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Authors: Jeff Abbott

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‘So you go put some ice on that eye. Or a nice steak,’ Delford said.

Claudia went back to her office. A whirl of paperwork covered her desk: two new burglary reports to follow up on, a shoplifting
case. Gardner came in a few minutes later, swigging a Dr Pepper. He shut the office door and leaned against it.

‘Aren’t you clever?’ he said.

‘Pardon me?’

‘You screw up, so you start trying to make me look bad.’

‘You’re mistaken.’

‘You’re gunning for me, Claudia. Maybe you damaged those evidence bags without me seeing.’

‘Oh, get over yourself.’

He shot an unexpected missile across her bow. ‘You
think because you’re Mexican and a woman you should get all the good cases.’

‘Just because you’re an idiot,’ she said sweetly, ‘doesn’t mean you should get all the bad ones.’

Eddie Gardner leaned toward her and growled, ‘I bet you scratch when you fuck.’

She stood. ‘Get away from me, and don’t you ever talk to me like that again.’

He stepped back, a wounded look on his face. ‘I don’t know what you’re talking about, Detective Salazar.’ He opened the door
and left.

She sat, bile polluting the back of her throat, wondering why autocracy and viciousness had suddenly fouled this perfectly
nice police department. Delford had turned tyrannical; Gardner, who she always suspected was a pig, had gone from mildly amusing
to no-tolerance disgusting.

She went down to the kitchen to get a glass of ice water. She found Patrolman Fox snacking on a Butter-finger bar. Chocolate
gummed the corners of his mouth.

‘What’s up, Bill?’ she asked, and he swallowed his candy.

‘Working hard for Eddie. I wore my fingers to the bone phoning on the Hubble case.’

‘What’s going on with that?’ She dumped ice into a glass and filled it from the faucet.

Fox shrugged. ‘I called all the numbers on Pete Hubble’s phone records. He knew some strange people, let me tell you. Most
of them seemed to be people that he knew through his, um, film work.’ The milk-breathed Baptist boy could hardly say the word
pornography.
‘I made notes. I haven’t typed them up yet.’

Claudia picked up his scrawled pieces of paper. In the last days of his life Pete had called a couple of porn directors and
a screenwriter in legit film. He’d called his mother, several times, his ex-wife three times. There were
a couple of calls to the Placid Harbor Nursing Home – the home David’s grandfather lived at, down by Little Mischief Beach,
and that reminded her that she wanted to have another talk with Heather Farrell. She wondered who Pete knew there. And still
the number in far East Texas, in the little hamlet of Missatuck, the one she’d tried the morning after Pete’s death, and Fox
had similarly gotten no answer. The phone company said that the number belonged to one Kathy Breaux. Pete had called her four
times in the three days before his death.

Claudia went back to her office and picked up the phone. She dialed the Missatuck number. It was now disconnected, and no
new number listed.

30

The afternoon light slanted through the tilted blinds. Bars of light and dark lay against Whit’s desk – for once, cleared
of the usual fan of papers and the half-full coffee cup. Whit sat across from Claudia, still in his judge’s robe, an askew
collar of yellow tropical-print shirt peeking out from the sober black. He had finished with traffic court by two, and she’d
given him a quick synopsis of the developments with Jabez Jones.

‘I don’t care much about that suicide note,’ Claudia said. ‘But there’s no way I believe Pete put Rachel into Jabez’s camp
as a spy, then decided to kill himself.’

Whit loosened a stray thread from the throat of his robe. ‘Did Rachel say she’d told Pete about the drugs she’d seen?’

‘Actually, no, she hadn’t talked to him since she arrived at the camp. It was too risky, they thought. So let’s say Pete found
out another way Jabez was dealing.’

‘Dealing?’ Whit said.

‘He clearly had more than he could personally use. Gives Jabez a motive.’

‘I suppose.’ Whit shrugged.

Claudia cocked her head. ‘You sound like you’ve graduated from the Delford Spires School of Low-Key Investigation.’

‘So Delford’s finally made it to your hallowed shit list?’

