Krewe of Hunters, Volume 3: The Night Is WatchingThe Night Is AliveThe Night Is Forever

Home > Other > Krewe of Hunters, Volume 3: The Night Is WatchingThe Night Is AliveThe Night Is Forever > Page 18
Krewe of Hunters, Volume 3: The Night Is WatchingThe Night Is AliveThe Night Is Forever Page 18

by Heather Graham


  “Can I leave now?” Jane asked him.

  “Yes, I’ll discharge you.” He looked over at Sloan, who’d been at her side throughout, except when medical procedure had dictated he wait outside. He’d taken that time, he’d told her, to talk to Detective Liam Newsome with county, and that conversation hadn’t improved his mood any.

  “Yes, just take care.”

  “She will.” Sloan leaned against the wall, arms crossed over his chest.

  Ten minutes later, they were both seated in the back of a county patrol car, being driven to Lily.

  The ride was silent. Uncomfortably silent. But apparently, Sloan didn’t want to talk in front of anyone else, so she didn’t try.

  When they returned to the theater, it was open for business, with the restaurant and bar in full swing. Liz came hurrying to the door to meet them. “Jane, you’re all right?” she asked anxiously.

  “I’m fine,” Jane assured her.

  “And Jennie?”

  “Jennie’s still unconscious, but she’s being given the best possible care,” Sloan said. “Where’s Henri?”

  “Backstage, setting up for this evening’s show. He’s getting the cast to help him with everything Jennie usually did,” Liz said. “Your deputy’s been standing guard at the basement door since you left.”

  “Thanks, Liz.” Sloan waited until she’d hurried off, then turned to Jane. “You should lie down for a while.”

  “I don’t want to lie down.”

  “I’ll take you upstairs,” he said.

  “Listen to me. I’m fine. If there’s something to be found in the basement, you’ll find it faster with two people looking,” she said.

  “Jane—”

  “Sloan.”

  He swore under his breath. “Come with me, then. But when we’re finished, you have to go to bed.”

  “We’ll search the basement first,” she said stubbornly.

  “I need to know exactly what happened down there,” he said, winding his way through groups of people, one hand on Jane’s back.

  The crowd in the bar was rowdier and more cheerful—and much drunker. Sloan’s mood was like a thundercloud, and Jennie had difficulty disentangling herself from the people trying to stop her as she walked toward the door. Most wanted pictures, and she promised to pose with them later. Each time she did, Sloan, scowling fiercely, would step between her and the tourists, and they’d back off.

  “I haven’t moved, Sloan,” Chet said when they reached the door. “Liz made coffee and brought it to me. No one’s been down there.” He started to smile at Jane, but cleared his throat and shifted awkwardly away from the door.

  Sloan managed a brief, “Thank you, Chet.”

  He walked down the stairs, not turning back as she followed him. He paused to pull a giant flashlight from his belt, using it as he went straight to the third section of the room—the place she’d forever think of as the mannequin’s lair.

  With the light playing over the mannequins, they seemed far less real.

  “So, relive every second of what happened,” Sloan said.

  “I looked for Jennie upstairs. She wasn’t there.” Jennie hesitated. “I saw Sage McCormick. She led me to the basement door and then disappeared. I checked every room until I reached this part—the mannequin room—and then I heard a groan. I pushed over a few of the dummies and found Jennie.” She stopped for a moment, shivering. “When I went to take out my phone, I saw Sage again. She was warning me to look behind me and...and then something whacked me and I went down.”

  “So someone was in here with you.”

  “Yes.”

  “One of the mannequins didn’t just fall?”

  “I think it’s a little unlikely that a mannequin would fall and hit Jennie so hard that she’s still unconscious—and then fall on me, too. Don’t you?”

  “Of course I do. I’m just asking you. Because, apparently, no one saw anyone come down here. Or leave.”

  “No one was in the building when I came in. Well, except for Jennie.”

  “Obviously, someone else was in the building—and in the basement.”

