The Highlander Next Door

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The Highlander Next Door Page 20

by Janet Chapman


  “So Hazel wasn’t his first victim?”

  “I can’t actually prove it, but she appears to be one of at least six.”

  “So if Rabideu died nearly two weeks ago, then who are the bastards ye believe are after Hazel and Birch? Did he leave behind a family; maybe a wife or brothers that might want Birch out of the way so they can exploit Hazel themselves?”

  Claude was shaking his head before Niall had finished. “My guess is whoever murdered Rabideu is after something other than money. His body was missing several fingers and toes, and the medical examiner concluded he’d endured several days of torture before someone finally carved out his heart and shoved it down his throat.”

  Sweet Christ. “Who in hell did the man piss off?” Niall growled. “And what makes ye think his murder involves his marriage to Hazel?”

  “From the research I’ve been doing, con artists of Rabideu’s caliber operating in Canada are almost exclusively from three, possibly four families. And I think Rabideu may have crossed one of them, and they tortured information out of him and then cut out his heart as a warning to others.” Claude shrugged. “My guess is he’d stolen from them or had incriminating evidence that he intended to use for blackmail, and I’m worried that whatever they’re after unwittingly ended up in Hazel’s possession. Birch said they packed up all of Leonard’s belongings, sent everything to a storage facility, and left the locker key taped to the door of their house along with a note saying divorce proceedings had already been started.”

  “And you believe the women may have missed something when they packed, and that’s why Rabideu followed them to Ottawa?”

  Claude blew out a heavy sigh. “That’s my best guess.”

  Niall stood up and walked to the window, then shoved his hands in his pockets and stood staring out at Bottomless. “Is it possible you’re mistaken,” he asked without turning around, “and Birch’s attacker could be a vengeful husband of an abused woman she’d recently helped?”

  “Birch stopped seeing clients two years ago when she went back to school to get her doctorate. And the timing of Rabideu’s death is too coincidental.”

  “Aye,” Niall murmured, not liking that Claude was probably right. He turned around. “Have you shared any of this with Birch?”

  “No.”

  “Is that why you’re here, then; so you can tell her in person?”

  Claude softly chuckled. “I’m here because I miss my daughter.” He cocked his head, his perspective appearing to turn inward. “My life did a one-eighty the day I walked into a Montreal hospital room and a frail-looking, six-year-old waif lifted her bandaged arms for me to pick her up. Whatever Hazel had told Birch about my absence in her life, she must have been kind in the telling, because even though I was a complete stranger, Birch hugged my neck, said, ‘Hello, Daddy,’ and thanked me for coming to see her. And then she explained to me that we would be living together for a little while, because some funny-smelling lady with crooked teeth had told her Grand-mémère was dead and her mom was hurt too badly to take care of her right now.” His expression still distant, he grinned. “Birch has been teaching me the finer points of being a father ever since.”

  “Was there a car accident?” Niall asked softly.

  “No, an explosion,” Claude said, his focus returning to the present. “It was decided a compressor ignited a gas leak that had filled a third-floor utility room of the downtown mall where they were shopping. Four people were killed—Hazel’s grandmother, Annette Hynes, being one of them—and sixteen were injured.” His eyes turned somber. “I was told Birch spent several hours trapped under concrete and steel, protectively cocooned by her dead great-grandmother and unconscious mother. The social worker who called to ask if I would be willing to come get my daughter said that, miraculously, Birch only had a broken finger, a few cuts that had needed stitches, and some bruising. But Hazel was critical and not expected to live; her back and both legs were broken, one lung had been punctured, and several vital organs were threatening to shut down. I was told that if she did survive, she probably wouldn’t ever walk again.”

  “She obviously did both,” Niall said.

  Claude’s grin returned. “Although it took six operations and several years of physical therapy, apparently just the thought of her precious little girl living in my father’s house was all the motivation Hazel needed to recover.”

  “So Birch went to live with your parents instead of with you?”

