just said youâd gotten an obscene phone call last night and panicked. She thought you must have run away. She was worried because you donât have a car or any money.â
âThatâs right, Sheriff. Iâm sorry she worried you all for nothing.â
Quinlan said, âI rescued the damsel, Sheriff, and let her sleepâaloneâin my bed. She liked the tower room. She ignored me. Have you found out anything about the murdered woman?â
âYes, her name was Laura Strather. She lived in the subdivision with her husband and three kids. They thought she was visiting her sister up in Portland. Thatâs why no missing person report was filed on her. The question is, Why was she being held a prisoner over here in The Cove and who the hell killed her?â
âHave your people checked all the houses across from Amabel Perdyâs cottage?â
The sheriff nodded. âDepressing, Quinlan, depressing. No one knows a thing. No one heard a thingânot a TV, not a telephone, not a car backfiring, not a woman screaming. Not on either night. Not a bloody thing.â He looked over at Sally, but couldnât speak until Martha delivered his pancakes.
She looked at each of them, then smiled and said, âIâll never forget my mama showing me an article in The Oregonian written by this man called Qumquat Jagger way back in the early fifties. âThe Cove sunsets are a dramatic sight as long as one has a martini in the right hand.â Iâve long agreed with him on that.â She added easily, âItâs too early for a martini or a sunsetâhow about a Bloody Mary? All of you look on edge.â
âIâd love one,â Sheriff Mountebank said, âbut I canât.â Quinlan and Sally shook their heads. âThank you, though, Martha,â Quinlan said.
She checked to see that they had everything they could possibly want, then left the dining room.
After David Mountebank had eaten half the pancakes, he looked at Sally again and said, âIf you had called me about hearing that woman screaming, Iâm not certain I would have believed you. I would have searched, naturally, but Iâd probably have thought youâd had a nightmare. But then you and Quinlan found a womanâs body. Was she the woman you heard screaming? Probably so. You were telling the truth then, and all the old folk in this town are deaf. Either of you have any ideas?â
âI didnât even think about calling a sheriff,â Sally said. âBut I probably wouldnât have. My aunt wouldnât have wanted that.â
âNo, probably not. The folk in The Cove like to keep things to themselves.â The sheriff grinned at her then. âI donât know if youâre my best witness in any case, Ms. Brandon, since I find youâve slept in Quinlanâs towerroom. And you lied to me about your hair.â
âI have several wigs, Sheriff. I like wigs. I thought you were impertinent to ask me, so I said I had cancer to guilt you.â
David Mountebank sighed. Why did everybody have to lie? It was exhausting. He looked at her again. This time he frowned. âYou look familiar,â he said slowly.
âJames tells me I look like his former sister-in-law. Amabel thinks I look like Mary Lou Retton, although Iâm nearly a foot taller. My mom said I was the image of her Venezuelan nanny. Donât tell me, Sheriff, that I remind you of your Pekinese.â
âNo, Ms. Brandon, be thankful you donât look like my dog. His name is Hugo and heâs a Rottweiler.â
Sally waited, trying not to clench her hands, trying to look amused, trying to look like she was all together and not ready to fall apart if he poked his finger at her and said he was taking her in. She watched his frown smooth away as he turned to James.
âI checked the files from the previous sheriff. Her name was Dorothy Willis, and she was very good. Her notes on
Harold Coyle
Shashi Tharoor
Jessica Fletcher
David Yeadon
K T Bowes
S. J. Kincaid
Cindy C Bennett
Alexa Riley
Alexis Morgan
Anne Fine