Stranger in Town

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Stranger in Town Page 8

by Cheryl Bradshaw


  “What are you doing?”

  “Sleepin’, I’m tired.” He winked at me. “You let me know when you change your mind, now.”

  “I won’t, so you’d better—”

  “Sloane?”

  I turned.

  Noah Tate approached us from behind. “What are you doing here—and who’s this?” he said, thumbing at Cade.

  Before I could respond Cade’s hand shot forward. “Pleased to finally meet you, Mr. Tate. I’m Cade McCoy.”

  Mr. Tate didn’t shake hands. He didn’t move. Without looking at me he said, “Next time you want to ambush me like this, Miss Monroe, call first!”

  A few seconds later his front door slammed shut with a bang, locking us outside.

  “Nice job,” I said. “Now he won’t talk to me either.”

  Cade pulled on the tailgate of his truck. He eased it down and sat on the edge, patting the area next to him, like I’d be happy to oblige. I didn’t.

  “Maybe we don’t need him to talk to us,” he said.

  “Trust me, we do.”

  He grinned.

  “Is this the part where you tell me what you wouldn’t tell my dad?”

  I crossed my arms.

  “It isn’t.”

  Several minutes went by. I stood, Cade sat. I passed the time by trying to decide how I could get Mr. Tate to let me into his house so I could somehow convince him to turn over the letter without involving any more people than I had to.

  “It’s been ten minutes,” Cade said. “You got a plan?”

  I shook my head.

  “Yeah, you do,” he said. “I can tell.”

  “You stay here. Let me try and talk to him.”

  Cade scooted off the tailgate.

  I warned. “Take one more step and I’m leaving, and you can handle Mr. Tate on your own. You’ve been doing a great job so far.”

  “Relax,” Cade said, spreading his hands out to the side. “Geez. I’m going to get in my truck. I’ll even close the door if it makes you feel better. Maybe that’ll help things. You can even tell him I’m leavin’ if you like.”

  We both knew it wasn’t true.

  I approached the front door and knocked. Nothing happened. I tried again. Still nothing, and there was no sound coming from inside, even though I knew at least one person was there. On the third try, the door cracked open. A small child around three years old peeked out.

  “Hi,” she said softly.

  “How are you?” I said.

  “My daddy’s mad.”

  “What’s your name?” I said.

  She looked down at her hands and whispered, “Lily.”

  I knelt down until we were eye level. I’d heard once that little kids were more receptive and comfortable when adults didn’t tower over them like giants. Kids felt better when an adult lowered themselves to their level. “It’s nice to meet you, Lily. My name is Sloane. I’m a friend of your dad’s. Do you think you could get him for me?”

  She glanced to the side, opening the door. “Come on.”

  “Oh, sweetie, I don’t know if I should—”

  “Come on, come on!” she insisted.

  Lily turned and skipped down the hall yelling, “Daddy… daddy…daddy.”

  But daddy didn’t come. So I went to him. I found Mr. Tate in his office, his eyes glued to a magazine, even though he wasn’t reading, not really. I made a fist and tapped gently on the open door.

  “You’re fired, Miss Monroe. You have no right being in my house. Please go.”

  I sat in a chair across from him. “Hand over the coloring page and I will.”

  “It’s no longer in my possession.”

  “Of course it is,” I said. “You wouldn’t let a precious item like that out of your sight. Give it to me and spare your family the embarrassment of having your house searched. Once the police know what you have and how it links up with the other kidnapping, they’ll get a warrant, and you’ll have cops all over this place. Is that what you want?”

  He sighed.

  “It doesn’t concern you anymore.”

  “Of course it does,” I said. “I keep my word, Mr. Tate. And we had a deal. Firing me doesn’t change anything.”

  He hurled the magazine to the side of his desk, but his aim was weak. It slid off the side, falling to the floor. I picked it up and set it down in front of him.

  “I thought I was hiring a private investigator,” he said. “Obviously, I was mistaken. You said you wouldn’t involve the police.”

  “I haven’t.”

