. Of course, he ended up getting himself shot in the back. Never found the culprit. Too many enemies.”

“Did he open the quarry?”

“My daddy. Went off to Harvard and returned with big ideas. He was going to make millions.” Mr. Shaw shook his head. “He lost sight of our family’s true strength.”

“What’s that?”

“The land, Frances. It’s in our blood. It’s the thread running through the Shaw generations. You can’t run away from it. I’ve tried.”

She thought she knew what he meant. She’d felt the solid presence of the land when she’d ridden out to the ridge. Like Grandy’s steady hand on her shoulder when she was young, like Frankie’s return. Like the Cherokee heart beating beneath her ribs. The bonds of blood and belonging never weakened.

Bushes rustled nearby. Someone was coming. “Did Miss Bea mention the shooting the other day?”

His pale eyes widened. “Shooting?”

Miss Bea stepped into the glade. Her bun was awry, the untied laces of her shoes dragging in the dust. A pair of reading glasses hung on a silver chain from her neck. Her eyes were wide with alarm.

With a nervous chitter, Bobby leaped from Mr. Shaw’s shoulder and skittered up a tree.

The old man rose. “Everything is fine, Bea. We were talking. I’ve almost convinced our girl here to keep the ranch after I’m gone.”


You
are not going anywhere. Not while I have anything to say about it.” Miss Bea’s eyes filled with tears. “Unless you continue to smoke those awful cigars. You know what the doctor said.”

“Come on now.” Mr. Shaw took her arm. “I won’t live forever, no matter how well behaved I am. We’ve discussed this.”

“Not if you’re alone with
her
.”

Unbelievable!
This woman was shameless. “You’re the one who drugged my dinner last night,” Kirby said. “I could have died.”

Miss Bea’s eyes narrowed. “Turned out to be a good night for you, didn’t it. You and Mr. Maguire enjoy yourselves?”

Kirby’s jaw dropped. “Are you insinuating that I was sleepwalking on purpose?”

“Ladies. That’s enough.” Mr. Shaw patted Miss Bea’s shoulder. “Bea didn’t mean to hurt you. She’s promised me it won’t happen again.” He eyed Kirby. “As for you, young lady, your scandalous behavior has bred doubts about you. I’m sure that was all Bea meant. But Shaw Valley is beginning to work on you. The coming year will be a time of great change. I can feel it.”

He was going to be crushed when she found Charleen and the real Frankie returned.

Kirby shifted on the stone bench and studied the trees. Miss Bea and Mr. Shaw had returned to the house, but it was nice here. Peaceful.

Her cell buzzed.

It was Frankie. “Hi, sis,” she said. “I tried to call you last night. Did you give Seth a try?”

“No.” The word sounded more adamant than Kirby intended.

“OMG. You did. You were with him, weren’t you?”

“Not like that. Miss Bea mixed sleeping pills in my food, and Maguire found me wandering around outside. I was sleepwalking.”

“Ooh. I love it. Wish I’d thought of it myself.”

“Did you know Miss Bea was drugging you at night?”

A pause, pregnant with thought, but Kirby couldn’t read the silence. “No,” Frankie said. She seemed oddly incurious about how and why. Could she be lying?

“Are you sure?” Kirby asked.

“No. I mean, I’m sure I didn’t know.” She tittered. “Obviously. Otherwise I’d have told you not to eat the food.”

So she knew how the sleeping pills were delivered each night. Maybe Frankie was embarrassed about how she’d been treated. Since Kirby was not the sort to eat rabbit food, Frankie might have figured she’d be safe.

“Anything else before I go?” Frankie asked.

Kirby stowed away her questions about the sleeping pills. When this was all over, she and Frankie could talk honestly about everything that happened. Talk and maybe laugh at little, too.

“Mr. Shaw got himself all ruffled up because you said you wanted to sell the ranch.”

“Look around you, Kirby. The place is falling apart. At least if he was running cattle, it might at least pay for itself. What else can I—we—do?”

“I’m not saying you’re wrong. I’m saying it could be a motive.”

Frankie gasped. “You’re brilliant! Maybe Cousin Eenie told the she-hawk to get rid of Momma and me because we want to sell the land. I bet that’s it.”

She talked like the mystery had been solved. “Your momma’s still missing.”

“I know, I know. That’s the most important thing. Finding Momma. You’ll keep looking, won’t you?”

“Of course, Frankie.”

