The Drop Edge of Yonder - An Alafair Tucker Mystery

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by Donis Casey




  The Drop Edge of Yonder

  The Drop Edge of Yonder

  An Alafair Tucker Mystery

  Donis Casey

  www.doniscasey.com

  Poisoned Pen Press

  Copyright © 2007 by Donis A. Casey

  First Edition 2007

  Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2007924785

  ISBN Print: 978-1-59058-446-0

  ISBN eBook: 978-1-61595-017-1

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in, or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book.

  Poisoned Pen Press

  6962 E. First Ave., Ste. 103

  Scottsdale, AZ 85251

  www.poisonedpenpress.com

  [email protected]

  Dedication

  As always, to Butch.

  Contents

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  The Family Tree

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Alafair’s Recipes

  Compendium

  More from this Author

  Contact Us

  Acknowledgments

  Love and thanks to my siblings: Chris, brother and web master; the “real” Martha, and Carol, who helped me reconstruct our mother’s recipe for okra pie. I especially want to express my gratitude to my cousins the Morgans, Charles Lee and his wife, Jean, for inviting me to visit the farm outside of Boynton for the first time in almost thirty years. If I hadn’t spent so much magical time on that farm when I was a child, these books would not exist. Thanks also to June Smith and Ardith McKeaigg for hosting me so graciously when I spoke at the Boynton Historical Society.

  The Family Tree

  August 1914

  Chapter One

  When I think about that day, Mama, here’s what sticks in my mind. I remember waking up on my back in the middle of the field. All I could see was the sky through the leaves of the oak tree, and grass all around me. At first, I didn’t know where I was, or what had happened to me. But I had a thought. I don’t remember what it was. It was gone just about the minute I woke up.

  Yet it was a mighty important thought, and if I could just call it to memory, I’d know who did this awful thing. All I know about this thought is that it had something to do with the Fourth of July.

  ***

  It had been a hard couple of years for Calvin Ross, what with his wife dying, his girls growing up before his eyes, and his sister coming to live with them. The town of Boynton was growing so fast that his dairy business could hardly keep up with the demand, and the work was brutal. Calvin was glad of that, though, since it kept his mind off of what the future held for himself and his three pretty daughters. Since their mother died, Calvin was generally chary of any fellow who came around his daughters. But when Laura, his eldest, had told him that she was in love with the McBride boy, he had been pleased.

  For red-haired, dark-eyed Bill McBride was not just a respectful and promising young man who had asked for Laura’s hand in the proper fashion, he was the youngest son of that worthy gentleman, Peter McBride, patriarch of one of the more influential clans in Muskogee County, Oklahoma. Bill’s substantial family loved Laura, as well, and it did Calvin’s heart good to see his daughter happy again after the long, sad year that followed her mother’s death.

  Therefore, Calvin was not worried when Bill showed up at his farm that hot, windy August evening in 1914, on a fine-looking little roan mare, and asked if Laura could come out for a ride. Bill was accompanied by his twenty-one-year-old niece, Mary Tucker, and Mary’s fifteen-year-old sister Ruth, since it would never do for the betrothed couple to ride out alone. Both of the Tucker girls were on their own horses. The plump and good-natured Mary seemed amused at acting the chaperone for her young uncle, who was only three years her elder. Ruth, looking fresh-faced, her wild auburn curls tucked up under a big straw hat, was as champing-at-the-bit to be off as her steed.

  Calvin was glad to give his permission for Laura to go. Her chores were done and Iva, Calvin’s widowed sister and housekeeper, wouldn’t be making supper for at least an hour. Laura would be well chaperoned and well protected, and she was a good rider. The usual riding paths around the area were well used and safe. There was no reason for Calvin Ross to feel the slightest trepidation when his daughter rode off into the evening with her beloved and his nieces. She turned in the saddle as they rode away and waved a cheery good-bye to her father.

  ***

  Ruth and Mary Tucker rode ahead of the affianced pair most of the way, though Ruth often headed her blaze-faced gelding off into the woods or trotted up the road and back if it struck her fancy. Mary was content to trot along ten yards or so in front of the couple and think her own happy thoughts, her full calico skirt hitched up over her stockinged knees, her younger brother Gee Dub’s outgrown boots on her feet and his beat-up cowboy hat on her head, admiring the dusky evening and contemplating supper. Time to oneself was rare for the second of ten children. Bill and Laura contentedly rode along behind, knee to knee, and made their plans for the future, only vaguely aware of what the Tucker girls were up to, until Ruth slowed her pace enough to drop back alongside her uncle.

  Bill and Laura fell silent and looked over at the girl, curious.

  “I see a lot of bees, Uncle Bill,” Ruth observed.

  “It’s getting evening, Ruthie. They’re heading home.”

  “I know it. I see a lot of bees heading home to that particular big old oak up ahead to the right.”

  Laura sat up straight in the saddle. “Ruth has sharp eyes, Bill! I see them, too, swarming yonder. I expect there’s a hive in that tree.”

