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Harper Connelly [3] An Ice Cold Grave

Page 23

by Charlaine Harris


  He stood almost directly outside the Hamiltons’ side door, down on the driveway; he didn’t mount the steps to the deck. Their security light shone on the top of his head. Barney’s hair was full of leaves and twigs. His suit was stained with blood and damp and dirt.

  He had a big knife in his right hand. It was really more of a machete than a knife. I wondered if he’d gotten it out of his car, and if so, where it had been during our struggle. He’d been too cocky, then, apparently; he hadn’t thought a weapon would be necessary, because he was big and strong.

  Okay. I’d just wait until he left.

  But Ted Hamilton was on the watch, as always. The door to the cottage opened, and the old man stepped out onto the little deck.

  “Is it Mr. Simpson from the hospital?” he called. “Mr. Simpson, is that you?”

  “Oh, Mr. Hamilton,” said Barney. “Listen, I’m sorry to disturb you. But that young woman that was here to find the bodies, that Harper Connelly, she’s having a mental episode and she’s somewhere out here running loose.”

  “Oh, goodness,” said Mr. Hamilton, and it was impossible to tell from his voice what his reaction was.

  “I don’t suppose you’ve seen her?” Barney asked, and I wondered if I was the only one who could hear the strain in his voice. Barney was having a hard time sounding and acting like a human.

  “No, I haven’t,” Ted Hamilton said. “What do you plan to do when you find her?”

  “Why, take her to the hospital,” Barney said.

  “Are you planning to cut off her head first? Because that sure is a big knife you’ve got there.”

  “No, Mr. Hamilton, watch out!” I jumped out of my hiding place, because I was so scared that Barney would attack the old man and his wife.

  But Mr. Hamilton was pointing a gun at Barney. He was right on top of the situation, until I’d startled both of them by my sudden appearance.

  With a roar, Barney came after me, and I turned to run back to the woods. But then the gun went off behind me.

  And Barney wasn’t running after me anymore.

  Fifteen

  I stopped and turned around. Barney Simpson was lying in the driveway, so newly cleaned of tree debris. Now he was getting it dirty again, because he was really bleeding from a hole in his shoulder.

  Mr. Hamilton had come forward to the edge of the deck, and Nita was behind him. She was wearing another tracksuit, and her short hair looked just as neat in the overhead light as it had in the daytime.

  “You think you need to shoot him again?” she asked her husband.

  “I think he’s done,” Ted Hamilton said. “You scoot in there and call the police.”

  “I’m one step ahead of you, honey, I already did it when I heard his voice outside,” she said. “Miss Connelly, you want to step around him, real careful, and come inside?”

  “Thank you,” I said, in a very shaky voice that didn’t sound at all like my own. “I’d love to be inside. Inside anything.”

  “You poor girl, come on in.”

  I walked very carefully around Barney Simpson, who was clutching his shoulder and as white as a sheet, though the bright overhead light washed the color out of everything. I went up the stairs very carefully, since nothing in my body seemed to be working exactly right. I was careful not to jostle Ted or come between him and the downed man. I didn’t want Barney to get any more like the Terminator than he already had.

  When I was close to Nita Hamilton and she got a good look at me, she said, “We do need to get you inside. Ted, are you good out here?”

  “Yes, honey, you take care of the young lady.”

  And just like that I was in a warm place. I could have predicted almost everything about the Hamiltons’ cottage, from the maple furniture to the crocheted throws folded over the backs of their favorite chairs, from the framed baby pictures to the china rooster on an end table. Nita efficiently threw a towel over the wooden chair by the door, where they probably normally dumped their keys and coats. After I looked down at myself, I knew that was the only possible place for me to sit.

  “You’re bleeding,” she said. “I’m going to get a rag and wipe you off. I know the EMTs will do it right, but you don’t want to be sitting there dripping. I know I wouldn’t.”

  And that was true enough, though I didn’t really care that much just at the moment.

