TREASURE KILLS (Legends of Tsalagee Book 1)

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by Phil Truman




  What readers are saying about Phil Truman’s TREASURE KILLS Legends of Tsalagee Book 1

  “Each character’s personality came to life. I almost felt like I was there. I would definitely go see this if it was made into a movie… the characters are what kept me intrigued, laughing, curious and sympathetic…I’m definitely going to be looking for [Phil Truman’s] other books and his future work. Kudos to Mr. Truman!”

  “I actually started this book by accident, meaning to read another first, but after the first chapter I couldn't put this one down, I was hooked! Legends of Tsalagee is THAT good!”

  “I read the last third of Legends in a hot summer afternoon in a hammock and enjoyed it greatly. Nice to see how all the legends in the story came together --the Belle Starr treasure, the Hill Man, and the old coots Hayward and Soc. I'd love to see a movie of this story… I commend Mr. Truman for writing it.”

  “The ending was absolutely great… I laughed so hard in some places. I think you will really enjoy it, it is a hoot.”

  “A great combination of a treasure hunt, murder, a little romance and some great laugh out loud situations… Phil did an outstanding job bringing this story together in an interesting, fun and easy to read fashion.”

  “I loved this book. It had me hooked from page one, it has everything I love in a book, good storyline, great characters, mystery and humor. I would recommend this book to my family, and friend's, and of course to complete strangers. A must read!!”

  “This book is extremely well written with a unique concept. I was left wanting more! The characters are well developed and they tie into each other nicely. I enjoyed this book! I will definitely look for more from this author!”

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  TREASURE KILLS

  Legends of Tsalagee

  Book 1

  (Previously published as Legends of Tsalagee)

  Phil Truman

  Denton, Texas

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Deadly Niche Press

  An imprint of AWOC.COM Publishing

  P.O. Box 2819

  Denton, TX 76202

  Copyright © 2011 Phil Truman

  All Rights Reserved

  No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, recording or otherwise, without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  ISBN: 978-1-62016-043-5 – Ebook

  ISBN: 978-0-937660-95-9 – Paperback

  To Bob Lawson, who insisted I write this book.

  Prologue

  The circumstances of Buck Buchanan’s death in the spring of 2004 puzzled everyone... that is, everyone except his killer.

  Nobody disliked Buck and it didn’t appear he’d been robbed, which is why almost everyone, including the sheriff, thought his demise probably resulted from an accident. Still, Buck had worked around farm machinery for most of his seventy-six years, and, since age ten—after having seen his older teenage brother eaten by a silage cutter—he’d treated all of it with the utmost respect. And the tractor pulling the disking implement, which apparently had run over Buck, stood stopped with the motor switched off not ten yards past the mangled body of Buck. The coroner found a depressed skull fracture on the right side of Buck’s head, and an underlying epidural hematoma, which he determined to be the cause of death, and not the mincing of the tractor implement. But no one could come up with a motive, much less a suspect.

  “They killed him,” Lorene insisted. In fact, that’s all Lorene ever said on the subject. When the sheriff or anyone asked her if she knew the killers, did she see them, Lorene’s face would cloud with concern and she would ask, “Killed who? Did someone die?”

  “Why yes, Miz Buchanan, Buck died. Remember, we talked about it,” the sheriff said with compassion. He looked quickly over at Jo Lynn Roundstep; then down at his big hands holding his gray Stetson; then back into Lorene’s confused and frightened eyes. He swallowed and asked softly, “Do you know who kilt Buck?”

  The day Buck died, Jo Lynn had come out to the Buchanan place to look in on Lorene; her habit most weekdays. Lorene, whom Jo Lynn had known for years, had been a sounding board and crying shoulder to Jo Lynn through her trials, marriages, and divorces; and because of it, Jo Lynn had developed a great affection for Lorene. When Alzheimer’s began to take Lorene’s mind, Jo Lynn didn’t let the disease take their friendship.

  Jo Lynn let herself in through the front door that day, and saw Lorene sitting in her oak rocking chair looking out the west side window of the living room toward the fields. Lorene was a tall, angular woman, and although large, never considered fat. Most, when describing her, referred to her as “big boned.”

  “Hi, Lorene,” Jo Lynn said. “How’re you doin’ today, hon?”

  “They killed him,” Lorene said flatly, and continued to stare out the window, rocking slowly.

  Jo Lynn unloosened the large bulging leather handbag from her shoulder, and plopped it onto the sofa. She’d gotten used to wispy phrases coming out of Lorene’s mouth, and took them with a grain of salt.

  “Killed who, Sugar?” she asked. She looked at the TV thinking Lorene’s current vision came from a soap opera, half-hoping maybe she could catch the last half of today’s Young and Restless. But the TV screen appeared black.

  She looked out the window to where Lorene continued to solemnly stare. Across the yard and fence, out into the plowed field a hundred yards away, she saw Buck’s tractor sitting stopped with no one on board.

