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Dead Secret dffi-3

Page 37

by Beverly Connor


  Things were working toward normal, but nothing felt right. Someone in the Taggart family had caused all this mess, and she wanted them brought to justice. She’d been over and over the evidence looking for something, anything that would definitively point to them.

  “Boss?” Jin was at the door holding a piece of paper, waving it at her.

  Diane put her feet on the floor and the ice pack down on her desk. “What have you got?”

  Jin collapsed in a chair in front of her desk. “I like this office. I think you need to spiff up your bone office some more.”

  “Did you come to recommend a decorator?”

  Jin grinned and brushed his hair back from his eyes. “No. Korey and I were talking about the diaries, and Korey wondered why Caver Doe-I can’t get used to calling him Dale Wayne Russell-anyway, Korey was wondering why he didn’t write down what happened, since he didn’t die right away-and had nothing to do but sit in that cave and wait. He at least had time to eat a couple of Moon Pies.”

  “And you said?” prompted Diane.

  “That he didn’t have anything to write on. Then I remembered that he had a pencil in his pocket, and I thought about it, and there it was. . the money. What if he wrote on the money? Remember the roll of bills we found in his shirt pocket?”

  Diane nodded.

  “I didn’t do anything with them.” He shrugged. “It was money covered in blood and cadaver juice. I didn’t think. But I went back and did the ESDA thing. Did you know that Korey has an electrostatic detection apparatus too?”

  “Yes, Jin, I did.”

  “We have lots of redundancies,” said Jin.

  “No, we don’t. The museum and the crime scene unit are separate.”

  “Oh, yeah, I forget sometimes.”

  “What did you find on the bills?”

  “He wrote down what happened. Sort of.”

  Diane leaned forward and took the paper from Jin. The photograph of the electrostatic image was difficult to read, but she could make out words. The handwriting grew progressively worse-probably as he had grown sicker.

  “I kind of translated it on the back,” said Jin.

  Diane turned it over and read.

  Fell. Broke lots of bones. Hurt. Emmett gone for help. Water gone. Food gone. Emmett should be back. Hurt. Rosemary. I love you, Rosemary. Emmett, where are you? Accident? Emmett not coming back. I’m dead. Whoever tell Rosemary I love her. Dale.

  “That’s a sad story,” said Diane. “It’s signed ‘Dale.’ We were right; it’s Dale Wayne Russell.”

  “Poor fellow. Waiting for someone named Emmett to come back for him. And in love with Rosemary. Isn’t this like a dying declaration?” said Jin.

  “Yes, it is. Garnett’s been trying to find out something about the identity of Dale Wayne Russell. I haven’t talked with him about it since yesterday. He’s having a hard time overcoming his political survivalist tendencies. This might light a fire under him.”

  Diane was about to pick up the phone when it rang.

  “Diane Fallon.”

  “Dr. Fallon, this is Emmett Taggart. We met at Helen Egan’s funeral.”

  “Yes, Mr. Taggart, I know who you are.”

  Jin’s eyes grew wide. Diane pointed to the phone in Andie’s office, and Jin nodded and went in to pick up.

  She watched Jin. When he was ready to pick up she said, “Hold on just a moment, please, Mr. Taggart. Let me go to my other phone.”

  She motioned to Jin and he picked up the receiver to listen. There was the momentary sound of another phone on the line until Jin pressed the mute button.

  “What can I do for you, Mr. Taggart?” she said.

  “It’s what I can do for you. I’ve been thinking about that mummy exhibit of yours and how much I like the museum. I was considering making a sizable donation.” Emmett Taggart’s voice reflected a man accustomed to being in control, to having his wishes fulfilled, to having people ingratiate themselves to him.

  “Kendel Williams takes care of donations,” said Diane in an attempt to disarm him. “She’s not in her office at the moment. I’ve had to clear out the museum because of some unfortunate events. Our lives are very much disrupted.”

  There was a pause during which Diane imagined Taggart enjoying the contribution he had made to that disruption. She looked at Jin and held up her legal pad on which she had written the word Emmett in big letters for Jin to see. Jin’s face registered astonishment.