‘I’ve made room for him. Gardner’s king.’ She told him about her confrontation with Eddie Gardner.

‘Be careful of him. Very careful,’ Whit said.

‘He’s a mouth. I can handle him.’

‘Seriously, Claudia,’ Whit said, and she saw he was
dead serious. The sharp-eyed glare on his face was the one he usually reserved for magistrating repeat offenders and irksome
litigants. His mouth twitched slightly. ‘He’s trouble.’

‘Why’s he on your shit list, Honorable?’

‘Just don’t cross him, okay? Trust me.’

‘What’s going on?’

‘Nothing. Tired. Inquest is tomorrow at one. I decided to call a full one in the courtroom instead of just issuing a ruling
of death.’

She supposed the political capital of a high-profile death was too good for him to waste right before an election. ‘Sure,
fine. I’ve got my notes ready to testify.’

He dug into his desk drawer and handed her a phone number. ‘This is a number Pete used in California with an answering service.
It might be interesting to see who in Port Leo, or in Texas, called him,’

‘Haven’t you been the busy bee?’ Claudia said. ‘Thanks, I’ll have Fox check this.’

‘I’ve got to go. Promise me you’ll be careful.’

‘About what?’

‘Just be careful, all right?’

‘Sure.’ She walked back across the street to the police station, wondering who had wedged the coal lump in Whit’s ass.

Whit watched Claudia cross the street, a sudden whip of wind from the bay mussing her dark hair. She tucked the errant strands
behind her ear and darted inside the police station.

He let the blinds fall. That morning he had called each of his five brothers. He heard updates on teething nieces and upcoming
software releases and the casual cruelties of writer critique groups. But nothing of bullets, of shady characters lurking
in darkened driveways, ready to make
innocents pay for Whit being the wrong judge in the wrong place at the wrong time. He ended each conversation with a story
about random violence he claimed to have seen on TV and begged them all to be extra careful.

He had trudged through the day’s duties of signing warrants, a brief truancy court, and a long and maddening traffic court
session. Tomorrow was the inquest; he didn’t have much time. He picked up the phone.

‘Velvet? It’s Whit Mosley. I need a favor from you. Do you still have a key to
Real Shame?’

‘I do.’ She sounded lazy, sleepy, as though just awakening for the day. If she was, he wondered what she’d been up to all
night.

‘I’d like to stop by and borrow it, if I may.’

‘The cops have a key.’

‘I’d like to borrow yours.’

She was silent for a moment. ‘Well, yeah, that’s okay.’

‘I’ve got an errand to run first, but I’ll be over in an hour or so.’

‘I’ll see you then, Judgie.’

He hung up, doffed the robe, and in his beachwear shirt and khaki shorts and sandals headed over to the trashy west end of
Port Leo.

The Blade watched the little waves surge up Little Mischief Beach, the sand flat, wet, and clean. The damp, fine air – the
ocean exhaling – smelled of salt and freshness. No sign on the beach Heather Farrell had ever been there, no blood on the
sands, not a gap-toed footprint to mark her passage.

He turned away from the water and the little voice, tinged with his mother, that whispered and berated in the curvy hollow
of his ear roared:
Do you think she only had the clothes on her worthless back?

He stopped. He turned toward the beach. Past the gentle crescent of sand, into the parkland, was a motte of live oaks, ringed
with high grass. Hadn’t he watched her there once, stretching against the Tower-of-Pisa bent-trees, scratching her foot?

She had to have camped nearby.

He bolted along the stretch of sand, up through the bluestems and the grasses, panic drumming its rat-a-tat in his chest.
Mama’s voice laughing at him, hiding in the wind.

He searched for a half hour among the askew oaks and the tall grasses. He found only a narrow rectangle of crushed bluestems,
where a woman’s sleeping bag might have lain recently. A discarded peanut butter crackers wrapper fluttered, caught in the
tall grass.

The trailer park was named Rainbow’s End. The pot of gold, however, was nowhere in sight.

He knocked on the wrong door, and a sleepy elderly woman told him Marian Duchamp made her home in trailer number six. The
woman pointed over to an immaculately maintained trailer, a veritable palace among the weed-choked lots.

