''Really?'' I said. ''That didn't come through in the report.''
''Because I had nothing to support my conclusion. I'd questioned hundreds of kids by that point in my career and they always gave something away, but not her.'' She shook her head. ''Not her. I heard later some shrink said she had amnesia. Bullshit, if you ask me.''
''I understand no local hospital had treated her heart condition,'' I said.
''True. I went to every Houston-area hospital myself, carried her picture with me. Questioned doctors and nurses. That child became my mission. No one had reported her missing. No one cared that she'd be going into the system. Made me sick, to be honest.''
''Did you ever get any leads?'' I asked, realizing I was glad I came here. Shauna was right about face-to-face interviews. She cared about JoLynn. No police report or foster-care file could have conveyed this woman's concern.
''Leads?'' Shauna said. ''Well, her clothes and shoes were from Kmart, could have been bought anywhere. We sent her picture and description to every major lawenforcement agency including the FBI, and I personally checked databases for more than a year after we found her. Nothing came up. She wasn't wanted. She'd been . . . discarded. That makes me angry to this day.''
''And this little girl helped erase her own past by keeping quiet,'' I said. ''Why? Was she afraid?''
''Probably. It was so frustrating. Even the necklace was a dead end,'' Shauna said. ''I had this gut feeling it would lead me somewhere, but I never caught a break.''
''The necklace?'' I said.
''I'm not sure I even mentioned it in my report. I was afraid a superior might accuse me of wasting time on an investigation that was going nowhere. She was already safe in foster care. But I did some digging around on my own, knowing how important the necklace seemed to the girl. The night I picked her up at the bus station? She wouldn't let go, kept twirling her finger in the chain. Cheap chain, but attached was a beautiful silver piece— a tiny owl sitting on an open book. I'd never seen anything like that owl. I sent the picture with her wearing it all over the place.''
''Where did you send it?'' I asked.
''Faxed it with the information I sent to the FBI, sent a copy to all the missing-children organizations. We're talking eleven years back, so we weren't quite as connected to the Internet then. Especially patrol officers like me.''
''What about local jewelers?'' I asked.
''I didn't have the time or authorization to pursue something like that, but every time I went to the mall, or to a Sam's Club or even Target, I checked the jewelry cases. I haven't looked in several years, though. I don't get to those places much anymore.''
Oliver whined, rolled his head so Shauna could stroke under his chin.
''This picture of the necklace? I didn't see it in her file.''
Shauna smiled. ''Not the necklace alone. Her wearing the necklace. If you have any of her foster-care pictures, you've seen it. I enlarged several photos and circled the necklace when I sent off info about her.''
A clue had been right there all the time and I hadn't even noticed. ''Would you like to see a picture of the girl you worked so hard for? She's twenty now, uses the name JoLynn.'' I reached into my bag for that photo Roberta Messing placed on a missing-persons Web site a year ago.
Shauna's dark eyes brightened and Oliver's head popped up. ''Are you kidding? I'd love to see what she looks like.''
I brought her the picture.
She stared for several seconds and her eyes filled. ''She's a beauty, isn't she?'' Then Shauna met my gaze. ''You never said why you're asking about her after all this time. Two years ago, the cop in me would have asked that question right up front. But now? I suppose I'm simply grateful someone cares.''
''A man tried to kill her . . . and now he's been murdered. And don't worry—JoLynn has a solid alibi, so she didn't retaliate. But both the police chief I'm working with and I believe the answers to this case—why that man wanted her dead and why he in turn was killed— may lie in JoLynn's past, the same past she refused to share with you.''
''Oh my God. After all these years, she's in danger again? Because I got the sense her fear was more com plicated than being lost.'' Shauna rested back against the cushions. ''I should have tried harder. I should have—''
''Choices, remember?'' I said. ''Even children have the right to make them. She shut you out.''
Oliver was on alert now, sitting on the sofa with his total focus on Shauna. God, what a wonderful dog.
She looked up at me, her eyes brilliant with emotion. ''Promise you'll finish this job, Abby? The one that I couldn't?''
''I give you my word. And you and Oliver will get a full report.''
Oliver barked when I said his name, and before I left with a Ziploc full of cookies, I hugged Shauna and shook his paw.
27
I returned home after dark to a house that smelled like teriyaki. Jeff, Doris, Cooper, Kate and even Aunt Caroline were sitting around the kitchen table. If Cooper Boyd didn't have my aunt's complete attention, I might have heard what a terrible niece I was, how I never gave her a first thought, much less a second. After all, I'd failed to call and check up on her.
But Aunt Caroline was all smiles, as flirty as any seventy-five-year-old woman can be—in other words, a seventy-five-year-old in complete denial. Did she think she had a chance in hell with Cooper?
A new jigsaw puzzle was laid out on the table and Jeff was sitting close to Doris to help her look for pieces to fit into the barnyard scene. Doris fell in love with cows after coming to Texas, so I was guessing that's why she chose this particular puzzle.
