Kiss the Moon (14 page)

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Authors: Carla Neggers

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She nodded. “Thanks.”

He adjusted her scarf, letting one knuckle curve along her jaw, featherlight. “I’m not imagining things. I know something’s not right with this whole plane story.” She started to answer, but he touched her lips. “No, I’m not trying to put you on the spot. I just want you to trust me if you get to the point of feeling you’re in over your head.”

“I’m not—”

He smiled, cutting her off. “I know you’re not. You’re in command of the situation.”

“I don’t know about that. You’re here. Jack Dunning’s in there wooing Harriet. I’m not in command of much. But I’m not worried about spending the night alone in my cabin.”

“Not even a little?”

“Nope. Frankly, I’d be a lot more worried about sleeping here.”

He laughed, and when she laughed, too, his mouth found hers. She shut her eyes, soaking up the feel of his lips, the heat of a quick taste of tongue. She wondered if she should be less worried about Bubba and Harriet and threatening messages and more worried about her attraction to this man, this Sinclair, with all his complexities and layers and built-in determination. All she wanted, right now, for the rest of the night, was his hands on her body, the chance to explore and taste and—

And you’re crazy!

“I’ve got to go,” she whispered. “Harriet, my mother—if they see us, ten to one I’ll end up grounded from flying for a million years. Pop won’t think I have a lick of sense left.”

“Caught kissing a Sinclair in the parking lot. You’d have to be out of control.” He eased one hand into her hair, kissed her again, hard, deep, fast. Then he stood back, winked with a mix of amusement and sexiness that would haunt her all night. “Question is, do you want to be out of control?”

“Wyatt—”

He shook his head, his gaze suddenly serious. “Just say good-night and thanks for dinner.”

She nodded, her body quivering with a desire that rocked her to her core. “Good night. Thanks for dinner.”

Her truck was cold, dark, so damned quiet. She flipped on the radio and headed out the winding main road, making the turns that took her to her dirt road, its squishy mud already hardening in the falling temperature. When she came to her house, she locked her truck and ran up the steps, imagining Bubba Johns lurking in the darkness, wondering if her judgment about him was wrong.

She locked her door behind her, made sure the sliding glass doors to the deck were locked. She ran around the house and flipped on all the lights, every one, even the one on the stove. She breathed, trying to relax. It was that kiss, of course. She
was
out of control.

Her tiny house was bright. Quiet. Light gleamed in Willard’s glass eyes. She could never shoot a moose. Never. But here was a moose head mounted on her living room wall. Next she’d sprout bushy eyebrows and turn into her grandfather, an old curmudgeon who’d never discussed his relationship with the Sinclairs. He’d known Colt, he’d known Frannie Beaudine. He had steadfastly refused to expound on what he might know or surmise about their love affair, their personalities, their hopes and dreams. He’d say to people, “I don’t know how that’s going to help find their plane.”

Whatever Sam Chestnut knew about Colt and Frannie went to the grave with him. His younger brother, the Reverend Mr. George Chestnut, had come out of his retirement in Florida to bury him. George’s idea of recreation in the lakes region was more in tune with Penelope’s—canoeing, kayaking, hiking, occasionally fishing. If her great-uncle had asked for the moose head, she would have given it to him.

She sighed heavily, still feeling restless, agitated. She unlocked the sliding glass doors and slipped onto the deck. The clouds were gathering over the still, snow-covered lake. She leaned over the rail, the cold seeping into her and the sounds of the night calming her. Yet she could feel, in a way she seldom let herself feel, how isolated and alone she was. She’d moved out here more or less on an impulse, another example of Penelope Chestnut operating on instinct, everyone in town thinking—telling her—she was crazy.

“And now,” she whispered, “here you are.”

An engine started. Up the road, down the road—she couldn’t tell. She stood up straight, listening. Not in her driveway. Not that close. She went still, wondering if whoever was out there knew she was outside.

The engine didn’t rev. It was as if the vehicle—car, truck, SUV—was trying to slip off quietly into the night without her noticing.

A spy?

She was getting paranoid.

But she shot inside without making a sound, locked the door behind her. She didn’t have bars or bolts or fancy locks, nothing that would stop anyone determined to get in. She ran to the study, ducking low as she approached the window, then creeping up, peering into the night.

Half expecting someone in the window, she almost screamed at her own reflection. Running out of gas at five thousand feet she could handle. Things that go bump in the night, forget it.

She couldn’t see the vehicle. She could hear it rolling down her dirt road, without lights, not fast, coasting.

Why? Why not turn on the lights and lay on the gas?

Was the driver deliberately trying to scare her? Trying to avoid being seen? Or just having car trouble?

What if he stopped past her house and snuck up for a peek in her windows?

“What ifs will drive you nuts,” she warned herself.

For the first time in her memory, Penelope found herself wishing simultaneously for good locks, a gun and maybe even a man she trusted. For all she knew, that could be Wyatt on her road. But she didn’t think it was.