  Sloan trained the light over the entire area. Now half the mannequins were on the floor.

  “What are you looking for?” she asked him.

  He pointed suddenly.

  She stared in that direction and saw what seemed to be a partial footprint on the dusty floor.

  “It could be anyone’s, Sloan.”

  “Not really. Too big to be either yours or Jennie’s, and I’m not wearing work shoes. Walk around it. I’m going to get the crime-scene unit in here. See if you can find anything else.”

  She tried to search without touching while he went meticulously through the room.

  “Found it,” Sloan said.

  “What?”

  “The weapon.” He pulled gloves from his pocket and reached into the fallen pile of mannequins near the spot where she’d discovered Jennie.

  He carefully lifted something out.

  It was a cane, a Victorian walking cane with a snarling wolf for a handle.

  “Grab the light,” he told her.

  She did, shining it on the cane. On the handle, almost as if the snarling wolf had just bitten flesh, was a bloodstain.

  “I imagine that’s going to be Jennie’s blood,” he said tersely. “You could have been hit a hell of a lot harder.”

  “Yes, and like the doctor said, I’m very lucky I wasn’t.” She sighed impatiently. “Are you going to get that to a lab?”

  He took out his cell. He spoke briefly but she could tell that he was speaking to Liam Newsome. “Yeah, I’ll be here until you send someone,” he said, and hung up.

  “Newsome isn’t coming himself?” she asked.

  “Newsome is still at the morgue with the body we found this morning,” he told her.

  She felt dizzy and fought the sensation. Concussion. She had to be careful.

  “You found someone—in the mine shaft?”

  “Yes. I didn’t want to talk about it earlier. Not until we knew you were okay. You didn’t need anything else to worry about.”

  “Who...who was it?”

  “Caleb Hough, the rancher. His throat had been slit.”

  Jane stood watching him. “Sloan, can all of this be related? A skull here, the bones...Jennie and me being knocked out in the theater? These may be entirely separate. No one was killed here.”

  “Jennie is in a coma, still unconscious. Maybe one or both of you was meant to die.”

  She was almost afraid to tell him about the guns. She had to, she knew. “Sloan, I stopped the duel today—”

  “Yes, yes, I heard about it,” he said. “I’m told you gave the day a whole new meaning.”

  “I stopped it because of Sage McCormick—and I stopped it because I was afraid someone had tampered with one of the guns. Which, as far as I can tell, turned out to be true.”

  He stiffened and scowled. She hadn’t thought he could look any more like a powder keg about to blow, but he managed it.

  “You know this? You found cartridges that weren’t blank?”

  She felt her cheeks burn. “I’m not a hundred percent sure, but the cartridges in the two guns were different.”

  “Where are the guns now?”

  “On my bed.”

  “No, they’re not.”

  “I left them on my bed!”

  “I went into your room when I arrived, when I was looking for you,” he said. “There are no guns on your bed.”

  Lock your door. Jennie had told her to do that.

  And she hadn’t.

  “I still have the bullets,” she told him.

  “You do?”

  “Unless someone ransacked
my whole room. They’re in the toe of one of my boots.”

  He still looked as if he could bite those bullets in half.

  “I know you’re worried about me, but you’ll have a heart attack if you don’t control your temper,” she said mildly.

  He stared at her, incredulous, but he didn’t have a chance to respond. Chet called down the stairs. “Sloan? You okay?”

  “Fine, Chet. Stay there, will you? I’m waiting for the county crime-scene people.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  But behind Chet, Henri had a different opinion on the matter. He came running downstairs. “Sloan, what are you doing? This is one of our two biggest nights of the year! You’re going to have crime-scene people in the theater now?”

  “Henri, someone viciously smashed in the head of your stage manager with a cane—and then used it on a federal agent. On Jane. You’re damned right I’m having crime-scene people down here!” Sloan informed him.

