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The Only One Left

Page 1

by Pamela Beason




  THE

  ONLY ONE

  LEFT

  A Neema Mystery

  Pamela Beason

  Dedication

  I dedicate this book to all those who stand up for the

  rights of women and children

  Chapter 1

  Monday

  Detective Matthew Finn had never before been kissed by a gorilla.

  When Neema wrapped an arm around his neck and pulled his head close, he shut his eyes so he couldn’t focus on the big ape’s giant teeth or her piercing red-brown eyes that seemed all too human. After brushing his cheek with her huge rubbery black lips, she ran her thick black fingers through his hair, grooming him. He took a deep breath, willing himself not to flinch.

  He should have known better than to accompany Grace into the barn where her gorillas lived, let alone agree to sit with them in what Grace called an “unstructured period.” Normally, during these periods Grace introduced something new to the gorillas, an exercise ball or a set of pink plastic flamingos or a pair of binoculars, just to see what would happen next and whether they’d use their signs to communicate with one another. Today, she had shanghaied Finn into being the variable in their ape play. He was grateful that Gumu, the massive, unpredictable silverback, had stayed outside.

  “Be gentle, Neema,” Grace warned from her seat several yards away. “Matt is still new to ape affection.”

  “Why does she even want to—”

  Finn completely lost his train of thought as Neema stuck a finger into his ear. He jumped to his feet.

  With a soft hoot, Neema leapt back, then sat on her haunches a few yards away. The gorilla squashed a pair of sunglasses onto her face and then made a pinching sign next to her broad nose.

  “Hey! Those are my sunglasses!” He tapped his chest, signing mine, one of the few American Sign Language words he knew.

  Neema stared at him, her maroon-colored gaze intense over the dark lenses perched on her broad nose.

  He repeated mine, then copied the gorilla’s pinching sign, which had to mean glasses. And then he held out his hand.

  Grace broke into laughter. “I so wish I had the video recorder running. Neema’s teaching you signs!” She scribbled a note into the tablet she held in her lap.

  Dear God, it was true. He’d just learned a new sign from an ape. “I’m glad you didn’t get it on tape, and you’d better not tell anyone that. She stole them right out of my shirt pocket! I want my sunglasses back.”

  “Neema.” Grace put down her pen and notebook to sign as she spoke. “Give the glasses back to Matt.”

  Finn knew she actually signed to Dog Gun Man, which was the complex sign the gorilla had invented to name him because of the Glock he usually carried in his belt holster and the animal hair he perpetually wore on his pants. At least his name had been shortened now from Dog Cat Gun Man. Neema liked cats and didn’t complain about the feline scent any longer. He hoped in time his gorilla name would become only Gun Man or at least something a little less laughable.

  He signed glasses mine and then held his hand out toward the gorilla again, sighing. Why couldn’t he have fallen in love with a normal woman who had normal pets? Although the gorillas were not precisely pets; they were Dr. Grace McKenna’s research subjects, and seemed to be the only close family she had, as well.

  Kanoni, the baby gorilla, climbed his leg, took an object out of her mouth and placed it in his outstretched palm. Then she launched herself from his thigh, making him stagger backward as she bounded over to her mother. Snatching the sunglasses from Neema’s face, Kanoni raced away with them to a dark corner of the barn, whooping loudly with glee.

  “Yuck.” Finn groaned. His thigh smarted from baby-gorilla toenails and his hand was slick with ape saliva.

  Grace dissolved into guffaws.

  “You’re not helping,” he complained, dumping the slimy object from his hand into the sawdust at his feet. He dried his palm on his pants leg.

  “That was one of the most entertaining observation periods I’ve had in a long time.” She stood and walked to him, wiping tears from her eyes with the collar of her shirt. “I’m sorry.” Pulling him into her arms, she excused herself with, “It’s just so damn funny.”

  “If you say so.” Her kiss was much gentler and more welcome than Neema’s, and Grace smelled better, too. He stroked her shoulder-length black hair. Today she was wearing it in the loose waves that he loved to run his fingers through.