  “No, we went to live with them. I was a single, twenty-five-year-old career soldier at the time; what did I know about little girls? I left the military, moved back home with Birch, and turned into my old man by becoming a cop.”

  “You’re a police officer?”

  “I was until I handed in my resignation five days ago. I spent the last four days packing up my belongings and putting my house up for sale, then got in my car this morning and drove to Maine.”

  “You’re moving here?” Niall said in surprise.

  Claude turned away and sat down again. “Montreal has felt rather empty lately.”

  Niall walked to his desk and also sat down, wondering if the seed of a notion he was forming was wise—or if he might very well be courting disaster. “How are you intending to make your living here?”

  “I haven’t needed to make a living since the day Annette Hynes died. In the letter she’d apparently written within days of Birch’s birth and left with her lawyer to give me, along with a rather outrageous sum of money, Annette explained that if I ever wanted to have a relationship with my daughter someday, it would be better if no one could say my interest in Birch had anything to do with her wealth.”

  “Yet you still let her buy you a Lexus.”

  Claude nodded. “That’s because I’ve never told her about my inheritance from Annette. Birch was eight the first time she insisted on buying me a new car, claiming she was doing the environment a favor by putting my old truck out of its misery. So as her legal guardian and knowing it wouldn’t even dent the interest on her trust fund, I drove her to the bank and signed for her to take out the money.” His eyes lit with amusement again. “Mostly because I knew the real reason she wanted to buy me that car was to piss off her grand-père St. Germaine. Because,” Claude went on when Niall raised a brow, “my father often went out of his way to make sure the little heiress living with him never made the mistake of thinking she was superior to anyone.”

  And that, Niall realized, explained Birch accusing him of trying to buy his way into her bloomers, as her own inheritance had obviously made her as much of a target as Hazel—only not just by scheming men, but by her own grandfather’s insecurities. It was a problem Annette Hynes had foreseen, apparently, and dealt with by taking wealth out of the equation for father and daughter by simply giving Claude his own money.

  Niall put his seed of a notion on the back burner for now. “Where are ye planning on staying until you find something permanent?” he asked, fairly certain Birch wouldn’t let a man sleep at the shelter, not even her father.

  “Figuring all the cabins and hotels are booked this time of year, I stopped at that campground just north of Turtleback Station on my way up and rented a campsite.”

  “Does Birch know you’re intending to move here?”

  Giving only a soft snort for answer, Claude cocked his head. “Just how well do you know my daughter?”

  That made Niall chuckle. “Admittedly not as well as I’d like. Hazel’s been telling me a few tales, though, mostly of Birch’s teenage years. But she’s never mentioned the explosion or it being the reason Birch went to live with you.”

  “It’s my understanding Hazel rarely talks about that time in her life,” Claude said. “And even though when I picked up my daughter at the hospital the social worker assured me Birch didn’t remember anything about the explosion or being trapped, I’ve always suspected she remembers every terrifying deta
il. But it appears both women have decided to pretend those four years never happened; Hazel likely because of the pain she endured getting back on her feet, and Birch most likely because if she can’t say something nice about her grandparents, she’d just as soon not say anything at all.”

  “She still doesn’t get along with your father? What about your mother?”

  “Birch tolerates them; for my sake, she once told me. My mother’s not exactly the nurturing type, and she didn’t know what to do with a little girl any more than I did. As for my father . . .” Claude winced. “Well, among other things, Hazel called him an emotionless, coldhearted bastard right to his face the day she came after Birch.”

  “So your daughter gets her mouth from Hazel?” Niall said in surprise, since he hadn’t heard Hazel utter a single curse or even show a hint of having a temper.

  “No, that wonderful trait comes from her great-grandmother. I never had the privilege of meeting Annette Hynes, but apparently even though she topped out at five-foot-three, the woman’s ability to cut a person off at the knees with one of her verbal outbursts was legendary. In fact, when her daughter, Evelyn, died of cancer when Hazel was seven months pregnant with Birch, Annette caused a scene after the funeral that’s still talked about today. Even back then, Evelyn’s husband, Avery Callahan, had a reputation as a domineering, take-no-prisoners businessman, and he made sure to pass that trait on to his three sons.” Claude grinned. “His only daughter, Hazel, was considered the black sheep of the family for actually liking people.”

