Authors: Carolyn Haines
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths, #Mystery, #Single Women, #Children, #Crimes against, #Mississippi, #Women private investigators, #Women Healers, #Delaney; Sarah Booth (Fictitious Character), #Women Plantation Owners, #Delaney; Sarah Booth (Fictitious Charater)
"What about the people who're waiting for this tape?" he asked.
"I help all that I can. I refuse to accept that burden."
"I'm the one who initiated the campaign for these tapes. I'm the one who set the Christmas release date. And I'll look like a fool," Michael said bitterly.
"Not to me." She kissed his forehead. "Never to me."
Michael looked down at his desk. "You're the boss."
I couldn't read anything into his tone, but Doreen straightened up and nodded at me. "I'm going to Zinnia with you."
"Zinnia?" Michael asked. "Why?"
"Sarah Booth has discovered that my mother may have been murdered."
"Is that right?" Michael looked at me, his dark eyes troubled. "I'm so sorry, Doreen. I didn't realize why you were canceling the studio."
"Reschedule for after the first, and apologize for me."
"I'll go with you to Zinnia," Michael said. "If there's murder involved, you shouldn't be alone."
"I'll be with Sarah Booth," Doreen said with the hint of a smile. "We'll be fine."
"But what if the murderer is still around?"
"I doubt he's hanging around the scene of the crime now," Doreen said. "My mother's been dead a long time."
"Sheriff Peters will be with us," I said. "We'll be perfectly safe." We didn't need an entourage if we were going to talk about a potential murder.
"There's a small problem," Michael said, one corner of his handsome mouth turned down. "Doreen isn't allowed to leave the jurisdiction."
"I'll talk with LeMont," I volunteered. "Maybe he'll be able to get her permission to make a day trip."
The Black Kettle
was a casual bar with a big business. The place was packed, and I stood on tiptoe trying to catch a glimpse of LeMont. I finally located him at the bar, where he was holding a stool for me by draping his leg over it.
His dark suit was rumpled and he finished one beer and ordered another. Judging from his posture, he was either tired or had just finished a discouraging day.
"Ms. Delaney," he said as he shifted his leg and offered me the stool. "What can I do for you?" There was a snap in his voice.
"Thank you for meeting me," I said. It would be best to get right to the point. "Doreen wants to go with me to Zinnia tomorrow. There's some indication that her mother may have been murdered. I'm going to talk to a possible witness to the murder." I was stretching things a bit.
"Her mother was murdered?"
"Possibly," I said, wondering at his sudden interest.
"And you think it would be a good idea to have Doreen with you when you talk to this witness?"
Put in that frame, I could see it wasn't such a good idea. "She wants to go."
He took a long swallow of his beer. "If that's what you want, I'll talk with the judge."
Now I was curious. Detective LeMont wasn't in the habit of tossing favors out. He'd obviously discovered something that worked in Doreen's favor. "Why are you doing this?"
He shrugged. "I don't view Ms. Mallory as a flight risk. But what I think doesn't matter. It's up to the judge and he's going to say no."
I wasn't buying that flip answer. I remembered the baby bottle. "What have you found out? Whose fingerprints are on the baby bottle?"
LeMont gave me a long, calculating look. "Doreen's and the maid's, as you'd expect. And Reverend Oren Weaver's. We had his prints on file from when his house was burgled a few years back." He paused, studying my reaction. And what a reaction it was. My mouth opened wide in the mouth-breather moment of shock that my Aunt LouLane would have slapped off my face.
"Oren Weaver? Why would he touch that bottle?"
"I was hoping you could tell me. What would the mighty televangelist be doing holding a baby bottle for Rebekah Mallory?"
I shut my mouth and put a slightly more professional look on my face. "What does your investigation show?"
He grinned. "I'm just getting started. Now, I'll talk to the judge, if you'll tell me exactly what you know about the preacher man."
I was caught on the horns of a dilemma. I'd promised Doreen I wouldn't reveal her connection to Weaver, or the other men, unless I had to. LeMont was sniffing on the trail, but he hadn't picked up the scent of possible paternity yet. By not telling him, though, I was thwarting an ally in proving Doreen's innocence. And Doreen had possibly lied to me. She'd assured me that none of the potential fathers had ever seen Rebekah.
"Sarah Booth, what's going on in that head of yours?" LeMont's eyes were flat and I had the sense that he needed to move or drown.
But my word had been given. "I can't help you," I said.
He rose from his stool, finished his beer, and smiled. "I got a call from that sheriff of yours. He's mighty fond of you."
And LeMont was pretty damn good at throwing curves. "What did Coleman say?"
"It wasn't so much what he said as how he said it." He arched his eyebrows. "None of my business, though. I got my hands full in
I leaned against the bar. "What about the judge?"
