Rob Cornell - Ridley Brone 01 - Last Call (20 page)

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Authors: Rob Cornell

Tags: #Mystery: Thriller - P.I. - Humor - Karaoke Bar - Michigan

BOOK: Rob Cornell - Ridley Brone 01 - Last Call
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“I need to know more about Dixie,” I said. “Did Autumn get into some trouble with her?”

His hand went to his necklace and tugged at it. “Why do you need to know any of this? I’m tired of the questions. Take me to Autumn.”

“What happened? You know something.”

He turned away.

I was so wrapped up in my questions, I hadn’t noticed the music change. Janis Joplin had been replaced by David Bowie.

Lincoln went to the stereo and turned it off, the sudden silence almost as hard on the ears as the loud music.

“You obviously already know something.”

“I talked to Dixie.” I didn’t bother explaining the sex change. “She told me something about her and Autumn getting into some trouble. I wasn’t sure how much of her story I should believe.”

“I only know what Autumn told me,” he said. “If she hadn’t told me, I wouldn’t have ever found out.”

“What did she tell you?”

“Autumn and I went through a bad patch. We fought, shouted. I was scared, because we’d always been so close. I knew Dixie wasn’t the best person for Autumn to spend time with, but I understood where Dixie came from. You couldn’t tell from my current surroundings, but I grew up dirt poor.”

He began to pace.

“I scrapped. My mother was a hooker. My dad hated my guts. But I got out of that. I met with a family that took me in as their own. They had money. And they showed me how to make it.”

I couldn’t keep my curiosity at bay. “How did you make it?”

He shrugged, toying with the dials on his stereo.

“All sorts of ways. Investments. Smooth talking. Mostly, just hard work. Hard work is underrated these days. It’s a cycle now. Lazy mother’s don’t teach their daughters how to work. They teach them how to be whores.”

I blinked a few times, not sure where this conversation had veered. I tried to get it back on track. “You were talking about Dixie.”

“She was a beautiful young girl.” He sighed. “But she led my daughter down the wrong path. When it all came to a head, Autumn told me everything, we reconciled, and things went back to normal.”

“How did it come to a head?”

He turned from his stereo and looked at me.

“I’m sure Dixie told you the truth. She told you about the guns, the family, how Autumn couldn’t go through with the robbery and left. I imagine she was quite angry with her. And that’s why you think she may have killed Doug, because Autumn was responsible for her going to prison.”

So it was all true. Autumn had lied straight to my face. I massaged my temples, feeling a headache coming on, as if my aching jaw and my throbbing bruises weren’t enough.

“Is that all?” Lincoln asked.

“It’s enough.”

He approached me, gripped my bicep. “Then take me to my daughter.”

I nodded. I would take him to her all right. Then he could take her the hell out of my life.

Chapter 17

We took separate cars, so for the second time in a week I had a black Lexus on my tail. I took the long way, making sure I didn’t have a third, uninvited, tail. I spent most of the drive listening to Ani DiFranco on the stereo with the windows down, the wind blowing in my face. The adrenaline that had pushed me this far finally tanked out. The lines on the road blurred together in my vision. I kept blinking to keep my focus. Even with the windows down, I cranked up the air conditioning to keep me alert.

When we finally arrived at the cabin, I shut down along with my engine, dozing the second I had the key out of the ignition.

“Brone!”

I jerked awake.

Lincoln stood by my car, waiting. My joints felt rusted. It took me a second to force my limbs to move and get me out of the car. Once I stood, I staggered, and Lincoln grabbed my arm to support me.

“What’s wrong with you?”

Images of the
High Note
burning flashed before my eyes.

“Long day,” I said. I gestured him toward the cabin.

Autumn must have heard us pull up. She stood on the porch, the one good light illuminating half her face. She squinted out at us as if trying to see through the dark.

“Daddy?”

“It’s me.”

He strode toward her. She leapt off the porch and ran into his arms. They embraced, Lincoln pulling her off her feet, Autumn kicking her heels back while he spun her around.

I watched them, feeling like an outsider when until now I had been the insider, the only one who knew where Autumn was, her protector. I crossed my arms and leaned back against the car. Sleep took a swipe at me the second I relaxed, and I had to brace myself before I fell over.

They whispered at each other. Autumn giggled. Lincoln laughed. They hugged again and finally turned to me.