  Not yet.

  He pointed toward the window. “That McCoy kid is the police, is he not?”

  I nodded.

  “He’s the one who’s been trying to talk to you. And just so we’re clear, I was as surprised as you when he showed up here today. If you spent two seconds listening to our conversation, you would have understood I was only trying to convince him to leave.”

  Mr. Tate raised a brow. “What’s he doing here?” he said.

  “Cade followed you the other day. He saw us meet at the restaurant and watched you hand me the money.”

  “He followed me?”

  “He’s trying to take over things for his dad.”

  Mr. Tate’s shoulders relaxed and he leaned forward in his chair. In a lowered voice he said, “Why?”

  “Detective McCoy Senior is retiring. Cade will be assuming his position, and he had some crazy idea that if he showed up here with me, you’d give him a chance. After today, they’ll be involved whether you like it or not, but how you choose to go about it is up to you.”

  I heard a swishing sound like sandpaper being scraped across a wood floor. Mr. Tate shifted his gaze from me to a woman standing in the doorway. She was pale and thin, and her hair was matted, as if it hadn’t been brushed in days.

  “Noah, what’s going on?” She gazed in my direction. “Who’s she?”

  Mr. Tate rose from his chair, a look of genuine concern and guilt on his face. “No one, honey. Go back to bed, okay?”

  “Mommy, I’m hungry,” Lily said, pulling on the ruffle of the woman’s nightgown.

  “Mommy’s tired now, Lily,” Mr. Tate said. “Go play, and I’ll make you a sandwich in a few minutes.”

  “But I don’t want a sandwich,” Lily said, stomping her foot on the ground, “mac and cheese, mac and cheese!”

  “I don’t have time for that, sweetheart,” Mr. Tate said.

  “I do,” I said.

  All three of them looked over at me, understandably stunned.

  At that moment, the doorbell rang. I had no doubt about who was on the other side of the door.

  Sit in his vehicle and wait, my ass.

  Mrs. Tate gripped the side of the door so tight I thought if she let go, her knees would buckle and she’d tumble to the ground.

  “Miss Monroe, I’m sorry to ask,” Mr. Tate said, “especially after the way I’ve treated you today, but do you think you could help my wife back to her room?” He pointed toward the hallway. “It’s the last door on the left.”

  I nodded, looked at Lily, and said, “I’m going to take your mommy back to her room, and when I’m done, we’ll see about making some macaroni and cheese, okay?”

  The idea of a stranger offering to cook a meal was apparently too much for Lily to comprehend. She covered her eyes with her hands, pretending I wasn’t there, and then backed out of the room, her Dora the Explorer slippers bouncing up and down as she turned and ran down the hall. I didn’t blame her one bit.

  I swung my arm around Mrs. Tate who clung to the door jamb at first, not willing to let go. Once she realized I wasn’t going away, she released her grip and sagged into me. We advanced down the hallway until we both stood next to her bed. I pulled the covers down so she could settle in, but she didn’t. She just stood there, staring at me. I didn’t say anything. She didn’t say anything.

  I could tell she’d internalized so much over the past six months, she didn’t know how to let her emotions out.
I opened my mouth to offer some kind of sentiment and she slapped me—hard—across my left cheek. Then she slapped me again across my right. I should have been stunned, but I wasn’t. I got it. I wrapped my hands around her wrists, holding them out in front of her, making sure not to grip them too tightly. She didn’t know who I was, and she didn’t care. I was there because of Savannah, and I wasn’t doing anything. No one was, not in her eyes. She was in pain, and she wanted everyone else to feel it too.

  I looked at her and said the only thing I could say. “I’m sorry.”

  A wave of shame and regret spread across her face once she realized what she’d done. My face was hot. It felt like I’d burned my cheeks after sitting in the sun for too long. For a woman as frail as she was, she knew how to deliver a slap with an intense sting.