Cooper smiled at me sheepishly—sheep, cows . . . it was a regular farm in here—and I got the feeling he was guilty about not accompanying me to visit Shauna.
''Did Officer Anthony help?'' he asked.
''Maybe.'' I hung my bag on its hook by the utility room door. ''She gave me a small lead, as well as some insight into JoLynn. Don't know if I can get any further than she did with the lead—which went nowhere for Shauna.''
''Give Cooper a chance to figure it out,'' Aunt Caroline said. ''He's former FBI. They know how to solve everything.''
Jeff looked at Aunt Caroline with a knowing smile and said, ''You are so right, Caroline.''
His sarcasm was lost on her because she said, ''You are most certainly correct, Jeffrey.''
''Jeffy knows how to solve, too,'' Doris said. ''He says that's his job. But I don't know what solve means. Can we look on the Internet, Abby?''
Aunt Caroline actually had a momentary lapse in narcissism and said, ''I never meant to imply that Jeffrey is not a very excellent police officer.''
Doris certainly gets right to it, I thought.
Jeff grinned. ''Don't worry about it, Caroline.''
''Did you eat, Abby?'' Kate, true to her family role, deflected attention from another awkward moment courtesy of Aunt Caroline.
''I ate a few cookies.'' I held up the now half-empty bag of shortbread.
I don't know who eyed that bag more hungrily, Doris or Aunt Caroline. Kate noticed, because she took the bag from me and handed it to Doris. ''You ate all your stir-fry, so here's dessert.''
Aunt Caroline watched as Doris opened the bag and dug in. She wanted those cookies, but knew she couldn't steal one with Kate watching. Cookies and diabetes don't exactly go together and Aunt Caroline needed to learn that lesson.
''Did you say stir-fry?'' I was hungry, despite the recent high intake of butter and sugar.
Kate stood and so did Cooper. He said, ''Kate and I cooked—she said you'd be fine with me bumbling around in your kitchen. We saved some for you.''
''Vegetarian?'' I said warily. Tofu is not my idea of a happy protein.
''We made a batch with chicken and one without,'' Kate said.
''While we heat it up, tell us about this lead,'' Cooper said.
I glanced at Jeff and asked if he wanted to be in on this conversation.
''We can hear what you're saying from here,'' he sa
id. ''Doris might beat me to the punch and finish this puzzle.''
''Is there punch?'' Doris said. ''With ginger ale and orange juice?''
''Not that kind of punch,'' Jeff said. He began to explain.
Meanwhile, Aunt Caroline sat on one of the barstools at the counter separating the kitchen prep area from the dining area. Seems she was keeping as close to Cooper as possible. ''What's this clue?''
I said, ''JoLynn had a piece of jewelry with her the night Shauna Anthony picked her up from the bus station. I guess it was pretty unusual.''
''Unusual how?'' Cooper held out a plate and Kate spooned on a mound of chicken teriyaki and brown rice. She knows I'm a white-food fan, but I was famished and not about to complain.
''We'll find out after I eat,'' I said. ''We've had a photo of this necklace since I got the foster-care file.''
The teriyaki turned out to be better than any takeout and I silently credited this to Cooper's touch. He probably added enough of another white food on Kate's banned list—salt.
After I put my plate in the dishwasher, I went to my office and pulled up JoLynn's foster-care photo file. I enlarged a few shots of the necklace that appeared around her neck in not one but every single picture.
Some of the photos couldn't be sharpened, but I finally ended up with a pretty decent close-up of the owl jewelry. Shauna never mentioned the owl eyes were tiny jewels and that rhinestones outlined the pages of the open book the owl perched on.
When I emerged from my office, Doris's attention was now on a DVD playing—The Little Mermaid. Everyone else was still in the kitchen and Aunt Caroline's small cream leather bag was slung on her arm. She was getting ready to leave. I hoped this picture didn't renew her interest in the case and make her hang around. I was tired and might say something I'd regret should she stick her nose in my business.
''Here's what Shauna described.'' I handed the picture to Cooper.
Aunt Caroline set her bag on a barstool and peered around his shoulder. Kate flanked him on the other side.
''Was she wearing that necklace when she was pulled from the wreck?'' I asked Cooper.
''No way. I went through all the belongings the paramedics bagged, hoping to ID her. I would have remembered this,'' he said.
Cooper handed the photo to Jeff. As he looked at it, Jeff said, ''Why didn't she have any ID, Coop? Seems strange to take off without anything. You found her license later at the ranch, right?''
''Yeah . . . in her purse,'' he said. ''We found out this afternoon that Dugan called her the night of the crash, scared her. She drove off in a panic and I'm guessing that's exactly what he wanted.''
''I don't doubt it for a minute,'' I said.
''The phone company finally sent me the records this afternoon and I have a stack to go through. Since we now know he called, we can see if the phone number on the incoming call right before the crash appears on the records earlier. JoLynn claims she never talked to him before that night, but maybe someone else in the family did.''