  She was back with a clean rag and a white enamel basin of warm water in just a couple of minutes, and she began the tedious process of cleaning my face.

  “Ted’ll keep his distance, don’t you worry,” she said quietly, as if shooting men was an everyday occurrence at the lake cottage. “He won’t get too close.”

  “When will the police be here?”

  “Any moment. Your brother has been looking for you all over town,” Mrs. Hamilton said, and my heart felt warm again. “He called out here and asked us to keep our eyes open, because he saw Barney Simpson’s car parked at the other end of the lake. So we were prepared.”

  “I hope the police understand,” I said.

  “I’m sure they will. Nothing wrong with our sheriff. She’s a good one.”

  I wasn’t as sold on that idea as Nita, but then the sheriff wasn’t answerable to me.

  “How come your head’s bleeding?” Nita asked, as if to make sure I was completely there with her mentally.

  “He pulled me out of the car by the hair,” I said, and she looked truly shocked. “He pulled some stitches out.”

  “Well, if Ted knew that, he’d shoot him again,” she said, and that triggered a set of giggles that shook my body in an unpleasant way.

  I thought, Then I wish I’d told him, but just then we heard an ominous sound outside. It was a deep groan, and it came from right outside the door. Ted Hamilton. Oh, shit.

  Quick as a wink, Nita locked the front door, and just barely in time. The knob turned, and when the door wouldn’t open to him, Barney threw himself against it.

  “Come out,” he bellowed, “come out here!”

  “He’s hurt Ted,” Nita said. “That son of a bitch.”

  Even at that moment, I was shocked. But that was only the beginning. Nita opened a closet on the other side of the front door, pulled out a rifle, and aimed it at the door. “This is our varmint rifle,” she told me, maybe because I was gaping at her. “He comes in here, he’s dead. I might turn my own cheek, but I ain’t offering up yours.”

  Barney threw himself against the door. Since I was still sitting to the right of the door, like a fool, I could hear the click in the quiet night. “Move!” I yelled. “Move, Nita!” And Barney fired Ted’s pistol into the house.

  The cabin had a good door, but the bullet came in and passed through the living room and into the kitchen beyond. Nita had moved to the side, and it missed her by a foot or more, but it was pretty shocking. For a moment I thought Nita would falter, that all her courage would drain away, but she raised the rifle and fired right back, and we heard a scream.

  After a second of staring at each other, Nita said, “I have to see about my husband.” Though I thought it was the worst idea in the world for her to open that door, I said “Of course you do” through stiff lips. I reached up my right hand and unlocked the door, and turned the knob as quietly as I could, though I’m not sure why I was trying to be so quiet at this late date.

  The door swung open, and we saw Barney again down and bleeding, and Ted Hamilton crumpled on the deck in a corner, blood running from his shoulder. He was conscious, but only just. Nita said, “Oh,” and it sounded like she was witnessing the end of the world.

  Then she simply stepped over Barney to get to her man, and she knelt down by him, and she put pressure on his shoulder like the sensible woman she was, and I finally managed to subtract myself from the situation by fainting.

  Sixteen

  WHEN I was a little more aware of what was around me, things were better all around. I was being strapped to a gurney and I was willing to bet I was about to get a ride in an ambulance to
the Doraville hospital.

  “Doraville’s not lucky for me,” I said, or at least I thought I was saying that, but I guess I was just mumbling, because the EMT at my head, a plump young woman with an aggressive jaw, said, “You’re gonna be okay, honey, don’t you worry.”

  “Mr. Hamilton?”

  “That’s nice, your asking about him. We got the bleeding stopped. I think he’s gonna be okay, too.”

  “Barney?”

  “He ain’t dead, but I bet he’s gonna wish he was.”

  “Where’s my—where’s Tolliver?” Had to get out of the habit of calling him my brother.

  “Tall, dark, skinny?”

  “Mm-hm.”

  “Waiting for us to wheel you out.”

  And I smiled.

