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Authors: Jessica Thomas

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“It’s enough for a search warrant, at least,”
Vonley
admitted. “How did the actual fatal blow come about?”

“I don’t know. But a good guess would be: Branch was driving up to his sister’s to see that all was well. He either saw something or just stopped on impulse to see if the cabin had been entered. Mickey was here and he wasn’t afraid of Branch, he held him in contempt. He would not have been leery that Branch would hurt him. Branch found opportunity to hit Mickey with the rock to stun him, so he could call the cops to arrest him for trespass. But for whatever reason, he thought he had killed him. Rather than leave him near the cabin, he dragged him up the trail to the
creekside
and placed the rock nearby. He probably went home, thinking Mickey was out of things for good.”

“It’s all possible,” Sonny agreed. “How did you get that black eye, by the way?”

“Later. It’s all Fargo’s fault.”

“The dog ate your homework, eh?
 
Well, go ahead. How did this peripatetic corpse get down the trail?”

Cindy returned to the deck wearing a sweater and bringing one for me. As I put it on, she took up the narrative.

“The sheriff told us some story about people with head wounds suddenly regaining consciousness. They carry on conversations, sometimes walk around and sometimes even get back to their homes. I don’t know if there’s a word of truth in it. He says a Dr. Ellis told him about—”

Ray interrupted. “It’s quite true. And I’ve known Butch Ellis since med school. He could have been chief surgeon at any hospital you could name, but he married a nurse who didn’t like big cities any more than he did. So they opened a small clinic here. He is a fine doctor.”

“I’m glad to hear it,” Cindy nodded. “Because what we think happened depended on that. We think Tommy Blackstone was walking up the trail. Why he was walking in the pouring rain while his mother had a perfectly good SUV we have not guessed. Anyway, at some point he met Mickey stumbling down the trail, and we think he was probably muttering something about getting to his car. Tommy supported him, headed down to the main road where Mickey’s car was found. Once again, cloth fibers were all over the place.” She took one of her rare cigarettes.

I wrapped it up.

“At some point we guess Mickey passed out and fell into the brush, and Tommy carried him the rest of the way to where he was found. He obviously had spotted either the wound or the rock or both, because at some point he brought the rock down, placing it near Mickey. He may have thought Mickey had hit his head and now died…maybe he had.”

“How do you know it was Tommy?” Ken asked. “I hate to see him mixed up in a killing. It will destroy Sara.”

“At the Bromfield Inn earlier, he was all dressed up,” I answered, “and his jacket was dark green with blue glints in it. Then a deputy found one that looks like it and seems to be about Tommy’s size.”

Cindy patted Ken’s arm. “Don’t worry about Tommy. All he did was try to help. If he hurt Mickey in any way it certainly was accidental.”

“Well.”
Vonley
grinned. “You’ve told a story somewhat more believable than
Jeffie’s
, if the evidence holds up. And you have accounted for everyone but yourselves.”

“Oh,” I felt myself blushing…damn, always at the most inauspicious times. “Oh, our night was frightening but uneventful except for my black eye. We left the Bromfield about midnight. It had finally stopped raining but was still wet as hell when we approached the cabin. We were scared to death Mickey was around somewhere. I let Fargo out of the car. He made no fuss about anything. We explored the whole house inside and out…no Mickey.”
 

I said nothing about the pistol. It was so old I doubted it was registered, and we had not been forced to use it, so why mention it?

Cindy grinned at Ken. “We raided your good brandy and I made coffee to go with it. Fargo whined to go out and startled me. I spun around and clocked Alex with a mug.”

“So you say.” Sonny teased.

“I’m sticking to my story,” she fired back. “After ice packs and brandy the three of us piled on to the sofa. We tried to stay awake till daybreak, but kept dozing off until the police sirens woke Alex. We thought it was a traffic accident on the main road until
Jeffie
arrived on the doorstep.”

“And from there it was all downhill,”
Vonley
finished for her.

CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

We were stuck in
Beulaland
until Tuesday late afternoon. I knew it was not a long time, at all, to wrap up a murder case; and God knows everyone involved was moving at top speed. But to those two of us who were prohibited from leaving, it lasted an eon.

Vonley
, who had gotten around to telling us to call him Lewis, decided to make his headquarters the cabin instead of the town jail. The jail was small and crowded, he explained, and any questions asked or information given would be all over town in an hour. And anyway, it didn’t have Cindy’s great coffee. Actually, I felt I was the coffee expert, but I was glad to let her accept this election.

The captain then got
Jeffie
on the phone, chewed him out for not reporting the murder—if it still was one—and told him to get a search warrant for Branch’s quarters at Clay’s house. The search warrant was to be carried out by the two female deputies—specifically looking for a gray blazer, gray pants and Champion sneakers. Two other deputies were to find and arrest Branch for assault and bring him to the cabin. Johnson was also to send Deputy Spitz—and only Spitz—to find Tommy Blackstone and
request
his presence at the cabin. He was also to offer to bring along Tommy’s mother.

He had the speakerphone on in the dining room, and I could hear
Jeffie
sputtering and “but…but…but-
ing
” like a faulty outboard. Lewis simply said, “Stay where I can reach you,” and hung up.

