No Good Deed

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No Good Deed Page 9

by Lynn Hightower

She had always liked the laugh lines that creased the corners of his eyes. Today they looked like grief. There was a smudge on his forehead and a look in his eyes she had seen before.

  ‘See it?’

  The toe of the riding boot was well camouflaged by the compost beneath Sam’s blunt fingertips. Black leather, like the one they’d found in the dust and blood at Delaney’s place.

  Sonora squatted behind Sam. They got their rhythm almost immediately, one scooping dirt, one dumping dirt, back and forth, moving quickly. In her heart, she knew there was no need to rush. She hurried anyway, hands weirdly padded by the white, water-filled blisters rising on the reddened flesh of her palms. She was sweating, a tiny film along her spine.

  Visible beneath the dirt was a riding boot, toes up, and the lower part of a bluejean-clad leg. Dirt caked the bootlaces, settling deep into the metal grommets and eyelets of the speed laces. The hem of an old green blanket covered the corpse to the knees. She could hear Helen, several feet away, talking softly to the dog, a calf bawling – scared? Hungry? Looking for its mom?

  Sonora touched the back of the leg, along the calf muscles, over the loose black boot. Found it firm, like frozen meat.

  ‘Rigor?’ Sam asked.

  ‘Advanced. I would have guessed she’s been dead a minimum of twenty-four hours, except she didn’t go missing till yesterday around three-thirty.’

  ‘So they say. I wonder if she was actually at school.’

  ‘Something to check.’

  ‘Y’all got something?’ Helen. Bella whined and Helen murmured something comforting under her breath. She moved toward them slowly, fingers twined in the dog’s loopy ears. She was smiling a little, but it was a smile Sonora had seen on the face of other detectives, a smile because the awful but expected was coming true, and you could smile or laugh or cry. It meant nothing more than a release of tense expectations.

  Sonora stood up, spit on the sweat-and dirt-stained blisters, rubbed her hands on the belly of her shirt. ‘Looks like Bella was right.’

  ‘I’ll call Crick,’ Sam said. ‘Get CSU down here.’

  The dog sat on her haunches, jowls hanging, eyebrows arching as she looked at each of them in turn.

  ‘Good girl,’ Sonora said, touching a long silky ear.

  Chapter Twenty-One

  The curtain had twitched once or twice in the house up the road.

  ‘They’re home,’ Sonora said.

  ‘Who?’

  Sonora inclined her head. ‘The people who live here, Sam.’

  ‘It’ll be a while before Mickey gets his butt in gear. Now might be a good time for a talk.’

  ‘It’s their truck.’

  Sam, walking toward the house, threw a look at her over his left shoulder. ‘You think they’re involved?’

  Sonora shrugged. ‘I’m having trouble wrapping my mind around the kind of person who would commit a murder and bury the body in their backyard.’

  ‘It’s the fast-food generation. Backyard’s convenient.’

  ‘And park the getaway truck in the barn?’

  Sam shrugged. ‘We got to ask.’

  ‘Whoever pulled this thing off knew about that truck.’

  Sam arched his back and stretched. ‘Know what I think?’

  ‘No. What do you think?’

  ‘I think this place is bad luck.’

  Sam was a back-door person, so they went up the newly whitewashed porch. The concrete base had been painted a thick coat of slate blue, which made Sonora think of her grandmother’s front porch.

  The wood door was shredding and splintered and it opened before they knocked. The trim had been painted halfway up. A work in progress.

  The woman who stood in the doorway was tall and thin and had reddish blond hair that hung thick down her back. She wore slim-fit jeans and a long sleeved T-shirt with Calvin & Hobbs on the front.

  Sonora could hear music coming from the kitchen – bells and chimes and trickly noises that she recognized as a lead into a seriously tedious New Age CD. She had noticed, in her career, that people who listened to New Age music were often people who seriously needed to feel better.

  The Kidgwicks certainly had a legitimate need.

  Sonora flashed her ID. ‘Detectives Blair and Delarosa, Cincinnati PD.’

  Mrs Kidgwick walked on to the porch, smiling, as if she had heard Sonora but her mind was a beat or two behind in processing the words. She looked at the porch swing, and Sonora had the distinct feeling the woman was going to invite them to have a seat.

