Three The sheriffs department was located in the basement of the Purcell County Courthouse. For the second time in as many
days, Alex parked her car in a metered slot on the square and entered the building.
It was early. There wasn't much activity in the row of offices on the lower level. In the center of this warren of cubicles was a large squad room, no different from any other in the nation. A pall of cigarette smoke hovered over it like a perpetual cloud. Several uniformed officers were gathered around a hot plate where coffee was simmering. One was talking, but when he saw Alex, he stopped in midsentence. One by one, heads turned, until all were staring at her. She felt glaringly out of place in what was obviously a male domain. Equal employment hadn't penetrated the ranks of the Purcell County Sheriffs Department.
She held her ground and said pleasantly,' 'Good morning.''
"Mornin'," they chorused.
"My name is Alex Gaither. I need to see the sheriff, please." The statement was superfluous. They already knew who she was and why she was there. Word traveled fast in a town the size of Purcell.
"He expectin' you?" one of the deputies asked belligerently, after spitting tobacco juice into an empty Del Monte green bean can.
"I believe he'll see me," she said confidently.
"Did Pat Chastain send you over?"
Alex had tried to reach him again that morning, but Mrs. Chastain had told her that he'd already left for his office. She tried telephoning him there and got no answer. Either she had missed him while he was in transit, or he was avoiding her. "He's aware of why I'm here. Is the sheriff in?" she repeated with some asperity.
"I don't think so."
"I haven't seen him."
"Yeah, he's here," one officer said grudgingly. "He came in a few minutes ago.'' He nodded his head toward a hallway.
"Last door on your left, ma'am."
"Thank you."
Alex gave them a gracious smile she didn't feel in her heart and walked toward the hallway. She was conscious of the eyes focused on her back. She knocked on the indicated door.
"Yeah?"
Reede Lambert sat behind a scarred wooden desk that was probably as old as the cornerstone of the building. His booted
feet were crossed and resting on one corner of it. Like yesterday, he was slouching, this time in a swivel chair. His cowboy hat and a leather, fur-lined jacket were hanging on a coat tree in the corner between a ground-level window and a wall papered with wanted posters held up by yellowing, curling strips of Scotch tape. He cradled a chipped, stained porcelain coffee mug in his hands.
"Well, g'morning, Miss Gaither."
She closed the door with such emphasis that the frosted-glass panel rattled. "Why wasn't I told yesterday?"
"And spoil the surprise?" he said with a sly grin. "How'd you find out?"
"By accident."
"I knew you'd show up sooner or later." He eased himself upright. "But I didn't figure on it being this early in the morning." He came to his feet and indicated the only other available chair in the room. He moved toward a table that contained a coffee maker. "You want some?"
"Mr. Chastain should have told me."
"Pat? No way. When things get touchy, our D.A.'s a real chickenshit."
Alex caught her forehead in her hand. "This is a nightmare."
He hadn't waited for her to decline or accept his offer of coffee. He was filling a cup similar to his. "Cream, sugar?"
"This isn't a social call, Mr. Lambert."
He set the cup of black coffee on the edge of the desk in front of her and returned to his chair. Wood and ancient springs creaked in protest as he sat down. "You're getting us off to a bad start."
"Have you forgotten why I'm here?"
"Not for a minute, but do your duties prohibit you from drinking coffee, or is it a religious abstinence?"
Exasperated, Alex set her purse on the desk, went to the table, and spooned powdered cream into her mug. The coffee was strong and hot--much like the stare the sheriff was giving her--and far better than the tepid brew she'd drunk in the coffee shop of the Westerner Motel earlier.
If he had brewed it, he knew how to do it right. But then, he looked like a very capable man. Reared back in his chair, he did not look at all concerned that he'd been implicated in a murder case.
"How do you like Purcell, Miss Gaither?"
"I haven't been here long enough to form an opinion."
"Aw, come on. I'll bet your mind was made up not to like it before you ever got here."
"Why do you say that?"
"It would stand to reason, wouldn't it? Your mother died here."
His casual reference to her mother's death rankled. "She didn't just die. She was murdered. Brutally."
"I remember," he said grimly.
"That's right. You discovered her body, didn't you?"
He lowered his eyes to the contents of his coffee mug and stared into it for a long time before taking a drink. He tossed it back, draining the mug as though it were a shot of whiskey.