"You won't help me, but you still expect me to help you?" He furrowed his brow. "Okay. I'll talk to the judge because I know it won't do a bit of good. And you're gonna owe me." He pushed his glass back. "I'll find out how Weaver's involved in this anyway. "
He walked out of the bar, never once turning around to look back at me. I ordered a vodka martini, dirty, and sat at the bar until it was gone. With just a hint of a buzz, I made my way to
AS THE
sun
edged over the horizon, I drove across
I'd spent the night in the arms of a fantasy. The movie theater of my mind had been given a whole new reel of images to play again and again. The last one was of
Now I was heading back to Zinnia, back to my normal life. Or was it normal? In the past few days I'd slipped my mooring. I was drifting. Life in
As I was heading back to
Now the highway stretched in front of me, a washed-out gray in a blur of pine trees and fallow fields. And this was my reality. I was hurtling through time and space at eighty miles an hour as the sun rose to my left, jewels of dew glittering all around me.
Behind me was
I drove in a turmoil of emotions, stopping twice for coffee and a bathroom. When I finally turned down the drive, Dahlia House awaited me through an alley of leafless sycamore trees.
Sweetie Pie greeted me with a chorus of barks, her tail whipping my legs as she whirled around me. In the back pasture, Reveler whinnied a welcome.
I rushed into the house.
"Hold up your hands," Jitty said in a gunslinger voice.
"Jitty?" She stood in the doorway of the parlor, her elegance as cold as her attitude.
"Hold them up. Let me see."
I slowly held up my hands, palms out. "What's wrong with you?"
"What's wrong with
you
is the better question." She stepped closer and I caught a fragrance that reminded me of my mother's mother, Grandma Baker.
"Evening in
"Which would be Evening in a New Orleans Hotel Bed without Benefit of a Ring if you were wearing it."
It was instantly clear what was eating at Jitty. "I thought you'd be happy that
"For how long? Long enough to put a ring on that finger and make you an honest woman?"
I took a deep breath. "I am an honest woman, Jitty."
"Liar."
She spoke with such certainty that I felt my temper rise. "I am not a liar."
"You the worse kind of liar. You lie to yourself. You go on about how you're satisfied with a few nights in
"I'm not so certain about that." Truth be told, I wasn't certain about anything. And Jitty was giving me a pounding headache.
"A full-time husband might interfere with your daydreams about that sheriff leavin' his wife and takin' up with you."
"I've never asked Coleman to leave his wife. Never."
"You haven't asked, but that don't mean you haven't thought about it."
I wasn't going to lie. I had thought about Coleman leaving Connie. He didn't have a real marriage. She'd tricked him back to her with the most low-down trick in the book. "I've never encouraged him to break his wedding vows. And he won't."
"No, he won't. And that leaves you standin' on the outside lookin' in. You know, eighty years ago, a woman didn't have the right to pop in and out of bed with men. Back then, she'da been run out of town on a rail. It wasn't fair, because men could do as they pleased and never suffer a bad reputation. But this today ain't good. A man won't buy the cow, Sarah Booth, when he's gettin' the milk free."
Jitty shimmered, as if a heat wave had rippled through her.
"Don't you dare disappear," I hissed. But it did no good. She was gone and I was left alone with her bitter words of wisdom.
20
I
met Coleman at the crossroads beside Playin' the Bones, a
fine blues club run by Ida Mae Keys and her son Emanuel. The club looked great. There were new shells in the parking lot and a marquee announcing the latest blues act.
There was also a long, tall lawman. To my surprise, Coleman was in his pickup, and he wore jeans and a flannel shirt. The blue of the plaid colored his eyes a deeper shade. I watched him walk toward me with pleasure and sadness. Two men could not be more different than Coleman and Hamilton. Even if I had the chance to choose, could I?
"You look pensive," Coleman noted, getting into the passenger seat of the convertible. The top was down and the October sun flooded the interior of the car with golden warmth.
"Tired, maybe." Or was it guilt I was oozing? I'd been in bed with
"Turn left here and head back toward Blue Eve. He's on
I drove with my eyes on the road ahead. Coleman watched me, drawing his own conclusions, and keeping them to himself.
Coot's house was a surprise. The man was an alcoholic. I'd expected a trailer with a mountain of beer cans in the backyard. Instead, the log cabin was neat and clean.
"Coot built it himself," Coleman said. "He cut the trees over by
"He must not drink as much as people say." I'd known a few alcoholics, among them family members. It was a road littered with unrealized dreams, broken promises, and half-truths. The cabin spoke of another kind of man.
Coot didn't wait for us to knock. He came out the front door and walked toward us. To my surprise, he was smiling. He was a man in his sixties, but he looked younger. Lean and freshly shaved, he smelled of Old Spice.
"I've been waiting for you," he said. "Ever since you called, Coleman, I've been waiting. I haven't had a drink in two days." When he held out his hand to shake mine, I saw the tremors.
We went inside and Coot served us strong coffee in hand-fired mugs. We settled around his small kitchen table.
"Tell me about Lillith's daughter," Coot said. "I hear she's beautiful."
"She is," I said. "Strikingly beautiful. And in a world of trouble."
"I know," he said. "I want to help her."
I wondered if he'd done the arithmetic, too, and figured out that Doreen might be his daughter.