Earlier I had suggested to
Vonley
that Johnson not be included in Tommy’s interview. “Tommy and Sara would in all probability talk to you,” I told him, “and would doubtless feel reassured if Ken were present—or even me, if Ken wants to stay well clear of this mare’s nest. But
Jeffie
has the unreciprocated
hots
for Sara, and neither mother nor son particularly like or trust him.”
 

Lewis nodded thoughtfully. At least he was a good enough cop to listen!

Ray had a joyous telephone reunion with Butch Ellis and took the rental car to go to the clinic and assist with the autopsy.

Ken called Gertrude’s
Delly
and ordered enough food to provide dinner for a regiment, plus sandwiches to have later for snacks. He also made out a list for the Bromfield bar that would have the owner smiling for several days. I offered to pick up the orders, but he insisted on doing it himself, saying that if he were in town and didn’t say hello to Gertrude she would never forgive him. He did, however, sheepishly ask to borrow my car to make his rounds.

While the phone was temporarily free, I called the Bromfield Inn and got them to add up the various checks we had signed.
 
I then wrote out my check for Ken and tucked it in the corner of his desk blotter. I wondered why we still have desk blotters, when we no longer write letters that need to be blotted? Then I wondered why I cared.

Vonley
pried Cindy loose from the coffeemaker and they walked down the trail to get some air and to see where McCurry had last been laid to his uneasy rest.

During their absence, a call came in from
Jeffie
. Sonny took it in the kitchen—not bothering to explain he was Detective Lieutenant Peres
from Massachusetts,
and learned that Branch had been found, very drunk, in a bar over on the state road. Did they want him at the cabin or let him sleep it off? He was really plowed.

“Why not bring him over?” Sonny answered. “
In
vino
veritas
,
right?

“No,”
Jeffie
replied. “They were over on the state road, like I said…in the Hillside Restaurant and Bar…not in the
Vino
, wherever that is.”

Sonny actually took the phone from his ear and stared at it. “Oh—uh—good! Very good. Bye,” he managed to say before he burst into laughter. “Oh, boy,” he said, “I can’t wait to tell this one to Lewis.”

Lewis came in as if on cue and laughed dutifully at Sonny’s anecdote. Then he held up a plastic bag with a glove inside it. The glove had tiny sharp metal points sticking out of the palm and the bottoms of the fingers. “Either of you know what this is for?” he asked us. “Cindy spotted it beside a bush near the bottom of the trail. It looks like a medieval torture device.”

Sonny shook his head. I nodded mine. It was one of those minor little inventions you wondered why you hadn’t made yourself. It would never make you famous, nor particularly rich…but it came in awfully handy when you needed it.

“I don’t know the proper name but you use it scaling fish. You put the fish on a wood table, or board, put on the glove and rest your hand on the fish’s tail. It keeps your hand from slipping on the slippery fish so it doesn’t skid off the table when you scale and gut it. Also prevents cut hands, I imagine. It could be Tommy’s. I saw him using one the other afternoon.”

“Ah! We’ll have to ask him when we find him. Any news on that?”
Vonley
inquired.

“Nothing on Tommy.” Sonny pulled a beer from the refrigerator. “Branch is on his way in, as you know.”

I looked at the glove again. “You know what?” I asked the air. “I’ll bet that’s what made the scratches on the murder weapon! For some reason Tommy must have been wearing the glove when he picked up the river rock.”

Vonley
looked at me seriously. “Whose job are you after? The sheriff’s, mine or your brother’s?” He grinned. “You probably could have your pick at this point.”

“Flattery will get you many things, sir, with a few exceptions. But unfortunately, three cars are pulling into the parking area as we speak.”

Dave Spitz was the first, advising us that Tommy and Sara would be along as soon as they had fed the horses. “I offered to wait,” he added, “but Ms. Blackstone said they preferred to bring their own car. And I had a definite feeling I should not put any pressure on them, so I just thanked them and left.”

“You done good,” Lewis nodded. “They are a prominent family, and we don’t believe Tommy was out to hurt anyone.”

The second car held Ken and a bunch of goodies—both solid and liquid. I went down to help him carry them in.

The third, of course, held Branch and two deputies. As I went down the steps from the deck, one deputy almost lifted Branch out of the backseat. He was not his usual natty self. Unshaven, uncombed and generally grungy and bedraggled, he tried to throw himself into my arms, but the deputy held on to him.

“Oh, Alex,” he cried, “I’m so glad you’re here! You can tell them my heart was innocent. It was all Mickey, every bit! He was going to kill you and Cindy.”

I had been feeling a combination of pity and humor, but his last sentence took me instantly back to the terror I had felt at the cabin door Saturday night. A cold sweat popped on my neck and I began to shiver.

Afraid my voice would break if I spoke, I simply waved and turned toward my car, which Ken was starting to unload. I managed to hang on to the bundles he handed me, and staggered up the steps.

Had Branch truly saved our lives, or was he now simply trying to save his own? But how did a chubby, short, out-of-shape guy like Branch manage to kill a taller, heavily muscled Mickey—with a rock, of all things—if he were not genuinely desperate?
 
A bullet, maybe a golf club, even poison—but a rock? Up close and very personal for a nonviolent man!

Had this ineffectual little fellow indeed become St. George just long enough to slay the dragon? I knew from experience that fright, for yourself or a loved one, could sometimes bring to the surface a courage you didn’t know you had. I found myself betting on Branch and hoping very hard that I was right.

BOOK: Murder Takes to the Hills
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