  She took a quick look down the road. The crime scene unit and a coroner’s van would be coming soon, but there was nothing in sight now, except fields, and sunlight on the water-filled ruts that gouged the gravel drive.

  Mrs Kidgwick kept smiling, but her face took on a set, mask-like tautness. The public face. She motioned toward the door.

  ‘Did you want to come in?’ Her voice was low and scratchy-sounding – you would love it or hate it. She had the slimness and muscle tone of a woman who took her gym membership seriously. Her face was still nicely brown, tanning-bed perfect, but even the careful makeup could not cover the seams and pouches around her eyes. She would look tired for the rest of her life.

  Sam glanced at Sonora. Wiped his feet on a rubber mat that had a red jumping horse etched into the black center.

  ‘We won’t keep you too long,’ he promised, waving the woman ahead.

  She slid inside quickly, feet soft. ‘Van. It’s the police.’ The restraint in her voice brought tension into the room like a match to gasoline.

  ‘Is there a problem?’ He was with them immediately, breathless, though Sonora did not think he had done anything more than walk a step or two. The voice was young and did not match the ancient weariness in his eyes.

  ‘I’m afraid so,’ Sonora said. She waited for them to move together, for comfort, but they exchanged looks and held position.

  The ensuing pause was a long one.

  ‘Will you sit?’ the man asked. His hair was thin, totally white over a face that could have been thirty or three hundred, skin healthy and taut, but webbed with lines of worry.

  Sonora did not think he was aware of the lack of graciousness in his invitation. It was as if he held his breath and those words were the only ones he could manage.

  Tragedy had marked them with the knowing aura of people who have learned that bad things happen without warning. Sonora heard it in the softness of their voices, saw it in the care they took to pay attention. They had the air of small cats in a big jungle. They would walk quietly, move in the shadows, and look over their shoulders at regular intervals.

  Sam and Sonora headed for the couch.

  The living room had an open, peaceful feel. There was just enough furniture, all of it heavy, dark and simple. A blue-and-white rug, threadbare, made a square of color on the dark, well-scuffed pinewood floors. The room smelled lemony, as if someone had just been dusting.

  Behind the couch, French doors opened out on to a concrete patio that was bare, except for an empty flowerpot and a rusted-out gas grill.

  Sonora moved closer to Sam. The Kidgwicks exchanged looks, then each took a chair. Sonora would have been willing to bet that the one knew exactly what the other was thinking – they had the closeness of people who had been through unspeakable things.

  She had seen grief cut like an amputation in one relationship after another. It was interesting to see one where it had strengthened the bond.

  ‘Either one of you know a teenage girl by the name of Joelle? Joelle Chauncey?’ Sam leaned back into the couch and crossed one foot over his knee, just like he was passing the time of day. He started a tape recorder, winked at the Kidgwicks, and set it on the coffee table, as if it were the most socially acceptable thing in the world.

  Van looked at the recorder and flinched. He smiled brilliantly at Sonora and looked at her with an intensity that was like hunger. She looked away.

  ‘No.’ Mrs Kidgwick, answering Sam’s question. She had n
ot bothered to look at her husband for this one. Her face was merely blank.

  Sam picked the heel of his shoe. ‘You familiar with a Donna Delaney, runs End Point Farm?’

  Two no’s, blank looks, shaking heads.

  ‘Is the girl missing?’

  ‘Did she run away from home?’

  Why are you asking us? was a question neither of them voiced, but its presence was there in their voices.

  ‘Do you own a truck?’ Sonora asked.

  The woman was wary now, moving sideways in her chair. ‘We have an F-350.’

  ‘Describe it, would you?’ Sam asked.

  ‘Did something happen to the truck?’

  ‘Mrs Kidgwick, can you give me a description of the truck?’

  ‘Blue-green,’ she said.

  ‘It’s an F-350, Dually pickup. Goose-neck hookup in the bed.’ This from Van. ‘What’s going on? Did something happen to the truck?’

  ‘Do you own a trailer?’

  ‘White Sundowner, maroon trim.’

  ‘Can you tell me where the truck and trailer are right now?’ Sonora asked.