  Henri was at the foot of the stairs now. He shook his head. “What are you talking about? This place is a mess! Jennie must’ve fallen—the mannequins, look at them! They’ve all fallen over. Nothing evil was done here, it’s just—” He paused, turning to Jane. “Oh, Jane, I’m so glad you’re okay. I don’t mean to sound as if I don’t care, I’m just running around like a crazy man. And now...you’re saying this was done on purpose?” he asked.

  “Yes, Henri, someone purposely bashed Jennie and then Jane. So crime-scene people will be coming down here. You’re lucky I don’t close the whole theater. But while we’re on the subject... No more duels, no hangings, nothing violent—even as playacting.”

  “But the outlaws were supposed to come riding into town tomorrow, shooting it all up!” Henri protested.

  “Think of something else. No guns, no knives, no ropes, nothing.”

  “I’m the mayor, Sloan. I can fire you!”

  “Fire me, but the county is coming in, and the county can trump you, Henri, and you know it,” Sloan said. “Henri, did you hear me? Jennie is really hurt. She’s in the hospital, in a coma.”

  Henri went silent and hung his head.

  “And there’s been another murder, Henri. This one, a townsman. Caleb Hough.”

  Henri looked up. “Sloan, I’m sorry. I’m truly sorry. But he was a bigmouth and a bastard, and I’m not surprised he got into trouble. But—”

  “He was murdered in the mine shaft.”

  “It can’t have anything to do with the theater!”

  “The crime-scene investigators will come down here, and you’ll get to keep your theater open. For now. Something is going on, and I’d think you’d want to make sure a body doesn’t suddenly fall on your stage in the middle of a show.”

  Henri glowered at him. “Hah! Now that’s being overly dramatic, Sloan.”

  “Henri, get back upstairs. We’re coming, too.”

  “What’s that?” Henri demanded, pointed at the cane.

  “It’s the weapon that bashed people’s heads, and it’s going to the crime lab,” Sloan said.

  Henri let out a groan of frustration and marched up the stairs. Sloan turned to Jane. “Go up to your room and get those bullets. See if the guns fell somewhere, although I doubt it. When the county crime-scene unit arrives, I’ll be up. And then, tonight, you’ll stay at my house.”

  She moved closer to him. “Sloan, if something’s happening, I should be here.”

  “So you can get your head bashed in again?” he asked. “You have a concussion. You’re off for the night. Either do it my way, or you’re uninvited,” he said bluntly.

  Jane straightened her shoulders. She was tempted to tell him to take his whole haunted town and shove it.

  But now she’d seen Sage McCormick—a ghost trying to communicate.

  And people were dying.

  “Fine,” she snapped, and left. Chet tried to pretend that he hadn’t heard everything as she walked by him. “Jane,” he said, nodding politely.

  “Chet,” she said in return, and kept going.

  As she passed through the bar area, she was accosted by many people in the crowd again. She posed for pictures. Too bad if Sloan didn’t like it.

  While she worried about poor Jennie, Jane could also understand Henri’s position. She couldn’t begin to calculate the amount of money the theater would be making that night.

  When she saw the crime-scene techs walk in, she quickly begged off doing more pictures. She heard people whispering, wondering why the officers were heading for the basement.

  She didn’t see anyone running out in fear.

  But the forensics people were there; Sloan would be along any minute. She excused herself and ran up to her room.

  In front of the mirror, she studied her reflection—no one had acted as if she looked strange. She gingerly touched the top of her head. She had a knot there, but she felt all right.

  It could have been worse. But she hadn’t done anything stupid, not then. Rushing out to stop the gunfight when she was afraid there might be live ammunition—now, that had been stupid.

  As Sloan had said, the guns weren’t where she’d left them. Neither were they on the floor—or anywhere she could find.

  She moved quickly, packing a small overnight bag and digging the cartridges out of the toe of her boot. When Sloan came to her room, she was ready.

  He stepped inside for a moment and closed the door behind him.

  “The bullets?” he asked.