Chapter Eleven

Seth tested the rope on the last stack of crates and scowled at Frankie’s bedroom window.

Come on, Kirby. Wake up.

He had to get up to the orchard or Miss Bea would hand him his ass. But he’d promised to wait for Kirby.

He felt too relieved…happy…aroused to worry about Miss Bea. Frankie had a hot sister. A hot sister who was also a cop. He’d like to see her in uniform, gun hanging on her hip, badge flashing, all business. Preferably in his bedroom.

His body had known right away she wasn’t Frankie. He’d tangled with a few ballbusters in his army days. He could spot one in a smoky bar at fifty feet or across a barnyard at a hundred. That was Frankie all over. A ballbuster. He knew to watch his back with her.

Kirby emerged from the woods next to the house. Golden, smiling, kissable. He intended to find out if she was. Tonight, if at all possible. She waved, and he waved back.

His eyes drifted to the sway of Kirby’s hips. It would sure be nice to have a woman in his bed, especially when the woman got his engine going like this one did.

He called out to her. “Ready for that sandwich?”

“I’m starved.” Her smile widened, and his heart did a little flip.

“Let’s go,” he said.

When she reached him, he inhaled the scent of pine clinging to her hair and skin, but he didn’t touch her. This woman would require a slow and steady hand. A little patience, a little charm. But she was doable.

In the coach house, he made her sit at the table while he played short-order cook.

“Ham, turkey, or both?”

“You really don’t have to do this. I can make my own.”

“You’re my guest. Besides, you had a rough night.”

“Turkey. Thanks.”

He piled thin slices of turkey on bread, feeling her gaze as she took his measure.

She sighed. “This is nice.”

He shot his lady-killer grin at her. A dark brow rose.
Too much, too fast?
He wiped the smile off his face, bent his head, sawed at a tomato. “What were you doing in the woods?”

“Talking to Mr. Shaw.”

“Yeah?”

“About the shooting. There has to be a reason. You said there was a problem between Frankie and Mr. Shaw, and I wanted to find out if it’s mixed up with the shooting.”

“You think Shaw is the shooter?”

“Seems unlikely, but he might have seen something. Miss Bea is the only one with any motive.”

“What’s that?” he asked.

“She’s protective of Mr. Shaw, and she hates Frankie.”

“What about the beef between Shaw and Frankie? Any clues?” he asked.

“Mr. Shaw is dead set against selling the ranch. Charleen and Frankie are determined to put it on the market as soon as he’s gone,” she said.

Seth bent his head so she wouldn’t see his frustration. Shaw Valley had so much potential…for a man with money. Still, he’d hoped when Shaw passed away the heirs would restore it to its true purpose. That wasn’t Frankie or her momma. They’d want the money, and probably in a few years it would be gone, spent on clothes and cars and baubles. “Mustard or mayo?” he asked.

“Mayo, please.”

He pulled the jar from the fridge. “So what did Shaw tell you?”

She rolled her eyes at him. “Nothing.”

“Nothing?”

“Well, no clues about what’s going on. The downside to pretending to be Frankie is that everyone assumes I know things I don’t know.”

“Maybe you should go away and come back as yourself.”

“Hardly seems like a foolproof plan to loosen tongues, does it?” She shot him a withering look.

“You’re the cop.” He brought the sandwiches to table and ripped open a bag of chips. “Not fancy, but it beats what they’re eating at the house.”

“This looks great.” She lifted her sandwich and took a hearty bite. Her teeth were white and even, her tongue pink.

He concentrated on shaking chips out of the bag. “Someone has to be lying.”

“Or at least hiding information. Unless there’s another suspect we haven’t thought of. But who?”

He picked up his sandwich. “Not many suspects around. Besides Shaw and Miss Bea, Brittany and Manny are the only regulars. If you don’t count Frankie and Charleen. And me.”

Her eyes flicked up to him, then back to her sandwich. Coolness sputtered in their depths. She had counted him among the suspects. Maybe she still did.

“How about someone from town?” she asked.

“There’s Zack, and maybe a few of the other guys she, uh, hangs with. But can’t think why any of them would want to shoot her.”

“What happened with Zack?”

“He and Frankie had a few drinks, went on a joyride, drove her Mercedes into a ditch. They ended up here and staggered up to Frankie’s room, partied, got kicked out in the morning.”

“Where’s the motive to kidnap Frankie’s momma?” Kirby asked.

“He was fired from his job. Around these parts, that’s a motive,” he said.

