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    Hard Row dk-13

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      away from the farm. When Kate inherited the place

      after his death and came down to await little Jake’s

      birth, she had needed all her persuasive charm to bring

      Lacy around. He had approved of Rob, though, and

      so adored his infant great-nephew that he continued

      to live in the room he’d been born in, even after Kate

      and Rob were married.

      “We’re going to fix up Lacy’s room and hire a live-

      in nanny,” Kate said. “Mary Pat’s trustees have already

      agreed to kick in with part of the cost.”

      “Great!” I said. “But does this mean that we have to

      find another place for Cal after school?”

      She shook her head and gave me a mischievous smile.

      “Nope. It does mean that I’m going to bill you and

      Dwight for a prorated share of her salary, though.”

      “Deal,” I said.

      We solemnly shook hands on it, then carried the pie

      and coffee out to the living room.

      Cal went to bed soon after we got home, but before

      Dwight and I called it a night, we let Bandit out for a

      run and walked outside ourselves to admire what we’d

      accomplished that weekend.

      The night breeze lacked the bone chilling edge it had

      carried only two days ago, yet the cool air still required

      jackets and gloves. A quarter moon gave enough light

      125

      MARGARET MARON

      to see where we were putting our feet and I could al-

      most smell spring in the air.

      In one of our few quiet moments the day before,

      Dwight had explained why he was so late getting back

      Friday night.

      “I can’t believe we’ve had this whole weekend with-

      out somebody finding another body part,” I said. “I

      was sure you were going to get called out for the miss-

      ing head.”

      “I just hope the ME’s preliminary report’s on my

      desk tomorrow morning and that it says they’ve found

      a tattoo or a prominent scar or anything that’ll help us

      make a positive ID. The only thing halfway unique to

      this guy is that an X-ray of his right arm shows that he

      broke the ulna about ten years ago. I bet at least twenty

      percent of the guys in this country have broken a right

      arm sometime in their lives.”

      He told me that the Alzheimer patient’s family had

      been notified and yeah, he’d heard that they’d re-

      tained Zack Young to file a civil suit against the nursing

      home.

      I told him that Kate and Rob were going to hire a

      live-in nanny and that we’d need to share the cost. “It’ll

      still be cheaper than putting Cal in formal after-school

      care. Better for him, too.”

      “You ever gonna say what yesterday morning was all

      about?”

      “What do you mean?”

      “C’mon, Deb’rah. I may not have been a full-time

      dad after Jonna and I divorced, but I got up there at

      least twice a month and I know my son well enough to

      know he wouldn’t pass up a Canes game on his own.”

      126

      HARD ROW

      I was silent.

      “He’s not giving you a hard time, is he? Talking back

      when I’m not around? Disobeying?”

      “Nothing like that. Honest. It was just a little bump

      in the road and we agreed that this is the way to smooth

      it out. If it was something serious, I’d certainly tell you,

      but I gave him my word and I don’t want to go back

      on it, okay?”

      “You’re sure?”

      “I’m sure.”

      He looked down at me with a rueful smile. “Got more

      than you bargained for, didn’t you, shug?”

      “I’m sorry Jonna’s dead,” I said honestly. “And I’m

      sorry for the way this happened, but Portland and I had

      already planned on getting the custody arrangement

      amended so that you could have Cal here for holidays

      and summers.”

      He shook his head. “Poor Jonna. She wouldn’t have

      stood a chance with you two.” Then his smile faded.

      “I’m just glad we didn’t have to put Cal through a court

      battle, glad he didn’t have to choose between us.”

      I squeezed his hand and we walked down the drive

      to where the young crepe myrtles began. In this silvery

      light, they were a double row of pale slender sticks and

      leafless twigs.

      “I’ll probably be sore tomorrow from all the work we

      did today, but they’re going to be beautiful,” I said.

      Dwight turned and looked back toward the house.

      “I was thinking we could put more pecans on the south

      side. They’ll shade both bedrooms in the summer, but

      they won’t interfere with the solar panels or the power

      lines.”

      127

      MARGARET MARON

      I smiled.

      “What?” he said with an answering smile.

      “I was just thinking how old we’d be before any trees

      get tall enough to interfere with the wires.”

      “Less than fifteen years if we keep them watered and

      fertilized.” He gave a contented sigh. “We really are

      married, aren’t we?”

      I laughed out loud. “It takes trees to convince you?”

      He stopped and I turned to look up into his face.

      What I saw there made my heart turn over.

      “Dwight? Sweetheart?”

      He put his arms around me and his voice had a sud-

      den rough huskiness. “I used to try and imagine what

      it would be like if hell froze solid and I actually got you

      to marry me.”

      “And?”

      “And this is better than I ever imagined.”

      Our lips met in the moonlight.