  Mary cantered back toward them just in time to hear Laura’s comment. The prospect of an adventure elicited her ready grin. “Want to rob a beehive, Uncle Bill?”

  Bill laughed. “Well, let’s see what’s what, first. Maybe there’s a hive worth bothering with up there, and maybe there ain’t.”

  The four young people rode up to the big oak, which was situated just off the side of the road in an open area. The dense shade of the old tree discouraged growth under its canopy, so there was plenty of room for all of them to mill around on horseback underneath and peer up into the branches, looking for a beehive.

  “I saw several bees going off up into this area.” Laura pointed to a large branch that joined the trunk fairly high up on the tree. “I don’t think we’re going to see anything for sure from down here. Somebody’s going to have to climb up there.”

  “Reckon that’s me.” Bill sidled his horse up next to the trunk and reached up to grasp a limb with both hands. He released his booted feet from the stirrups and nimbly pulled himself up into the foliage. In the effort, his hat was scraped off his head by an errant branch, and Ruth stepped down out of her saddle to retrieve it. Mary reached over her horse’s neck and took his mare’s reins.

  Laura lost sight of him for a minute, but could follow his progress by the rustling as he climbed higher into the leaves. Fina
lly, she caught sight of a flash of red hair halfway out a major limb.

  “There’s a hive up here, all right,” Bill called. “A big one, too! Do you think your daddy would like some honey, Laura?”

  “Hey, we want some honey, too,” Ruth protested.

  “Don’t worry, Ruthie-girl,” Bill’s voice soothed. “This looks like it’s got enough honey for everybody. You think you can make me a smudge and get it up here?”

  “You think you can rob that hive without burning the tree down?” Mary countered.

  Bill’s head popped into view as he pushed branches aside with his hand. “Why, I’m wounded by your lack of faith in my abilities, Mary. I’ve smoked out many a beehive in my time and never started a conflagration once.”

  Mary was already on the ground with Ruth, hunting for materials of the proper length, texture, and moisture content to make a smoky smudge for calming the bees before stealing their honey. “This tall grass here isn’t green enough…” Mary called out, but before she could finish her thought, a loud crack and a zing cut her off. The horses started.

  There was an instant’s silence before Laura said, “What was that?” But all knew very well that it was rifle fire.

  “That was close!” Mary exclaimed. “Where did it come from?”

  No one had time to speculate before a second shot rang out and hit high up in the oak tree.

  Bill yelped in surprise, and Laura called his name, alarmed, while trying to calm her skittish horse. Bill dropped to the ground, tried to stand, but stumbled and went to his knees.

  “That coyote is shooting at us.” He sounded calm and deliberate. “Y’all girls get on your horses and ride like the devil. Laura, you too.”

  “You’re hit!” Laura wailed, and started to dismount.

  “Laura!” Bill’s tone was severe enough to startle her. “Do as I say. I ain’t hit bad, just grazed the calf…”

  The third shot hit Laura’s horse in the withers. He bucked and reared, and Laura, unprepared, went flying and hit the ground hard. A fourth shot pinged into the ground close to Bill’s feet.

  “Ride, you girls, ride!” Bill yelled. “Get help!”

  Ruth was in the saddle and racing back up the road as Bill’s last word hung in the air. Mary ran toward her uncle, but he waved her off. “No, Mary, get to Laura. Get her out of here. I’m okay, I can stand.”

  Mary paused and took in the situation in a flash. Bill was hit in the leg and struggling to get up. Laura was down in the grass, conscious or not, Mary couldn’t tell, and her horse was skipping and bucking across the meadow with a gunshot wound in its withers. Mary looked off toward the woods, from where she thought the shots had come.

  “Can you get to your horse, Bill?” Mary called, as she moved toward Laura.

  She never heard the answer. She heard a crack and a hot pain exploded over her left ear, and everything went dark.

  ***

  Mary’s mother, Alafair Tucker, stepped out onto the back porch from her kitchen, fanning herself with a dishtowel. The August evening was sweltering, and Alafair had suddenly found herself so uncomfortable in the hot kitchen that she had had to come outside to try and catch a breeze. The sun was just westering, and the family would be clamoring for supper before long.

  Her two-year-old, Grace, had followed her into the yard, and was making a beeline for the path to the barn. The children’s house pet, an elderly yellow shepherd named Charlie-dog, was close on her heels. Alafair puffed, distracted by the child’s break for freedom. Ever since one of the barn cats had had kittens, it was nearly impossible to keep Grace away from them.

  “Grace…” she called, but just as the child stepped out of the gate, the big red rooster, master of the family flock, rose up from nowhere, a miniature demon out of the ground, squawking, spurs at the ready and wings ablur, and jumped at Grace. The dog yipped and beat a hasty retreat.

  Alafair started as Grace shrieked and made an about-face back toward the house, narrowly escaping a flogging. Alafair lengthened her stride and scooped the child up into her arms and banged the back gate shut in the rooster’s face. She hadn’t seen him among the other chickens scratching in the dirt close to the yard.