“It’s an extreme response, don’t you think? Besides, he could hardly blame Frankie for his mistakes.” She chewed her sandwich thoughtfully. “That leaves us with Miss Bea and Mr. Shaw.”

“What about me?”

She laughed. It was a pleasant sound, high and bubbly. “Well, Mr. Maguire—”

“Seth.”

“Well, Seth, since you asked, you’re still in the running for Charleen’s disappearance. I saw how you reacted when I mentioned selling the ranch. But it seems a long shot, since you were with me when the gun was fired. Can’t have a better alibi than that.”

“Guess not.”

“I’d like to go up to the quarry. Maybe there’s something you missed.”

She wasn’t going to find anything. “Another time. We need to be out at the orchard this afternoon. The pickers will be here tomorrow.”

Her face fell.

He sighed. “I’ve got to drive the trailer out. If you want to ride Old Tom, you can follow me. Bring Darby, too. We’ll ride up to the ridge later.”

“Thanks.” Popping the last bite of her sandwich in her mouth, Kirby stood. “Let me help you clean up.”

“Nah. Leave it. I’ll get it later.” Worry lines streaked across her forehead. “You like burgers?” he asked.

Her face brightened. “I love them.”

“I’m cooking for two tonight. If you’re interested.”

“Thanks.”

She clattered down the stairs in Miss Bea’s heavy shoes, and he hustled close behind, unable to tear himself away from her.

Unloading crates under an unforgiving sun proved to be hard work. Kirby’s body was an oven, her skin its burners. Frankie’s silk shirt—probably ruined—dripped with perspiration. Seth’s presence made the heat and the work a little easier to bear. But just a little.

Seth’s cell buzzed, and he pulled out his phone. “Goddamn Miss Bea,” he muttered, wiping his sweaty forehead with his shirtsleeve. But he sighed. “I better take this.” He strolled off.

Manny sidled up to Kirby. “Brittany gave me your message about meeting at the Limestone. I guess I could.”

“Perfect. The Limestone it is.” It was neutral, nonthreatening, public, and close to the police station. Frankie’s missing-person report might have yielded some results by now. She could kill two birds without crossing the street.

“I have to be here in the morning. The harvesters are coming. Maybe next week after things slow down a bit.”

“It’s really important, Manny. I can meet you as early as you want. Five, five thirty, six. Whatever’s good for you.”

From the other side of the bunkhouse, Seth’s voice vibrated. “How the hell was I supposed to know she followed Shaw into the woods? I’m not his bodyguard.” Miss Bea was still angry about this morning.

Manny grimaced. “I gotta be here by seven.”

“Six, then.”

“I guess it would be okay.” Seth emerged between two bunkhouses. Manny picked up a crate. “I better get back to work. Don’t want to get fired.”

The rim of the sun dipped behind the ridge. The shadows on the narrow lane between orchard and ranch deepened.

Kirby closed her eyes, her body swaying to Old Tom’s gait, Darby’s muffled clop, and Seth’s soft, masculine breath. After a bumpy start, the day was ending smoothly. Lunch with Seth had papered over the embarrassment of waking up in his bed. But she’d seen a thoughtful, generous side to him. Thoughtful and generous with a great smile, an amazing body and a brain—

Stop thinking about him! Focus on finding Charleen. No more panting after the hot ranch manager.

Charleen. Miss Bea had to be the shooter and therefore Charleen’s kidnapper. Who else had opportunity and motive? But why hand Frankie all that cash then try to shoot her? Why get huffy when Seth confronted her about the gun? Was Mr. Shaw behind the troubles on the ranch? Had he ordered Miss Bea to spook Charleen and Frankie? If they gave up their rights to Shaw Valley, he could give Miss Bea the land to preserve, couldn’t he?

Too much traffic in your head, Kirby-nee. The answer can’t find its way.

Grandy was right. She stopped thinking and let the hot summer wind blow her thoughts away.

“Don’t hear the name Kirby much.” Seth’s deep voice tumbled between them.

She opened her eyes. From beneath the brim of his hat, his deep blue eyes watched her. No. Assessed her. Hamburgers for dinner, and no points for guessing what—or who—was dessert.

“My daddy grew up just outside Kirby, Oklahoma. That’s where I grew up. I guess he was homesick when he named me.”

“Middle name?”

She smiled. “Adelaide. Very old-fashioned, I know. It was my great-grandmother’s name. Grandy, my—our—granddaddy had a picture of her from back in the thirties. She was a tiny thing with light hair. Wore Levi’s, which was frowned upon in those days. But she was a rebel.”

