Runkle chuckled. “Oh, I warned Miss Swann about the condition of this property. And she said she was looking for something out of the way.”
“I like to work on my bike,” Edie said to Holt, using the explanation she’d given Runkle. “Too many neighbors complain about the noise.”
Holt seemed satisfied with that, but he cautioned Runkle on keeping the house maintained and Edie on purchasing it. “Buyer beware,” he told her.
When he was gone, Runkle turned to Edie. “Front or back?”
She chose the front and he guided her to the door. “Watch your step, here, young lady.” Runkle inserted the key, had a little trouble with it sticking, but eventually got the door open.
Suddenly she was surrounded by the familiar and unfamiliar. Roses still clung to the walls, but the wallpaper was dirty and faded. Nothing like the bright, airy foyer she remembered. Instead of the homey smell of Sunday dinner, the air was stuffy and reeked of mold. And the house was much smaller. As a child it had seemed gigantic to her. Now it was stunted and dwarfed by time.
She followed the real estate agent to the kitchen. A rust stain marred Grandma’s sparkly-white porcelain sink.
“Not much to look at,” Runkle said.
She pulled at the oven door, and it opened with a squeak. “Well, I don’t cook much.” She remembered chicken swimming in a sea of gravy. Mashed potatoes. Her mother smiling as they sat down. Her father holding the chair for Aunt Penny.
“Want to see the rest?”
He led her up the stairs to the bedrooms, and she ventured her first real question.
“So who owns this place now? Why’d they let it get so dilapidated?”
“Not much going on this side of town. House hasn’t been lived in for a long time. Twenty, thirty years ago used to be the Bellinghams lived here. Old Mrs. Bellingham died and the property was sold to settle the estate. I bought it five or six years ago, kind of a speculation. Development’s going to come to this area one of these days. Been renting it on and off, though the last lot was a horror, as the chief said. One of these days I’ll just tear the thing down and put it out of its misery.”
Bellingham. Her mother’s maiden name. The answer to every security question she’d ever been asked.
She floated to the room she’d stayed in when she slept over. Her mother’s room. Not that she would have recognized it. There was no trace of the white dresser or the pink chenille bedspread. An iron bedstead and a bare mattress occupied the space now. Looked like prison gear.
“Seen enough, young lady?”
She nodded and they trooped down the stairs. “I’ll think about it.”
“You do that,” Runkle said with a wink. “Wouldn’t blame you a bit not wanting to live out here. Still got that condo in town, if you change your mind. Nice hardwood floors. New appliances.”
They left the house and walked to the curb where Runkle’s car—a neon-blue Corvette—sat. “You just let Dennis Runkle know how he can be of help.”
And now the real reason Edie had set up this appointment. She fingered the tiny treasure inside her pocket and leaned against the passenger side door. Examined the car with bright eyes. Guy who owns a car like that had to be a little machine proud. “Nice wheels.”
Sure enough, he brightened. “You like cars?”
“Who doesn’t?” To distract him, she pointed to some gizmo on the dash. “What’s this?”
Runkle went off on a lengthy explanation of torque and rpms, explaining it as if she’d never heard the terms before.
Okay by her. While he was busy with show and tell, she slipped her little gift under the briefcase he’d laid on the front seat.
“Impressive,” she said when he paused for breath.
“Best money can buy.” He smiled proudly and reached for the briefcase.
Edie froze. Waited breathless to see what would happen. How he would react. A small thrill of anticipation ran through her.
But he only snapped the case open and brought out one of the Runkle Real Estate fans she’d seen at the picnic. He handed it to her, pointing at the logo. “Got my phone and email there. Keep in touch, young lady. I’m sure we can find something for you.”
“Thanks.” She gave him the smile she usually saved for customers and watched him go. He waved as he drove away.
When he was gone, she pulled out the crumpled list she’d carried everywhere for the last few weeks. Aunt Penny’s list. She stared at the five names like they were the magic keys to unlock the kingdom of revenge.