  She pulled away, sweeping her hair back from her face with both hands. “Are you wiping gorilla spit off on my hair?”

  It was his turn to laugh. “No, I . . .”

  She combed her fingers through her tresses.

  He grinned. “Well, maybe a little.”

  Abruptly, Grace’s face sobered. She closed her eyes and flattened a hand on her stomach, swaying slightly on her feet.

  He clutched her arm. “You okay?”

  “Yeah.” Opening her eyes, she gave him a light smile. “Just a little dizzy for a second. Stood up too fast, I guess. What did Kanoni give you?”

  Finn checked the ground at his feet, then picked up a gray-white object a little over an inch long. He turned it over several times, then measured it against his index finger. It was slightly shorter than the space between the first and second joints, a little smaller in diameter. “Do you give the gorillas bones?”

  “Never.” She took the object from him. “But this barn was originally part of a working farm, and the farmers kept all sorts of livestock in here. I have found a few chicken bones, and once a leg bone from a calf.”

  She peered at the bone carefully. She turned it over a couple of times, inspected the ends. “I hope I’m wrong. It’s been a long time since I took basic anatomy. This looks an awful lot like . . .”

  As a homicide detective, Finn had seen quite a few skeletons. He finished the sentence with Grace: “. . . a bone from a human finger.”

  Chapter 2

  Monday

  “Here we go again,” Finn groaned. Having a love relationship with a scientist who studied interspecies communication was full of weird happenings no normal man could anticipate. The last “incident” had involved the disappearance of all three gorillas, leaving behind a huge, mysterious pool of blood in this very barn.

  Grace glanced frantically around the barn, which had been remodeled to provide a jungle-like habitat for gorillas. Leafy broken branches and bunches of straw and stuffed toys littered the dirt-and-sawdust floor. Several tree trunks were propped into various positions against the walls. The original hayloft had been removed, and now the building was open all the way up to the roof, which rose to a peak more than thirty feet overhead, supported by a massive beam that ran the length of the entire building. The main beam was in turn held up by four vertical posts as thick as telephone poles. Dominating the space was a manmade “tree” of platforms that radiated out and up around one of these posts in a spiral formation, like leaves sprouting from a vine. Finn knew the gorillas often slept on the platforms. He’d also seen them chase one another up and down the structure, leaping from one platform to the next.

  “I’ve never found anything like this in the barn,” Grace said. “Surely this bone can’t be human.”

  “Well, it definitely did not come from a chicken. Or a calf.”

  Holding the bone between her thumb and index finger, she twisted her hand to study it from a new angle. “You know, bear paw bones are frequently mistaken for human hand bones. Someone could have butchered a bear in here.”

  “Let’s hope for that.” He’d heard of a couple of cases where officers had embarrassed themselves by identifying bear bones as human remains. How was he going to sort this out? Maybe someone at the local college could tell the
difference?

  “But Matt, you have to keep this to yourself, for now.”

  He raised an eyebrow. Last time Grace asked him to keep an incident secret, all hell had broken loose.

  “Please.” She put her hands together in a praying gesture. “I have an inspection coming up in a few days. If anything out of the ordinary happens, the county might revoke my permit to keep the gorillas. You know a lot of people think they shouldn’t be here.”

  Finn was well aware of the Evansburg citizens who were opposed to apes in their neighborhood. And so far, there was no evidence a crime had been committed, so he didn’t have much to report, anyway. “Where could Kanoni have picked up that thing?”

  “Kanoni!” Grace yelled. “Come!” She gestured the baby gorilla away from a plush toy monkey the little ape was busily covering with a blanket.

  Kanoni barreled over to them, stopping at Grace’s feet, suddenly intrigued by the laces on her keeper’s running shoes. She pulled on one, hooting happily when it came undone.