  The tone of Emmett Taggart’s voice now reflected a noticeably more insistent quality but with a varnish of civility. “I understand what you are saying, but for the kind of donation I’m thinking about, I’d rather speak to the director.”

  “And you would want what in return for this donation? For large donors, we usually name a room after them.”

  Distaste was now evident in his voice as he was actually having to ask for something, to justify himself. “I wasn’t thinking of a room. I was thinking of consideration for all the years of good I have done, all the charities I have given to, all the people I have helped.”

  “You want acknowledgment?” Diane was almost enjoying this. Rubbing his face in his own arrogance and his guilt. And it had its desired effect. He came back at her on the offensive, with less caution.

  “Let’s stop this. You know exactly what I want, and I have enough money to pay for it. You may think I did something in the past that I should be punished for, but anything I might have done has been balanced several times over by all the good I’ve done.”

  But Diane was just warming to the challenge. “I’ve just spoken to the family of Jewel Southwell. They have been devastated by her disappearance sixty-three years ago, and are still feeling the effects today.”

  “Jewel.” He said the name as if he had just now remembered. Perhaps he had forgotten her name. “She was a waitress with an illegitimate child.”

  “No, the child was not illegitimate. Jewel’s husband worked out of town.”

  “You wouldn’t have known she was married by the way she acted.”

  “She loved life, and her family loved her. I also have a last letter from Dale Wayne Russell. Let me read it to you.” Diane read the poignant last words of Caver Doe. “He expected you to come back for him.”

  There was a long, drawn-out silence, but Diane could still hear the old man breathing. When he spoke again, he was not contrite, but he was calmer and sounded sincere, almost pleading.

  “Dale was hurt too bad. My cousin was a careless boy. He was going to die anyway. You have to understand. I loved Rosemary too.”

  “He was your cousin?”

  “I thought you knew that. Yes, he was my cousin. Don’t presume to judge me until you know everything.” His calm had not lasted long, and was replaced by a return of his arrogance and self-justification.

  “I know we have three recent murders,” said Diane.

  “Blackmailers!” he spit. “Blackmailers!”

  “Nothing they did justifies your taking the lives of Jake Stanley, and Flora and Donnie Martin,” said Diane, her own temper now raised. “My mother was thrown in a black hole of a prison as a result of your criminal activities. There is nothing you can do to undo her suffering or to repair my ruined relationship with my family. No amount of money will change any of the evil you have done. You’ve hurt me and people I love and you want my goodwill?”

  “About your mother, that wasn’t-”

  The blast that exploded through the phone was so loud it hurt Diane’s ear.

  “Mr. Taggart? Are you there? Mr. Taggart?” Diane heard the phone click.

  Chapter 46

  Jin rushed into her office as Diane was calling 911.

  “That was a gunshot!” he shouted.

  “Yes, it was. . ”

  “Nine-one-one. What is the nature of your emergency?” the calm, businesslike voice of the dispatch operator said.

  Diane identified herself and gave her phone number and a description of what had just happened. In talking to 911
, she realized that all she knew for certain was that she had been called by a man who claimed to be Emmett Taggart, and that the earsplitting sound she’d heard sounded like a gunshot. She couldn’t even give the caller’s number because her caller ID had been blocked.

  “Can you be reached at this number?” the dispatcher asked.

  “Yes,” replied Diane.

  “Stay on the line, please.”

  Diane and Jin looked at each other, not knowing exactly what to think or do. The operator came back on.

  “An officer has been dispatched to the scene. He may be back in touch with you later.”

  “Thank you,” said Diane.

  When she put the phone down she was still stunned. “What do you reckon?” said Jin.

  “I don’t know.”

  Neither moved for several moments, as if waiting for something. So much had just happened. Emmett Taggart had confirmed his complicity in the deaths of how many people? Five? What was he saying about her mother?

  Diane was brought out of her thoughts by the throbbing of her aching jaw. She picked up the ice pack and held it to her face.