“Because of the pants.”

“In part. Convention didn’t bother her. She roped and branded, herded cattle. Whatever the cowboys were doing. Grandy said she ran away with my great-granddaddy when she was eighteen. He was Cherokee.”

Seth tilted his head. “You’re Native American?”

“I’m third generation, so an eighth, but yes. Frankie, too.”

He steered Darby close to Old Tom. His leg brushed against hers, igniting a small blaze that shot up her thigh. He shot her a knowing smile. “Did Adelaide ever regret her wild youth?”

Her gaze skittered away from him. She composed herself. “I don’t know. Maybe. She and my great-granddaddy had a little homestead near Kirby. They ran cattle on it. But they lost everything in the Depression. Great-granddaddy started working for the rodeo after that. He took care of the horses. Adelaide stayed in Kirby and raised Grandy. When Grandy was sixteen, Adelaide died, and Grandy went to work at the rodeo, too. That’s how my daddy got started.”

“Your daddy was in the rodeo?”

“My mom, too. She was a barrel racer. He was a bulldogger.”

His eyebrows rose. “Riding steers is dangerous work.”

“Sure is. Got my daddy’s neck broke.”

“I’m sorry.”

Familiar pain, cold and sharp and unwelcome, awoke in her. Joe Swallow’s death. Stupid and useless.

“That’s why I became a cop. He lost his life doing something worthless. At least if I die, it will be helping people.” She jerked Old Tom’s rein and pulled away from Seth. “Can we let them run?”

He blinked. “Did I say something wrong?”

“Of course not.”

“You could have told me to mind my own business.”

She’d wanted to tell him about Grandy and Daddy, but now she wanted to forget. “Sad thoughts, that’s all. And Old Tom’s literally champing at the bit. I want to let him stretch.”

“Wait until we reach the crest. It will be easier on Darby if it’s downhill.”

An itchy sort of silence settled over them. Kirby cleared her throat. “How about you? Seth’s not a name I hear much. Especially in Texas.”

A flash of pain crossed his face. “Crazy parents.”

“Yeah? Any brothers or sisters?”

He fiddled with his reins. “Ready to stretch out the horses?”

Was the girl in the photo his sister? “Don’t want to talk about it, huh?”

“Let’s go.”

She dug her knees into Old Tom’s side. Tall grass faded into a gold blur, and dust spun under the gelding’s hooves. She leaned into him, loving his strength and speed, his supple body, his spirit. She reached the crest ahead of Seth. Below them, Shaw Valley spread out in waves of green and pale purple.

A ray of light rocketed across the valley. It came from the ridge.

“Come on, boy. Let’s get ’em.”

Bending low over Old Tom, she coaxed him into a full gallop. The legs beneath her picked up speed, pounding the dirt in double time.

“Dammit, Kirby, stop!”

No way.
She charged out of the field and up the ridge. Her hands tightened on the reins. She’d need to have Old Tom under control if they got shot at again. But nothing stirred in the woods above them. She crashed through the light brush and into the trees.

A narrow path rode along the ridge, disappeared behind a thin screen of loblolly pines, reappeared between leggy underbrush. Between narrow, limbless spaces, dull black water, opaque as molasses winked. A pale stone outcropping curled like an angry wave over the pool. The old limestone quarry.

She urged Old Tom forward, her eager, him balky. At the outcropping, he dug in his hooves as if he could read the crude signs posted at the edge of the road,
Danger—Keep Out
and
Private Property
.

Kirby slid off Old Tom and tied the reins to a sapling sprouting from the rock. Head down, shoulders hunched, she sprinted from tree to tree. A tall shadow flitted nearby.
Risssh.
A hawthorn quivered and rustled. Someone—something?—was pushing past it.

Thu-rump, thu-rump.
The ground trembled beneath Darby’s hooves. Seth was close behind her.

Dropping to the forest floor, Kirby slithered through the brush on her elbows. A catclaw thorn tore her neck. A jagged rock cut her knee. Worse, a large, slimy beetle scurried over her arm. Swallowing a gasp, she crawled on, avoiding another mean-looking catclaw but getting her face wacked by the branch of a viburnum.

She broke through to the quarry and her reward.

Beneath the outcropping on an apron of buffalo grass, the remains of a campfire charred the ground. A crumpled sleeping bag and a mound of empty beer cans rested beside it.

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