The Leading Ladies - Tyler Colins - E-Book

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Beschreibung

Three cozy mysteries by Robin Murphy, Connie L. Beckett & Tyler Colins, now available in one volume!
POACH: In this suspenseful small town mystery, Gwen Lindstrom - owner of Rancher's Cafe in Dubois, Wyoming - finds herself embroiled in a murder investigation after her waitress's boyfriend, Donny Myers, is discovered dead in a barn. As the county sheriff delves into the case and reveals that Donny was shot, Gwen begins to suspect her employee, Lacey, might be the culprit. Counterfeit goods, poachers, and a mysterious man all intertwine with the murder. Driven by her curiosity and a desire for justice, Gwen takes it upon herself to uncover the truth. But when her investigation takes a dangerous turn, will she be able to solve the mystery of Donny's death and save herself from harm?
Point And Shoot For Your Life: In a twist of fate, photographer Hannah Mills finds herself on the brink of eviction, struggling to make ends meet. But when her great aunt leaves her a priceless Navajo blanket, Hannah's life takes an unexpected turn. Before she can auction the valuable item, her niece Mandy is kidnapped by human traffickers, who demand the blanket as ransom. Determined to save her niece, Hannah joins forces with the charming FBI agent Finn McNally. Together, they embark on a thrilling and humorous journey to bring down Russia's largest human and drug trafficking ring. Point And Shoot For Your Life is a captivating blend of humor, mystery, and romance that will keep you hooked until the final page.
The Connecticut Corpse Caper: Seven eccentric individuals find themselves trapped in a mysterious Connecticut mansion. With hidden passageways, puzzling deaths, and the mischievous ghost named Fred, their week-long stay becomes a game of survival. As bodies start piling up, amateur sleuth Jill and her allies embark on a frantic quest to solve the murders, but their efforts are met with chaos and mayhem. Will they unravel the truth behind the mansion's dark secrets before becoming the next victims? Brace yourself for a thrilling and comedic journey that will keep you on the edge of your seat.

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2023

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THE LEADING LADIES

A SLEUTH MYSTERY NOVEL COLLECTION

CONNIE L. BECKETT

ROBIN MURPHY

TYLER COLINS

CONTENTS

POACH

Connie L. Beckett

Acknowledgments

1. Lacey

2. Missing

3. Found

4. Retribution

5. Erickson Clan

6. Awol

7. Foster Kids

8. Dilute

9. Lot Lounger

10. Revelation

11. House Guest

12. Game Plan

13. Bait the Hook

14. Strike

15. Aftermath

16. Epilogue

About the Author

Point and Shoot for Your Life

Robin Murphy

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

About the Author

The Connecticut Corpse Caper

Tyler Colins

1. The Arrival

2. Walk this Way

3. What Were They Thinking!?

4. The Dinner Bell Tolleth

5. Done … Like Dinner

6. Deadly Desserts

7. Breakfast Beckons

8. Surprise, Surprise

9. A Tour of the Manse

10. The Never-Ending Manse

11. Come Out, Come Out, Wherever You Are

12. Hyde-n-Seek

13. Come Out, Come Out, Wherever You Are

14. 1-2-3, You're It

15. What a Jam

16. Fall of the Fungi

17. Olly Olly Oxen Free

18. What a Surprise

19. A Tale with Two Tails

20. Big but [Not So] Bad-Ass

21. A Bop on the Head is Worth Two …

22. Little Brown Jugs

23. Ring around the Rosie

24. That's the Way the Cookie Crumbles

25. Murder They Wrote

26. Who REALLY Did It?

27. Three on a Dare

28. If the Diary Fits …

29. It Always Works Different in the Movies

30. Almost Always

31. Going for It

32. The Best is Yet to Come

33. All's Well that Ends Well … Sort Of

About the Author

Copyright (C) 2023 Connie L. Beckett, Robin Murphy, Tyler Colins

Layout design and Copyright (C) 2023 by Next Chapter

Published 2023 by Next Chapter

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the author's permission.

POACH

GWEN LINDSTROM MYSTERIES BOOK 1

CONNIE L. BECKETT

To Joe, my travel companion and driver in chief on our trip to Dubois.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Thank you to my writing group friends. Your input is always valuable. A big thank you to Donna for making sure my commas are in their proper places and any plot holes are filled. Joe and I stayed at the Wind River KOA while I researched the Dubois area. The staff was helpful in their recommendations and we appreciated their input about area history and attractions. A heartfelt thank you to my friends and family for supporting my writing obsession.

1

LACEY

“Where in the hell is that girl, anyway?” Gwen Lindstrom asked Mack as she flipped over the sign in the restaurant window from closed to open.

The dark sky had just begun to lighten, but at the early hour, dawn had not yet brightened the shallow valley where Dubois, Wyoming, lay.

Mack shrugged. “Second time this week she’s been late, right?” he asked Gwen through the opening cut in the wall between the restaurant’s dining area and the kitchen. He was cleaning the already spotless grill, getting it ready for the breakfast crowd soon to wander in for crisp bacon, over-easy eggs, and tender pancakes. “I still think you need to drug test her. Or you could just fire her for being late. You’ve done that for lesser things.”

“I would, but the summer tourist season has started, and waitress pickings are thin,” Gwen explained, reaching into the fridge for squeeze bottles of the hot, homemade salsa the Café was famous for.

The girl they talked about was Lacey Stevens, but she wasn’t really a girl since she was in her twenties. She had wandered in a month earlier looking for work. Gwen had taken pity on Lacey. She was a skinny little thing, shorter than Gwen’s five-foot-five, and looked like it had been a long time since she’d had a decent meal. Still, her appearance was clean and neat, and her long dark hair was pulled back into a tidy ponytail. And Gwen was short-handed with Michelle on maternity leave, and most likely not coming back.

Gwen had told Lacey, “I have a spot open on the morning shift. We open at 6 a.m. That means you need to be here and ready to go before 5:45. Understand?”

Lacey nodded her agreement.

Gwen went on, “Your hair’s good pulled back like that and I guess the purple is okay.” It looked like the bottom half of the girl’s dark hair had been dipped into purple dye. On Lacey, the look worked. Plus, did she have the standing to protest hair? Gwen fingered her earlobe with its row of earrings that ran from the top of her ear to the bottom of the lobe. She wouldn’t begrudge the girl the purple. “But,” Gwen continued, “you’ll need to cover that.” She pointed to the tattooed sleeve on Lacey’s left arm that ran from just above her wrist up to where it disappeared under the pushed-up sleeve of her baggy sweater.

