Read Bones to Pick Online

Authors: Carolyn Haines

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths, #Mystery Fiction, #Murder, #Inheritance and succession, #Detective and mystery stories; American, #Mississippi, #Women private investigators, #Delaney; Sarah Booth (Fictitious Character), #Women Private Investigators - Mississippi, #Murder - Investigation - Mississippi

Bones to Pick (2 page)

BOOK: Bones to Pick
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He had a point, and I decided to try another tack. "Who do you think might want to murder Quentin?"

"Pick up a copy of
King Cotton Bleeds.
I'd say there are at least a hundred people who have motive. A good number of them were at the local bookstore yesterday, so a lot of them were in town."

Humphrey wasn't only handsome; he was smart. "Good leads," I said.

"Just to be sure we're all on the same page," Tinkie said, "where were you last night?"

Humphrey's smile was charming. "Patti Tierce." He reached across my desk and picked up a pen and wrote a number. "Call her. I think she'll remember our evening together quite vividly." He reached into the side pocket of his coat and brought out a checkbook and began to scribble.

He rose and put the check in front of me. It was made out for ten thousand dollars. "I hope that will suffice."

"For the first week," Tinkie said as she saw him to the door. "We'll be in touch."

When he was gone, I arched an eyebrow at her and waited for an explanation. Tinkie was the classiest broad I knew, and she never acted rudely, or seldom ever.

"Humphrey dated Eleanor Hinton."

I remembered Eleanor, though I'd lost touch with her when she moved to
Vicksburg
. She was a pretty girl who grew into a pretty woman, yet she couldn't hang on to a man. Or at least that's how the Cult of Daddy's Girls would diagnose it. She'd never made it to the altar, sort of like me, so she was officially out of the DG Club. "So?"

"He tied her up to the bed in some kind of sexual fantasy game. He put on a Superman costume and was going to leap from a tree into her second-floor bedroom window and
rescue
her."

"That's outrageous, and if I were Eleanor, I wouldn't have repeated all of this."

"It gets worse. He fell and struck his head and was knocked unconscious. One of the neighbors had to call 911." Tinkie walked around her desk, her boots clicking on the parquet floor. "The fire rescue squad had to untie Eleanor." She shook her head. "Eleanor was so humiliated, she had to move out of town."

It wasn't the kind of rumor one was likely to live down, I supposed. "So why blame Humphrey? She obviously signed on for the game."

"He never called her or even apologized. Once the rumors got out, he was too busy fielding all the date offers he got from curious women."

I had to laugh. "Isn't that the way it always works. The guy gets all the glory, and the woman wears the scarlet A."

"He's one of the most eligible bachelors in
Mississippi
, Sarah Booth, yet I can't try to fix any of my friends up with him!" She put her hands on her hips and stared at me. "Although, he might be perfect for you. Both of you are a little off."

Her insult was good-natured, and I took it as such. "It's almost
. We've already had breakfast. Maybe we should head over to the jail to see Allison."

"Then we can go out to The Club for a mimosa," Tinkie said. "I'm sure we'll run into some people who will be more than willing to talk about Quentin's book."

As Tinkie and I drove into Zinnia, I noticed several county prisoners in their green-and-white uniforms, planting poinsettias around the
Bradford
pear trees that marked
Main Street
. Tiny white fairy lights were already woven around the trunks and through the branches. Christmas would soon be upon us, a fact that left me depressed and melancholy.

"I'm going to give Oscar a call," Tinkie said as she whipped out her new cell phone, a flip device with a suede carrying case. It matched her purse and boots. "I'm more than a little curious about the McGee and Tatum family finances."

Tinkie had come to realize that most murders were about money. Money could buy sex and power, among other things.

"Good idea."

She pulled into a parking space along the empty courthouse square. I got out and walked up the courthouse steps and down the hall to the sheriff's department. It was going to be difficult to go in there and not see Coleman at his desk. He'd become such a big part of my life, both professional and personal. Since he'd taken an unpaid leave of absence and left for
Jackson
with Connie, I hadn't heard a word from him and didn't expect to. Whether it was vanity or deluded fantasy, I believed that it had cost Coleman a lot to walk away from a possible future with me and stick with his psycho wife. But I respected his decision. Coleman wasn't a man who gave his word lightly.

My footsteps sounded hollow on the linoleum, and Deputy Walters met me with a carefully blank expression. "I hear you're working for the Tatums," he said.

Word did travel fast in a small town. "Humphrey hired us. Can we see Allison? Tinkie's right behind me."

He unlocked the door to the jail and escorted me between two rows of cells. Only a few weeks before, Sweetie Pie had been incarcerated on trumped-up charges of biting. Coleman and Gordon had been good to her. I could see that Gordon had done what he could to make Allison comfortable. She had four pillows and three blankets, though the temperature was comfortable. She was a pretty young woman with her brother's Nordic coloring and a petite but athletic figure.

"Who are you?" she asked, rising to her feet. She came to the bars and grasped them to get a better look at me.

'This is Ms. Delaney," Gordon said. "She's your private investigator. She was also at the crime scene and saw your footprints clear as day."

I didn't dispute Gordon but merely waited until he was gone. While I was waiting, I took Allison's measure. Her hair was cut in a chin-length bob, and her blue eyes were without make-up. She didn't need any. Her long eyelashes were thick and dark, and her complexion as smooth as a child's, except for three angry-looking scratch marks across her left cheek.

"Why did my brother hire you? He hates me," Allison said.

"Why does he hate you?"

She sighed. "I messed up his life. Quentin fell in love with me, instead of him."

That was something to ponder, but I filed it away and got down to the basics. "Where were you last night, Allison?"