She’d seen Lyle at the picnic. Now Runkle. Three more to go.
The fun was only beginning.
11
Dennis Runkle was a satisfied man. Despite what Edie Swann had said, he had a feeling that black-haired mess of a circus act would end up taking the Bellingham house.
He paused leaving his latest appointment—another old relic on the east side. Time wasn’t right for east side development. But it would be. Yes, indeedy. Long as Hammerbilt stayed open. And if he could get this monstrosity at a good price, he’d own two nice properties on the east side of town, this and the Bellingham house.
He trotted down the sloping steps to the curb. Why did he keep referring to it as the Bellingham house? As he’d told the Swann woman, the Bellinghams hadn’t owned it in years. Not since… well he’d had enough of the past in the last few weeks to last him another twenty years.
Black angels, indeed.
Well, now that they’d buried poor Fred Lyle, talk should die down.
At the bottom of the steps, he took a moment to admire the convertible’s blue shine. He inhaled good fortune. Thought about the woman he’d just left inside the house. Poor thing. Now that her mother was dead she was free. Better late than never.
He remembered her when she was in school. Never pretty but always kind. What they used to call a good girl. And now. White-haired, dried up. Life had passed her by.
He had an odd impulse to go back and ask her to dinner. Or lunch, maybe. Yes, lunch would be more appropriate. He might even enjoy talking with a woman closer to his own age. He’d enjoyed talking with her just now.
But he couldn’t imagine her sitting next to him in his gleaming Corvette. He’d look ridiculous. He needed someone pretty and young sitting there.
So he suppressed that fleeting impulse and opened the car door. Was about to toss his briefcase inside, when his smile chilled. Something on the passenger seat. Something small and black.
Tentatively, he leaned over the driver’s side and poked at it. The thing rolled on its back, and sent a ripple of apprehension down Dennis Runkle’s spine.
A tiny black angel. Just like the one Fred Lyle had received right before his death.
What the—
He slid behind the wheel. Stared at it. How long had it been there? Up until the afternoon he’d had folders and papers piled up on that seat, ready to move them to the new office. Had someone tossed it in days ago and he hadn’t seen it? Or had someone placed it there today? A few minutes ago.
He looked around. No one on the street. He started the engine and slowly rolled down the road. No one hiding behind trees or shrubs.
He started to sweat.
Anyone could have done this. In good weather, he always kept the top down. He liked to show off.
But now… He’d been foolish to expose himself all this time.
He sped away and as soon as he saw a public lot—Myer’s Gas Station—he pulled in, quickly raised the car top, locked it in place, and rolled up the windows. Feeling safer, he sped off again, blasting the air-conditioning. He was absurdly hot.
He glanced at the dark little creature, so like a devil’s messenger. Another shiver ran through him.
What did it mean? Some kind of voodoo?
Suddenly, he grabbed the figure, yanked open the glove compartment, and threw it inside.
But still, he couldn’t breathe easier. He couldn’t breathe at all.
He gripped the wheel. His throat was closing u
p. He gasped, desperate for air, and clutched his neck. The car swerved violently. Panic overwhelmed him, and in a violent jolt, he understood what was happening. But the knowledge came too late.
Holt got the call over the radio while he was doing his afternoon patrol. By the time he got to the accident site there was a small crowd. The town fire truck was there, along with their volunteer crew. A county ambulance stood by. Sam had already set up a perimeter and was holding the curious back.
He drew her away from prying ears. “Status?”
“Dead,” she said.
“I can see that.” He glanced over her shoulder to the wreck. The showy blue convertible was crunched like a tin can against a telephone pole. Dennis Runkle’s body was crushed against the steering wheel.
“Pretty straightforward. Plenty of eyewitnesses,” Sam said, gesturing with her head toward a group separated from the rest. Holt recognized Andy Burkett, who ran Myer’s garage, but he didn’t know the others. “Same story all around,” she said. “He was going fast, lost control, and wham.” She whistled like a mortar traveling overhead and exploding. “I tracked the skids. They jibe with what the witnesses say.”