  The woman stood up and headed for the door, wiping her hands absently on the T-shirt as if it were a hand towel. ‘They’re supposed to be in the barn. That’s where we left them. Where are they now?’

  Sonora waited and watched, wondering if the woman would leave them and head to the barn. So far the Kidgwicks rang true. They might never have known that their truck was used to commit a murder.

  Bad truck.

  Mrs Kidgwick turned and looked at Sonora, shirt bunched in her left fist. ‘It was stolen, wasn’t it?’ Her voice was flat, annoyed. ‘This girl you’re asking about? She took our truck?’

  ‘Did she wreck it?’ Van asked.

  ‘Is she okay?’

  ‘Where do you keep the keys?’ Sam asked.

  The two of them exchanged guilty looks.

  ‘I’ve got a spare set up in my top dresser drawer. But they’re still there. I saw them this morning.’ Van looked at his wife, and her chin went up.

  ‘We keep a key in the ignition. We always kept the keys in the truck on my daddy’s farm. You never know who’s going to use it next and sometimes you need it fast.’

  Truer words never spoken, Sonora thought.

  Sam smiled at Mrs Kidgwick. ‘And that’s how most farm kids teach their own selves to drive at a very early age.’

  She gave him a crooked sideways smile. ‘I used to stand up in the seat while my brother lay on the floor to work the pedals.’

  Sonora shuddered. Her son had been driving only a couple of months and he had already claimed two fenders, managed one non-moving violation, and decapitated a duck.

  He had been very sorry about the duck.

  Van stood up. ‘Is the truck okay?’

  ‘Did the girl get hurt?’

  It was on the tip of Sonora’s tongue to make some tiny comment about leaving keys in the ignition, but she caught herself. These were the parents of a girl who had been dragged by outlaw children into brutality at the tender age of thirteen. A sixteen-year-old boy had been murdered on their property. These people did not need to be reminded or patronized.

  ‘Where’s the truck now?’ Sonora asked.

  The woman put her hands on her hips. ‘I told you, it’s supposed to be in the barn. My guess is it’s not?’

  ‘When’s the last time you drove it?’

  ‘Can you please just tell us what’s going on?’

  Sonora glanced at the floor. Took a second. ‘Mrs Kidgwick, I’d appreciate it very much if you’d bear with us for just a few minutes more and answer the rest of our questions.’

  She had not meant to sound so harsh. It was hard to keep the steel out of your voice when investigating the death of a child.

  The husband took over. ‘We used the truck about ten days ago to pick up some paint for the porch. And I was in the barn about … oh, three days ago. Sunday, I think. And the truck was there.’

  ‘You remember exactly where you parked it?’

  ‘I put it dead to the right, so I could get to a stack of lumber I got out there.’

  Sonora looked at Sam. She could not remember how the truck was parked. They’d have to go look.

  Sam slid forward on the couch. ‘I’m sorry, Mr and Mrs Kidgwick, but we’re going to have to impound your vehicle.’

  ‘My truck? But why?’

  Sonora kept her voice gentle. She knew that a pickup truck was a thing near and dear to a man’s heart.

  ‘Sir, we believe your truck was used in the commission of a felony.’

  ‘Drugs?’ The word was like vinegar on his tongue.

  His wife sighed softly. ‘They’ll rip it to shreds.’

  ‘Not drugs.’ Sonora hated being called ‘they’.

  Sam pulled a picture out of his coat pocket – a school picture of Joelle, from last year. ‘You’re sure you’ve never seen this girl before?’

  Van Kidgwick took the picture, face blank, then frowned. His wife moved across the room to stand at his shoulder. He looked at her. A question.

  She looked at Sonora. ‘Is this the one you were asking us about?’

  ‘Yes. Joelle Chauncey.’

  ‘We didn’t know her name. We … we’ve seen her, several times. She hangs out down by the pond sometimes.’

  ‘Why is that?’ Sam asked. The Kidgwick farm was a good two miles from Joelle’s mobile home, maybe a mile and a half as the crow flies.

  Van rubbed his hand on his knee. ‘I talked to her a couple of times. We used to get people on the property a lot. Curious, ghoulish. I run most of those kind off. Do you know who we are?’

  Sonora nodded.