  “That’s sweet, she’s happy to see him,” the young woman said. Her partner, a man in his fifties, said, “Grace, let’s just get her out of here,” and she pouted as they got me down the deck steps.

  Tolliver was by me, and he was beside himself. “He took you right out of the car,” he said, as if I didn’t know that. “I couldn’t believe it when I came out and you were gone!”

  “Well, you-all can talk all night if you want. Let us get this gal to the hospital,” the older man said.

  The ride back to the hospital took a while, and the young woman sat in back with me and chattered the whole time. She took my pulse and checked my temperature and did all kinds of things, including looking at the stitches in my scalp. From the slight face she made, I knew they weren’t in good shape.

  “Now, I understand you had a cracked ulna a few days ago?” she asked. “I think you’ve graduated to a broken arm, but we’ll take us an X-ray to be sure.”

  “Okay,” I said. We’d have to go into our savings to pay for my Doraville medical bills. That’d be that much longer until we could buy our house. But it was hard for me to worry about that right now, or much of anything else, being in this ambulance felt so blissful compared to my previous three hours of experience.

  I felt so safe I actually fell asleep and had to blink my eyes open when we reached the hospital.

  The whole hospital experience was déjà vu. I wasn’t in the same room—I think Ted Hamilton was in that one. I was down the hall and on the other side.

  Sandra Rockwell was my most surprising visitor. After we’d done the “How are you” s and so forth, she said, “I want to apologize for something.”

  I waited.

  “I knew whoever attacked you, I knew it had to be the killer. And there wasn’t a trace of him. Or his vehicle. Turns out, Tom Almand says he parked over behind Hair Affair and cut across the back parking lots. Then he hid behind the Dumpster behind the motel. He was going to slash your tires, but then you came out, and he’d brought the shovel just on the off chance.”

  I tried to remember where Hair Affair was—two doors down from the motel, I thought. It hardly mattered now.

  “How’s he doing?” I asked.

  “Tom?” She sounded surprised. “Talking his damn head off. But won’t mention his son.”

  “Maybe Barney will,” I said. Again, I felt as if I hardly cared. Chuck Almand was gone now, and no amount of confession or explanation would bring him back.

  Tolliver came in just then. He’d been in the cafeteria getting coffee and breakfast. He’d gotten me some coffee, and though I wasn’t sure if I was supposed to have it or not, I planned on drinking it. He bent over to kiss me, and I didn’t care, either, what Sandra Rockwell thought about that.

  Klavin and Stuart came in then. They both looked exhausted, but they were smiling.

  “There’s enough pathology between those two to keep the serial-killer writers busy for years,” Klavin said. “As long as they’re behind bars while they’re being studied, that’s fine with me.”

  “The writers are welcome to ’em,” said Stuart. He smoothed his already smooth hair. “Those two are talking, and that’s how we’re filling in the cracks.”

  Tolliver took my hand.

  I sighed.

  They began asking me exactly what had happened the afternoon before, and I wasn’t really ready to talk about it. But I’d had to do a lot of things I didn’t want to do during my stay in Doraville, and this was simply another one of them.

  “Did you suspect he was the one?” Stuart asked.

  “Yes,” I said, and they all seemed surprised…especially Tolliver. “Because when I was sitting there in the car, I was thinking about the hole under the barn, and I was thinking how strange it was that Barney Simpson knew there was a hole there. He said something about it when I was visiting Manfred here at the hospital. I might not even have thought about it, but when Doak Garland asked me a question about it, it was clear that Doak had no idea there was a pit under the stall. So it was not common knowledge. Yet Barney had known about it. And then I thought about the way so many of the boys had had a trip to the hospital. That would have been a good place for Barney to spot them and mark them for future attention. And he said something to me about that.”

  That was what they were anxious to hear, so I tried to remember the way Barney had talked about their methods, and explain about the pit and why it had been built, when the old house out of town was really more isolated.