  Mrs. Tate sniffled and then the tears came. First it was just a few, but by the time I released her wrists, she was crying uncontrollably. I just stood there, watching her stick her right hand in her pocket and pull it out, over and over again, like she had no control over her own limb. Every time it went in, she touched something before pulling it out again, but I couldn’t see what it was.

  I helped Mrs. Tate into bed and then found some tissue so she could wipe her eyes. I held it out to her. She clutched something in her right hand. It looked like a piece of paper no bigger than the size of a mini notebook. She pressed it against her chest and began rocking back and forth, mumbling something I couldn’t understand. I tried to get her to lie down, but she shook her head furiously. I backed off.

  When the rocking slowed, her eyelids began to open and shut, each time getting heavier until they no longer opened. I pulled the blankets up to her neck, making sure to fold the sheet over the top. Then I reached for the paper that had slipped out of her hand. It was a photograph of her and her missing daughter. It was bent and worn, like she’d been holding it for days, months even. In the photo, she looked like a completely different person. Her hair was long and lustrous, and she had a radiant smile. The photo depicted a woman with a fulfilling, invigorating life. She looked nothing like the person she was today.

  The top drawer of the nightstand was cracked open just enough for me to glimpse inside. I did and then shifted my focus to the wide array of pill bottles lining the top of the nightstand. They were in all shapes and sizes. Some were in bottles, others in cardboard boxes, and a few were scattered around like they’d been spilled and no one had bothered to clean them up. The entire scene was grave. Mrs. Tate was barely clinging to life. The hope that her daughter was still out there somewhere was the only thing keeping her alive.

  CHAPTER 19

  After making macaroni and cheese for maybe the third or fourth time in my life, I joined Mr. Tate and Cade in the living room. They were engaged in a civil conversation, which gave me a small assurance that the two of them might be able to work together after all.

  Cade glanced at me when I walked in. “Mr. Tate has agreed to answer my questions, but only if you’re present.”

  “I thought I was fired,” I said.

  “You know I didn’t mean it,” Mr. Tate replied.

  I sat next to Cade, but not too close.

  “Ask your questions.”

  The next several minutes passed by in a mundane manner, with Cade asking many of the same questions Mr. Tate had grown not-so-fond-of. At one point, he looked like he was ready to shut down and show Cade the door, but he maintained his composure, keeping a straight face. He wasn’t smiling, but he wasn’t frowning, either. It wasn’t until Cade asked him if there was anything else he should know that Mr. Tate shifted his position in his seat and looked over at me.

  “What have you found out since our meeting?” Mr. Tate said to me.

  “Someone saw Olivia Hathaway in the parking lot the day she was taken.”

  Cade’s forehead wrinkled in confusion. It was fine with me. Let him wonder. He deserved it.

  “Why didn’t the person come forward when it happened?” Tate said.

  I said, “It was a young boy. He was embarrassed because he didn’t do anything to keep it from happening. But I’ve convinced him to give a statement to the police.”

  Once Todd realized I wasn’t going to leave him alone, he talked to his parents, and the three of them went to the police. At the pleading of his mother, the detectives promised to keep Todd’s name out of the papers—maybe not forever, but for now.

  “How good was the description the boy gave?” Mr. Tate said.

  “He remembered enough to get a sketch artist on it. He also knows the make and model of the vehicle the man was driving.”

  “Unbelievable,” Mr. Tate said.

  I looked at a still-confused Cade and then back at Tate. “You know what you have to do now.”

  Cade turned one of his palms up and shook his head. “What is going on between you two?”

  “I’ve got something I need to show you,” Mr. Tate said. “But I’d like your father to be here when I do.”

  Detective McCoy arrived a half hour later looking far more haggard than he had earlier that morning. He apologized, saying he thought he was coming down with something. By the looks of him, he’d already come down with it.

  Mr. Tate paced the floor like he was preparing to give the most important speech of his life. It wasn’t until he realized all eyes were on him and no one else was talking that he started in with his story. Cade and his father listened while Mr. Tate talked about his theory on the correlation between the two kidnappings. Then he switched gears, mentioning the coloring page he’d received in the mail. Detective McCoy seemed relieved the truth was finally coming out, but Cade looked like he wanted to blacken both of Tate’s eyes for withholding evidence. When Mr. Tate finished, no one said anything for a long time.