"Did you kill my mother, Mr. Lambert?"
Since she hadn't been able to accurately gauge his reaction the day before, she wanted to see it now. His head snapped up. "No." Leaning forward, he braced his elbows on the desk and gave her a level stare. "Let's cut through the bullshit, okay? Understand this right now, and it'll save us both a lot of time. If you want to interrogate me, Counselor, you'll have to subpoena me to appear before the grand jury."
"You're refusing to cooperate with my investigation?"
"I didn't say that. This office will be at your disposal per Pat's instructions. I'll personally help you any way I can."
"Out of the goodness of your heart?" she asked sweetly.
"No, because I want it over and done with, finished. You understand? So you can go back to Austin where you belong, and leave the past in the past where it belongs." He got up to refill his coffee mug. Over his shoulder he asked, "Why'd you come here?"
"Because Bud Hicks did not murder my mother."
"How the hell do you know? Or did you just ask him?"
"I couldn't. He's dead."
She could tell by his reaction that he hadn't known. He moved to the window and stared out, sipping his coffee reflectively.
"Well, I'll be damned. Gooney Bud is dead."
"Gooney Bud?"
"That's what everybody called him. I don't think anybody knew his last name until after Celina died and the newspapers
printed the story."
"He was retarded, I'm told."
The man at the window nodded. "Yeah, and he had a speech impediment. You could barely understand him."
"Did he live with his parents?"
"His mother. She was half batty herself. She died years ago, not too long after he was sent away."
He continued to stare through the open slats of the blinds with his back to her. His silhouette was trim, broad-shouldered,
narrow-hipped. His jeans fit a little too well. Alex berated herself for noticing.
"Gooney Bud pedaled all over town on one of those large tricycles," he was saying. "You could hear him coming blocks away. That thing clattered and clanged like a peddler's wagon. It was covered with junk. He was a scavenger. Little girls were warned to stay away from him. We boys made fun of him, played pranks, things like that." He shook his head sadly. "Shame."
"He died in a state mental institution, incarcerated for a crime he didn't commit."
Her comment brought him around. "You've got nothing to prove that he didn't."
"I'll find the proof."
"None exists."
"Are you so sure? Did you destroy the incriminating evidence the morning you ostensibly found Celina's body?"
A deep crease formed between his heavy eyebrows.
"Haven't you got anything better to do? Don't you already have a heavy enough caseload? Why did you start investigating
this in the first place?"
She gave him the same catchall reason she had given Greg Harper. "Justice was not served. Buddy Hicks was innocent. He took the blame for somebody else's crime."
"Me, Junior, or Angus?"
"Yes, one of the three of you."
"Who told you that?"
' 'Grandma Graham.''
"Ah, now we're getting somewhere." He hooked one thumb into a belt loop, his tanned fingers curling negligently over his fly. "While she was telling you all this, did she mention how jealous she was?"
"Grandma? Of whom?"
"Of us. Junior and me."
"She told me the two of you and Celina were like the three musketeers."
"And she resented it. Did she tell you how she doted on Celina?"
She hadn't had to. The modest house Alex had grown up in had been a veritable shrine to her late mother. Noting her frown, the sheriff answered his own question. "No, I can see that Mrs. Graham failed to mention all that."
"You think I'm here on a personal vendetta."
"Yeah, I do."
"Well, I'm not," Alex said defensively. "I believe there are enough holes in this case to warrant reinvestigation. So does District Attorney Harper."
"That egomaniac?" he snorted contemptuously. "He'd indict his own mother for selling it on street corners if it would move him any closer to the attorney general's office."
Alex knew his comment was partially true. She tried another tack. "When Mr. Chastain is better acquainted with the facts, he'll agree that there's been a gross miscarriage of justice."
"Pat had never even heard of Celina until yesterday. He's got his hands full chasing down wetbacks and drug dealers."
"Do you blame me for wanting justice? If your mother had been stabbed to death in a horse barn, wouldn't you do everything possible to see that her killer was punished?"
"I don't know. My old lady split before I was old enough to remember her."
Alex felt a pang of empathy for him that she knew she couldn't afford. No wonder the pictures she'd seen of Reede had been of a very intense lad with eyes much older than his years. She'd never thought to ask her grandmother why he looked so serious.