  Grace let out a wail, but Alafair could tell she was startled rather than injured, and she patted the toddler’s leg. “It’s all right,” she soothed. “That old rooster didn’t hurt you. He was just trying to protect his family.”

  Grace sniffled, her eyes round as dollars, but she was comforted by her mother’s assurance that she wasn’t hurt. “Bad rooster,” she pronounced.

  Or at least that was what her mother understood, given that she was as yet unable to articulate the letter “r.”

  “Yes, that woostoo is bad.” Alafair glanced down at the dog, who was cowering at her feet. “You’re a fine protector.” Her voice was heavy with irony, and the dog slunk off to nurse his shame in solitude. She wondered absently why the usually placid old rooster had suddenly taken to flogging anyone who crossed his path, but the thought didn’t engage her for long. She adjusted Grace on her hip and let her gaze wander into the distance.

  She had no reason to think so, but Alafair knew something was wrong. She had been stirring the soup pot when she felt it, the disturbance in the rightness of things. She was anxious now, for no good reason, she knew. Even so, she began to tick off her family members in her mind, placing the whereabouts of each child, and her children’s father. She knew exactly where each was supposed to be, and what he or she was supposed to be doing. She didn’t worry about Mary and Ruth any more than the others. They were with their Uncle Bill, who knew how to take care of anything that might arise.

  She was just turning to go back into the kitchen when she heard a sound on the wind that caused her to pause. It sounded like a woman moaning. She blinked and listened for a minute, not sure of what she was hearing. It was the wind sighing through the elms around the house, but it was something else, as well. A woman crying, she was sure. Her heart leaped. She turned to go back into the house to send her youngest son, Charlie-boy, to fetch his father, when she heard the horse galloping up the drive from the road.

  ***

  My head was aching something powerful, and though I didn’t have any idea about what had happened to me, I knew I was hurt. I wondered if maybe my horse had thrown me on my head. It came to me that I had been out riding with somebody. I was getting little pictures in my mind that didn’t line up. I saw Ruth tearing out at a gallop like Beelzebub himself was after her. That’s what came to me, Mama, that the Devil was loose. Laura was there. I got a flash of her dun gelding rearing up and her going a-flying. I remembered Bill, then, up in the tree. Something about craving honey. Robbing a beehive.

  ***

  Mary swam up from unconsciousness with an effort. The first thing she was clearly aware of was the loud whir of cicadas, and at first she was comforted by the familiar sound. The burning feeling over her ear sharpened her senses, and she raised her hand to her head and opened her eyes at the same time. She found herself lying on her back in a cradle of grass, staring at the darkening sky through a fan of oak leaves. Her honey blond hair had mostly escaped from its long braid, and her head was spinning, and ached like blazes. The fingers that had touched the sore spot on her temple were bloody. She peered at them, perplexed, unable to remember for a moment where she was or what had happened.

  She raised her head just enough to peer over the grass. Bill’s filly and Laura’s gelding were grazing quietly under the oak tree. Mary could see a trickle of blood running down the gelding’s withers. He was favoring that rear leg, but from what Mary could tell, the horse was only creased. Everything else in the small meadow was quiet. Neither Laura nor Bill was anywhere to be seen.

  Mary stretched up on her knees, then slowly got to her feet. The late summer grass rustled in the desultory breeze. The cicadas were deafening, which made her head ache more than it already did. She took a tentative step, then another. The mare lifted her head to look at the young w
oman, then resumed grazing.

  Mary didn’t walk very far before she saw the red hair in the grass, under the oak tree on the opposite side of the trunk. She forgot caution and her pounding head and ran to the prone form under the branches. She fell to her knees beside her uncle and put her hand on his back. He was lying with his face turned toward the tree and both arms flung out over his head, very close to where she had seen him last. It was late in the evening, now, and the light was fading fast, but Mary could see well enough to know that he was dead. The dark, matted, sticky place in his coppery hair showed plain enough that the bullet had caught him in the back of the head and laid him out instantly.

  Mary was so dumbfounded that it took her a few minutes to realize that the whimpering, sobbing noises she was hearing were coming from her. She sat back on her heels and looked around. The sun was down and the light was nearly gone. The heavy August air had stilled and the dry grass and leaves had quieted. The only sounds were the relentless cicadas and the intermittent movement of the horses. She stood up and dried her eyes on her skirt tail before she began a methodical examination of the meadow. She fully expected to find Laura lying dead in the tall grass, but she did not. She could tell by the way the grass and undergrowth was crushed and broken that there had been a lot of activity in the clearing since the four of them had ridden up to rob a beehive. There was a wide trail going off into the woods to the west that had not been there when Ruth had ridden off.

  Mary considered following the path of disturbed grass into the woods to look for Laura, but hesitated when she heard the scuffle of some small animal off to her right. She stood still for several minutes, listening to the night critters come alive. She turned around and caught sight of Bill, just a dark shape on the ground now, and choked back a fresh spate of tears.

 

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