“I have a long-sleeved shirt I can wear,” Lacey had told her, and at that Gwen hired her.

For three weeks, Lacey had arrived before the designated time and ready to work. No doubt she was a hard worker, although her nervous manner and the fact that she was always fretting, moving, and fidgeting was quite a contrast from Michelle’s heavy-bellied cautious way. And, Lord, how easily the girl was distracted. A truck would rumble into the lot and Lacey, in the middle of taking a customer’s order, would stare out the window until the driver shut off the motor.

Just then the door opened, and Lacey rushed in.

“Sorry, sorry,” she told Gwen as she zoomed past her on her way to the back room for an apron.

Before Gwen could open her mouth to say anything, Lacey was gone, the door to the back room swinging in her wake.

Mack held up two fingers, telling Gwen twice in one week.

The first time Lacey was late, she had come in with a black eye, the makeup she applied failing to hide the bruise. Gwen had reminded Lacey that she needed to get there before 5:45 but, seeing the damage, she didn’t have the heart to scold her.

“I’m so sorry. I know this is the second time, but I promise it won’t happen again,” Lacey told Gwen after she came back, tying the black apron with Ranchers’ Café stenciled in red above her breast.

The bruise around Lacey’s eye had turned that pukey shade of yellow-green that bruises do after a few days. What caught Gwen’s attention this morning was the darkness smudged under both of Lacey’s eyes. Not a bruise but definitely evidence she hadn’t slept much. Gwen wondered if she had been partying late or was the boyfriend who had most likely smacked her also been responsible for the sleepless night?

Their first customer pulled into the lot, headlights sweeping the inside of the restaurant.

“I’ll talk to you about it later, Lacey. Right now, we have work to do.”

Gwen watched Lacey’s shoulders relax with the reprieve as a second customer pulled into the lot.

The restaurant’s busy breakfast time fell between 6 and 9 a.m. Lacey was even more nervous and twitchy than usual as they waited on the ranch and farm workers who rose early for work first, and then the office staff and salespeople who slipped in for a bite before their workday began. Every time someone drove into the parking lot or opened the squeaky glass door, Lacey’s head jerked toward the noise, a strange expression on her face. Gwen couldn’t decipher the look. Gwen wondered if it was fear, dread, or anticipation.

An unsettling tingle fluttered on the back of Gwen’s neck as if Lacey watched her all morning like a dog that had an accident on the carpet and knew punishment loomed.

At 10:30, with only one couple still eating and unable to stand it anymore, Gwen poured two cups of coffee and motioned Lacey to join her at an empty booth.

“You were late again this morning,” Gwen told her as soon as Lacey sat. “Why was that?” She always believed the direct approach was best. Gwen didn’t give them time to formulate a lie.

Lacey’s hand shook as she poured sugar into her coffee. She quickly set the sugar container back down on the table and tucked her hands under her thighs.

Gwen had grabbed a couple of silverware sets rolled in napkins before she sat down. Now she unrolled one of them, took out a spoon, and laid it on the napkin beside Lacey’s mug. When she looked up from the task, Gwen saw a tear had formed at the corner of Lacey’s bruised eye. Surprised, Gwen took a deep breath and began again, this time in a softer voice.

“I’m not angry,” Gwen went on. “It just seems like you’re upset about something. It’s just you and me working the early shift and if you don’t show up, I’m jacked. Especially now that it’s spring and we have tourists coming through. I need to know what’s going on with you.”

Slowly, eyes on her mug, Lacey took the spoon and stirred the sugared coffee. Gwen had never seen her so still, so nearly motionless. If Lacey were on drugs like Mack suspected she was, could she shift from fidgety to nearly frozen that fast? Gwen wasn’t sure.

Still staring at her coffee, Lacey began. “Donny, that’s my boyfriend, he didn’t come home last night. I was up late waiting for him.”

Oh, good Lord, Gwen thought. She hated the girlfriend-boyfriend drama thing. How many times had she seen it?

This Donny had probably gone off on a bender, and he was sleeping it off in his car or in the bed of some girl he had picked up at the bar. Good riddance. Donny was probably the one who smacked her. Lacey was better off…

“I know what you’re thinking,” Lacey said, interrupting Gwen’s thoughts. “Donny, well, Donny wouldn’t do that, I mean disappear like that. He was going—” Lacey clamped her lips shut. The words she almost said locked up in the vault of her mind. Lacey took a gulp of coffee and squirmed in the seat.

Gwen stayed quiet hoping Lacey would say more. She wanted to quiz Lacey further, but one of the remaining customers waved his coffee mug in their direction and Lacey jumped up to fill it.

2

MISSING

Lacey arrived promptly at 5:40 a.m. the next morning, tapping on the heavy glass door so Gwen could let her in.

Gwen thought the boyfriend problem had been resolved until she saw Lacey’s face. The bruise was the same yuck yellow and green, but the dark circles under her eyes had deepened. Lacey rushed toward the back room to grab her apron before Gwen had a chance to question her.

Friday mornings were always busy at the Ranchers’ Café. This one was no exception. Lacey worked with her usual ball of quick motion as she took orders, kept the customers’ coffee cups filled, and grabbed breakfast plates as soon as Mack placed them on the counter under the warming lights and dinged the bell. Unlike the day before, she only occasionally startled whenever the door opened, or a diesel truck rumbled into the lot.

Finally, customer traffic slowed. Gwen massaged her tender shoulder, counting the minutes until 2 p.m. when her afternoon manager would take over. That was when Sheriff April Erickson marched through the door.

April was Gwen’s sister-in-law, her late husband’s younger sister. She was tall, nearly six feet, with a strong build, and fair complexion. April and Gabe Lindstrom, Gwen’s late husband, were two peas in a Scandinavian gene pod, and sometimes when Gwen saw April, her heart would give a little ping of sorrow over losing Gabe at such a young age.

Most days, April wore a smile as big as her heart, but not today. She spared a moment to nod hello to Gwen, then turned her laser focus on Lacey.

As April approached her, uniformed with the holstered pistol and accouterments of law enforcement, Lacey froze like a deer hearing the first distant shot of the hunting season.

Gwen moved closer, not in the least bit ashamed to eavesdrop on their conversation.

“You’re Lacey Stevens, right?” April asked.

Lacey nodded, twisting her hands together.

“And you reported your boyfriend, one Donald Myers, missing yesterday?”

Lacey nodded again. She seemed incapable of speech.

April turned and asked Gwen, “Okay if I talk to Ms. Stevens privately for a few minutes?”