  Jin stood up and headed toward his lab area. “I’ll fax Caver Doe’s-I mean Dale Wayne Russell’s-letter to Garnett.”

  Diane nodded. Her mind went back to worrying about what effect the coming publicity surrounding two violent deaths inside the crime lab would have on the museum. She relived in her mind the events and wondered what she could have done differently.

  She tried to get some work done, but gave up. She started to go see how the cleanup was coming when the phone rang. It was Garnett.

  “Emmett Taggart has been shot. We have his wife, Rosemary, in custody.”

  “I thought he lived in Atlanta. How did the Rosewood police get involved?”

  “He and his wife are staying with their grandson, Robert Lamont, who has a farm that lies inside the Rosewood city limits. Mrs. Taggart’s not saying anything. She, uh, only wants to talk to you.”

  “Me? I don’t even know the woman. I met her only briefly at Helen Egan’s funeral.”

  “I don’t know why, but that’s what she says.”

  “You need us to work the crime scene?” asked Diane.

  “Get David and Neva to do the work-you and Jin are witnesses.”

  “Should I be talking to Mrs. Taggart?”

  “She says she won’t talk to anyone else.”

  “Okay. Get a search warrant for the entire premises-outbuildings and grounds. Jin can do the outside search.”

  “Very well. What are you thinking?”

  “I’m just being thorough.”

  “How’s your jaw?”

  “Hurts like hell. Looks worse.”

  Before she left her office Diane checked her appearance in the mirror. Her face was now swollen and badly discolored. She could already hear what Frank was going to say when he saw this. He had been threatening to quit work just to be able to watch after her well-being. She was beginning to think she did need a keeper.

  Diane remembered Robert Lamont when she saw him. He was the auburn-haired man who was at the funeral with his running-for-senator uncle, Steve Taggart, and his grandparents, Rosemary and Emmett Taggart. Lamont’s farm was larger than Diane had expected. It reminded her of Tara in Gone with the Wind-the run-down Tara, not Tara in her prime. Not that Lamont’s place was dilapidated. It was more shabby chic. The Greek Revival two-story columned house needed fresh paint, as did all the outbuildings. However, the yard was freshly mowed, the fields looked well-kept, and the black-and-white cows looked contented.

  When their crime van pulled to a stop in the circular driveway, Garnett was already there. He informed them that the search warrant covered only the room in which Emmett had been shot.

  “Damn,” said Diane. “Why?”

  “The victim’s son, Steven Taggart, already had lawyers in the judge’s chambers when I went to get the warrant. They were very persuasive.”

  “I think someone here helped Emmett Taggart orchestrate everything,” said Diane. “He couldn’t have done it by himself. I doubt he would have known how to find people like Valentine and MacRae.”

  “That may be true. But the only crime scene we are working is the one in the study. That’s all we can do. No search of the rest of the house, no search of the grounds or outbuildings.” Garnett shook his head in disapproval.

  “Jin, you wait in the van,” said Diane. “They pulled a fast one on us.”

  He nodded. “Sure. We brought a computer. I’ll just entertain myself.”

  “David and Neva, you two work the study,” Diane told them.

  Emmett Taggart had not died but was in critical condition and had been removed from the scene by the time Diane entered the study where he had been shot. The room had a leather, wood and tobacco-stand ambience that said it was for men only.

  Taggart had been sitting behind a mahogany desk when he was shot. There wasn’t much blood, just spots on the desk and chair and some high-velocity spatter almost invisible to the naked eye on the rug and desk.

  Garnett ushered Diane into the parlor, where Mrs. Taggart was sitting on a love seat. She looked much the same as she had at the funeral, but wore a mauve pantsuit and a light pink silk scarf tucked around her throat, rather than mourning black. She was fidgeting with a piece of old yellowed lace, gathering it up with her fingers.

  When Diane sat down across from her, she saw that the material in Mrs. Taggart’s hand was a lace collar. It was a moment before Diane realized that it was the same lace collar worn by the very young Mrs. Taggart in the snapshot found with Caver Doe.