She gave herself fifteen minutes to calm down. This was no time to go crying wolf. When the fifteen minutes passed and her heart was still pounding, her hands still shaking and clammy, she dialed Andy McNally at home. It was the most sensible course of action. They’d had their disagreements in the past, but he knew his daughters looked up to her—and he had a soft spot for Harriet. Plus, he was a responsible chief of police.

“Penelope? What’s up? I was just heading over to the inn for a drink.”

“I’m a little spooked, Andy.” A lot spooked, but she was trying not to overdramatize. Andy had been saying for years that one of these days her zest for drama, in his words, was going to bite her in the ass. “Someone drove down my road without lights about fifteen minutes ago. I’m still spooked about it, even though I know it’s probably kids or some straggling reporter—”

“I’ll drive up there myself and have a look. Penelope—hell, this must be a first, but you even sound upset. You telling me everything?”

She didn’t know if she should mention the weird e-mail message. It wasn’t overtly threatening. It might not even be a police matter. She’d have Jack Dunning and Wyatt Sinclair down her throat about what she
really
found on Sunday. Not that she didn’t already, but they didn’t need more ammunition. And what if the message was their doing, to try to scare her? “Just drive by. If you see anything suspicious, let me know.”

“Damned right I’ll let you know. I’ll be knocking on your door.” He paused, going cop on her. “You sure there’s nothing else?”

“Andy, if it was bad guys on my road, they could be doubling back here now with shotguns and knives—”

“Nah. They’d have already napalmed your place by now. Next time don’t wait fifteen minutes before you call.”

He hung up, and Penelope paced until, ten minutes later, he drove past her house and up the road, turned and drove back, tooting his horn.

The all clear.

Relieved, she went into the study and turned on her computer to check her e-mail. She noticed a paper in her fax machine, and as she pulled it out, she automatically looked for the ID line at the top. There was none. That was illegal, though perhaps an oversight if one of her friends had just bought a fax machine, an unlikely event.

The message was one line, in a large, easy-to-read font.

Don’t show anyone what you really found in the woods.

Her hands shook. Her stomach lurched. She crumpled the fax and threw it against the wall and dialed the inn’s number. Harriet picked up. Penelope fought an urge to jump up and tear out of her house. “Harriet? It’s me. Tell me—where are Jack Dunning and Wyatt Sinclair right now?”

“I have no idea. I don’t keep tabs on my guests.”

“Don’t tell me you’re not keeping tabs on these particular guests. Please, Harriet. I need to know.”

“You sound awful. What’s wrong?”

“Nothing’s wrong. I just—I just have the feeling things are spinning out of control. Are they there?”

“No,” Harriet said. “They went out after dinner. Separately. Jack first, then Wyatt. Jack said he was going to the airport to check on his plane. I don’t know where Wyatt was going.”

Penelope bent and picked up the crumpled fax. Neither Wyatt Sinclair nor Jack Dunning had made any pretense they believed she was lying about Colt and Frannie’s plane. How low would they stoop to get her to change her story? Like the instant message, the fax wasn’t overtly threatening. Probably Andy McNally would blame the national media coverage and tell her to forget it, let the dust settle. Without an actual threat, there was probably little he could do.

“Penelope?”

She could hear the concern in her cousin’s voice. “Thanks, Harriet. I’m just tired. It’s been a long day. I’ll see you tomorrow.”

“Call me if you need me.”

Penelope smiled. She could always count on Harriet. After they’d hung up, she folded the fax into a tiny square and stuck it in her lingerie drawer. Was Bubba Johns capable of sending a fax? She shook off the question, shook off
all
her questions and fixed herself a cup of lemon chamomile tea. She drank it sprawled on the couch with a fleece blanket pulled to her chin and Willard, silent and composed, on the wall, as she had countless times as a kid on a rainy day with her grandfather puttering around his small cabin. The wind had picked up, and she listened to the trees creak and groan. She thought about a Sinclair and a Sinclair investigator on the loose in her dark, quiet little town, and she wondered if she could trust both of them, one or neither.

“Neither, if you’re smart,” she said.

And she thought it was a hell of a life she lived, in an old man’s lakeside cabin with no one to talk to but a dead moose.

Nine

W
et, fat snowflakes covered the roads and fields and clung to power lines and tree branches. Penelope’s windshield wipers turned the snow to ice as she drove out her dirt road, wishing whoever had spied on her last night had gotten stuck in the deep ruts. She almost did, even with four-wheel drive. She stopped at the airport en route to town and found her father up to his elbows in engine parts.

“Your mother wants me to keep you busy,” he said. “She thinks you’ll get into less trouble here than at home. It’s the lesser of two evils.”

“Does that mean I can fly?”

“It means you don’t have to cool your heels at home, you can come in and sweep, wash planes, help your aunt in the office—”

“I can’t this morning,” she said, as if she were her own boss. “Wyatt Sinclair and this Dunning character are coming to my place at ten to check out my research into Colt and Frannie. If I’m not around, I have a feeling they’ll help themselves.”