  “Where did you get this toy, Kanoni?” Grace held out the bone and gestured with her other hand, ending in the extended thumb and little finger that was either the sign for “Hang Loose” in Hawaiian or the letter Y.

  Finn frowned. “Toy?”

  “Well, they don’t know the word for bone.” Grace demonstrated a disturbing combination of tapping her forearm and then making crab claws with both hands crossed.

  How the heck had that sign come about? Something about an arm being picked clean by crabs? Or crossed skeleton arms? How macabre.

  Kanoni untied Grace’s other shoe. Grace repeated the question and again held out the small bone.

  The swish of feathers drew the attention of both apes and humans to the roof peak overhead. A small bird swooped from the louvered air vent in the wall to the massive main beam that ran the length of the barn.

  “There are birds inside your barn,” Finn observed.

  “No kidding, Detective? They have a nest up there, I think.”

  Now that Grace mentioned it, Finn thought he heard faint cheeping sounds.

  “I should find a way to clear it out because birds attract mites. But that beam is thirty-four feet from the floor.”

  Finn studied the barn’s architecture. The highest platform on the “tree” stopped about twelve feet below the roof, but the vertical supporting pole was bolted to the main beam. Maybe the pole could be climbed or reached by a ladder set on the highest platform, but he was not about to volunteer. “How’d you bolt that pole to the main beam up there?”

  “I didn’t. They were already connected. The construction team used one of those lift trucks like the line workers use to attach the platforms. I’d have to rent one of those again, or maybe get an extra long extension ladder or something. I can’t justify that expense just for a bird’s nest.”

  The bird flew back to the air vent and squeezed out between the louvers.

  “Besides, I like swallows. They are beautiful birds.” Grace looked back at the baby gorilla. “Now—”

  Kanoni grunted and pinched her fingers together beside her mouth.

  “That’s right, that’s a bird, Kanoni.” Grace repeated the bird beak sign. “But where did you get this toy?” She again held out the bone and shook it in front of the little ape’s face.

  Kanoni raked both hands down through the air, then moved one hand at the side of her face as if pulling on whiskers.

  “Snow cat is not here,” Grace responded, signing back.

  Finn grimaced. Over the past two years, he’d learned that conversation with apes was riddled with non sequiturs, but he still found it disturbing. “Why is she mentioning the cat?”

  “Snow is her favorite. And he’s been missing since yesterday afternoon, so she’s thinking about him. Or maybe she’s trying to say that Snow brought her that bone.”

  After spending more than two years with Grace and her menagerie, Finn knew that the apes often made up stories to shift blame. Or just because they thought the lie was funny. He’d been the focus of ape humor more than once.

  Grace turned to the mother gorilla. “Neema, where did that toy come from?”

  Snow cat, Neema signed.

  “I don’t believe that, Neema.” Grace shook her head. “Where did the toy come from?”

  Neema raised her face toward the ceiling, signed bird.

  “Neema.” Grace’s tone was exasperated. She jabbed her index finger at the bone in her other hand. “Where did this come from?”

  Nest, Neema signed, naming the calico cat that looked like the multicolored blankets the gorillas wove into sleeping nests each night. Finn glanced around the barn. Nest was nowhere in sight.

  Grace frowned. “No. Cats don’t carry toys like this. Tell the truth.”

  Tree candy juice yogurt, the gorilla signed, bartering.

  Finn groaned. “Do you think Neema even knows the answer to that question?”

  “Probably. But that doesn’t mean she’ll tell me, even if I give her food.” Grace turned back to Kanoni. “Did Snow bring you this toy?”

  The baby gorilla slapped her chest in a mine sign, snatched the bone out of Grace’s hand, and popped it into her mouth. Slapping her chest mine mine mine as she loped away, she fled to the lowest platform and quickly scampered up to the highest.

  Finn put his fists on his hips. “We’re gonna need that bone.”

  “I’ll get it. Somehow. Eventually.”

  “And my sunglasses.”

  “I’ll find them, Matt, I promise. I’m sorry.”