“Take whatever time you need. We’re not busy,” Gwen responded, doing her best to hide her disappointment. So much for eavesdropping.

April pointed to the door and then followed Lacey outside.

Ten minutes later, Lacey came back alone and looking upset, eyes red in their dark hollows. Gwen longed to ask if the boyfriend had turned up—most likely in jail—but just then a party of six walked in. Gwen laid a gentle hand on Lacey’s arm and told her to take a few minutes to compose herself and then went to wait on the new customers.

Finally, Marilyn, the evening manager, arrived along with the afternoon wait staff. One of the regular waitresses, Susie, came in earlier to help with lunch so Gwen sent Lacey home after the lunch crowd slowed. When she told her to take off, Lacey had bolted to the back room, already untying the apron. Before the door stopped swinging, she was back through it and rushing toward the restaurant door.

“I’m gonna get some bookwork done,” Gwen told Marilyn after she cashed out a couple who had lingered over lunch.

“What did April want with Lacey?” Mack asked.

Gwen entered the kitchen to pluck a food supplier’s invoice off the bulletin board so she could pay the bill.

“Her boyfriend is still MIA. Seems like she made a missing person report after she left here yesterday.”

“Off on a toot, I suspect,” he replied.

Gwen lifted pot lids, peering in, nostrils twitching a bit. “This one smells good. I saw a lot of servings of it go out. I’m starving.”

“Chicken and dumplings. Grab a bowl and help yourself,” he told her. “Lacey have any clue where her guy went?”

“No. I thought maybe he was sleeping it off somewhere, but according to Lacey, that’s out of character for him.”

Mack snorted.

“Yeah, I thought that, too, but no doubt she’s upset. Do you know Donny, her boyfriend?” Gwen asked.

“Never met him. Could be he’s been in to eat, but I don’t know what he looks like. How about you?”

Gwen added grated cheese to the top of the chicken dumplings and scooped up a spoonful while she thought.

“Nope, same as you. Lacey rarely talks about her personal life, not that we have time to chat as busy as we are in the mornings. It’s weird we don’t know him. Dubois isn’t that big, especially in late winter when the tourists are gone.

“Yum, this is really delicious,” she continued as she spooned up another fat dumpling. The sauce tasted of sage and basil and whatever secret ingredients Mack used.

Mack began working as a chef while serving in the military. After twenty years of service, he’d retired. Retirement didn’t last—too boring, he’d told Gwen. First, he went to work in the kitchen of a Jackson restaurant, but soon realized the upscale Jackson Hole lifestyle wasn’t a good fit for his family, and he sought work in a smaller town. Mack talked to a friend, who referred him to another friend, who recommended him to Gwen.

The timing was perfect. After Gabe died from cancer, Gwen had thought about selling out. The restaurant’s income had steadily increased over the years, but the work was hard with little time off.

Gabe, her loving supporter was gone, and she couldn’t muster the heart to go on. After a few months of watching Mack’s competent work, she asked if he’d like to buy in as a partner. He had agreed and now managed the kitchen, hired and fired the kitchen staff, and ordered supplies. He and his wife and their grown kids were not native to Wyoming, but they had easily adapted to the area.

Gwen spooned another helping of chicken and dumplings into her bowl and headed to her office to work on the books for a while.

As Gwen was leaving the restaurant, she saw April pull back into the lot. Her sister-in-law looked unusually harried. Normally Sheriff April Erickson was a tall pillar of calm, but not today.

“Hey, Gwen. That waitress, Lacey Stevens, still here?” April asked.

“I sent her home an hour or so ago. Why?”

“Hell,” April said, resting her palm on the butt of her holstered gun. “You know where she went after she got off?”

“Nope. Why?” Gwen asked. “You found her boyfriend?”

“If it’s him we found on their property. It’s not good news.”

Gwen frowned. “What do you mean?”

Just then the sheriff’s cell phone rang. She checked the caller ID and then answered. “Yeah, Jack?”

April listened for a minute, then responded, “Keep her there, I’m on the way now. And don’t say anything to her. I want to observe her reaction.”

April turned back to Gwen and asked, “Your car parked around back?”

“Of course,” Gwen said. She lifted her keys and beeped open the door locks of the Jeep that was parked around the side of the restaurant. “Why?”

“I’d like you to come with me, if you’re free, of course. I’ll drive you back when we’re done. We found a body in the barn behind their house. Could be Myers, but we don’t have a positive identification yet. That was my deputy on the phone. Lacey just arrived home. He’s on scene with her, but it’d help me out if someone Lacey knows is there when I tell her. I’ll tell you what we know on the way.”

Gwen beeped her key fob, this time to relock her Jeep doors, and slid into the passenger seat of April’s patrol vehicle.

“So, what happened?” Gwen asked April as they drove out of the parking lot.

“Couple guys out hiking said they noticed a barn window was broken and it didn’t appear anyone was home. They went to check it out and—”

Gwen snorted.

“My thoughts exactly. Their story sounded like total BS. Anyway, they peeked inside the window, just to make sure everything was secured.”

Gwen snorted again.

“Inside they found a man on the ground that they claimed looked dead, so they called 9-1-1.”

“Who were the two guys?” Gwen asked.

“Don’t know. Hung up before they gave the 9-1-1 operator their names, and no one was on scene when the patrol officer arrived.”

“Anonymous caller then?” Gwen asked.

April turned and shot a grin at Gwen that reminded her of a wolf’s snarl. “Not quite. The dispatcher will have the cellphone number the call was made from.”

April slowed. Spotting a narrow driveway, she pulled into it. They were outside of town now, the trees and underbrush hiding the view of the house from the street.

“How did he die?” Gwen asked.

“We haven’t examined the body yet. Jay is on the way.”

Gwen’s heart gave a pitter-patter at the mention of Jay Marker. He owned the Dubois funeral home. As funeral director, he also served as the Fremont County coroner when needed. He was lean and handsome with silvered hair. He was Gwen’s friend and sometimes lover… when they had time. With their busy work schedules, getting together didn’t happen often.

April glanced over at Gwen. “That big grin on your face couldn’t be because your handsome cowboy funeral director is due to arrive, is it?”

Gwen punched her sister-in-law lightly on the shoulder, but she couldn’t damper the grin.

When they stopped at the end of the driveway, they found Lacey sitting hunched on the front steps of a sad little house with a vacant look on her face. A uniformed officer stood to one side, and he lifted a hand in greeting. Around the corner of the house, tucked into the trees, stood a weathered wooden barn with crime scene tape circling a wide swath in the front.