Autumn came over, her arms out like she meant to hug me. I brushed her off and stumbled toward the cabin.

“I need to sit. We need to talk.”

Inside, I flopped into the recliner, gave myself a minute to relax, then scooted to the edge of the seat before I fell asleep.

Lincoln and Autumn came in, their arms around each other, and took the sofa in front of the picture window. In the lighted room Autumn must have noticed something, the extra cuts on my face, the weariness in my eyes.

“What happened?”

My voice came out hoarse. “I don’t even know where to start.”

Before we left his estate, Lincoln had changed clothes. He wore a pair of khaki slacks, a silk shirt with the top three buttons undone, and had put his hair into a ponytail again. He leaned forward, resting an elbow on one knee.

“You can start by telling me why the hell you’ve kept my daughter captive in this dump?”

Autumn rubbed his back. “Daddy, I’m not his captive.”

Lincoln made a show of looking around the cabin, even tilting his head back to gaze at the ceiling. “This is unacceptable.”

I rolled my neck to work out a knot forming close to the shoulder. “Are you through?”

Lincoln cocked his head, said nothing.

“I brought Autumn here because I trusted her,” I said. “But that trust… I was duped.”

Autumn straightened. “I didn’t dupe—”

“Quiet. Let me finish.”

Lincoln piped in, “Don’t talk to my daughter that way.”

I pretended Lincoln wasn’t sitting there and spoke directly to Autumn.

“Dixie told me the truth about your home invasion stunt. I don’t know why you felt you had to lie to me about that. You were with her. You ran out. You ran to Tom.”

Lincoln waved a hand as if ordering away a servant. “This is all old news. What difference does it make?”

“Trust,” I said, answering Lincoln’s question but still addressing Autumn. “That’s what difference it makes. I put myself on the line because I believed you didn’t kill your husband. I put myself on the line but you kept lying to me, leaving out this detail or that.”

“Please,” Autumn said. “I don’t want to talk about this now.”

“Why not? Your father already knows. You told him all about it and he confirmed it for me.”

Autumn shook her head slightly, as if trying to signal me without her father noticing.

Something clicked.

“Unless he doesn’t know all of it.”

“Stop.”

Now Lincoln straightened. “What’s he talking about?”

“Nothing,” Autumn said.

“He doesn’t know why Tom was so nice to pull you out of trouble.”

“She gave up Dixie,” Lincoln said. “That’s why.”

“It’s the missing piece,” I said. “The real reason why Tom had it in for you. You played him.”

“I didn’t play him,” Autumn shouted. “I liked him. I really did. But he wasn’t… he wasn’t what I wanted.”

“You slept with that cop?” Lincoln asked.

Autumn rolled her eyes like she was a teenager getting reamed for staying out too late. “Yes, Daddy. I slept with Tom. I didn’t tell you because I know how you get about boys.”

Boys? Like this was seventh grade or something. But I hadn’t brought Lincoln here so he could ground his adult daughter.

“You two can argue about this later. Autumn, why didn’t you tell me?”

“I knew you two were friends. I felt bad, like I had betrayed you by being with him.”

“That was over ten years ago.” I stood, fresh adrenaline pumping through me now, the fatigue rolling away. “You really thought I’d care?”

“I was ashamed. I know what it looked like. I know he felt used, no matter how much I tried to explain to him the truth. And you jumped to the same conclusion. So Tom hates me because he thinks I used him? Does it matter the reason?”

“Did it even occur to you that Tom might have set up the whole thing to get back at you?”

Autumn slowly eased against the couch back. Her gaze drifted to one side, and her lips parted slightly, realization coming to her.

“He couldn’t have.”

“Why not? If it wasn’t you, it had to be someone. I thought it might be Dixie until she told me about Tom and you.”

Lincoln looked away. This was all too much for him to accept, listening to his daughter talk about a man she had slept with.

Pacing the floor, I said, “If you had told me about this up front, I wouldn’t have gone to Dixie, I would have gone straight to Tom.”

“Fine. I’m sorry I wasted your time. Go to him now.”

“That’s the thing, I can’t go to him now.”

I raked a hand through my hair. I felt like someone had installed a blender in my gut.

“I went to Dixie …” I debated whether to bother going into her sex switch and decided it wasn’t important. “She wasn’t willing to talk at all. She really doesn’t like you. Between her and Tom, I’m surprised it isn’t you with the bullet in the back.”