  He sighed. “It’s a good thing I have another pair in the car.”

  Neema signed, Give Neema tree candy good eat now tree candy. The big gorilla swung forward on her knuckles, gazing hopefully into Grace’s eyes.

  “No lollipops,” she said sternly.

  Neema sat back and signed yogurt juice.

  Finn was reminded of his frustration when he’d first met Neema. Questioning a gorilla was only marginally more informative than conversing with his dog Cargo. He was glad nobody at the Evansburg Police Department was witnessing this interaction. He could imagine Sergeant Greer’s snide commentary about talking to apes.

  His cell phone chirped from his back pants pocket, and he pulled it out. Neema abruptly switched her focus to the phone, her gaze dangerously intent. Finn tightened his grip on the phone, turned his back to the gorilla, and walked a few steps away. “Detective Finn.”

  “Where are you?” Greer barked, startling him.

  Had he conjured the stout desk sergeant out of thin air? He wanted to answer, “It’s none of your business,” but diplomacy won out and he merely said, “It’s my day off, Sarge. Today’s Memorial Day. That’s a national holiday, in case you hadn’t noticed.”

  “Crime doesn’t take holidays. And it’s afternoon already, so you had half. You’ll get comp time for the rest.”

  Finn frowned. He had nearly six weeks of comp time in his account, but never had the opportunity to take more than an hour or two. One of the many joys of working for an underfunded small-town police department. “What’s so urgent?”

  “Missing young woman, age seventeen, last seen in Bellingham three days ago. Her car was left at the Gorge Amphitheatre. The Sasquatch Festival there ended over two hours ago. The managers of the Amphitheatre called earlier when the car and the tent were left abandoned in the campground.”

  “The Gorge Amphitheatre is not even in this county.”

  “No shit?” Greer retorted. “Dawes and Larson are out, so we’re down two detectives, as you well know. You’ve got the most experience, and you’re available. Grant County Sheriff requests mutual assistance, and we aim to deliver.”

  Finn wondered when the mutual part of the quid pro quo assistance agreement between local law enforcement units was going to kick in. It was about time one of the others volunteered someone to help out the Evansburg department. When he took the senior detective position in Evansburg, he had expected to be revered for his experti
se as an experienced homicide detective from Chicago. Instead, all the police and sheriff organizations in the area seemed to view Detective Matthew Finn like a piece of department property they could borrow at will for cases that ranged from cattle rustling to drug deals. He checked his watch. “It’s a quarter to three, and the Amphitheatre is about a one-hour drive from here.”

  “The parents were notified around one p.m.; they’re on their way. The missing girl is Darcy Jeanne Ireland, from Bellingham, driving a 2018 Ford Edge registered to her parents.”

  What sort of parents gave a brand new car to a teenager and then let her drive on her own from Bellingham to the Gorge? His parents had certainly never been that generous or lenient. He wouldn’t have been, either, if he’d had the chance to be a father.

  He hated cases involving missing people. In his experience, most missing adults had ditched their everyday lives to take off somewhere with a new companion. Most missing teenagers were runaways, hell bent on punishing their parents for reasons the parents usually didn’t divulge. But then there were the few horrible, genuine cases in which people vanished because of abduction or murder or accident. And as long as the individual was listed as missing, the department and the media and the relatives and even his own conscience would hound him, because there was always the chance that minutes could mean the difference between life and death.

  Greer broke into his grim thoughts. “I’m sending the particulars to your phone right now, Detective.”

  Rowdy ape hoots erupted behind Finn, and he turned to see Grace chase Neema across the barn, threatening to tickle the gorilla. The Sasquatch Festival was probably tame compared to this gorilla circus.

  On the platform high above, Kanoni bounced and screeched in excitement at the activity, adding to the cacophony. The doorway to the exterior enclosure darkened as the big male, Gumu, peered in to see what was going on.

  “Where the hell are you?” Greer snarled.

  “On my way to the Gorge Amphitheatre.” Finn tapped the end button.

 

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