“I had to tell her, Sheriff,” the officer informed April after they got out of the car. “She insisted on looking in the barn and the only way to stop her was to say a body had been found and we had to wait.”

“Damn,” April muttered.

Lacey hadn’t acknowledged their arrival, hadn’t even moved. As she got closer to her, Gwen saw Lacey had her arms wrapped tightly around herself as if trying to hold the pieces together. Gwen sat on the porch step beside her and put one arm gently around the girl. It was hard to know what to do with this one. She had seen Lacey stiffen and pull away when a customer patted her on the back or squeezed her arm. Lacey didn’t pull away from Gwen’s touch, but neither did she lean into her. Under her shirt, Gwen could feel the knobs of Lacey’s backbone.

“You cold?” Gwen asked. The spring air still held a chill, especially in the shade of the trees surrounding the lot.

Lacey nodded, the first sign of acknowledgment since they had arrived. Gwen took off her fleece jacket and placed it around Lacey’s shoulders. The girl shivered in the retained warmth of Gwen’s body heat.

April had walked over to the deputy standing watch at the entrance to the barn, and they talked quietly.

“You know what happened?” Gwen asked Lacey.

Lacey shook her head. “All they said was there is someone dead in the barn. They won’t tell me who.”

She lifted her head and gave Gwen a haunted look. “Donny still hasn’t come home, you know. Oh, God. Oh, God.”

Lacey put her head between her knees and sobbed.

“Is there anyone I can call to come be with you? Family or a friend?” Gwen asked.

Lacey shook her head. “No one.”

That question answered, all Gwen could do was to pat the girl’s bony back.

3

FOUND

Jay arrived a few minutes later, driving the Ford van he used for transporting bodies. He spotted Gwen when he got out. His eyebrows rose, and then a smile lit his face.

Gwen got up from the front step, brushed off the seat of her pants, and went to greet him.

Lacey stayed where she sat with her head bowed and arms hugging her knees. At least her sobbing had eased some. The officer tasked to keep an eye on Lacey raised a hand in greeting and pointed to the barn.

“Body’s back there, Mr. Marker.”

Gwen joined Jay as he opened the back door of the van and rolled out a gurney. She wanted to give him a hug, but the officer was watching, and their situation was… complicated.

She had known Jay’s wife, Lauren, back when Gwen and her husband, Gabe, were good friends with the Markers. After Gabe died, that left Gwen the odd single in the quartet, and the invitations to join Jay and Lauren for dinner or a night out had dwindled.

Gwen had mourned the loss of their friendship but understood the awkwardness of a threesome with memories of Gabe still too present. She understood it better when she learned Lauren was diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s. They had supported each other—Gwen and Jay—and it had developed into more than a friendship. Still, Gwen worried about what the townspeople would say, even though Lauren was in a care home and hadn’t recognized her husband in a long while.

“Do you know the deceased?” Jay asked Gwen, tilting his head in the direction of the barn.

“Never met him. The girl sitting on the steps is my morning waitress. She lives here, told me earlier her boyfriend didn’t make it home last night.”

Jay started toward the barn, the gurney bumping over the rough ground. Gwen walked beside him.

“So, they think the boyfriend is the body in the barn?” he asked.

“I’m guessing yes but who knows, maybe the boyfriend killed somebody, stashed the body in the barn, and took off.”

Jay turned to look at her. “That possible?”

“Hard to say. Lacey came to work a few days ago with a shiner—that tell you something?”

They arrived at the crime scene tape and an officer held up a hand. Gwen knew the officer. He was a regular at the restaurant.

“Sorry, Ms. Gwen,” the officer apologized. “Authorized persons only beyond this point.”

“No problem, Mark,” she said, pulling his name out of her memory bank at the last second.

Mark lifted the tape and Jay, stooping low, pushed the gurney under it.

Gwen wished she had taken her own car and followed April. Now the sheriff was inside somewhere, and Gwen was stuck until she could catch a ride back. She went back to the front stoop to wait beside Lacey.

“You think it might be your boyfriend?” Gwen dared to ask Lacey who had stopped crying and was now texting on her phone.

“I think so,” Lacey responded in a hoarse voice. “I keep texting him, but he doesn’t answer.”

Gwen couldn’t think of anything else to say so they just waited on the steps, each in their own thoughts.

A short time later, Jay left the barn and walked toward them. He had on latex gloves and held something in one hand.

It was a wallet, Gwen realized, as he came to stand in front of them.

“You’re Lacey?” he asked in a gentle voice.

Lacey nodded, steepling her hands over her mouth as if in prayer.

Jay opened the wallet and pulled out a driver’s license. “Donald Myers, he’s your boyfriend?”

She nodded again, hands still covering her mouth.

Gwen noted Jay’s use of the present tense. Does that mean…?

“Is this Donald?” he softly asked Lacey, showing her the photo on the driver’s license.

She nodded, harder this time. Tears leaked from her eyes.

April joined them. She, too, had on latex gloves.

“I’m very sorry, honey,” Jay told Lacey in the same gentle tone. “Donald is deceased.”

“Donny, Donny, no, no,” Lacey sobbed, wrapping herself up once more and rocking with each wail.

“Sorry for your loss,” April added, wading into the circle of Jay, Gwen, and Lacey.

Identity confirmed, Jay turned and started back toward the barn.

“Are you sure?” Lacey cried.

April nodded. “We’re sure.”

“Can I get you something?” Gwen asked Lacey. “I have Kleenex in my purse. Let me go get it.”

By the time Gwen got back from April’s car, tissues in hand, April had Lacey standing, one firm hand under her elbow for support. Gwen handed the package of tissues to Lacey who wiped her nose and face. The makeup she had carefully applied to hide her black eye was gone and the harsh yellow-green of the bruise lay starkly on Lacey’s delicate face. It didn’t escape April’s notice. Gwen just wanted to march into the barn and kick the now defenseless Donny for smacking his girlfriend.

“Lacey’s going to ride back to the office with me,” April told Gwen. “The crime scene techs should be here soon.”

“I don’t want to leave Donny,” Lacey sobbed and tried to pull away from April.

“They’re going to take good care of your Donny,” April told her. “Right now, I need your help figuring out what happened and who did this.” Softly she added, “That’s how we can help him best now.”

“Do you mind?” April asked Gwen.

“Go. I’ll ride back to town with Jay,” Gwen replied.

As Lacey and April made their way to the car, April looked back over her shoulder and gave Gwen a conspiratorial wink.

