Read Crossed Bones Online

Authors: Carolyn Haines

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths, #Detective and mystery stories, #Mystery Fiction, #Crimes against, #Mississippi, #Women private investigators, #Delaney; Sarah Booth (Fictitious Character), #Women Private Investigators - Mississippi, #Women Plantation Owners, #African American Musicians, #African American Musicians - Crimes Against

Crossed Bones (43 page)

Instead of standing, I took a horizontal route to Scott, sliding off the sofa and scrambling on the floor. I was almost to him when I felt the barrel of the pistol pressed into the small of my back.

"So,
Miss
Sarah Booth Delaney, you don't look so high-and-mighty now." Ray-Ban had shoved his sunglasses up on his forehead as he leaned over and pushed the metal deeper into my back. It was the first time I'd actually seen his beady black eyes, and I looked away from the hate and malice.

"Stop that! Leave her alone." Bridge started forward to defend me. Though he was an athletic man, he was no match for Ray-Ban. In one swing, Ray-Ban swept the gun from my back to Bridge's jaw, connecting solidly. Bridge dropped like a sack of cement, momentarily stunned and in pain.

"Stay out of it, Moneybags," Ray-Ban said. He looked down at Bridge. "By the way, that's a nice ride you've got. Hope we didn't hurt it when we hit that ugly dog."

Rage boiled in my heart, but my brain was clear enough to know that if I hurled myself at the bastard, he'd simply cold-cock me, too. I took the opportunity to check on Scott. He was moaning and spitting blood. His cheekbone was definitely cracked and I could see chips of tooth in the blood he was spitting. "He needs a doctor," I said. I put a hand on his chest to hold him steady on the floor. If he tried to get up, they'd simply whack him again.

"Load the records. I'll keep an eye on them." Spider pointed Ray-Ban at the sturdy cardboard cartons. An ugly grin lit his face. "Put them in the trunk of the Jaguar. Moneybags won't be needing that fine car anymore."

Ray-Ban hefted one box first.

"The records won't do you any good," I pointed out. "Everyone knows about them. No music company will buy stolen goods."

"Who needs a music company? I've already got a private collector lined up. He doesn't care where the records come from or how I get them."

Damn. Spider was a lot smarter than I'd anticipated. That was the flaw in my whole scheme. I'd never considered that the two creeps were smart enough to conceive of such a plan and execute it by themselves. I'd vastly underestimated them. "What are you going to do with us?" I asked.

"Kill you. I don't believe in leaving loose ends behind." Spider grinned, and I knew he was telling the truth. We were only moments away from a bullet in the brain. The cavalry should have ridden over the hill by now. Delay was the only tactic I had left.

"I thought Scott was your brother." I eased his head into my lap as he tried to rise up. His eyes were dazed with pain, but his fists were clenched.

"Scott broke the code when he sided with that old negro against his brothers." He made a face. "He should have understood that standing up for a black was something we'd never forgive. We got a name for someone like him."

"And I don't want to hear it." I had to keep them talking. "Why'd you try to kill my horse?" I asked.

"If I'd really been trying to kill him, he'd be dead. At first, we wanted to scare you off. We painted the tombstone and shot at the horse, but that was before you became a real pain in the ass. You kept snooping around, poking into things. Once you climbed in the sack with Scott, we knew you'd never give up trying to help him. So we decided the easiest remedy was to kill both of you."

"You're a real specialist with fire, aren't you?" I asked.

"I like my cocktails dry and hot," he grinned. "But the grocery store was more fun. It really burned."

Ray-Ban had loaded one carton of records. Our time was running out. "Hey, Ray-Ban. Maybe you'd better play some of those records. You might be in for a big surprise."

Spider was instantly alert. Still holding the gun on us, he walked over to the last box. Pulling up a black record, he examined it a moment before he threw it to the ground. "Glenn Miller!" He pulled out another one. "Frank Sinatra? What is this?" He threw the record against the wall.

"Hey, those are very valuable. They're collector quality." I didn't try to hide my smug grin.

The muzzle of the gun swung down at me. "Where are the Ivory records?"