"This is an untenable situation, Mr. Lambert. You are a suspect." She stood up and retrieved her purse. "Thank you for the coffee. I'm sorry to have bothered you so early in the morning. From now on, I'll have to rely on the local police department for assistance."
"Wait a minute."
Alex, already making her way toward the door, stopped and turned. "What?"
"There is no police department."
Dismayed by that piece of information, she watched as he reached for his hat and coat. He stepped around her, pulled
open the door for her, then followed her out.
"Hey, Sam, I'm leaving. I'll be across the street." The deputy nodded. "This way," Reede said, taking Alex's elbow and guiding her toward a small, square elevator at the end of the hall.
They got into it together. The door creaked when he pulled it closed. The sound of grinding gears wasn't very reassuring.
Alex hoped it would make the trip. She tried to help it along by concentrating hard on their ascent. All the same, she was fully aware of Reede Lambert standing so close to her that their clothing touched. He was studying her.
He said, "You resemble Celina."
"Yes, I know."
"Your size, your mannerisms. Your hair's darker, though, and it has more red in it. Her eyes were brown, not blue like yours." His gaze moved over her face. "But there's a striking resemblance."
"Thank you. I think my mother was beautiful."
"Everybody thought so."
"Including you?"
"Especially me."
The elevator jerked to an abrupt stop. Alex lost her balance and fell against him. Reede caught her arm and supported her long enough for her to regain her balance, which might have taken a little too long, because when they separated, Alex felt light-headed and breathless.
They were on the first floor. He shrugged into his jacket as he guided her toward a rear exit. "My car's parked out front," she told him as they left the building. "Should I put more money in the meter?"
"Forget it. If you get a ticket, you've got friends in high places."
His smile wasn't as orthodontist perfect as Junior Minton's, but it was just as effective. It elicited a tickle in the pit of her stomach that was strange and wonderful and scary.
His quick grin emphasized the lines on his face. He looked every day of his forty-three years, but the weathered markings
fit well on his strong, masculine bone structure. He had dark blond hair that had never known a stylist's touch. He pulled on his black felt cowboy hat and situated the brim close to his eyebrows, which were a shade or two darker than his hair.
His eyes were green. Alex had noticed that the moment she had walked into his office. She had reacted as any woman would to so attractive a man. He had no paunch, no middle-aged softness. Physically, he looked two decades younger than he actually was.
Alex had to keep reminding herself that she was a prosecutor for the sovereign state of Texas, and that she should be looking at Reede Lambert through the eyes of a litigator, not a woman. Besides, he was a generation older than she.
"Were you out of clean uniforms this morning?" she asked as they crossed the street.
He wore plain denim Levi's--old, faded, and tight--like the jeans rodeo cowboys wore. His jacket was brown leather, and fitted at the waist like a bomber jacket. The fur lining, which folded out to form a wide collar, was probably coyote. As soon as they'd stepped into the sunlight, he'd slid on aviator glasses. The lenses were so dark that she could no longer see his eyes.
"I used to dread the sight of a uniform, so when I became sheriff, I made it clear that they'd never get me in one of those things."
"Why did you always dread the sight of one?"
He smiled wryly. "I was usually trying to outrun it, or at least avoid it."
"You were a crook?"
"Hell-raiser."
"You had run-ins with the law?"
"Brushes."
"So what turned you around, a religious experience? A scare? A night or two in jail? Reform school?"
"Nope. I just figured that if I could outchase the law, I could outchase the lawbreakers." He shrugged. "It seemed a natural career choice. Hungry?"
Before she had a chance to answer, he pushed open the door of the B & B Cafe. A cowbell mounted above it announced
their entrance. It was the place where things were happening, it seemed. Every table--red formica with rusted chrome legs--was full. Reede led her to a vacant booth along the wall.
Greetings were called out to him by executives, farmers, roughnecks, cowboys, and secretaries, each distinguished by his attire. Everyone except the secretaries wore boots. Alex recognized Imogene, Pat Chastain's secretary. As soon as they passed her table, she launched into an animated, whispered explanation of who Alex was to the women seated with her. A hush fell over the room as word traveled from one table to the next.
No doubt this microcosm of Purcell gathered every morning at the B & B Cafe during coffee-break time. A stranger in the midst was news, but the return of Celina Gaither's daughter was a news bulletin. Alex felt like a lightning rod, because she certainly attracted electric currents. Some, she sensed, were unfriendly.