Gwen waited and waited some more. She shivered in the late afternoon chill, wishing she had asked Lacey for her jacket back. Another vehicle arrived, this one containing two crime technicians. They briefly acknowledged Gwen before opening the trunk, pulling out equipment, and starting toward the barn.

The property was surrounded by trees and brush. Gwen could barely make out the narrow break of the curved gravel drive leading out to the blacktopped road. The house was isolated, a few miles outside of Dubois. She had driven the highway countless times never realizing there was a house behind the screen of trees.

Somewhere in a treetop, a crow cawed. A wire-fenced pasture ran alongside the drive and in it a buckskin horse grazed, occasionally lifting its head to watch the activity. A horse trailer was parked between the house and the barn, but the only other vehicle she could see was the older silver Toyota sedan that Lacey drove to work.

The Toyota was not powerful enough to haul a trailer, there was no hitch on it even if it could. If that was Donald Myers in the barn, then where was his vehicle?

Another question came to her. Why hadn’t Lacey thought to look inside the barn for her missing boyfriend earlier? Was it because she had killed him after he beat her? Or was it because his vehicle wasn’t there so Lacey assumed he wasn’t in the barn? She had worked with Gwen the last three mornings getting off at 2 p.m. That left a lot of time unaccounted for. What had she been doing in the afternoons? What time did Donny normally get home?

Gwen had seen Donald’s driver’s license when Jay showed it to Lacey. She didn’t recognize him from the glimpse she caught of the photo. Maybe they hadn’t been in town that long; nearly everyone in Fremont County passed through the doors of the Ranchers’ Café at one time or another.

The buckskin raised his head and its ears pricked toward the barn. Gwen turned to watch Jay come through the door pushing the gurney, now topped by a lumpy, dark grey body bag. He stopped, said something to one of the deputies, and waited as the deputy got into Jay’s van and backed it up to the yellow crime scene tape. Jay pushed the gurney a short distance to it, opened the vehicle’s back door, and slid the gurney and Donny’s body inside.

Gwen joined him, and together the three of them—two alive and one not—drove back down the shaded drive and out onto the road.

“What’s the story?” Gwen asked.

“Gunshots, one in the back and one through the eye.”

Gwen felt a chill ripple through her. “Pistol or rifle? Or was it a shotgun?”

“Not a shotgun, no pellet pattern. I’ll know more when I get him back to the mortuary.”

Gwen visualized Lacey’s face, recalling which eye had been bruised.

“The left eye?” she asked.

Jay turned to look at her. “How did you know?” he asked.

Gwen shrugged. “Fifty-fifty guess,” she said, but her thoughts focused on Lacey’s swollen left eye. Was it Lacey’s final statement of revenge against her abusive boyfriend or just coincidental? She shivered.

“I have a jacket in the pocket behind your seat,” Jay told her.

Gwen glanced between the seats, saw Donny’s bagged body, and turned quickly back around.

Jay grinned at her. “He won’t complain. But here, let me grab it.”

He reached behind her seat, pulled out a fleece jacket, and gave it to Gwen. She wrapped it around her, breathing in the lingering scent of Jay’s aftershave.

Better.

The cafe, and Gwen’s car, was between them and the funeral home. It was comfortable being in the car with Jay, the other passenger notwithstanding.

As if he read her mind, Jay said, “If you don’t mind, I’ll drop the body off first. I need to get it refrigerated, and then I can take you back to your car.”

Much better.

4

RETRIBUTION

It would be a while before Gwen reached her car and home.

Jay backed the Ford into the large garage connected to the funeral home. Then he hit the remote, closing the garage door to keep out prying eyes. Only then did he go to the back of the van and pull out the gurney. The wheels unfolded from beneath the gurney as soon as they cleared the van’s bumper.

Gwen was the caboose in the parade as Jay rolled the body through the automatic doors and down the short hall to the preparation room. The room was clean, the equipment, floors, and metal tables sanitized until they gleamed. Still, the place always made Gwen uneasy. Jay had explained that every deceased person deserved the respect afforded, and the preparation of a body was part of the life cycle. Still, it wasn’t anything Gwen wanted to dwell on.

She had already told Jackie, her daughter, grown with her own family in Denver, that when she died, she wanted to be cremated. She had explained to Jackie and her husband that it would be their decision as to what to do with her ashes. “Bury me beside your dad if you want. Just don’t plop me on your fireplace mantel,” she had told them.

The unsettled feeling, however, didn’t stop Gwen’s curiosity about Lacey’s Donny.

“You got a good look at him?” Gwen asked Jay pointing to the body in its zippered bag.

“Sure, why?”

“I was wondering what he looked like. I mean, after Lacey showed up with the black eye, I had an image of some big hairy brut with a beer gut.”

Jay looked at her and grinned. “Not at all like that. Remind me not to plunk my money down if you have a hunch about the winning lottery numbers.”

Jay stopped at a steel door that reminded Gwen of a grocer’s walk-in cooler.

“Someone from the sheriff’s office will be here later to observe when I examine him. They already took possession of what I found in his pocket.”

“What did you find?” Gwen asked.

“The usual things—keys, billfold, coins.” He paused. “And the torn corner of a plastic sandwich bag with some kind of substance in it.”

“What?” Gwen asked, her curiosity piqued.

Jay shrugged. “I have no idea. You still want to see him?”

“Yes.”

“He gave her an appraising look. “I can unzip the bag enough to expose his face, but I warn you, his eye looks bad.”

Gwen’s dad had hunted and fished when she was a kid and the whole family pitched in to process the deer, fish, and pronghorn. If she could do that, then she could look at Donny’s ruined face. She nodded her consent.

Jay unzipped the body bag a few inches so she could see. “Just don’t touch,” he warned as if he needed to.

Donny had been good-looking in life with dark hair and a goatee like the ones popular now with a mustache and facial hair that curved like parentheses around his mouth and chin. His skin was mottled, but in life, his face had been lean and his nose strong. There was a raw hole where his left eye had been. Gwen tried to block that image from her mind. He had been wearing a plaid shirt and the first marks of a neck tattoo peeked out from under the collar.

“Damn,” she exclaimed as Jay zipped him back in. “What would you say, mid-twenties for his age?”

“His license showed twenty-four,” Jay told her as he opened the walk-in door to the cooler and pushed the gurney inside.

Gwen tried to remember what Lacey had written on her employment application for date of birth. Early to mid-twenties sounded right for her, too.

Jay went over to the large stainless-steel sink and started washing his hands.