His finger inched the trigger back, and I wondered how it was going to feel to die. Once I told him the truth, he was going to shoot me. Then again, he was going to shoot me anyway.

"Bite me," I said with the biggest grin I could muster in the face of death.

"You little--"

"I can make her talk. In fact, I'd love it."

All heads swung to the front door where Nandy Shanahan stood, all tricked out in a pink cloud of lace and nylon. She stepped into the room and I realized she was wearing pink acrylic glitter heels with a little pink-feathered pompon on each foot. She was also wearing Baby Doll polish and lip gloss, which contrasted nastily with her glossy red hair. The episode of self-mutilation must have ended with some type of psychiatric therapy and some mighty good drugs. Nandy was clean and polished. Despite the problem with her color choices, she'd been transformed from a grunge groupie to a strange kind of glamour girl--if peignoirs were your taste. The metal staples in her forehead gave her Barbie meets Bride of Frankenstein panache.

My big problem with Nandy wasn't fashion, but that she was standing in Scott's doorway. Once again, I'd assumed. I'd been told she was gone by two sources. I'd assumed it was fact. Twice in one day I'd violated the golden rule of a good detective. I might not live to break it a third time. I could see from his expression that Spider was not impressed with the latest visitor, no matter how bizarre her getup.

"You're that crazy bitch from the courthouse," he said, unfazed by Nandy's fashion flip.

"I can make Sarah Booth squeal, but you have to promise that you won't hurt Scott." Nandy looked at me with anticipation. "I would enjoy making her talk."

She was serious. "So, you came for one more shot at scoring with Scott." I pointed at her getup. "Everyone in town knows that you only have sex when you're wearing your Barbie peignoir set. I can't help but wonder what you wear to the shrink. Does Barbie have a cute little pink straitjacket?"

"When I see that big-mouth Robert again, he's a dead man." She was fuming.

Scott pointed at the door and mumbled something to the effect that she should get out.

Nandy rubbed her feathered pom-pom on his leg. "Baby, I'm the only one who can save you. You might as well accept it."

Scott tried to sit up, but I held him back. At this particular moment, Nandy was a good thing. The longer she diverted Spider and Ray-Ban, the better our chances were. I was positive Coleman had heard enough of the conversation to realize Scott and I were in grave danger, though not from Bridge. Surely Coleman was racing through the hot night at this second. I took a deep breath and tried to calm myself.

Spider and Ray-Ban exchanged glances. Spider stepped closer to Scott. "I don't need a crazy bitch to get anyone to talk." His booted foot pressed down on Scott's left hand as he gave me a victory smile. "You tell me where those records are or I'm going to crush his fingers. He'll never play again."

"Okay," I said, pushing his foot away. "I'll be glad to tell you."

"Don't trust her." Nandy stepped up to Spider. "She was a liar in the womb. Every time she's in a tight spot, she lies. In the sixth grade, she was caught drawing penises on pictures in her geography book. She pretended she'd never seen those pictures and then said that I'd borrowed her book the day before."

I'd forgotten all about the pen-and-ink penises. I hadn't actually accused Nandy, but now I realized how the teacher had figured out she was the guilty party. No one else in sixth grade would draw a penis with a tiara on it.

"She's a total psycho," I interjected. "She honest to God believes she's heir to the Scottish throne. Forget the fact that there hasn't been a Scottish throne in centuries."

Nandy's pale face flushed, and I noticed for the first time that when she was upset, the flush extended down her legs. It was a fascinating bit of science.

"That's a damn lie, Sarah Booth Delaney. I'm sick of you interfering in my life. I want him to kill you." She turned to Spider. "She took the records to the courthouse. I saw her."

Spider pushed Nandy aside with such force that she fell against the sofa and whacked her head against the wall. I could tell by the way she landed she was unconscious. It was the preferred state where Nandy was concerned.

"Where are the records?" Spider had a one-track mind and it was focused on me.

"Nandy's finally right about something. The records are in Sheriff Coleman Peters' office. In his closet." I pulled the telephone out of the pillows, pushing the off button as I handed it to him. "Call Coleman and ask, if you don't believe me." I wanted to call Coleman. I wanted to call him and give him a piece of my mind. Where in the hell was he? I'd designated him the cavalry, and he wasn't riding over the hill.