      “Much better,” he said and kissed me again.

      Despite the cool night air, I began to feel warm all

      over.

      Dwight never needed to have a diagram drawn for

      him. “Why don’t we take this inside?” he murmured

      and whistled for the dog.

      128

      C H A P T E R

      15

      We must take things as we find them, making a choice of

      such as seem to us, by the use of our best judgment, to con-

      tain the most good and the fewest evils.

      —Profitable Farming in the Southern States, 1890

      Flame Smith

      Monday Morning, March 6

      % Flame Smith was tired, angry, and fighting a dull

      headache, the direct result of driving east with the

      morning sun in her eyes for three hours. All weekend

      she had waited at Buck Harris’s mountain lodge, willing

      him to pull up in the drive and honk the horn exuber-

      antly upon seeing her car there.

      It never happened and she was now so furious with

      Buck that had she met him as she drove down the wind-

      ing private road, she would have rammed her Jeep into his

      BMW hard enough that the hood would be smashed all

      the way back to the steering wheel in such neat little even

      pleats that he would be playing it like an accordion.

      The image gave her a sour pleasure. So did the image

      of chasing him back down the mountain with the .357

      Magnum she kept in the console beside her.


      129

      MARGARET MARON

      In her forty-odd years, she had been chased by many

      men. Had even let a few catch her. Usually on her terms.

      Wasn’t that why God had given her a mane of fiery red

      curls, flawless skin with a light dusting of freckles across

      an upturned nose in the middle of a lovely face, a nicely

      proportioned body with a twenty-inch waist, and a low

      sexy laugh that men wanted to hear again and again?

      She had passed forty with every asset still intact, so

      why was she chasing around the state of North Carolina

      looking for this particular man? Yes, he had money

      and yes, she was tired of worrying about how she was

      going to pay the mortgage on Jackson House, her B&B

      down in Wilmington; but he was not the first man with

      money to want to put a ring on her finger and another

      one through her nose. He was not classically handsome,

      he needed to lose at least twenty pounds, he could be

      crude and rough, and like many self-made men she had

      known, he seemed to have the ethics of a polecat. But

      he was hung like a prize bull, he was surprisingly unself-

      ish in bed, and he made her laugh.

      The older she got, the more important that was

      becoming.

      All the same, if he thought she was going to sit around

      cooling her heels while he took his sweet time to let her

      know why he’d broken both their date and his word, he

      had another thought coming, she told herself. It could

      have been fun for both of them, but c’est la damn vie.

      Enough was enough.

      She stopped for gas on the east side of Raleigh and

      bought a Coke for caffeine and a BC powder for her

      headache. To hell with Buck Harris. She would go back

      to Wilmington, make sure things continued to run

      130

      HARD ROW

      smoothly at Jackson House, and then maybe she would

      give ol’ what’s-his-name a call. The guy who had de-

      veloped one of the first planned communities along the

      river. The one who kept sending her orchids and roses.

      What the devil was his name? He wasn’t as rowdy as

      Buck, but what the hell? Maybe solid and dependable

      would wear better in the long run.

      As I-40 veered southeast through Colleton County,

      her headache eased off and she flipped on the radio,

      turning the dial to an amusing local country station.

      Solemn organ music played softly beneath a somber

      voice that enunciated proper names, followed by the

      name of a funeral home.

      Flame had to laugh. Just what she needed—the local

      obituaries. “Add Mr. Effin’ Buck Harris to your list,”

      she told the announcer. “From now on that SOB is

      dead to me.”

      Obituaries were followed by the latest county news:

      the weekend had produced four car wrecks and a motor-

      cycle accident for a total of three deaths. Several com-

      puters had been stolen from a Dobbs middle school. An

      employee with the county’s planning board had been

      charged with embezzling almost four thousand dollars.

      Stupid cow, thought Flame. Wreck your life for a pal-

      try four thousand?

      Still no identification for the dismembered body

      of a muscular Caucasian male. The Colleton County

      Sheriff ’s Department again urged the public to report

      any missing man between the age of thirty and sixty.

      Eighteen dogs had been confiscated in Black Creek and

      their owner charged with felony dog fighting and ani-

      mal cruelty, while—

      131

      MARGARET MARON

      “Wait a damn minute here!” Flame exclaimed. She

      was almost past the Dobbs exit, but she flashed her turn

      signal, yanked on her steering wheel and slid in front of

      a van that was trying to make its own sedate exit. The

      van honked angrily and veered to avoid rear-ending the

      Jeep, but Flame barely heard.

      It was crazy, but what if that bitch was even less will-

      ing than Buck to share what they had built?

      “Major Bryant?”

      Dwight looked up to see one of the departmental

      clerks standing in his doorway.