I realized how harsh that sounded, but it felt good to say. I was too pissed to care about hurt feelings.

Autumn looked down and balled her hands into fists on her lap. Her father opened his mouth as if to speak, but I talked over him.

“I had to push her hard to get her to talk, maybe too hard. But I learned what I learned and I set up a meet with Tom to ask him about it.”

Lincoln tossed another dismissive hand in the air. “You’ve spoken with him already. Then why the melodrama?”

“I’m sorry if I haven’t already told you to shut up.”

Lincoln jerked his head back, crossed his arms.

“I haven’t talked to Tom,” I said and looked right at Autumn, “because Tom is dead.”

Autumn stuttered a moment, shaking her head. She peeled a hangnail from her thumb with the fingers of her opposite hand. A tiny red bead welled at the edge of her thumbnail.

“How? Why?”

I recounted the ordeal from the moment I left Dixie/Sam at the diner to the explosion at the
High Note
.

“I’m pretty sure the explosion was meant for me,” I said. “Dixie might have called someone from work, had it set up.”

“Couldn’t it have been an accident?” Lincoln asked just I had when talking with Palmer.

“That thing was set to blow when the door opened. It was no accident.”

My story told, I sat back on the recliner. A pressure seemed to release itself from inside of me. The knot in my neck loosened. But the fatigue did not return. Instead I felt like I’d downed a vat of espresso.

I watched the two of them on the sofa. Autumn stared at the floor. Lincoln put his arm around her and rocked her gently.

“So it’s settled,” Lincoln said. “If Tom killed Douglass, and Tom is now dead, Autumn is in the clear.”

“Not even close. See, this guy Palmer was working with Tom and he still suspects Autumn.”

“You can explain things to him like you did here. He won’t arrest Autumn when he knows all the facts.”

I raised my hands to rub my face and noticed them trembling. As wired as I felt, I knew I needed some sleep. The stress of the day would break me before too long.

“Two things. First off, Palmer happens to be Tom’s cousin. Palmer seems more level headed than Tom, but he’s bound to be a little biased. I can’t start throwing murder accusations at his dead cousin when I don’t have a lick of proof. Actually, that’s three things. Lack of proof is number two. Number three is Autumn’s glaring absence of an alibi.”

Lincoln’s brow creased. He looked from me to Autumn. “I don’t understand. Don’t you have yoga on Saturday nights?”

Autumn’s shoulders sagged. She covered her face with her hands. The electricity in the room changed, and I realized what storm was coming. All this time, Lincoln had never learned why I was back in Autumn’s life. He didn’t know that Doug had been cheating on Autumn, and he was about to find out.

“I didn’t go that night,” Autumn said. “Doug and I had an argument.”

Lincoln’s eyes narrowed and he turned to me as if he thought this was all my fault. I met his gaze, knowing he was about to have his attitude adjusted.

“I hired Ridley because I thought Doug might be… Ridley took pictures. There’s a woman …”

Despite her scattered telling, I could tell Lincoln got the gist.

“The police know this?” he asked.

I nodded.

I almost heard the click in his head as he put it together. He turned his attention to Autumn.

“You weren’t at yoga?”

“No, Daddy. I was alone… driving. I was upset because we were arguing. I accused him of cheating. I saw the pictures, but I didn’t tell him that. I wanted him to admit it on his own. He wouldn’t. He lied right to my face.”

Lincoln put a hand to his forehead. His jaw hung slack.

“I thought… no wonder they suspect you.”

“When Tom questioned you,” I asked Lincoln, “did you tell them Autumn had a yoga class that night?”

Lincoln lowered his hand and stared at his palm as if he expected to find something in it. “He seemed upset when I told him. Disappointed even.”

“He probably checked up on it right after, found out she never showed.”

Autumn hugged herself. “I can’t believe Tom would… I can’t believe it.”

“And no one else will either, especially Palmer.”

Lincoln closed his hand into a fist, his eyes fixated on the hand as the knuckles turned white. His intensity worried me. He looked like he might break down at any minute. But as soon as I thought this, his hand popped open, he dropped it to the couch beside his thigh, and his gaze lifted to me.

“I know you’re upset with Autumn for lying to you. But she isn’t responsible for this murder. She needs your help.”

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