“Whoever shot him must have gotten close if they hit his eye,” Gwen remarked.

“Could be, or whoever it was they were a damn good shot. There was also a gunshot wound in his back between his shoulder blades.”

Gwen thought about that. “So, you think someone sneaked up and plugged him in the back and when he spun around, they shot him a second time in his face?”

Jay turned off the water and pulled paper towels from the dispenser to dry his hands. “That’s one possibility. I’ll have a better idea tomorrow. Back or eye, likely neither wound would have been survivable.”

“When was he killed?” she asked.

Jay opened the lid of the trash container with his foot and tossed in the paper towel. Now he stood facing Gwen. Even after time in a barn examining a dead body, his khaki pants still looked crisp. Jay had rolled up his sleeves before he washed his hands and her eyes wandered over his sinewy forearms with their fine body hair.

“You are the most curious person I have ever met,” he teased. “Always have been.”

Gwen shrugged and then tried to look offended, but failed. What he said was true.

“I just wondered. Lacey, my waitress, worked the last two days from open to around 2 p.m. That left a lot of the day.” She left the rest of her concerns dangle, not wanting to put what she feared into words.

“You’re thinking she may have killed her boyfriend?”

“I just don’t know. She came to work a few days ago with a big shiner. You saw it. Her left eye, just like Donny. Plus, she’s been more nervous than a feral cat.”

Jay went to Gwen and folded her in his arms. “Too soon to worry about that yet. Now I have a question for you.”

“Alright. What?” This she said into his very warm and masculine shoulder, smelling of whatever cologne or deodorant he had put on when his day began.

“You have plans for this evening?” Jay asked, his voice husky.

She didn’t.

Jay kept an apartment in the second story of the funeral home. After his wife was admitted to the care home, he had sold their family house. Too big and too many memories, he had explained to Gwen. She knew exactly what he meant. After Gabe died, she and Jackie had rattled around in their house like two abandoned souls. Later, after their daughter went off to college, Gwen had sold the 2,500-square-foot house and bought a cottage with half the space. It suited her perfectly.

“A glass of wine first,” Jay told her as he poured one for her after they’d climbed the stairs to his place.

They sat close together on the couch in his apartment. He nibbled Gwen’s earlobe running his tongue along the edges of her earrings. Then he worked his way down her neck. Shivering with the pleasure of his touch, Gwen unbuttoned his shirt and slid a hand along his chest, feeling the beat of his heart.

Ten minutes later, after wine and a little more make-out time on the couch, she gasped.

“First, we both need a shower.”

Much later, after an pleasurable hour of lovemaking and a quick dinner of toast and scrambled eggs, Jay drove Gwen through the dark streets to pick up her car where it was still parked in the restaurant lot. He had asked her to stay the night with him, but she had a lot to think about, especially after Jay told her the officers had found a baggie of what they suspected was drugs in Donny’s pocket.

Getting ready for bed, Gwen wondered if the stash in Donny’s pocket could’ve been methamphetamine. It would’ve fit with what she had seen in the news lately about Wind River Valley drug busts. She slipped the T-shirt she slept in over her head and crawled between the sheets. Using drugs might explain why Lacey always seemed so fidgety.

Gwen fell asleep still analyzing the shocking events of the day.

5

ERICKSON CLAN

It surprised Gwen early the next morning when a haggard Lacey knocked on the cafe door at the usual time.

“Come in, Lacey. Let me get you a cup of coffee. I appreciate your dedication, especially under the circumstances, but, really, I already called Sarah to cover for you today.”

“Are you sure?” Lacey asked, but seemed relieved.

“I’m sure. Get some sleep, take care of what you need to do, and you can come back when you’re ready. Just keep me posted.”

Gwen watched Lacey shuffle her way out, passing Sarah on her way in.

Tourists, as well as their breakfast regulars, kept Gwen and Sarah hopping.

One more day, Gwen thought, one more day, and then I get a day off. The restaurant was closed on Mondays, and that day couldn’t come fast enough.

When the crowd thinned, Gwen’s thoughts turned once more to Lacey, wondering how she was doing and if the girl would even want to come back to work after the funeral.

If she were Lacey, and she had killed Donny, she’d flee the area and never again stay in that isolated house outside of town. Lacey had never mentioned having relatives or close friends in Dubois, making her ties to the community even more tenuous.

“Sarah,” Gwen called out when she saw the waitress wiping syrup off a table where a family with two young children had eaten. “Is your sister still looking for part-time work?”

“Becky? I’m not sure, why?”

“You heard about Lacey’s boyfriend getting killed?” Gwen asked.

“Who hasn’t,” Sarah said, shaking her head. “It’s been all over the news, and everyone was talking about it this morning.”

Gwen was well aware of the rumor scuttlebutt; morning diners had plied her for details as she refilled their coffee cups.

“Have Becky call me if she’s still looking for work. I don’t know for sure if Lacey will be coming back.”

“Will do,” Sarah answered. “You think Lacey won’t be back because she killed him? That’s what everyone is saying. There are all kinds of rumors going around town that they were dealing dope. I mean, I even heard they found a meth lab out in the barn behind the house.”

Gwen wasn’t sure about the last. Once the town gossip line got started, facts sprouted weird appendages. Still, Jay had told her a baggie of something was found in Donny’s pocket, something law enforcement suspected might be drugs. Would Jay or April have told her if they discovered evidence that something illegal was being manufactured in the barn?

“Told you we should have tested the girl for dope,” Mack told Gwen when he escaped from the kitchen to pour a cup of coffee.

Gwen shrugged. “Too late for that now, and who knows if the kid is going to flee the area or come back to work.”

“Hey Todd, you ever come across meth cookers when you’re tramping through the woods?” Mack asked a man in a khaki uniform shirt and cargo pants sitting at one of the nearby booths.

Gwen knew Todd. He was an investigator with the Wyoming Game and Fish Department. He was also a cafe regular. The man sitting across the table was his new partner, Mark.

“Came across a guy cooking meth clear out on one of those old ranch roads one time,” Todd answered. “His car got stuck in the mud when he tried to turn around. What fool takes an old Mercury down a path where you need a four-wheel drive? Anyway, he was all nervous and you could smell the solvent when you stood beside the car. We called for the sheriff, and when they got there, we found he had chemicals and containers with liquid inside the trunk. Damn if we didn’t have to call a decontamination team to haul away that piece of shit car. What about you, Mark?” he asked, addressing his breakfast companion.

“Found some marijuana patches here and there, but nothing like that,” Mark replied.

