Hidden Falls (36 page)

Read Hidden Falls Online

Authors: Olivia; Newport

BOOK: Hidden Falls
3.72Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“That’s right.” Cooper clicked his ballpoint pen. “We’ve already been over that ground. I think I have everything I need for now. I’ll see if there have been any other reports of pickpockets lately. Maybe we’ll find a pattern.”

“Be sure you talk to Gavin Owens about the attempted purse snatching in his restaurant.” Jack reached into his breast pocket, withdrew a business card, and handed it to Richard. “I’m experienced with criminal cases. I might be able to help you remember something you don’t realize is significant.”

Richard put the card in the pocket of his brown flannel-lined jacket. “I have to go meet my wife.”

“Call me anytime if you want some help.”

Jack looked down the street. Liam was out of view. Jack found it hard to believe Liam and Cooper were brothers. Beyond a vague family resemblance, they seemed nothing alike, even when Liam was not the ball of nerves he’d become in the last few days. By now Liam was probably at Waterfall Books and Gifts. Jack crossed the street and strode down the sidewalk.

At the mayor’s shop, Jack tried the front door and found it locked. He could see into the store, though, and watched Liam set his lumpy bag on the counter. Jack jiggled the doorknob again, and Sylvia looked up and pointed at the sign. C
LOSED.
Unperturbed, Jack waved through the glass but made no movement away from the door. When he had Sylvia’s eye, he pointed at the door. A moment later she turned the latch.

“We’re not open, Jack. It’s still a mess in here.”

“I just thought I’d see if I could be helpful.” Jack pushed into the store.

“We have it in hand,” Sylvia said.

Jack spotted Dani Roose toward the back of the store. She was definitely someone he should speak to soon. He could represent her interests in making sure any suspects in the vandalism to her boat were prosecuted as thoroughly as possible. Probably there were grounds for a civil case on top of criminal charges.

“I haven’t heard back on the calls I made yesterday,” Jack said. “It takes time, though. I’ll be sure to let you know as soon as I hear anything.”

Silent, Liam shifted his weight from one foot to the other.

The poor guy can hardly stand up,
Jack thought.

Sylvia turned to Liam. “As I was saying, the best thing is to call Marianne and make an appointment to see me. Then we can talk without interruption.”

Liam glanced at Jack and ran his tongue over his lips. “I appreciate your willingness to see me in your office, but I believe this is an urgent matter.”

Jack knew when to keep his mouth closed. He stepped back two paces to listen.

“You can see I’m in the middle of my own muddle. I could give you my full attention at Town Hall.”

Liam glared at Jack. “I was hoping to speak privately.”

Jack gave a smug smile. He wasn’t going anywhere.

“I’ve told you before,” Sylvia said, “the town council can’t look at your proposal until the comptroller has vetted it.”

“This is about Quinn.”

Sylvia froze. “What about Quinn?”

Jack leaned with one palm on the counter.

Liam took his phone out and tapped a few buttons before turning the screen toward Sylvia. “This was mixed in with my mail. I couldn’t keep the letter, obviously. I hope it’s not a crime to take a picture, but I thought it might mean something. Look at the next one, too.”

Sylvia held the phone in both hands, studied the image, and scrolled to the second one. “What kind of business is that?”

“I tried to find it on the Internet,” Liam said. “They don’t seem to have a website.”

“Everybody has a website,” Jack said. “Mind if I have a look?”

He ignored the reticence in Liam’s face and reached for the phone. Sylvia handed it to him.

“Santorelli,” Jack read aloud the single name of the business. The address was in Pennsylvania, but it was only a PO box. “In my experience, this sort of letter comes from an organization whose greatest value is being discreet, like a private detective or an adoption search.”

“Adoption search,” Sylvia said. “Why would Quinn …?”

“Some sort of search,” Jack said. “It might not be an adoption, but Quinn is probably looking for somebody.”

4:44 p.m.

Sylvia could tell nothing from the photo.

It could be a private letter from an old friend. Liam had held it, though, and insisted the paper inside felt like business weight, the kind companies used to print letterhead on before the world defaulted to economical photocopy paper for ubiquitous use.

Sylvia took the phone from Jack and handed it back to Liam. “Will you send that image to my e-mail address, please?”

