“Well, the hell with it,” said Horton, as much to himself as to the others. He was sixty-three years old and he’d already decided he wasn’t going to run again. Let his successor fight with those penny-pinching commissioners. Maybe some college-educated hotshot like Underwood here could take them on, pry loose a few more dollars. He was tired of going hat in hand every year to beg for enough money to do the job properly. From here on out, he’d do his job, but bedamned if he was going to exert himself too much. They’d get what they paid for and nothing more.
It no longer fretted him that he’d never have a house like this one. He’d done all right for someone who’d barely scraped through high school. A lot better than his brother, who’d gone all the way through college—first Horton ever to get a degree. Law enforcement might not pay much, but it sure paid more than teaching math to horny, dumbass teenagers. ’Course now, if he’d been willing to bend the law the way Bobby Ashe had when he was first starting in real estate … Not that anything had ever been proved, but look at the way his kids had turned out. Apples don’t roll far from the tree, do they?
“Anybody thirsty?” asked Joyce Ashe from the doorway. She carried several bottles of water.
“Now, that’s real kind of you,” Lucius Burke said. He unscrewed the cap from the pale blue bottle and drank deeply. The others followed suit, although Horton shook his head in amazement as he first studied the label.
“Who’d ever think you could get people to pay good money for plain old water?” he asked.
Joyce grinned. “Don’t you wish it was you and me?”
Horton grinned back. For all her big house and fancy car, Joyce Ashe was okay. Hadn’t got above her raising. And she’d worked hard for everything she had. Too bad there were things money couldn’t buy, because for all the money they’d made, they might as well have dug a big hole in the front yard and dumped half of it in. That’s probably what it’d cost them in lawyers and rehab over the years. He still remembered how she’d cried the first time Bob Junior got picked up for dealing and—The walkie-talkie gave a screech.
“Yeah?”
“Sorry, Sheriff. That dark shape Carmichael saw? It was just another rock.”
Horton sighed and took a swallow of the water.
Underwood set his bottle on the dark wood railing and went back to scanning the hillside to the left of the terrace. Even though the morning had a light nip in the air, the water was cold enough to give off beads of condensation.
“Saw you talking with that substitute judge this morning,” Horton told him. “She a friend of yours?”
“Friend of a friend. Or rather girlfriend of a friend of a friend.”
“Lucky friend,” Lucius Burke said lightly.
“Sorry ’bout that,” Joyce said to him. “When I met her back in the summer, she didn’t seem to be attached to anybody.”
“She here with you last night?” asked Underwood.
“No, I just gave her a ride back to town.”
“Thought you were still seeing some lady lawyer over in Boone,” Horton said.
Burke shrugged. “Didn’t work out.”
Joyce Ashe glanced at her watch. “I need to make a few phone calls. Get anybody anything else?”
Burke and Horton shook their heads.
“Me either,” said Underwood as he lifted the bottle and drank another swallow.
A drop of condensation dripped onto his binoculars and he pulled out his handkerchief to wipe it away, then frowned. The handkerchief had a small wet spot of brownish red.
He wiped the bottom of the bottle. More staining.
“What’s that?” asked Horton.
Underwood put his nose close to the damp spot on the railing where his water bottle had sat and sniffed. “Smells like blood.”
“The hell you say!”
“Tell them to take another look right under us.”
Horton barked orders into his walkie-talkie and soon the officers converged directly below the damp place on the railing, where oaks and laurels grew thick and bushy.
They found Norman Osborne’s body halfway up a tree, folded in half over a limb.
The ground dropped off so sharply there that Horton needed to hold on to a rope to work his way down through the laurel thicket.
“Damn it all,” he said, glaring at the men who’d first worked this spot. “How many times you gotta be told to look up when you’re searching a wooded area? It ain’t enough to cover the ground. You gotta look in the fuckin’ trees, too.”
Underwood agreed, and yet, with so many limbs and trunks and the bushes that crowded all the spaces between, even knowing the body was here, the eye didn’t automatically home in on it.
Osborne hung across a limb like the first dead buck of hunting season. His head was nearly even with his feet and there was a deep laceration on the back of his head.
“Careful, Sheriff,” said Underwood. He put his hand on Horton’s arm to keep him from walking closer and pointed to the ground where ants and flies were busily feeding on the gore that had puddled on the brown leaves.
“Poor bastard must’ve bled out,” Horton said.
Underwood nodded. “Just like Ledwig.”
“Oh, shit!” said Horton as he and Lucius Burke shared a startled glance.
“Hey, now, wait just a damn minute here,” said Burke.
Underwood shrugged. “Two men going off decks? Friends? Both with head wounds?”
“Doesn’t necessarily mean they’re related,” Burke argued.
“Don’t it?” Sheriff Horton gave a cynical, seen-it-all snort. “I wanna be there when you try telling that to the Freeman kid’s lawyer.”
CHAPTER 15
As Mary Kay had warned me, the Three Sisters Tea Room was jammed when I got there a little past noon, but I quietly worked my way through the vestibule, where at least six people waited to be seated in a room that could accommodate about three dozen.
When people glared at me, I smiled politely and murmured, “I have a reservation.”
“They take reservations?” a woman asked indignantly. “I was told they didn’t.”
“I’m a relative,” I said.
The young hostess who approached with a frown for my pushiness was wearing a long black skirt, white ruffled blouse, and a retro black velvet and cameo choker, a costume meant to conjure up a more gracious era, no doubt, and appropriate for a tea room decorated in pink and white with fresh flowers at every small table. I remembered her from my courtroom yesterday where she had sat immediately behind Danny Freeman.
“I’m sorry—” she began.
“Carla Ledwig?” I asked, eyeing her trim waistline. Her pregnancy wasn’t yet showing.
“Yes?”
“I’m Judge Knott. I believe my cousins are here? May and June Pittman?”
Her annoyance turned to alarm as she recognized me.
“Well, yes, but they’re really sort of busy right now.”
I drew myself up to look as official as possible. “Never-theless, I’d like to see them. Now.”
“I’ll tell them you’re here.”
“Why don’t I tell them myself?” I said pleasantly and pointed to a set of double doors at the rear. “Through there?”
She nodded.
From my own waitressing days I knew to enter through the right door, so that I didn’t collide with the young Asian woman who came through the left one carrying a large tray filled with luscious-looking open-faced cucumber and watercress sandwiches. Like Carla Ledwig, she also wore ruffles, long skirt, and a ribbon choker.