Todd continued, “What we’re mostly finding lately is evidence that poachers have been out hunting.”

Mark nodded. “We’ll catch them, just a matter of time.”

“What are they poaching?” Gwen asked. “I thought that had slowed down.”

“It did for a while,” Mark told them. “Our agency arrested four guys in Montana a few months ago. They were working their way through the Rockies and up toward the western border of Yellowstone. They had out of season game in their trailer— elk and mule deer.”

Mark went on. “Just the other day, we talked to a landowner who had his eye on a buck with a set of big non-conforming antlers he planned to take when the season opened. But one night he saw lights out in the pasture and went to take a look. He found some guys dressing down a dozen deer, including the buck he had his eyes on.”

“Damn, so they’re in custody now?” Mack asked, his muscular arms crossed over a grease-stained apron.

“Nope. They took off. The landowner got his license tag number but turns out it had come off a stolen truck. Far as I’ve heard, they haven’t been apprehended.”

“The close call stopped the poaching?” Sarah asked, having joined them.

“For two seconds, maybe. Been picking up again,” Todd told them. “Mark and I have been out patrolling since about four this morning. Nothing, but we’ll get them yet.”

After lunch, Gwen spent an hour in the restaurant office catching up on bookwork and preparing the bank deposit. She locked the deposit bag in the safe for Tuesday since the bank closed at noon on Saturday.

Before she knew it, Marilyn, Gwen’s evening manager, was knocking on the frame of the office door.

“The evening staff is all here if you’re ready to take off,” she told Gwen.

“Almost done,” she replied.

April had invited Gwen over for dinner, and she was looking forward to it. April and Rod Erickson had three boys, one in high school, one in middle school, and one still in elementary. It made for a boisterous household, and Gwen was happy both for the noise and activity, and afterward for the quiet of her little cottage with its tidy garden in the back.

Before that happened, Gwen needed to call Lacey. She had pulled her employment application out of the file earlier wondering if the girl listed any relatives, but the only contact person was the now-deceased Donald Myers. She punched in Lacey’s cell phone number. No one answered, so Gwen left a message asking her to call. She thought about going by Lacey’s house, but she had promised April she’d be at their house by five-thirty, and she still had potato salad to make.

* * *

“Yum,” April said to Gwen as she lifted the aluminum foil that covered the bowl of potato salad. “When you decide to cook, you always make the best stuff.”

“Mom, I’m starving,” whined Phillip, joining them in the kitchen.

“You’re always starving,” April told her 15-year-old-son. “And stay out of the fridge—your dad’s almost done with the burgers.”

“I’m starving, is it ready yet?” Sven, the 13-year-old said, echoing his brother’s whine as he entered the room.

“Teenage boys,” snorted April. “I swear, I can load up two carts at the grocery store, and in less than two days they’ve munched their way through a whole fridge full. Go outside, you two, and see if your dad is about ready.”

“Hi, Aunt Gwen,” said the youngest, Marcus, hugging her.

Rob and April were both tall and Gwen noticed that even 8-year-old Marcus was edging his way to her shoulder.

“You, too, kiddo,” April ordered her youngest son. “Go out and see how your dad’s doing. And here, take a plate out for the burgers.”

“Sometimes I envy you,” a smiling April told Gwen. “I wanted a daughter like your Jackie and what did I end up with—three sons. It’s twenty-four-seven food, stinky sports gear, wrestling in the living room, and more food.”

Gwen laughed. “With girls, it’s giggling, clothes, and girl drama. Oh yeah, and boyfriends.”

April set out plates and silverware on the counter. “We aren’t too involved in the dating scene yet, but Phillip does spend an inordinate amount of time prepping in the bathroom.”

They pulled condiments out of the fridge and opened cans of baked beans.

“I tried calling Lacey this afternoon but all I’m getting is her voice mail. Do you know if she or Donny have any family around here?” Gwen told her, breaking their busy silence.

“I don’t know about her, but some guy called the office today claiming to be Donald’s brother.”

“Asking about what happened?” Gwen probed.

April turned to Gwen, and her blue eyes narrowed. “Mostly, he wanted to know if we had Donald’s truck, trailer, and barn keys, and when he could collect his brother’s things.”

Gwen chewed on that for a minute.

“So, he didn’t ask what happened to his brother? That would be the first thing I would ask.”

“Briefly, just to ask if we have any suspects, but mostly it was about the truck and stock trailer. Apparently, the brother didn’t approve of Lacey. He claims Lacey got Donald into drugs.”

“And brother knows this because he lives close by?” asked Gwen.

“Somewhere in Idaho, he says,” April went on. “Lacey, she’s still working for you, right?”

“I guess. At least until she tells me otherwise. I told her to take whatever time off she needed.”

“You spot any evidence she’s using drugs, like meth?”

“I never saw her taking anything, but she’s fidgety like she can’t stand to be still.”

April looked out the window at Rob forking the meat off the grill. “Before we’re overtaken by a herd of hungry males, I need to ask. You and Mack require a drug test before you hire people for the restaurant, don’t you?”

“No, although we had one grill cook come in drunk a while back, and we had the city cops do a breathalyzer test. Then Mack fired him.”

“Might be a good policy to implement, starting with that Lacey,” April said as Sven opened the sliding glass door for his dad.

“Mack said the same thing.”

“Smart partner you have there. We’ll talk later,” April quickly told Gwen as the hungry herd trooped in behind Rod.

6

AWOL

The next day, after the Sunday morning breakfast business slowed, Gwen again tried to reach Lacey. This time all she heard was a message announcing her voicemail was full.

Crap.

There was still the question of whether Lacey would be at work Tuesday. If not, she needed to find someone to help her with the morning shift.

She was worried about the kid, too. What if Lacey, overwrought with the loss of the sole person she had listed as a family on her employment app, had overdosed? Did Donald’s brother dislike her so much that he would go to their house and try to take his possessions? Gwen felt certain it was Donny who had given Lacey the black eye. Was the brother violent, too? How far would the brother go to collect what he felt he was owed?

She thought about taking her five-foot-four-inch, forty-nine-year-old, skinny self out to Lacey’s house to make sure the brother wouldn’t harm Lacey, but that didn’t seem like the smartest of ideas. Even if Gwen wasn’t attacked, she knew April would likely arrest her just for making such a foolish decision.

What to do?

Marilyn came in early, saying she needed more work hours, so Gwen was able to leave by noon. Her house was clean, and the garden was not fully awake from the winter, so she went to the workshop off the back of the garage. The first thing Gwen did was turn on the electric wall heater to warm the small space. Next, she took a seat at the old worktable found years ago at a garage sale, pulled tools and supplies from their drawers, and began to tie new fishing flies.