Liam tapped a few prompts, and Sylvia heard the alert sound on his phone that meant the message was en route. She would look at it later, at home, where she could hold it before her eyes for as long as she liked. Maybe a full-size image on her computer screen would reveal more than what she could see on a cell phone.

Not that Sylvia would know what to look for. The return address was just one name, the PO box, and a city Sylvia recognized as a suburb of Philadelphia. Quinn’s name and address had come off a laser printer. Whatever kind of company Santorelli was, their standards for being discreet didn’t preclude contemporary office technology.

Liam and Jack still huddled uncomfortably close.

“Thank you, Liam. You did the right thing by insisting I look at the photos.” What she would do with the information, Sylvia didn’t know. Philadelphia was a long way from Hidden Falls, and she didn’t even have a street address.

“I’ll call your office about the other matter.” Liam tucked his phone away.

“I’m sure Marianne can set you up.”

“I’ll ask for the next available appointment.”

“There’s no rush. As I said, I can’t do much until the comptroller finishes his work.”

“I understand. I just want to be sure I have the opportunity to address questions you might have.”

Sylvia was ready to be done with both Liam and Jack badgering her for town business. She wasn’t sure she could trust either one of them, but even if she did, the town council had several members savvy about financial contracts. The decision to give Liam investment accounts to manage or Jack legal contracts to review wouldn’t be up to Sylvia. People tended to think the office of mayor held far more power than it did. Even a small town had ordinances and bylaws to abide by.

Still, she was grateful Liam had brought her the photo, even if he did have ulterior motives.

Liam picked up his black bag. “I’d like to say hi to Dani before I go.”

He moved toward the rear of the store, leaving Sylvia with Jack’s overeager expression.

“Let me check out that address,” Jack said. “If this is a clue about what happened to Quinn, we’d all like to know.”

Sylvia’s mind was unclear what Jack had invested in finding Quinn. It certainly wasn’t personal. Quinn welcomed the Parker family to town with the same cordiality he extended to anyone, and one of Jack’s daughters was a student of Quinn’s, but as far as Sylvia knew, the two men barely knew each other. Jack’s chronic zeal to be the winner—when there was no contest—grated on Sylvia.

But Sylvia would never forgive herself if she didn’t do everything she could for Quinn. All day, every day, between responsibilities—Town Hall, her mother, the shop—Sylvia tempered the anxiety for Quinn that broke over her spirit in fresh waves.

What could it hurt to let Jack try to find out who or what Santorelli was? She couldn’t stop him, anyway. He’d seen the address. If he came up with something, she wanted him to bring it straight to her. Brushing him off at this point would be counterproductive.

“It’s kind of you to offer your time and experience,” Sylvia said.

“I’ll get back to you.”

Sylvia wondered what kind of lawyer Jack had been in Memphis and Atlanta. Perhaps despite his overconfident yet needy demeanor, he was a competent professional. When it came to finding Quinn, Sylvia would like nothing more than to be proven wrong in her instincts about Jack Parker.

Jack went out the shop door, and Sylvia locked it behind him. Out of deference to Dani, she quashed the urge to rush Liam out.

Sylvia went down the shelf-lined wall to check on Lizzie’s progress with sorting books according to degree of damage. Each hour brought more encouragement about the store’s inventory. The insurance policy would compensate Sylvia for most of the losses, but it was still nice to see they wouldn’t have to reopen with empty shelves. Already the UPS truck had brought two orders Sylvia placed before the burglary, and Lizzie had entered orders with two other distributors with expedited delivery. Between new items and salvageable items, the store would look fairly normal in another day or so.

In the back of the store, Dani was replacing bent brackets on a shelving unit that had otherwise survived the assault. Dani typically didn’t stop what she was doing to talk to people, and the conversation with Liam was no exception. She ducked her head at an odd angle to position a screwdriver while Liam spoke to her.

Liam looked alarmingly pale to Sylvia. Distraction seeped through his every gesture today, and his grooming seemed a shade off of his usual personal presentation.

Sylvia stopped to chat with Lizzie and then moved through the store toward the office in the back.

“Fine, come,” Dani muttered.

“Your house at seven?”

“Yes.” Dani withdrew the screwdriver. “But you’d better bring something I feel like eating.”

“Pretty sure I can manage that.” Liam adjusted the strap of his bag as he turned toward Sylvia. “I’ll get out of your way now.”

“I’ll walk you out,” Sylvia said.