  ‘So you know what happened here? You know the pond was where they murdered Ben Randolph.’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Our daughter. Our daughter was involved, but—’

  His wife pursed her lips. ‘You don’t need to go into that.’

  She might never have spoken.

  ‘She’s dead now, our daughter. When it happened, she was probably about the age of this girl. That’s why … that’s why I didn’t get after her for coming around. And she said she lived near by, so she was sort of a neighbor. And Ben’s parents came for a while. But that didn’t work out.’

  ‘They blamed us,’ Mrs Kidgwick said. ‘It got awkward. And it didn’t seem to be good for them. The wife used to just crumple up, and the husband would about have to carry her out. And one day I saw Tammy watching them out the porch window, and we had to ask them not to come any more. It was bad for her. She never … She’s dead now, of course.’

  ‘What was Joelle doing on the property?’ Sonora asked.

  Van looked at the toe of his hiking boot. ‘She just sat by the pond and wrote in this little book. She’d come in the afternoons sometimes, after school. Just sit and look at the water and write in her little book. We didn’t talk to her much. I’d look out the back window sometimes and there she’d be.

  ‘You know teenagers, they need a place to be by themselves. Once in a while I’d look out and think just for a minute that it was Tammy. You forget, you know, and you look up and expect to see her.’

  Sonora nodded. She still half expected to hear her brother’s voice on the answering machine when she wasn’t thinking. Not so much lately. Which made him seem further away.

  Mrs Kidgwick folded her arms and leaned against the door. ‘It’s a funny spot, down by that pond. The animals won’t go down there.’

  ‘Honey.’ This from Van.

  ‘It’s true. The cows used to drink out of it all the time. Now they won’t go near it.’

  ‘Lincoln will.’

  ‘Lincoln was Tammy’s dog. He goes everywhere.’

  ‘Lincoln doesn’t mind ghosts.’ Van lifted his head. Looked at Sonora. ‘This Joelle Chauncey. She never did anything but sit by that pond. I’ll tell you right now, she doesn’t seem like the kind of little girl who would steal a truck.’

  Sonora took
the picture back, handed it to Sam. ‘She wasn’t.’

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  ‘You think they were involved?’ Sam said.

  Sonora leaned back into the seat of the official-issue Taurus she and Sam shared. As usual, she was too short for the headrest to do anything but throw her neck into an awkward position, so she slumped sideways, cheek against the window.

  ‘God, no. Still. We better check everything out.’

  ‘Get some uniforms to go over the property. That’s a big pond.’

  ‘I wonder how deep it is.’

  ‘We may have to drag it. I’ll talk to Mickey.’

  ‘Of course we have to drag it, or did you just want to bide your time in case something surfaces in the spring?’

  ‘Don’t be cranky, Sonora.’ Sam started the engine. The car snagged in the mud, then broke free.

  Sonora rubbed her eyes. ‘Why does Crick want us right now? Didn’t you tell him we found the girl?’

  Sam glanced at her. ‘I’m going to leave that out? He said there’d been developments, and we could come into the bullpen while CSU does the excavation – which will take a while. Crick told Mickey to be meticulous.’

  ‘Mickey meticulous. That’s scary. He’ll be there till my kids start college.’

  ‘Don’t sit like that, Sonora. If we have a wreck, you’re going to slide right out of that shoulder harness and go through the windshield.’

  ‘I’ll be a violent projectile.’

  ‘Makes you sound like vomit.’

  Sonora studied the dirt-creased blisters on the inside of her palm. ‘Wonder what it’s like to be murdered at the age of fifteen.’

  Sam looked at her hands. ‘You got blisters, Sonora? After ten minutes with a pitchfork?’

  Male. Conflict avoidance. Sonora looked back at her hands.

  ‘I’m delicate, Sam.’

  ‘Spit on ’em.’

  ‘Spit on them? Don’t explain, Sam, no doubt it’s a guy thing.’ She glanced out the window, pushed her hair out of her face. ‘Listen, this is nuts. I don’t like all this driving around. We’re wasting time. We need to arrest somebody.’

  ‘You did already. That’s why Crick wants us downtown.’

  ‘Are you talking about McCarty? I didn’t arrest him, Sam, he’s being held.’

 

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