Emily knew Samantha was right. But the evidence could work the other way, too—as a motive for murder. She didn’t say any of that to Samantha. No argument was needed. The shock of the news had to sink in.
“The DNA results came back,” Emily said. “I was as surprised as you are.”
Samantha turned away and walked toward the workbench. “You think you really know someone. I guess the joke’s on me. I told her everything about my marriage. How I hated the idea that my husband had his hands in people’s mouths all day long. It disgusted me. I told her how I thought my oldest wasn’t very smart and I wanted to kill myself for thinking that.”
“We all have silly thoughts. Every mother does.” Emily said, as the woman crumpled in front of her.
“The point here,” Samantha said, “is that I told her everything. If that baby isn’t Mitch’s, I wouldn’t have the first clue as to whose it could have been. It makes me wonder if I ever really did know her at all.”
“Nothing to suggest maybe she might have had an affair?”
Samantha shook her head. “Tell me something, Sheriff Kenyon.”
“What?”
“How do you grieve for a best friend you really didn’t know?”
Emily didn’t have a good answer, but she offered one anyway. “There are things we don’t know about each other, but our love is just the same.”
Samantha looked around her perfectly organized garage. Order amid the chaos. “She was like a sister to me.”
“I know. She still is.”
“But I didn’t really know her.”
“Maybe she didn’t want to disappoint you.”
On the other side of Cherrystone, Jason Howard made the rounds of the scrapbooking group. Neither Erica Benoit nor Alana Gutierrez had an inkling about who might be the father. He caught up with Tammy Sells as she trudged out on the crunching snow to get her mail.
“If Mitch knew about it, it’s the reason he killed her,” she said, stuffing her mail into her coat pocket and bracing herself against the chilly air. “In a way, though, I’m kind of happy for Mandy. Maybe for the last few months, she really did have a little happiness after all.”
“Thanks for your time,” Jason said. “I’m sorry about your friend.”
She looked at the young man and smiled. “Be good to your wife, deputy. She’s depending on you.”
“Thanks, ma’am. Will do.”
Darla Montague, Mitch Crawford’s assistant, was cleaning the “guest” tables from a day of free hot dogs. The dealership smelled more like a fast food place than a place that sold cars. Her spirit seemed to brighten when she saw Emily and Jason enter the showroom. She always expected good things would come her way, simply because she was good. Or tried to be.
“Hi, Mrs. Sheriff Kenyon,” she said, letting out a little laugh.
“Hi, Darla. My deputy and I are here to see your boss. Is he in?”
“Yes, he is.” She set down a bottle of diluted bleach and a cleaning cloth. “Mr. Crawford has been gone most of the day, but he came back an hour or so ago. He’s in his office.” She indicated the direction of the big glass windows that had enclosed the owner’s office since Mitch’s father opened up for business. A slogan painted on the window still endured: WE’LL STAND ON OUR HEADS TO MAKE YOU A GREAT DEAL.
Mitch was on the phone; his back was turned to face the car lot when Emily and Jason approached. When their reflections appeared on the glass, his body tightened and he turned around.
“Gotta go. Have some visitors here.” He hung up and stood, his manner stiff and unwelcoming. “What do you want? Are you here to mess with my head some more?”
Emily inched closer. Jason lingered just a few paces behind her.
“No,” she said. “We’re here with what may be upsetting news.”
“What could be more disturbing than having my wife and baby killed by some creep and having half of the town I love think that I’m the one who did it?”
“I’m sure it has been very hard for you, too,” Emily said, her voice cool. “But you’ve put yourself in this position, Mitch.”
“Are you here to tell me how to act?”
The conversation was escalating to a place that would have no victors. “No. I’m not. As I said, I’m here with some very disturbing news.”
Mitch folded his arms across his chest. “Yeah? What?”
“DNA results indicate that the baby your wife was carrying was not yours.”
Silence. His dark brown eyes looked around the room and his mouth tightened.
“Mitch, did you hear me?”
He turned and looked across the dealership. It was the end of the day and the balloons had fallen to the ground. A pair of salesmen, young and in need of commissions, stood at the ready in case someone came on to the lot in search of a deal.
“I heard you. And you ask me if I knew? Let me tell you this. What you’re saying is a goddamn lie. My wife would never cheat on me. She would never do that to me. She knew I could never forgive that. Now, get out. I don’t ever want to see you here on my lot again. Get your next car somewhere else. I don’t care. Leave me the hell alone.”
Before he turned his back on them, Emily and Jason thought they’d seen a tear in his eye.
Chapter Thirty-five
The next morning, Camille Hazelton gave the word and Mitch Crawford was arrested for the murder of his wife and daughter. There was no fanfare. No TV-style chase toward a chain-link fence. It was mundane, as criminal cases often are. Emily and Jason picked him up as he was going into the dealership.
“This is the biggest mistake you ever made,” he said, setting his briefcase down. “And you’ve made a lot of them.”
He looked right at Emily and she just dug her eyes deeper into his gaze.
“That’s fine,” Jason shot back. “We learn from all of our mistakes. Guess you don’t.”
Jason kicked the black briefcase to the side.
“Hey that’s pig leather! Be careful or I’ll sue!”
“You have the right to remain silent,” Emily began. The words came from her lips, and with each one she thought of Mandy and her baby. This monster standing cuffed in front of her would never hurt anyone again.
The Cherrystone jail staffers—and two guys in custody for driving under the influence—could barely contain their glee over the arrest of Mitch Crawford. He came into the jail kicking like the brat that most of his advance publicity pegged him to be.
“These coveralls smell bad,” he said. “I can’t wear this filthy thing.”
“You’ll wear it or you’ll walk around naked,” a jailer said. “You pick.”
The car dealer with the dead wife and baby had a complaint for everything. The food was bad, the place was filthy, and the staff was unprofessional.
“He thinks he’s on a damn vacation,” one of the DUIs said to the other with whom he was sharing a cell.
“Yeah. Cry me a river. This is no all-inclusive resort, that’s for sure.”
When it came time to shower, Mitch Crawford begged for unused flip-flops so his feet “didn’t have to feel the slime of the vermin who’ve been here before me.”
That didn’t win him any friends, in a place where he probably could use one. It wasn’t that anyone was going to “shank” him for a pack of smokes. It was more like someone might rough him up a little just because they could. It was also because in jail, outside of watching TV for an hour and hoping for a litter detail, there wasn’t much to do.
Mitch Crawford was fresh blood and a welcome break from the jailhouse ennui that ensured long days.