Once he was out of the store, Sylvia bolted the door again. This time she pulled down the shade that covered the glass in the door and then reached for the cord to release a shade over the front window, something she hardly ever did.

She wanted no more interruptions. C
LOSED
meant C
LOSED.

7:02 p.m.

Dani was tempted to sit Patricia Healy down for a lesson on rewiring a lamp. If Patricia was going to persist in blowing out lamps at the rate Dani had seen during the last two years, she ought to learn to repair them. This one had been on Dani’s garage workbench for four weeks already. If she didn’t fix it soon, Patricia would start leaving daily messages on Dani’s old answering machine in the kitchen. Further delay wasn’t worth that aggravation. Dani popped the old socket out of the lamp and tossed it aside before cutting the wires and pulling out the cord. She had just starting pushing the new cord through the bottom of the table lamp when she heard Liam’s car.

Dani didn’t interrupt her project. Liam would know where to find her. His car door slammed, and his steps crunched on the gravel driveway. Dani counted seventeen steps and looked up to see her cousin standing in the door with a sack of food from Eat Right Here.

“I got cake, too,” he said.

“What are we celebrating?” Dani pulled the cord through to the top of the lamp and reached for the wire strippers.

“How about the fact that you’re alive and not in the hospital after being tossed over the falls?”

“You must have heard some wild stories.” Dani stripped a half inch off the wires. “Hand me that new socket, will you?”

Liam set down the food bag and found the socket.

“Now the screwdriver,” Dani said. “That little one.”

He gave her the tool. “I was relieved to find you in Sylvia’s store today and see for myself that you’re all right.”

“I think in my case you can assume that if you don’t hear from me, I’m not dead.” Dani wrapped wire around a screw. “You’re my local next of kin.”

“I’m honored. But seriously, I was glad to see you weren’t more banged up.”

Dani tightened down both screws and reached for electrical tape to wrap the terminals. “I just need a few minutes to finish this.”

“I’m in no hurry.”

“Isn’t Jessica waiting for you or something?”

“Jessica doesn’t run my life.”

Dani flashed him a look but managed to refrain from laughter. “What did you do now?”

Liam reached into the food sack and pulled out a french fry. “I’m not going to dignify that crack.”

“Whatever.” Dani tore a paper towel from the roll over her workbench and wiped her hands. When Liam opened the sack and unleashed the smell of food—Reuben sandwiches along with the fries, if Dani’s nose was any judge—hunger overtook her. “Let’s go eat. I’ll finish this later.”

Before she had swallowed her first bite, Liam put his phone on the table in front of her. Dani looked at the photo of an address.

“I’m not sure I trust Jack Parker,” he said. “Do you?”

Dani took another bite and chewed slowly. “Who’s Santorelli?”

Liam swiped to another photo. “And why is he writing to Quinn at a UPS box?”

“You’re full of surprises.” Dani set down her sandwich. “How did we get from Jack Parker to Quinn’s
private
mail?”

“Jack says he can find out who Santorelli is, but I would put my bet on your sleuthing abilities.”

“That’s Quinn’s business,” Dani said.

“And maybe it had something to do with what happened to him.”

“That’s a pretty big leap.”

“It’s possible, isn’t it?”

“Anything is possible. That’s not the point.”

Liam rearranged his sandwich. “Yes it is. Even long shots are possibilities when no one’s heard from Quinn in four days.”

“So now you’ve talked to every resident of Hidden Falls.”

“I’m pretty sure Cooper’s on top of that.”

“Then let him do his job.” Dani filled her mouth again. No matter what anyone said, she wasn’t inclined to worry about Quinn. “I’ve got my own mystery to solve if I want justice about my boat.”

“Isn’t that Cooper’s job, too?”

“This is different.”

Half of Hidden Falls were sticking their noses into Quinn’s business and thinking they knew his mind. Dani was minding her own business. She had every right to try to assemble the puzzle pieces when it came to the destruction of her boat. Dani wanted to get back to her work enlarging and enhancing Ethan’s photos. She wasn’t going to waste time debating the merits of her strategy with Liam.

Other books

My Soul to Keep by Carolyn McCray
Dark Sister by Joyce, Graham
Into the Firestorm by Deborah Hopkinson
Unicorns' Opal by Richard S. Tuttle
Immortal Distraction by Elizabeth Finn
Native Speaker by Chang-Rae Lee