A Crystal Gayle ballad about love lost was wafting from the jukebox. It competed with "Hour Magazine" on the fuzzy black-and-white TV mounted in one corner. Male impotence was being discussed to the raucous amusement of a trio of roughnecks. The nonsmoking movement hadn't reached Purcell, and the air was dense enough to cut. The smell of frying
bacon was prevalent.
A waitress in purple polyester pants and a bright gold satin blouse approached them with two cups of coffee and a plate of fresh, yeasty doughnuts. She winked and said, "Mornin', Reede," before ambling off toward the kitchen, where the cook was deftly flipping eggs while a cigarette dangled between his lips.
"Help yourself."
Alex took the sheriff up on his offer. The doughnuts were still warm, and the sugary glaze melted against her tongue.
"They had this waiting for you. Is this your table? Do you have a standing order?''
"The owner's name is Pete," he told her, indicating the cook. "He used to feed me breakfast every morning on my way to school."
"How generous."
"It wasn't charity," he said curtly. "I swept up for him in the afternoons after school."
She had unwittingly struck a sore spot. Reede Lambert was defensive about his motherless childhood. Now, however, wasn't the time to probe for more information. Not with nearly every eye in the place watching them.
He devoured two doughnuts and washed them down with black coffee, wasting neither food, nor time, nor motion. He ate like he thought it might be a long time before his next meal.
"Busy place," she commented, unself-consciously licking glaze off her fingers.
"Yeah. The old-timers like me leave the new shopping mall and fast food places out by the interstate to the newcomers and teenagers. If you can't find who you're looking for anyplace else, he's usually at the B & B. Angus'll probably be along directly. ME's corporate headquarters is just one block off the square, but he conducts a lot of business right here in this room."
"Tell me about the Mintons."
He reached for the last doughnut, since it was obvious that Alex wasn't going to eat it. "They're rich, but not showy. Well liked around town."
"Or feared."
"By some, maybe," he conceded with a shrug.
"The ranch is only one of their businesses?"
"Yeah, but it's the granddaddy. Angus built it out of nothing but acres of dust and sheer determination."
"What exactly do they do out there?"
"Basically, they're a racehorse training outfit. Thoroughbreds mostly. Some Quarter Horses. They board up to a hundred and fifty horses at a time, and get them ready for the track trainers."
"You seem to know a lot about it."
"I own a couple of racehorses myself. I board them out there permanently." He pointed down to her half-empty coffee cup. "If you're finished, I'd like to show you something."
"What?" she asked, surprised by the sudden shift in topic.
"It's not far."
They left the B & B, but not before Reede said goodbye to everyone he'd said hello to when they came in. He didn't pay for the breakfast, but was saluted by Pete the cook and given an affectionate pat by the waitress.
Reede's official car, a Blazer truck, was parked at the curb in front of the courthouse. The space was reserved for him, marked with a small sign. He unlocked the door, helped Alex up into the cab of the four-wheel-drive vehicle, then joined
her. He drove only a few blocks before pulling up in front of a small house. "That's it," he said.
"What?"
"Where your mother lived." Alex whipped her head around to stare at the frame dwelling. "The neighborhood isn't what it was when she lived here. It's gone to pot. There used to be a tree there, where the sidewalk dips slightly."
"Yes. I've seen pictures."
' 'It died a few years ago and had to be cut down. Anyway,'' he said, slipping the truck back into gear, "I thought you'd want to see it."
' "Thank you." As he pulled the Blazer away from the curb, Alex kept her eyes on the house. The white paint had grayed.
Hot summer suns had faded the maroon awnings over the front windows. It wasn't attractive, but she swiveled her head and kept it in sight as long as she could.
That's where she had lived with her mother for two short months. In those rooms, Celina had fed her, bathed her, rocked her, and sang her lullabies. There, she had listened for Alex's crying in the night. Those walls had heard her mother's whispered vows of love to her baby girl.
Alex didn't remember, of course. But she knew that's how it had been.
Tamping down the stirring emotions, she picked up the conversation they had been having when they had left the B & B. "Why is this proposed racetrack so important to the Mintons?"
He glanced at her as though she'd lost her senses.' 'Money. Why else?"
"It sounds like they've got plenty."