      “Mr. Stephenson’s here with a client and they’d like

      to speak to you if you have a minute?”

      “Sure,” he said, laying aside the ME’s report on the

      torso, a report which confirmed that it really was part

      and parcel of the other appendages they’d collected. If

      there had been scars, tattoos, or anything else unique

      to this body, they were obliterated by animal depreda-

      tions or by the heavy blade that had dismembered it.

      Said blade, incidentally, appeared to be approximately

      six inches wide with a slight curvature of the cutting

      edge, all consistent with an ordinary axe.

      Nevertheless, in addition to the broken right ulna ear-

      lier X-rays had discovered, the torso did carry two mark-

      ers that might help distinguish this body from another.

      First, there was a small mole just below the navel.

      Second was what the ME described as “a protrusive

      umbilicus.”

      “Thanks for seeing us, Major Bryant,” Reid Stephenson

      said formally as he held the door open for a very attrac-

      132

      HARD ROW

      tive redhead. A handsome six-footer himself, Reid was

      well-known for his penchant for knockout redheads,

      but this one was even more gorgeous than usual.

      Where the hell did he keep finding them? Dwight

      wondered as he stood and shook hands with Deborah’s

      cousin and former law partner.

      “This is Ms. Smith,” Reid said. “Flame Smith, from

      Wilmington.”

      “Major Bryant,” she said, offering a firm handshake.

      Up close, she was still gorgeous, if not quite as young

      as her flowing hair, slender figure and tight jeans implied

      at first glance. There were laugh lines around her wide

      mouth and small crinkles radiated from eyes as green

      as the snug sweater she wore beneath a beige leather

      jacket.

      “What can I do for y’all?” he asked when they were

      seated.

      Reid leaned forward. “That man, the one with his

      legs in one place and his body in another—has he been

      identified yet?”

      “Why do you ask?”

      “Because my client has been missing for over a week

      now and he fits the general description that’s been re-

      leased to the media.”

      Dwight frowned. “I thought you said Ms. Smith here

      is your client.”

      “Actually, I’m his client’s girlfriend,” said the redhead

      in a smoky voice that seemed to have Reid enthralled.

      “We were supposed to meet here in Dobbs this week

      for his divorce settlement, but he never showed up and

      I can’t find anyone who’s seen him lately. It’s weird to

      think it might be Buck you’ve found, but if it is—”

      133

      MARGARET MARON

      “I see,” said Dwight. “Does he have any identifying

      marks that you know of?”

      “Identifying marks?”


      “Like a tattoo or scars or something?” Reid said help-

      fully.

      Flame Smith shook her head.

      “Wait a minute!” said Reid. “Isn’t he missing the tip

      of one of his fingers?”

      “That’s right!” She held up a beautifully manicured

      finger. Her long nails were painted a soft coral. “His

      right index finger. It got caught in a piece of farm equip-

      ment when he was a teenager.”

      They looked at Dwight expectantly. The big deputy

      frowned as he leafed through the file on the body. “The

      right hand we found is missing the tip of the index fin-

      ger, but it’s also missing some other joints.”

      Flame Smith winced, but she did not go dramatic on

      them. Dwight had the impression that this was a woman

      who could, when necessary keep her emotions in check,

      but he was willing to bet she could also take advantage

      of a redhead’s reputation for a blazing tongue and tem-

      per if it suited her.

      “You say no one’s seen him,” he said. “Who have you

      actually asked?”

      “Well, first I tried everybody around here I could

      think of. I even drove over to the main office in New

      Bern thinking something might have come up, but no

      one’s seen him there since week before last. His wife’s

      been living at their New Bern place since they split and

      he’s been staying here.”

      “Here?”

      134

      HARD ROW

      “At the old farmhouse he got from his granddaddy. It

      was their first tomato farm.”

      “Oh yes,” said Dwight. “I remember now. It be-

      longed to his mother’s people, didn’t it? The old Buckley

      place?”

      “I guess. That’s his middle name. Judson Buckley

      Harris, but everybody calls him Buck.” She pushed a

      tress of hair away from her eyes. “I tried there first thing

      on Wednesday and again on Friday. No sign of him and

      the housekeeper says she hasn’t heard anything in over

      a week either. But in court Wednesday, I heard his wife

      say he might be holed up in the mountains.”

      “Deborah’s doing the Harris ED,” Reid murmured

      in an aside.

      “Deborah?” asked Flame. “Judge Knott? You know

      her?”

      With a repressive glance at Reid, Dwight nodded.

      “So then you—?”

      “—drove up to his lodge in the mountains?” she

      asked, finishing his question. “Yes. But he wasn’t there

      and when I finally caught up with the caretaker Sunday

      afternoon, he said he hadn’t heard from Buck in at least

      three weeks.”

     


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