Whit wondered why anyone would voluntarily live on the Texas coast in a mobile home. One hurricane – one mild tropical storm
– roaring ashore could move the trailer half a county inland. In small fragments.

Whit knocked once on the door. Inside, an afternoon talk show’s theme jazzily trilled. The door lurched open. A woman who
should have looked younger than she did, wearing frayed cutoffs and a faded Corpus Christi Ice Rays T-shirt, tottered in the
doorway.

‘Marian Duchamp?’

‘Maybe.’ She blinked against the bright afternoon light.

‘I’m Whit Mosley, the justice of the peace for Encina County. I’m conducting a death inquest, and I’d like to ask you a few
questions.’

‘Um, okay. Um, what about?’ Lunch had apparently been of the liquid sort.

‘Corey Hubble.’

She stared.

‘A friend of yours who disappeared several years ago?’ Whit prompted.

Marian Duchamp digested this request. She was clearly drunk. A wine bottle rested against her hip: French Beaujolais, surprisingly,
not your typical trailer-park fare.

Georgie, the walking she-database, had provided him with the local lore on Marian: a good-looking tomboy and jock up until
the last year of junior high, when her father drowned in a boating accident. The dead father had reached from the grave to
drag his daughter down; Marian Duchamp had raced into a self-destructive spiral of drugs, booze, and petty theft. Dropout
from school, lived on her mother’s mercy, Georgie had said. Just a shame.

‘Corey. Yes.’ She spoke slowly.

‘Can we talk about him?’

‘Well, I’m drunk, but you know, I’m not out in public, Judge, so I don’t think that I’m in the wrong this time.’

‘I’m not here to arrest or bug you, okay? As long as you’re not planning on driving anywhere today, are you?’

‘Don’t have a car, so I guess not.’ She laughed, a rough, unpleasant guffaw, and the wine wafted on her breath. She contemplated
him with a half smile. ‘I remember you. One of the Mosley boys.’

‘Yeah, the youngest.’ At once he almost regretted his words. Forever the baby of a certain notorious family. But when five
older brothers had already speeded and
fished and slept and drunk a path through the town’s consciousness, cutting your own distinctive way got progressively harder.

‘Yeah, I knew your brother Mark,’ she said. Her smile warmed, not quite sultry but at least friendlier. ‘Come on in.’

A sober feminine hand clearly maintained this space: gold-trimmed family photos, a small milk bottle holding fresh carnations
on the dinner table, a sofa with neatly arranged pillows, embroidered with platitudes like
BLOOM WHERE YOU’RE PLANTED
and
PRINCESS OF QUITE A BIT.
Dust would not dare show its unsightly face; the home appeared as pristine as a freshly tended hotel suite. A stand of wine
bottles, emptied, stood along the breakfast bar. Whit read the labels: Cakebread, La Crema, Cuvaison. Not a dollar vintage
in the bunch.

‘You have a nice trailer,’ Whit said.

‘I found quality help,’ Marian smirked. ‘And you know, good help is really hard to find. I’m ever so lucky. Have a seat. You
on duty? Do judges do duty? Want a glass of quality red?’ Her gaze drifted across his throat, his chest.

‘No, thank you.’ He sat on the couch, and she tumbled into the recliner. He knew she’d once been attractive in a lanky way,
but now her skin looked sallow, her belly was a little wine barrel, and patchy shadow, new applied over old, caked her eyelids.

‘What’s Mark doing these days?’ she asked.

‘He’s living in Austin, still single, getting an MFA in creative writing at UT. He’s finished a novel and is working on a
collection of poems.’

‘Well, la-di-da, fancy, fancy,” fancy. Po-ems.’ She paused. ‘I know some words that rhyme.’ She confessed this with a tinge
of embarrassment, as though she had neglected a gift handed her by the gods.

Whit let silence sit between them for twenty seconds, and Marian fidgeted and half smiled at him. ‘I understand you knew Corey
Hubble when you were kids,’ Whit said.