"You'd better be lying," Spider said as he lifted his boot.

I snatched Scott's hand off the floor. Then I realized he hadn't intended to stomp Scott. He was going to kick me.

Bridge had remained silent throughout the entire exchange. He chose this time to speak, though he didn't bother with words. With a loud roar he charged at Spider.

I watched in horror as Spider shifted the gun from me to Bridge. I saw his finger pulling the trigger back in slow motion. There was the sound of a gunshot. Bridge's body changed course in midair as he dove beside the sofa where Nandy sprawled. Spider turned slowly to face the door as he staggered and began to fall.

Then I saw the blood on his pants leg. The denim had erupted with splinters of bone, and blood was jetting out in bright crimson gushes. Coleman walked calmly into the room, ignoring Spider as he fell. Coleman pointed his gun at Ray-Ban. "Hand it over," he said.

Ray-Ban hesitated, but the look in Coleman's eyes convinced him to yield his gun. As deputies Gordon Walters and Dewayne Dattilo rushed into the room, Coleman took Ray-Ban's gun and picked up the gun Spider had dropped. Finally, Coleman squatted beside Spider, who was moaning on the floor, clutching frantically at his bleeding thigh.

"Damn, I hit an artery. Sarah Booth, call an ambulance," Coleman said.

"Coleman!" I'd never been gladder to see anyone.

"Give me your belt," Coleman said to Scott, who sat up and pulled his off. In a few seconds Coleman had fashioned a tourniquet and slowed the bleeding.

He stood and motioned Dewayne to hold the tourniquet.
"Gordon, if anybody moves, shoot them. That means anybody, but especially her." He pointed at Nandy, who was now whimpering.

He grabbed my arm and pulled me up and out to the front porch.

"Are you okay?" His hands moved down my arms, then along my back as if he wouldn't believe my words.

"I'm fine. You got here just in time."

"Playing that record on the radio was stupid, Sarah Booth. This whole plan was foolish and dangerous. You knew the people who wanted the recordings had killed once."

His hands tightened on my arms and he pulled me into a hug. I didn't care that he chastised me. The only thing that mattered was that he held me.

"By the way, leaving your cell phone in the records was a good piece of work." He pulled the small phone out of his pocket and returned it.

His whispered praise made me smile.

"How did you know I would be in the office?" he asked.

"It was a risk, but where else would you be?"

He squeezed me tight and let me go. "When did you figure out it was Spider and Ray-Ban?"

It was on the tip of my tongue to tell him that my trap had been set for Bridge. But I remembered DG rule eighty-eight. Never admit to anything less than perfection.

"Did you hear their confession?" I countered.

"Heard it and recorded it. The quality of sound won't be the best, but it's good backup, especially since we have you and Bridge and Scott to testify."

Coleman walked me back into the room, his arm around my shoulders. I didn't feel it necessary at that time to tell him I'd recorded the whole thing, too--just in case.

Coleman stopped in the doorway, his arm possessively slipping around my waist. "Where did Nandy come from?" he asked.

"Hell," I answered.

We were both laughing when I looked at Scott. His jaw was swollen, but it wasn't pain from his injury that showed on his face. He truly cared for me. I saw it in the way his gaze slipped from my face to Coleman's arm around me. Right before we'd been bombed, Scott had been telling me that he was falling in love with me. And right before that, he'd admitted that everyone he loved got hurt. I knew then that the entire scene when he'd returned my car had been staged in an effort to keep me safe. He'd decided to run me off by treating me mean, rather than see me get hurt. It took my breath away.

Nandy, who had revived, saw her opportunity and knelt down beside Scott. "I told you she was fucking the sheriff," she said with great satisfaction.

The hush in the room seemed to suck all of the oxygen out. It was Bridge who moved first, getting to his feet and picking up the old black record from the coffee table. "So who actually owns the records, and are there more of them?"

"Emanuel Keys owns them. There are twenty-two, counting the one you're holding."

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