  “Where’s Buck?” she asked, giving several nervous chomps on her stick of Doublemint, and craning to look back through the kitchen entry toward the back porch. A bit of uneasiness started to creep into her chest as she stepped closer to the window. She squinted to look out at the lone, parked tractor. A large lump lay on the ground behind the tractor’s implement, which didn’t seem natural for the surroundings. As her mind pushed through the veils of disbelief into the harsh light of comprehension, that bit of uneasiness flew into full-blown horror. Her hand flew to her opened mouth as she said, “Oh, my God!”

  “They killed him,” Lorene said.

  That’d been some four or so hours ago. The red sun sat half concealed by the top of the barn roof, as the county medical examiner’s black SUV led the silent ambulance down the gravel drive, and out onto the crumbling asphalt road in front of the Buchanan’s
place.

  Lorene looked back at Sheriff Bluehorse with disparagement. “Oh, Artie Lancaster, don’t be silly,” she said. “Buck’s not dead. He’s out working the fields where you oughta be. He just had breakfast not ten minutes ago. Land sakes.”

  Sheriff Bluehorse, still dangling his Stetson in his hands, sighed and rose from the chair opposite the sofa where Jo Lynn sat next to Lorene. Artie Lancaster was Buck’s and Lorene’s nephew and sometimes hired hand; the sometimes being when he wasn’t on a toot or in jail, as was currently the case. Artie was Buck’s deceased sister’s only child. Buck had kept Artie on as a farm hand during those intervals when the county didn’t have the Iraqi War veteran picking up trash along the highway.

  Jo Lynn held Lorene’s hand and looked at her friend with pity. Lorene had turned her head to look out the west window again, remaining silent.

  “Well, Miz Roundstep,” Sheriff Bluehorse said with resignation. “If she says anything else about this, you know where to reach me. I ain’t got much to go on. I think Buck’s death was likely an accident.”

  “Of course, Sheriff,” Jo Lynn said. She put her arm around Lorene’s shoulders and patted her gently as the sheriff headed for the front door.

  “You know, they killed him,” Lorene called to the sheriff as she watched him leave.

  So after a few years, like Buck’s fields, the case lay fallow, then overgrown with the weeds of time, and eventually almost forgotten.

  Chapter 1

  Goat Gets Out

  August 2000

  As the steel door slammed behind him, Stanley “Goat” Griggs surveyed the two-lane asphalt road at the bottom of the small hill upon which he, and the prison walls behind him, stood. The road stretched two miles in either direction before it disappeared over a rise in one direction, and curved behind some trees in the other. In the hot morning sun, heat shimmered off the black road, but there were no vehicles. It didn’t appear anyone had come to give Goat a ride, not that he expected one.

  Goat didn’t really think Squeaky would wait around for his release. This time she’d gotten out of prison two years ahead of him. Still, Goat thought it would’ve been kind of nice to see old Squeak, considering nothing conjugal had occurred between them during the eight years of his latest incarceration. Their first stretch, for farming five acres of marijuana in southeast Oklahoma, had landed each of them ten to fifteen years, of which they both only served ten. The second conviction they’d garnered after the authorities discovered a failed meth-making business after their mobile home lab blew up.

  The trailer was located in an isolated rural area, and the pair had been returning with ingredients to make their product, when the explosion occurred. Fortunately for the couple, a Highway Patrol trooper stopped Goat for a broken headlight not more than three miles from their lab about five minutes before it exploded. The contents of their Walmart shopping bags, and the disposition of their residence, all proved to be pretty incriminating evidence. That, combined with their prior convictions, resulted in Goat getting sent up for another twenty years. Squeaky, however, received six to eight years after she cut a deal with the prosecutor.

  The pair traded a few letters while in prison, which dwindled as time rolled on. The last letter from Squeaky had come about six months before she got out, with the somewhat vague promise to Goat that she’d be in touch. But he hadn’t heard from her again.

  In the last letter—amid her usual ramblings about the astrologically controlled goings on in her life, her usual fascist-pigs-running-the-government rant, and so forth—she wrote about heading out to maybe Oregon or Santa Fe. But first she wanted to go see their daughter Sunflower, whom she’d traced on the Internet using the prison’s computers, and found that the girl lived in Oklahoma City. Squeaky had given Goat Sunny’s address, in case he wanted to write her.

  That’d taken place over two years ago, and Goat had no idea on the whereabouts of Squeaky, or if his daughter still lived at that address. But he figured he’d head that way, anyway. Mooching a few meals and a place to stay for a few days seemed to be a good plan. Maybe Sunny would be willing to give her long lost old dad that much. The last time he’d seen her he was face down in the dirt with a federal agent’s knee in the middle of his back. Sunny had been crying and calling out to him as another agent ushered her away into the backseat of a black Ford sedan. She’d been eleven then. With both her parents in jail, the girl became a ward of the state, and they’d sent her to live with foster parents in a small town somewhere up in the eastern part. She’d written him a few times his first year in prison, telling him about her new life on a farm; then the letters stopped all together.