  “Was Hazel the youngest?” Niall asked.

  “Yes. And apparently Evelyn Callahan hadn’t been in the ground an hour when Annette helped her granddaughter fill a suitcase with a few precious possessions and hustled the girl out the back door to her limo. The story goes that Annette then walked back in the house and told her son-in-law that she had kept her opinion of him to herself for her daughter’s sake, but that his toxic, oppressive nature is what had really killed Evelyn. She then announced she was taking Hazel to live with her so that her grand – and great-granddaughters didn’t suffer the same fate, and if he tried to stop them, she would ruin him both socially and financially.”

  Niall once again found himself in awe of Hazel’s history with men, which had obviously influenced Birch’s opinion of them. “Would the Callahan men all happen to be hulking brutes, by any chance?” he asked dryly.

  Claude nodded, his eyes filling with amusement again. “A colorful vocabulary isn’t the only thing my daughter inherited from Annette Hynes. When she was little Birch often wondered aloud if whoever had been in charge of handing out height the day she was born hadn’t been sleeping on the job.” He shook his head. “I seem to be the only male relation she wants anything to do with. But then, in her words, ‘she’s put a lot of effort into making me at least tolerable.’”

  Aye, with nothing more than the bandaged hug of a six-year-old delivering a sucker punch to her daddy’s heart, Niall decided. Because although he didn’t know Birch well enough to guess how she would take the news Claude was moving to Maine, he didn’t doubt the woman more than just tolerated her father.

  “Did ye put any files together on those three or four families you suspect may have murdered Rabideu? Because it so happens I know someone with contacts in several international . . . agencies who might be able to help us,” Niall said, picking his words carefully. “Then would you be willing to let me show my friend what you have?” he asked when Claude nodded, a different kind of light coming into the man’s eyes.

  “I had just started with military intelligence myself when I got the call about the explosion,” Claude said. “But that was so long ago that I don’t know anyone I can bring my information to now. It’s mostly the Royal Canadian Mounted Police who’ve helped me get this far. Your friend can have everything I’ve got if it will help us find out who these bastards are and what they’re after. Give me tonight to dig out my files and organize them so they’ll make sense, and I’ll bring you everything tomorrow morning.”

  Niall nodded. “It may take him a few days, but—”

  “Chief! Chief MacKeage!”

  At the sound of pounding footsteps on the porch, Niall stood up just as the station door burst open and an older gentleman he recognized but couldn’t immediately place charged inside. “Thank God you’re here,” the man said in a winded rush. “You gotta come to the Drunken Moose. Now, before things get out of hand.”

  “What’s going on?” Niall asked, moving around his desk toward him.

  “Noreen seen that fellow who’s staying with Logan get off a motorcycle and go in the Moose, and she ran in after him looking madder than an old laying hen caught in a rainstorm, and started shouting to everyone that the guy had rooked Logan outta three thousand dollars of their savings.” The man sucked in a wheezing breath and headed onto the porch, gesturing for Niall to follow. “There’s a whole table of grange ladies and other women taking Noreen’s side, and if you don’t get there quick, this town’s gonna see its first all-out riot and maybe even a lynching,” he continued as he scurried down the stairs, glancing over his shoulder to make sure Niall was following before starting up the lane. “A bunch of men moved their chairs to surround the poor bastard when he tried to leave, claiming he’s got every right as anyone to eat at the Moose,” the man motored on, shouting his last words because Niall had sprinted ahead and was almost to the sidewalk.

  He’d dawdled long enough, Niall decided with a heavy sigh, and it was time to bring this public little war to an end. He was just glad Birch was out of town at the moment, because he really couldn’t see her getting on board with his solution. And if she did stick her nose in his business when she got back . . . well, the pint-sized spitfire just might find herself sleeping in his holding cell tonight.