“Any indication of why he was speeding?”
“Idiocy? I mean, the man was seventy if he was a day. Had no business driving a powerhouse like that to begin with.”
“Ageism, Deputy Fish? Not much of a theory.”
“Okay, so maybe the brakes failed.”
“Wouldn’t be skidmarks if they had.” Holt signaled to Andy Burkett, who ambled over. “You said he was driving fast. Anyone following him?”
The mechanic shook his head. “Just raced down that hill toward the square like a demon was after him.”
“You see one?”
“No, sir.”
“Sam, check with the others.” She went off, and Holt turned back to Burkett. “Can you stand by? We’ll get the body out and you can tow the car.”
“Sure thing, Chief.”
Between Holt, the EMTs, and the volunteer fire department, they got the driver’s door open and Runkle’s body off to the county morgue.
The rest of the witnesses confirmed Burkett’s story, which left Holt mentally finishing his accident report, case closed. He gave Burkett the okay, and the mechanic called the garage and had someone bring the tow truck to the wreck.
The crowd of onlookers had thinned, but there were still a dozen hardy souls who would stay until the bitter end. They watched silently as Burkett hooked up the wreck and stood by while the driver started the winch. The crushed metal clanked as it was hauled upward, and the briefcase on the seat fell onto the car floor.
“Slow it down!” Burkett yelled to the driver.
The winch jerked to a stop, and the glove compartment popped open. The owner’s manual, papers, and other odds and ends fell out, then shifted from side to side as the pulley started again, slower this time.
“Hold it. Hold it!” Holt held up a hand, and Burkett shouted to the driver to stop.
“Something the matter, Chief?” Burkett asked.
Holt barely heard him. “Sam,” he said softly. “Get me an evidence bag from the trunk of my car. And some latex.”
She was back seconds later with the bag and the gloves. “What is it?”
Instead of answering, Holt put on the gloves, leaned in through the now-open driver’s side, and picked something off the floor of the car.
“Lord God a mercy,” Burkett said with solemn awe.
Sensing something momentous, the crowd edged closer, and Burkett blurted, “It’s one of them black angels.”
People started murmuring, and Holt snapped his head up. “Get those yahoos away from the car,” he said to Sam. But it was too late. She ushered them back, but they’d all heard. He gave the crowd his sternest, coldest look. “Go home. All of you.”
Folks grumbled and shuffled, but neither he nor Sam gave ground, and one by one they pulled each other away. Finally only the tow truck was left. Holt sent Sam back to the office to write up her report while Burkett finished hoisting the convertible and had it towed to the garage.
“What do you want me to do with it?” Burkett asked Holt. “Someone going to claim it?”
“Not yet. Listen, I want a full workup. Brakes, fuel line, transmission, you check everything. And I mean everything. If that car’s been tampered with I want to know. I want you to do it personally, okay? No one else.”
The intensity in Holt’s voice communicated itself to Burkett. He nodded gravely. “Yes, sir.”
“And Andy—you keep it to yourself. You have notes or paperwork, keep them locked up. I hear any of this talked around, I’ll know where it came from.”
“Won’t be from me.”
“Good. When you’re done, you call me. No one else. Got it?”
Burkett nodded, and Holt handed him a card with his contact information on it. Though he tried not to show it, he felt tired and dispirited. The death of two city leaders so close together was daunting. And the black angel lingered like doom over both.
12
As always, Sam Fish did as she was ordered: went to the office to write out a report. She didn’t particularly like writing reports, but following orders was a way of life. Otherwise things got all screwed to hell. Not that they couldn’t get all screwed to hell on their own. She’d seen that for herself in alibabaland. Her mind automatically scolded her. Iraq. She meant Iraq. Of course. No disrespect intended. Sir.