  Goat knew Oklahoma City lay a couple hundred miles north and west of where he stood. The road in front of him ran east and west. He walked down the prison’s drive to where it met the road, and stopped. The morning sun hung above the road where it curved behind some trees off to his right. Goat let out a sigh, and turned left to walk down the road, heading west. That was about as much of a plan as he had at the time.

  * * *

  “Hey, Sunny,” Goat said when she finally opened her apartment door. He knew he looked a lot different than the twenty-nine year old man she’d last seen—the few scars and harsh lines in his face, the callousness in the eyes; all those things that two decades doing hard time put on a man.

  He knocked twice before she’d responded. He figured somewhere between the first and second set of knocks she’d looked through the peephole in the door, and then gone to get some defensive weapon.

  “Who is it?” she asked on the other side of the closed door. Goat stood back a step or two and looked straight at the peephole. The voice he heard sounded like a woman who would be about his daughter’s age.

  “Is that you, Sunny?” he asked.

  More silence from the other side. More peephole scrutiny he imagined, and puzzlement over who in the hell the lanky man with the receding hairline and graying ponytail was on the other side of her door. His five-day mustache and beard further masked his face... and the prison tats probably gave her pause—one of a large black widow spider on the side of his neck with two words in red below it which read “One Bite.” The other a cobra that encircled his right arm, the hooded head, fangs bared, at the shoulder. However, that part was concealed under the sleeve of the golf shirt he’d purchased at a Salvation Army store. Embroidered on the left breast of the shirt was a broad red leafy tree with the words “Comanche Creek Country Club” around it.

  “What do you want?” she asked. Then quickly added, “How do you know my name?”

  “It’s your daddy, babe. It’s Goat.” That brought a dead silence. A small dog barked aggressively behind the apartment door in back of him. A quarter minute or so ticked by.

  “Sunny?” he called again. He heard the chain loosen and the bolt slide. The door opened a foot. The young woman stood half behind it, as if ready to slam it shut at the slightest provocation. He saw a woman in her early thirties; filled out, but not fat; attractive, but not pretty; appealing, but not wholesome. She had her mother’s dishwater blonde hair, strong chin, soft brown eyes, and a few of her freckles. Also, like her mother, she wore no make-up.

  “So... How you been?” Goat asked. The woman didn’t answer. She just stared at him, looking at his tats and hair.

  Goat cleared his throat and scratched the side of his whiskered face. “Look, I know this’s a shock. I would’ve called first, but I couldn’t find a number. Wasn’t even sure you still lived here. I just got out a few of days ago. It took me a while to find this place.”

  “How did you know where I lived?” she asked. Sunny kept her position behind the door. She didn’t smile at him; her eyes remained clouded with suspicion. But at least she’d said something to him; it marked a start.

  “Your mom wrote me. Said she found you on that intelnet thing on a computer. She got out a couple of years back. Said she was going to come see you. Did she show up?”

  “Yes,” Sunny said.
But she didn’t look happy about it.

  Goat nodded. “Well... good. That’s good.” He scratched the top of his head, then grabbed his ponytail and pulled his hand down its twelve-inch length.

  “So, I was wondering if I could come in for a minute. I’d just like to talk for a while. Not seeing my baby girl for twenty years, figured we had a lot of catching up to do.”

  Sunny didn’t move.

  “’Sides,” Goat continued. He looked at his feet. “I was hoping maybe I could get a little breakfast. I ain’t had much to eat in the last couple days.”

  Sunny’s eyes and expression seemed to soften a little. “Okay,” she said. “I’ll fix you something to eat.”

  Goat smiled and moved toward the door.

  “But you can’t stay,” Sunny added quickly. “You’re going to have to find somewhere else to stay.”

  Goat stopped and put his right palm on the partially opened door. “Oh no, babe, I wasn’t planning on staying,” he lied.

  Sunny released the door and stepped back to let Goat enter. She folded her arms across her chest and watched him. Although she tried to conceal it, he could tell she held some kind of spray in her right hand. Smart girl, he thought.

  * * *

  “Best breakfast I’ve had in twenty years,” Goat said. He sopped the last of the egg yoke onto his toast and drank the last of a glass of milk. Sunny leaned against the sink; her arms still folded across her chest, watching him.

  “Why’d you come here, Goat?” Sunny asked.

  Goat wiped his mouth and facial hair with a paper napkin, and then leaned back in the chair. He smiled at Sunny and shrugged. “Same reason your mother did, I reckon. Guess I just wanted to re-connect with you.”

  He hooked his left index finger through the mug of coffee on the table, and blew onto the surface; took a slurp, then another. “Is she still around here somewhere? In this town, I mean?”

 

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