''The family members all have their own phones, Cooper,'' I said.
''True, but guess who pays the bills? Elliott Richter. I've got everyone's records.''
Just then Aunt Caroline tapped the printout of the necklace. ''I can tell you what this necklace means to me.''
''Yes, Aunt Caroline?'' I said politely. But I was wondering why she always had to be the center of attention.
''This is probably custom-made. Very intricate, very detailed. If your JoLynn was some street urchin, where did she get something like this?''
We were all stone silent for a second. If anyone knew about jewelry, it was Aunt Caroline. I finally said those words she always loved to hear. ''Good question.''
''I know,'' she said with a smug smile. She then held out her right hand to show off her ruby and diamond ring. ''This was designed for me. In fact most of my important pieces are custom-made. I once had a good friend who showed me how jewelry like this is created. Believe me, this precious little owl didn't come from any store.''
''You are a fountain of knowledge,'' Cooper said.
Don't encourage her, I wanted to say. But she was off and running and she did hold everyone's attention. She said, ''Since these owl eyes have to be canary diamonds— I can tell by the color—I'm certain the other stones are diamonds as well. Too bad they're small because they'd sparkle so much more with added facets.''
Aunt Caroline went on, but finally tired after a fifteenminute lecture on handcrafted jewelry. I could see the fatigue in her eyes.
Once again she was ready to leave, but Kate stopped her, saying, ''Please check your blood sugar first? For Abby and me? We don't want you driving into any trees.''
But she complied only after Cooper nodded and said, ''Kate, that's a great idea.''
Kate, Cooper and I arrived at the hospital on Sunday morning around noon. Last night we'd all agreed JoLynn needed to come clean abut her past. It seemed like the only way to protect her while we continued to follow leads like the necklace and the phone records.
We discovered most of the Richter family at Ben Taub. Matthew and Piper were hanging around near the elevators and offered snooty hellos when we passed them. Adele and Leopold were waiting outside JoLynn's room along with strongman Henry. Their greetings were warmer, but not by much. We found Ian and Richter visiting JoLynn and they actually seemed happy to see us. No Scott or Simone. There wouldn't have been room for them anyway. I was betting Ben Taub wanted this family out of here as much as Elliott Richter wanted JoLynn transferred out. Probably a very demanding clan.
The picture of the necklace was folded in my bag and I'd also brought along the sketch artist's work as well as Simone's photo of the fake security guard, which Adele had sent to my computer. JoLynn's bed was rolled up to a sitting position and though she looked tired, her features weren't drawn with pain like yesterday. She wore a cotton nightgown with tiny peach flowers and a ribbon woven through the neckline. My guess was this came from Adele.
Cooper said, ''Would you mind if we talked with Jo Lynn for a few minutes? It's pretty crowded with more than three visitors.''
Ian was leaning against the window, but he straightened and said, ''Certainly, Officer'' in his pleasant British accent.
Richter seemed more reluctant to leave, but Ian managed to steer him into the hall. Cooper closed the door after them.
Kate gestured to the lone chair by JoLynn's bed and said, ''Abby. Your turn to sit today.''
JoLynn smiled and said, ''Cramped, isn't it?''
''Can't stir us with a stick.'' I sat and looked at Cooper, who stood beside Kate at the end of the bed.
I started off, saying, ''Has your grandfather told you that he wants to find out about your past?''
JoLynn's eyes gave her away. She was suddenly on high alert. ''Not really. But he knows I lied. I told him all about being in foster care and I mentioned that I got in trouble a few times, but—''
''I'm not talking about foster care,'' I said quietly. ''I'm talking about before foster care.''
She licked her lips. ''I don't understand.''
''We need to know about your early childhood, before someone left you in a bus station one rainy night. You were nine. You knew who left you there, but you never told anyone. Now's the time, JoLynn.''
Kate slowly made her way around to the other side of the bed and picked up JoLynn's hand, held it tightly. ''This is important. A man died Friday. You nearly died.''
She stared straight ahead, her face vacant, her voice toneless when she said, ''I don't remember.''
This was the face Shauna Anthony probably saw when she'd questioned JoLynn. And I was certain she'd repeated those three words many times from age nine until today.
I reached into my bag and took out the picture of the necklace and held it up in front of her so she couldn't avoid looking at it. Working hard to be as patient as Kate managed to be, I said, ''Do you remember this?''
I saw her eyes widen a little; then the blank stare returned. ''Never
saw it before.''
Now she was outright lying. ''Funny thing, because you wore this necklace in every picture they took of you while you were in the CPS system. You had it with you the night Officer Shauna Anthony picked you up, the night you were soggy and scared and alone in the bus station.''
''Okay, it was mine. So what?'' JoLynn's less-thansweet side was coming out. But there was more than anger. The fear in her eyes was back.
''We want to help you,'' I said. ''Your grandfather wants to protect you. We can't do that unless we know the truth.''
Pushing Up Bluebonnets: A Yellow Rose Mystery Page 25