  Chapter Sixteen

  Aware Claude was keeping pace behind him, Niall rounded the corner of the Trading Post only to mutter a curse when he caught sight of Shep running flat-out down the main road well ahead of a little red cart. He wasn’t surprised the dog had followed Birch, but he did wish their rescue mission had kept them out of town a while longer.

  Niall actually heard the shouting two stores shy of the restaurant, and slowed just enough to ease his way through the crowd gathered on the sidewalk trying to see in the windows. “Let me through, folks,” he said, his tone opening up a path as people pulled each other out of his way. He then entered the Drunken Moose to find battle lines indeed had been drawn; an impenetrable circle of male diners—some appearing to be tourists—sat two rows deep surrounding an obviously uncomfortable Silas French as they tried to outshout an equally impressive—and definitely angry—wall of women.

  “I was just about to call 911,” Vanetta said as she approached, having to raise her voice to be heard. She stopped in front of Niall and waved a dishcloth toward the battle. “I haven’t seen people this riled up since some idiot suggested the grange ladies should have to pay taxes on the railroad land they simply claimed for their park.” She looked to Niall’s left when Claude moved up beside him, blinked and did a double take, then shot Niall a smile. “You want me to go ahead and dial 911 and ask them to send you some backup, or should I just call Nicholas?”

  “Let’s save both for when I’m actually outnumbered,” Niall said, giving her a wink and striding into the chaos. “Okay, people, let’s quiet down,” he said loudly, only to be ignored. “Enough!” he bellowed, effectively bringing the shouting to an abrupt halt.

  Well, except for Noreen Kent, who pivoted in surprise, quickly recovered, and turned her angry glare on him as she pointed at Silas French. “I want that man arrested. And you make him give Logan and me back our money.”

  “He doesn’t have your money, Noreen,” Niall said gently. “I spoke with Logan on the phone not half an hour ago, and your husband said he mailed the check directly to the beekeeping supply company yesterday.”

  Her
face darkened. “That doesn’t mean this man’s not scamming us. For all we know that company’s just as crooked as he is and they’re in cahoots together.”

  “I saw this kind of thing on 20/20,” Christina Richie piped in, the octogenarian giving an authoritative nod. “Scammers create a fake company and even make TV commercials that look legitimate so you’ll call and give them your credit card number. And you get charged but never receive the product because it’s fake, too.”

  “Why do you think crooks like him travel all the way up here,” a woman added, “and then move in on the first man they come across living alone? I’ll tell you why,” she rushed on with an equally assertive nod. “Scammers got us pegged as easy marks, figuring only ignorant hicks live in the wilderness because we don’t know any better.”

  “Ladies,” Niall said quietly. “I checked into that company and it’s—”

  “That shows what you know, Inez,” a man called out from the inner circle of chairs, cutting Niall off. “This fella came here because he prefers the wilderness just like we do, and he knows all sorts of stuff about the forest and animals and growing things. And I ain’t never met a crook yet who was quick to roll up his sleeves and break a sweat showing a person how to fox-proof his henhouse without spending a fortune.”

  “Silas showed me how to get my hydrangeas blooming again by tucking pine needles around them,” another man said. “He explained they like acidy dirt.”

  “I told you that two years ago, you idiot,” a female voice called out from the back. “And of course he pretends to like the wilderness—that’s how he lures people into his scams.” Janice Crupp, another of the older grange ladies, pushed her way forward and also glared at Niall as she pointed at Silas. “I want to file charges against him, too, for waltzing in our driveway like he owned the place when he saw my husband weeding around our fence posts.” She turned to address the women. “The guy told Amos that if he got himself a dozen geese he wouldn’t ever have to dig out his noisy weed-wacker again. Noreen, do you know the name of that company Logan sent your three thousand dollars to? I bet it’s the same fake company he wanted Amos to buy those geese from. We’d be out a hundred and twenty bucks plus postage if I hadn’t asked Amos why he was looking for our checkbook.”

 

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