"Quentin and I had a fight." She spoke softly and looked down, blinking her eyes rapidly. Her fingers drifted up to her cheek. When she looked back up at me, tears hung in her lashes. "We'd had a terrible fight. The first book was a tremendous success. Her publisher had already gone back to print another twenty thousand copies, and the book had only been out for a week. Quentin said she was going to write a second book. I didn't want her to."

A good investigator learns there are always multiple ways to bend a motive. Allison had just handed me a gold-plated one. But somehow, I believed her when she said she'd had an argument with Quentin. That was a far cry from a desire to murder her. "So you argued. Where and when?"

"We were having dinner at The Club. Several people overheard us. Quentin got rather loud." She frowned. "That was about eight o'clock last night."

"What happened after that?"

"Quentin stormed out of The Club. By the time I got the car from the valet, she'd disappeared. That was the last time I saw her." She wiped at her cheek. "I really loved her. I hate that we parted with angry words."

"Where did you go?"

"I drove around Zinnia for a while. Then I drove to Tatum's Corner. I was so close to home, I thought I might see Mom and Dad."

This was good news. "Did you see them?"

She shook her head. "No. I didn't stop. There were things in Quentin's book that only I could have told her. I felt like a Judas, so I didn't stop." When she looked into my eyes, there wasn't a hint of self-pity in her gaze. "Quentin and I both believed that people who built their lives on lies should be exposed. That's what her book was about. Somewhere along the way, I guess I lost the taste for unadulterated truth. We hurt a lot of people."

"Which brings me to a logical question. Who would want to hurt Quentin?"

Allison's eyes filled, but she didn't cry. "Who wouldn't? Everyone hated us. I told Quentin that I just wanted to live our lives together. We could have moved to
New York
or
London
. We could have gone somewhere we'd be accepted, but she said we weren't going to run away. We were going to rub their noses in it."

I'd learned one thing from Lawrence Ambrose, a truly famous literary figure who'd been murdered last Christmas: People will do a whole lot to keep their secrets out of print. "Can you give me some specific names?"

"Lots of people were angry about the book. Yesterday afternoon at the book signing,
Umbria
, Quentin's sister, was saying horrible things. I think she bought all the books and burned them."

I'd already planned to visit the McGee family members. "Anyone else?"

"For the past six months someone had been sending Quentin threatening notes."

I gripped the bars and leaned closer. "Who?"

"They were anonymous. I thought they were creepy, but

Quentin just laughed about it. She said we were getting someone's goat, and the book hadn't even come out yet." "Do you have any of those notes? Did she keep them?" "I'm not certain," Allison said. "Quentin might have saved them. You could look through her things at the B&B or maybe at our cottage in
Oxford
."

2

Tinkie was sitting on the courthouse steps when I finished my interview with Allison. To my surprise, my partner was deep in a phone conversation with someone who must have been distraught.

"There's no point in making yourself sick," Tinkie said, and I knew she was talking to a man. In a well-trained Daddy's Girl, there's a tone that both soothes and strokes the ego of a MWP--Male With Potential. There was a pause and Tinkie continued. "Nothing can change it now. Sarah Booth and I will check it out, and I'm sure we'll find everything is okay." She looked up and blew her sun-glitzed bangs off her forehead in a gesture of impatience, but mere wasn't a hint of it in her voice. "I'm certain Sarah Booth doesn't think any such thing. She's always had great admiration for you."

I arched my left eyebrow--the only one I could arch after months of practice--as she hung up the phone.

"I'm sorry I didn't get into the jail to interview Allison, but I knew you had it covered, and I thought it best to talk to Harold out here."

"Harold? What's wrong with him?" Tinkie was only half right. When Harold had tried to buy my affections with a four-carat diamond, I hadn't felt very warmly toward him, but he'd proved himself a good friend in the last eight months.

"He's worried."

"Is it about that book?"

"Partly, but there's something else. He's in a real dither." She patted the step, and I took a seat beside her on the cold cement slab. The courthouse square was lined with white oaks, their limbs all bare. In one tree a murder of crows hunkered down against the wind. It was a bleak and dismal day.

"What's wrong with Harold?" The faintest tingle in my thumb let me know that my appendage hadn't totally forgotten Harold and his attentions. I reminded myself that Harold Erkwell was the president of the Bank of Zinnia, the bank Tinkie's father owned and where her husband was chairman of the board of directors. I'd seen Harold in a fit of passion but never in a dither.

"He had a run-in with Quentin McGee last night. Gordon has already been out to question him."

"It's Allison who's locked up. Why is Harold worried?"

"He doesn't believe Allison killed Quentin, and once she's released, he thinks he may be the prime suspect."

"Why in the world would he think that?"

"Because he threatened to kill Quentin in front of about eight people at The Club."

My mouth made a silent little O. "That doesn't sound
like
Harold."

"He'd been drinking. I gather he just broke up with Rachel Gaudel and was upset. Then that ass
Marcus Kline started teasing him about the book and some dirt on the Erkwell family. About that time, Quentin bumped into him and spilled her drink all over him. That was the last straw."

Harold normally was the most levelheaded person I'd ever met. It was hard to visualize him making rash death threats. "Did Harold say what time this happened?"

"After nine and before ten, but he couldn't be more exact. He knows that because Rachel left at nine, and Harold said he went home around ten."

That time frame put Harold talking to Quentin
after
Allison had left The Club. "Did Oscar have any information on the financial scene?" My butt was freezing off, so I stood and offered Tinkie my hand. She grasped it and rose.

"He just said we'd better cash that check first thing in the morning and see if it clears."

"Damn." I turned to face her. "I thought the Tatums were the wealthiest family in
Crystal
County
."

"That was before 2000. A lot has changed in this country.

BOOK: Bones to Pick
13.33Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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