Her late husband, Gabe, had loved to fly fish. At first, Gwen joined him to spend time with her new husband, but she had grown to love the sport as much as Gabe had. Their daughter had enjoyed fishing, too, at least until Jackie had morphed into an alien-like pre-teen. The family—Gabe, Gwen, and Jackie—had explored rivers and streams throughout Yellowstone Park. It was a great way to relax on the weekend, and it had been therapeutic for them all after Gabe was diagnosed with cancer that would steal him from their family.

Teasing a line across the water’s surface had also been her salvation after Gabe was gone. Gwen felt most connected to him at the river’s edge with the sun slanting across the sky and inhaling the scent of pure fresh air. With May around the corner, it was time to get out on the water again.

Gwen lost herself in the intricate task of making the flies and checking fishing equipment. It wasn’t until her stomach growled and she looked at the time did she realize it was after four in the afternoon and she had worked past lunch. She put the flies she finished into the tackle box, cleaned up, and went inside to fix a sandwich.

While she ate, Gwen tried Lacey’s phone again. No one answered and the voicemail was still full. She thought again about driving out to the house and knocking on Lacey’s front door, but then had a better idea.

* * *

“I wondered how you were doing,” Jay said when he answered the phone.

Gwen hadn’t talked to him since Friday. Not that they phoned each other every day, but they did text back and forth regularly. With work, family dinner at April’s, and the afternoon’s absorption in preparing for the summer fishing season, she hadn’t reached out to him.

“I’ve been trying to reach Lacey, but she’s not answering the phone. I’m worried. Has she talked to you about funeral plans for her boyfriend yet?”

“Not yet. I’m finished with the exam of Donald Myers’ body. The sheriff’s office wanted it expedited, and business was slow, so I was able to get it done Saturday afternoon. I expect they’ll release the body for burial soon.”

“What did you find?” Gwen asked.

“No surprise about the cause of death. Gunshot wounds. The deputies will arrange for an examination of the bullet fragments. Looks like a twenty-two, but I’m not the expert. I sent off blood and tissue to the Wyoming Bureau of Investigation. They’ll analyze them for drugs and whatever else the sheriff’s office needs.”

“So, they won’t know for a while if he was on drugs or was drunk?” Gwen asked.

“Alcohol testing will take a couple of days. Anything else, we’re looking at three-to-four weeks, depending on how busy the lab is. Hold on a minute, I have a call on the other line I gotta take.”

Gwen listened to hold music while Jay took the other call.

Everyone in Wyoming knew something about firearms. She didn’t hunt, but she did know that although a .22 was good for shooting small game, it wouldn’t be her first choice of weapons in situations where a person might encounter a rattlesnake, wolf, or bear while tramping through the outdoors. She wondered if the .22 came from a pistol or rifle. That might have offered a clue about both the intent and the shooter.

“I’m back,” Jay said, coming back on the line. “Did you say you were trying to reach Lacey?”

“Yes, why?”

“Well, that was her that just called.”

Gwen felt some of the worry she had been carrying slide off her shoulders. “Good, that means she must be alright. She called about plans for Donald?”

“Yeah, wanted to know when the sheriff was going to release the body.”

“What did you tell her?” she asked.

“Told her I did my part and as soon as the sheriff gives the okay, we can proceed with funeral plans.”

Gwen said, “I heard he had a brother. Has he contacted you yet?”

“A brother? No one’s told me anything about family. I suspect the girlfriend or the sheriff’s office has been in touch with them. Anyway, Lacey wants to meet with me about arrangements. I told her I was free now if it’s a good time for her to come by. She said she’d be right over.”

“I need to talk to her,” Gwen said, dumping the remains of the sandwich in the trash. “Be there in two minutes.”

Six minutes passed before Gwen pulled into the parking lot of Jay’s funeral home. It would have been five, but she took time to put on earrings, run a brush through her hair, and swipe a bit of blush across her cheeks before leaving the house. Gwen was sitting in the lobby talking with Jay when Lacey arrived.

All the nervous mannerisms Lacey had previously displayed were gone. In their place was a sad lethargy. She moved toward them like she was afraid the ground might suddenly shift under her feet and swallow her. Gwen had felt the same way after Gabe died, like the earth beneath her feet could unexpectedly turn to quicksand.

Lacey’s hair was unkempt, the purple ends tangled. The bruise around her eye had faded, but the dark circles had grown even darker.

Lacey raised a hand in greeting when she stopped in front of them but didn’t speak.

Jay, ever the diplomat with years of dealing with people at the worst time in their lives, rose and put an arm around the shoulders of the fragile young woman. She turned into his shoulder and sobbed.

Gwen wasn’t sure what to do. She rose and went to pat Lacey on the back. Jay spoke soothingly to Lacey, but Gwen couldn’t catch the words. After a while, the sobs subsided.

“Sorry,” Lacey told Jay, stepping back, seeing the spots on his shirt where her tears had fallen.

“Don’t worry about it,” he said, gently smiling at her. “Part of the process of grieving.” In a more solemn tone, he told her, “If you’re ready, we can go into my office and talk about what you want done for Donald. But first, Gwen here would like to talk to you for a few minutes. That okay?”

Lacey nodded and turned on her the same sad-puppy eyes that had swayed Gwen to hire her.

“Sit, please,” Gwen said, pointing to a chair.

Lacey sat and folded her hands in her lap. Gwen perched in the chair beside her and placed one hand on Lacey’s thin forearm.

“Again, I want to give my condolences for your loss.”

Lacey nodded, eyes focused on the floor.

“You have any family or friends to help you?” Gwen went on.

Lacey shook her head.

“How about Donald? I hear he has a brother.”

At this, Lacey jerked her head up to look directly at Gwen, giving her a puzzled look. “Donny doesn’t have a brother.”

Gwen leaned back in the chair. “I heard his brother contacted the sheriff’s office.”

She didn’t tell Lacey that the brother’s reason for contacting them was to ask how to get the victim’s things. If this brother didn’t like Lacey, maybe that was the reason for her denial. Except, wouldn’t the brother need to have actually met Lacey to dislike her? She wished she had thought to ask April the name of the brother.

Lacey’s genuine surprise convinced Gwen Lacey wasn’t lying when she denied the family relationship.

“Donny didn’t have a brother,” Lacey repeated.

“But maybe Donny didn’t tell you about—”

“He didn’t have a brother!”