  “They would take turns,” Stuart said. “Because it was hard to park two cars behind the old house. But sometimes, on weekends, they’d go together. Like double dating.”

  I felt sick, and put the coffee down on the rolling table. Tolliver patted me.

  “Sometimes the boys would last four or five days, if they gave them food and water,” Klavin said.

  “Okay, enough,” Tolliver said, and it was clear he was angry. “We know as much about this as we want to know.”

  “So, we’re charging him with attempted homicide on you and Ted Hamilton,” Klavin said, when he’d absorbed the rebuke. “But with the murders, we got enough to put him away forever. We’ll just throw in other charges if there’s any way at all he might get off. I mean, you can only give him life so many times.”

  “Some of the forensic evidence will tie both of them in, I hope. So it’s not just their confessions.”

  “There was so much there, some of it’s definitely going to come through. For one thing, there are hair matches already. And I’m sure we’ll get some DNA matches.”

  I nodded. Though these men would eat, breathe, and sleep the case until it came to trial, to me it was at a close.

  “How are you doing, by the way?” the sheriff asked. She just wanted to point out that Klavin and Stuart hadn’t inquired. They both looked only a tad sheepish.

  Tolliver said, “Her arm is broken all the way through. Her scalp stitches had to be redone and there are more of them now. The scalp wound is infected. She has multiple severe bruises and two loose teeth. You can see the black eye. And now she’s got an upper respiratory infection, too.”

  Also, a torn fingernail, but he left that out.

  Tolliver was glaring at them so indignantly that I expected they would break down and weep, but they just shuffled around uncomfortably until they thought of a good reason to leave. It didn’t sound as though I’d have to come back to Doraville, maybe. At least, not anytime soon. That suited me just fine.

  Manfred called, but I didn’t talk to him. Tolliver did. I was too tired—too emotionally tired—to want to talk to him again.

  The only guest I was glad to see was Twyla Cotton. She came in moving even more heavily, it seemed to me. Her face was so serious that it didn’t seem she would ever smile again.

  “Well,” she said. She was standing right by my bed, and she couldn’t meet my eyes. “They’re caught, and my grandson’s gone for good.”

  I nodded.

  “I did the right thing bringing you here, and I’m glad I did. They had to stop what they were doing, even if it was too late for Jeff.”

  It had been too late for Jeff by months.

  “They’ll rot in hell,” Twyla said with absolute convictio
n. “And I know Jeff is in heaven. But it’s hard for us left here.”

  “Yes,” I said, because that was something I knew about. “It’s hard for those left behind.”

  “You’re thinking of your sister who’s missing?”

  “Yes, Cameron.”

  “Kind of ironic, huh?”

  “That I can find everyone else but her? Yes, you could put it that way.”

  “Then that’s what I’ll pray about for you. That you find your sister.”

  Looking at Twyla’s stricken face, for the first time I wondered if I really wanted to find Cameron. If it would really give me peace. I switched my gaze over to Tolliver. He was looking at Twyla with an unpleasant face. He thought she was making me unhappy, and he didn’t think I needed any more unhappiness.

  “Thank you, Twyla,” I said. “I hope…I hope your remaining grandson brings you joy.”

  She almost smiled. “He will. Ain’t nothing can replace Jeff, but Carson is a good steady boy.”

  She left soon after, because we didn’t have anything left to say.

  Tolliver said, “Tomorrow, if you don’t have a fever, we’re leaving this place.”

  “Absolutely,” I said. “Maybe by the time I get to Philadelphia I will have healed enough that I won’t scare the clients.”

  “We can cancel and go to our apartment and just relax for a couple of weeks.”

  “No,” I said. “Back in the saddle again.” And then I made an effort to smile. “And when I’m a little better than that, we’ll see about really getting back in the saddle.” I tried to leer, but the result was so ludicrous that Tolliver had to choke back a laugh.

  But I poked him in the ribs, and he let it out.

  Back in the saddle again.

 

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