  “At least we are all on the same page now,” I said. “Once the two cases come together, maybe we can find these girls.”

  I hoped, alive. It was a lot to wish for, but I didn’t want to accept the worst until I had no other choice.

  Cade shook his head. “What a mess.”

  “We’ll have to get with the boys in Sublette County and sort all this stuff out,” Detective McCoy said. “Since we may have mutual interests, my hope is we can swap information with each other.”

  He rose from the sofa and winced, placing a hand on his lower back and holding it there. When he caught me staring, his hand dropped to his side. “If you all will excuse me, I better call the chief and tell him what’s going on.”

  Once Detective McCoy was out of the room, Cade started in on Mr. Tate. “How could you keep this critical piece of evidence from my father?”

  Mr. Tate looked at me, but I didn’t want to interfere. Not yet. My turn was coming.

  “Olivia’s parents said they never got the picture back once they handed it over to the police,” Mr. Tate said. “And once they had it, they still couldn’t find her, so why should I trust it with you?”

  “It could help us find your daughter and the other girl, Olivia,” Cade said. “What good does it do sitting here in your house?”

  “It helps my wife—gives her peace, gives her hope.”

  Cade threw his hands in the air. “Hope for what? Your wife barely gets out of bed anymore!”

  The words slipped out of Cade’s mouth just as Lily’s sweet face poked around the corner. I placed a hand on Cade’s arm and squeezed just enough for him to stop before it got any worse.

  “I’ll be outside,” he whispered to me. “I can’t believe you knew about this and didn’t say anything. What was you thinkin’?”

  “We’ll discuss this later,” I said. “Away from here.”

  “Get the flippin’ paper, or whatever it is.”

  I nodded.

  Mr. Tate had already left the room, apparently to get the paper. When he returned, he said, “I hope you don’t get in trouble because of me.”

  “I’m sure I can handle it.”

  He handed the folded page to me. “There was an envelope
, but I can’t find it. I swear. I saw it yesterday, but now it’s gone. Maybe my wife knows, but she’s sleeping right now, and I don’t want to—”

  I took the paper from him and smiled. “No worries,” I said. “When you find it, let me know. In the meantime, I’ll make sure they get this.”

  Mr. Tate closed his eyes. He looked worried. I didn’t know if it was because the envelope was missing, or if it had to do with something else. If it was over the envelope, he was fretting over nothing. I knew exactly where it was.

  CHAPTER 20

  “Where’s the rest of it?” Cade said.

  I shrugged, handing him the coloring page.

  “This is all he gave to me.”

  Cade dangled the plastic baggie in front of me. “Paper doesn’t come in the mail without an envelope.”

  “He said he’ll try to find it.”

  Cade slid into the seat of his truck, started the engine, and snatched his cowboy hat from the seat next to him. He put it on and said, “It doesn’t matter. Once they get a warrant, they’ll find it, along with whatever else the man has been hiding.”

  “Why don’t you bring that high horse of yours down a couple notches?” I said. “They’re suffering. Do you really want to rip their entire home apart for an envelope? Your father certainly has told you what Mrs. Tate is going through—she’s barely coherent.”

  Cade whipped his head around, staring at me. “Are you done giving me advice? If I want to know how you feel, I’ll ask.”

  I felt an uncomfortable pain in my stomach over a man I’d just met.

  He pulled the truck door shut and sped out of the driveway, leaving me alone with his father who had taken it all in like we were shooting the main scene of an old movie.

  “I guess I’ll be seeing you later, maybe,” Detective McCoy said.

  The way the words came out of his mouth was awkward—like he didn’t really know what to say, but he felt compelled to say something.

  “Have you told him yet?” I said.

  “I don’t follow.”

  “That you’re sick,” I said.

  “Why would I—it’s just a nasty virus. It’ll pass.”

 

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