‘Ancient history now, like Vietnam and the Renaissance.’

‘His brother Pete died recently, and he was working on a film about Corey’s disappearance. We’re interested to know who he
talked to about Corey.’

‘We being who? The police?’

‘We being me, really.’ He suspected she had no liking for the police. ‘The inquest determines if someone is responsible for
the death of another. The voters are my boss. I work for the county.’

‘You don’t work for Delford Spires?’

‘He wouldn’t hire me to wipe his ass,’ Whit said. Marian, the wild teen, would have no love for a longtime police chief. ‘I’m
not one of his favorite people.’

Marian abruptly got up from the recliner and refilled her glass with Beaujolais. Not the gentle arc of a pour – more of a
rough slosh, spilling the wine. She licked wine from her hand, then drank half the glass down, then refilled again before
she tottered back to the recliner.

‘So this is upsetting to you, or you’re just thirsty?’ Whit said.

‘There’s nothing to tell about Corey Hubble.’

‘Pete didn’t think so.’

‘Yeah, and now he’s gonna be crammed in a coffin for eternity.’ She shuddered. ‘No, thanks.’

Whit was silent, Marian Duchamp, in this state, could hardly be considered a credible witness. At least in court. But instead
he got up, found a glass, poured in a small trickle, and sat again.

‘I remember Corey, you know,’ he said. ‘I knew him, but not well.’

Watching him sample the wine, she visibly relaxed. She traced the ring of the glass with a fingernail. ‘He … was jealous of
you,’ she said with a soft laugh. ‘Does that surprise you?’

‘Sure does. I’m nothing special.’

‘Well, you had a mess of brothers. You always had family around. Corey didn’t have nobody after his daddy died. Pete was the
pet, and his mama just wanted to go write laws and fuck around in Austin. Serving the people, my ass.’

‘Didn’t he have you as a friend?’

She laughed. ‘Friend. There’s a nice clean word. We fucked now and then.’ She watched him for a reaction to her crudity.

‘He ever hit now and then?’

She giggled. ‘Hey, I hit him back. He was a mean little shit when he got crossed.’

‘You ever hear of him roughing up other women?’

She tongued the rim of her glass. ‘I was the only one stupid enough to date him.’

‘So what do you think happened to him, Marian?’

‘I really don’t know.’ She sipped some wine, not looking at him. ‘Why should I tell you anything anyway?’

‘Well, I need your help, and you’re the only one who can help me. No one else will.’

‘That’s a lousy reason.’

‘You mentioned Delford Spires before.’

She shrugged.

‘You think Delford did a crappy job of investigating Corey’s disappearance?’

She laughed, not a funny or kind laugh. ‘That was the fox watching the freaking henhouse.’

‘Why?’

‘Corey hated Delford Spires’s guts.’

‘Didn’t every teenager in town?’ Whit cajoled, laughing,
tasting a little more of his wine. ‘I was in the terrorist crew that painted his house pink. You remember that?’

She brayed laughter, recognizing the widely loved – or at least widely discussed – prank played long ago on the police chief.

‘So what was Corey’s beef with Delford?’

‘I think,’ she said slowly, ‘Corey took off because Delford caught wind of what he was planning.’

‘Which was?’

‘Well, Corey was probably kidding – you know loud-mouthed kids, but he told me he was gonna kill Delford Spires.’ She held
her wineglass very still, in both hands.

Whit kept equally still. ‘How did he plan on doing this?’

She shrugged. ‘He had his daddy’s shotgun.’

Whit watched her; she stared at the hem of her cutoffs. ‘Why do you think he told you this, Marian?’

‘Just to impress me. He was ten pounds of shit in a Dixie cup.’

‘Why did he want to shoot Delford?’

‘I don’t know. He never told me why … so I never took him seriously. I mean, look, he couldn’t have been serious. Delford
Spires is still alive.’

‘But Corey probably isn’t,’ he said, and she burst into tears.

‘You think Delford killed Corey?’

She cried, she shrugged. ‘Shit. I shouldn’t have said anything. Shit.’

BOOK: A Kiss Gone Bad
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