She sighed. Couldn’t seem to shake the army. Maybe she should have stayed in. If her mama hadn’t gotten sick she probably would have. A lifer. Well, things don’t always work out the way you planned. And law enforcement was a good job. Holt a good boss. Not bad to look at, either.
Her face heated, and she immediately dismissed that thought. It was her mother’s fault, always telling her to loosen up. “How you going to get that handsome man to notice you?”
Well, what was wrong with a starched uniform? Sam never did understand that whole wrinkled look. If you couldn’t make yourself neat and presentable, how were you going to make the world around you that way?
She let herself into the office. Frowned at the clutter on Holt’s desk. He might be movie-star cute, but they’d never suit. She’d always be running behind him, straightening up the mess he left. Just looking at his desk, she was tempted. But she resisted. He left her alone, only right she do the same.
She got out the report forms and started filling them out. She’d seen her share of bodies, but thought she was all through with that when she came home. She’d imagined a life of corralling Terry Bishops—drunks and drifters mostly. But here she was, two dead men in less than two weeks. And both with black angels.
She looked up from the form, stared into space. A coincidence or a connection? She wondered what Holt thought. In all the time she’d been his deputy, they’d never had a real case. Was this the first? Goose bumps ran up her arms. A real investigation. Wouldn’t it be sweet to go after the bad guys again?
When Holt finally made it home, Mimsy had dinner waiting. She sat him down at the kitchen table, the same table he’d eaten at his whole life, and put a cold beer and bowl of chili in front of him. How many meals had she made for him? He looked around at the kitchen. Saw the nick in the counter where an illegally thrown football had knocked over a glass bowl. The corner by the phone where messages, store circulars, and coupons had mounded into a junk pile. Home. Family. The natural order of things.
Dennis Runkle’s smashed-up body invaded the scene in his head. Stroke? Another Redbud VIP felled by a heart attack?
It could be the car. Something mechanical, either accidental or…
Or what? Murder didn’t happen in Redbud.
And yet…
Two deaths. Two black angels.
Unnatural. Supernatural?
He pushed the bowl of chili away. Man, oh man, now they had him thinking crazy.
Miranda rushed in, dressed for bed in her favorite nightgown with the lace ruffle a
round the edge. No one could accuse his child of not being a girl. “Daddy!” She hopped on his lap, and his gloom vanished. Hard to be gloomy when Miranda was around.
She put her arms against his neck and squeezed. “You’re late.”
“Sorry, darlin’. I was working.”
“I got a fattoo.”
“A what?”
“A fattoo. Look.” She pulled the neck of her nightgown down to bare her shoulder. Showed him some kind of picture she’d drawn there. “It’s a swan.”
He laughed. “Why in the world—”
“Don’t worry, it’s just marker.” His mother bustled into the kitchen. “It’ll wash right off.” She shot Miranda a long-suffering look.
“I don’t want to wash it. Do I have to, Daddy?”
“That’s what life’s all about, baby girl. Doing stuff you don’t want to do.” He nicked the tip of her nose. “So why a tattoo?”
“Miranda made a new friend today,” Mimsy said.
“Really.” Holt could only think of one person with tattoos. But where on this planet Earth could Miranda have met Edie? “A new kid?”
“Oh, it wasn’t a child,” Mimsy said. “It was… well honestly, I don’t know what she was. A phantom from past. My past. Black hair all teased up and going every which way. Thick black eye makeup. I used to know a dozen girls like that.”
He looked down at Miranda. “So you met my friend, Edie.”
“Friend?” Mimsy said. Her eyes bored right into him. Matchmaking was one of her favorite hobbies.
To put any ideas to rest, he explained, “She’s Red’s new bartender. Where did you meet her?”
“In the library,” Miranda said, oblivious of the undercurrents running between her grandmother and her dad. “Playing with the big machines.” She drew the size in the air with two hands.
Holt looked up to his mother.
“Microfilm,” she explained.
What was Edie doing digging in the library’s microfilm room? She didn’t look like the studious type. In fact, he had trouble imagining her sitting still long enough to get any use out of a library.
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