"Nobody ever has enough money," he remarked with a grim smile. "And only somebody who's been as poor as me can say that. Look around." He gestured at the empty stores along the main thoroughfare they were now traveling. "See all the empty businesses and foreclosure notices? When the oil market went bust, so did the economy of this town. Just about everybody worked in an oil-related occupation."
"I understand all that."
' 'Do you? I doubt it," he said scornfully.' "This town needs that racetrack to survive. What we don't need is a wet-behind-the-ears, blue-eyed, redheaded female lawyer in a fur coat to come along and screw things up."
"I came here to investigate a murder," she lashed out, stung by his unexpected insult. "The racetrack, the gambling license, and the local economy have no relevance to it."
"Like hell they don't. If you ruin the Mintons, you ruin Purcell County."
"If the Mintons are proven guilty, they've ruined themselves."
"Look, lady, you're not going to uncover any new clues about your mother's murder. All you're going to do is stir up trouble. You won't get any help from locals. Nobody's gonna speak out against the Mintons, because the future of this county is riding on them building that racetrack."
"And you top the list of the loyal and closemouthed."
"Damn right!"
"Why?" she pressed. "Do the Mintons have something on you? Could one of them place you in that horse barn well before you 'discovered' my mother's body? What were you doing there at that time of day, anyway?"
"What I did every day. I was shoveling shit out of the stables. I worked for Angus then."
She was taken aback. "Oh, I didn't know that."
"There's a lot you don't know. And you're far better off that way."
He whipped the Blazer into his parking slot at the courthouse and braked, pitching her forward against her seat belt.
"You'd do well to leave the past alone, Miss Gaither."
"Thank you, Sheriff. I'll take that under advisement."
She got out of the truck and slammed the door behind her. Cursing beneath his breath, Reede watched her walk up the sidewalk. He wished he could relax and just enjoy the shape of her calves, the enticing sway of her hips, and all else that had immediately captured his notice when she had entered Pat Chastain's office yesterday afternoon. Her name, however, had robbed him of the luxury of indulging in pure, masculine appreciation.
Celina's daughter, he thought now, shaking his head in consternation. It was little wonder that he found Alex so damned attractive. Her mother had been his soul mate from the day in grade school when some snotty kid had hurtfully taunted her because she no longer had a daddy after her father's sudden death of a heart attack.
Knowing how ridicule about one's parents could hurt, Reede had rushed to Celina's defense. He had fought that battle and many others for her in the ensuing years. With Reede as the bearer of her colors, no one dared speak a cross word to her. A bond had been forged. Their friendship had been extraordinary and exclusive, until Junior had come along and been included.
So he knew he shouldn't be surprised that the assistant D.A. from Austin had churned up such emotions inside him. Perhaps his only cause for alarm should be their intensity.
Even though Celina had borne a child, she had died a girl. Alexandra was the embodiment of the woman she might have
become. He'd like to pass off his interest as purely nostalgic, a tender reminder of his childhood sweetheart. But he'd be
lying to himself. If he needed any help defining the nature of his interest, all he had to do was acknowledge the warm pressure that had developed inside his jeans as he had watched her lick sugar off her fingertips.
"Christ," he swore. He felt as ambiguous toward this woman as he'd felt toward her mother, just before she had been found dead in that stable.
How could two women, twenty-five years apart, have such a pivotal impact on his life? Loving Celina had almost ruined him. Her daughter posed just as real a threat. If she started digging into the past, God only knew what kind of trouble would be stirred up.
He intended to trade his sheriffs job for one that would generate wealth and status. He sure as hell didn't want his future shadowed by a criminal investigation. Reede hadn't worked his butt off all these years to let the payoff slip through his fingers. He'd spent his adult life overcompensating for his childhood. Now, when the respect he'd always wanted was within his grasp, he wasn't about to stand by and let Alex's investigation remind folks of his origins. The sassy lady lawyer could wreck him if she wasn't stopped.
The people who said material possessions weren't important already had plenty of everything. He'd never had anything.
Until now. He was prepared to go to any length to protect it.
As he left his truck and reentered the courthouse, he cursed the day Alexandra Gaither had been born, just as he had on
that day itself. At the same time, he couldn't help but wonder if her smart mouth wouldn't be good for something besides
spouting accusations and legal jargon. He'd bet his next win at the track that it would.