  She handed them over. All twelve were there. He glanced at them and then at her.

  “Do you know which of the actors was holding the gun with the live ammunition?”

  She shook her head. “I just took them—fast.”

  She thought he’d accuse her of being the worst law enforcement officer ever; to her surprise, he didn’t.

  “You saved someone’s life, that’s for sure,” he said. He didn’t look fierce anymore; he looked tired and worn.

  “Let’s go,” he said dully. “I have two county men staying through the night. Whatever’s going on, I know damned well that the theater’s involved. I should close the damned thing down.”

  “If you do, you’ll never know.”

  He shrugged. “Let’s pray the county guys are as good as you are.” He took her bag. “Come on,” he said. “I’m tired enough to drop and we’ve got a stop to make before we get to my house.”

  “Where?”

  “I have to go to the Hough ranch. Tell his wife and boy Caleb’s dead.”

  “Okay, then you’d better give me a hand getting out of this Victorian get-up,” Jane told him.

  He looked at her helplessly, and she sighed.

  “Just unlace the bodice at the back,” she said. “I’ll need a few minutes to change and we’ll be on our way.”

  9

  The Hough ranch was massive. Barns, paddocks and stables far to the east of the property, while the main house sat on a hillock. A stone patch, surrounded by an attractive cacti garden, led the way to the house, which could have graced many a magazine cover.

  Jane stood on the porch with Sloan as he rang the bell. He was glad she’d come along with him. He’d always hated having to tell someone that a loved one was dead—but he hated the idea that they’d hear it on the news or through another source even more.

  She touched his hand. “It’s been hours since you found his body. Do you think they know already?”

  “Liam Newsome came by to speak with the family,” Sloan said. “As much as you seem to think I don’t play well with others, I keep him up on what I’ve discovered—and he’s a detective. I haven’t even actually seen Liam yet. Johnny Bearclaw and I were waiting for him to arrive with someone from the medical examiner’s office when I called, but then you went missing. Johnny waited at the scene, while I
drove to town. Newsome came out here right after.”

  “Then why are we here now?”

  “Liam couldn’t get an answer. They’ve called a couple of times. Apparently, Caleb took Jimmy’s cell and Zoe, Caleb’s wife, is notorious for never knowing where hers is. So, Newsome had an officer come out, but he still didn’t find anyone home.”

  “It doesn’t seem that we’re finding anyone at home, either,” Jane said. “Maybe they’re out of town. Jimmy was in trouble, wasn’t he?”

  Sloan frowned. “Sometimes Jimmy works for the stables.” He pulled his cell phone from his pocket. Heidi answered breathlessly.

  “Lily Stables.”

  “Heidi, it’s Sloan—”

  “Oh, yeah, your name’s on caller ID. What’s up?”

  “Did Jimmy come into work today?”

  “No, the little dweeb was a no-show, and he didn’t answer his phone all day, either. That’s why I can hardly breathe. I’m hauling hay all by myself for the hayride. Is something wrong—something else? Wow. I went by on my third trail ride today, and an area near the old mine shaft was cordoned off. A guy in a county uniform told me just to take the trail group on by. What else has happened? Oh, God!”

  Heidi was going to get hysterical and he couldn’t afford to listen right then. “Thanks, Heidi,” he said, and hung up.

  Watching him, Jane stepped gingerly into the garden to look inside the house. She pressed her nose to the picture window.

  “Sloan,” she said.

  “What?” he asked, joining her.

  “I see a handbag and a shawl on the little table in the foyer. There are keys lying next to it.”

  Sloan figured someone had to be out by the stables and barns. It was a massive ranch. But the house was also set apart from the work buildings.

  He tried the front door; it was locked. It was a solid wood door—slamming his shoulder against it for the next ten years probably wouldn’t break it in. He hesitated a bare half second, then drew his gun and shot the lock. If Jane was surprised, she didn’t say so. They entered the house.

 

‹ Prev