  Garnett seemed completely clueless as to the purpose of this meeting, but Diane thought she understood.

  “Thank you for coming.” Mrs. Taggart’s voice was almost cordial.

  Diane thought that odd. But she didn’t respond to her first impulse and say, That’s all right; I had to do the crime scene anyway. The woman was not as cold as she had been at the funeral. Diane dug deeper into herself to come up with more compassion. Sometimes sympathy fled her in the wake of everything she had to deal with.

  “Why did you want to see me?” asked Diane.

  “I want you to tell me what happened.”

  “I don’t know for sure. . ”

  “All right, this stops right here,” a man in a dark, expensive-looking suit said as he walked into the room. The lawyer had arrived. He was followed by Robert Lamont. It was then that Diane noticed Lamont scratching, and the bandages on his arms. “Mrs. Taggart, you don’t have to say another word.”

  “Get out,” said Rosemary Taggart, her mouth set and her eyes downcast.

  “You heard the lady,” said the lawyer.

  “I was talking to you, you sycophant.” She glared at him. “You aren’t my lawyer and I don’t want you here.”

  The lawyer looked shocked, then sympathetic. “You don’t understand. I’m here to help.”

  “You are here to do no such thing. And stop treating me like I’m senile. I have a lawyer and she’s on her way. Until she gets here, I’m talking privately to this woman. Now get out. I know enough about the law to know that when I say you aren’t my lawyer, you have to get out.”

  “Grandma,” said Robert, “he only wants to make sure you are okay and don’t say anything to incriminate yourself. ”

  “Just last week I had a thorough annual physical that included mental acuity. I am certifiably fit in mind and body. If you don’t leave, then I will leave with this woman so I can talk in private. You don’t know what business I have with her, so don’t presume that you are competent to take care of my needs.”

  “I think we need to do as she says,” said Garnett. He seemed to take a great deal of pleasure in ushering the two men out of the room.

  Rosemary Taggart smiled grimly. “I always include a mental checkup when I get a physical, for just such an occasion. I don’t trust my family-God help me.”

  She bowed her head for a moment. Diane didn’t know if she w
as praying, falling asleep, or just organizing her thoughts. She brought her head up sharply.

  “Tell me about Dale. Tell me what you think happened to him. You’ve seen him, touched his bones.”

  “Mrs. Taggart. .”

  “Call me Rosemary. I’m never going by the name Taggart again.”

  “Okay, Rosemary. It’s a guess, but it is based on what we have discovered. Dale Wayne Russell and Emmett Taggart were caving together. Through a mishap-I believe it was an accident, but I don’t know for sure-the railroad spike that anchored his rope pulled out of the rocks. Dale fell into a cavern from a considerable height and broke several bones.” Diane hesitated.

  “Don’t leave anything out on my account, please.”

  “One break, his shinbone, was a compound fracture. It broke through the skin and caused bleeding and later became infected. He also broke his ankle and wrist and had some internal injuries. We know that because of. . We know that he did.”

  Rosemary put a hand to her face and whimpered. “Please don’t stop. I need to hear this.”

  “There was no way for Dale to climb out, and no way for Emmett to carry him out without help. Emmett got him situated and left him with water and a couple of Moon Pies.”

  Rosemary smiled. “Dale loved his Moon Pies.”

  “It is my belief that sometime while making preparations to go for help, Emmett hatched a plan to abandon Dale. He took Dale’s wallet so Dale wouldn’t be identified if anyone found him. But he and Dale had stopped in that morning at Ray’s Diner on their way to the cave. Jewel Southwell, a waitress at Ray’s Diner, was the only person who could tie them together that day. In order for Emmett’s plan to work, he had to get rid of Jewel Southwell.”

  “Jewel was the woman Emmett said Dale ran off with. At first I didn’t believe it. I didn’t think Dale would do it, and I didn’t think she would leave her child. But as more and more people believed it, I just fell in with them.”

 

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