Her father nodded, climbing heavily to his feet. “You probably have a point there. It won’t be any comfort to your mother.” Little was, and they both knew it. “I won’t mention this meeting to her. Just don’t make the mistake of thinking you can handle those two.”

By “handle” Penelope suspected he meant “lie to.” She adjusted the sleeve of her anorak. She’d pulled it on over a fleece shirt, along with jeans and her day hikers. It was March, and she refused to wear a hat and gloves if she was driving around town. She told her father, “It’s not as if Colt and Frannie disappeared yesterday. They’ve been gone for forty-five years. Wyatt wasn’t even born yet, and Jack Dunning—why would he care?”

“It’s his job to care. And Wyatt—”

“I know, I know. He’s a Sinclair, and that explains it all.”

Her father grabbed an old rag and wiped his greasy hands, studying his only child in a manner that made her think he really could read her mind. “I know all the media attention caught you by surprise—I know you worry about Harriet. You wouldn’t want her ending up in the tabloids, a laughingstock.” When she started to protest, he held up a hand. “Harriet’s stronger than you think. She can take care of herself. You just do the right thing.”

“I’m trying to do the right thing, Pop. What about Bubba Johns? Is it right his life should be turned upside down and inside out? Reporters were already tramping around on my land. It was only a matter of time before they found him.”

“Reporters aren’t your worst problem—or Bubba’s. Wyatt Sinclair and Jack Dunning are, and they aren’t going anywhere until they’re satisfied you’re telling the truth.” He tossed the rag onto the floor. “You might think about that.”

She’d thought of little else all night. She shoved her hands in her pockets. It was chilly in the hangar, and the snow hadn’t let up. Grounded or not grounded, she wouldn’t be flying today. “Pop, if you were me and you
had
found Colt and Frannie’s plane, would you come clean?”

He shrugged. “I’d do what I thought was right. I wouldn’t let Sinclair and Dunning intimidate me—but I wouldn’t let fretting about Harriet and that old hermit influence me, either.”

“Then on what grounds do you decide what’s right?”

“Your own grounds,” her father said simply.

Penelope nodded. “Of course, this is all theoretical.”

“Right. You didn’t find the plane.”

On her way out, she stopped at the office to say hello to her aunt, who was griping about the weather as if it never snowed in March. The office was small, cluttered and purely functional. Her aunt didn’t even keep a picture of her family or a vase of flowers on her desk.

Penelope asked her about Jack Dunning’s plane, and that perked her up. “It’s his personal plane,” Mary said. “It doesn’t belong to the Sinclairs. What a beauty it is, too. You should peek inside—it’s a custom interior.”

“I might just do that. Aunt Mary, what’re you doing?”

“Oh—I’m programming my fax machine. It was a mess this morning. Must have had a power surge or something, I don’t know. I’ve had to input our identification. It’s a pain. I’m almost done.”

Penelope twisted her hands together and stifled an urge to pounce on her aunt’s fax machine, trying instead to stay calm and not jump to conclusions. “Did anyone break in last night? Did you let someone use the fax machine yesterday? Jack Dunning came by after dinner to check on his plane. I’ll bet he’s good with locks. He could have broken in and—”

She stopped abruptly, but her aunt prodded her. “And what? Penelope, people don’t break into offices to use a fax machine. That’s insane.”

“Did you forget to lock up last night?”

“I didn’t do the locking up. Your father did. When I got in this morning, everything was perfectly normal. I’d have Andy McNally up here if there had been any sign of a break-in.”

She frowned at her niece, her hands on her hips, suspicion etched in every line and feature of her round face. Aunt Mary had four kids of her own, all older than Penelope, all convinced she’d give their mother a heart attack one of these days. Yet they understood the special affection their mother and cousin had for each other, never mind that it was tried on a near-daily basis.

“Honestly, Penelope,” Mary Chestnut Feeney said. “You’ve been grounded for one day and you’re already acting crazy. This is an old machine. Sometimes it goes haywire. That’s all there is to it. For heaven’s sake, if you want excitement, I’d hope you find it somewhere besides a fax machine on the blink!”

Penelope smiled lamely. “You’re right, Aunt Mary.”

“It’s having these two New Yorkers in town. Harriet told me they’re watching you like hawks, thinking you found that plane on Sunday. I’ll bet they think you’ve looted it or you’re planning to write a book—”

“They can think what they want to think. Look, I just wanted to pop in and say hello. See you later. Don’t mention this fax machine thing to Pop, okay?”

“As if I would. I tell him this one, and I’ll be lucky he doesn’t fire me for talking him into grounding you for three weeks instead of four.”

“Pop can’t fire you. You’re partners.”

“Like you, Miss Hot Shot, he can find a way to get done what he wants to get done.”

Before she could paint herself firmly into a corner, Penelope made her exit. She drove straight to town and bought a jigsaw puzzle, milk, juice and bullets for her grandfather’s rifle. If common decency didn’t keep a New York Sinclair and a private investigator at bay, maybe a loaded gun in the kitchen would.

Wyatt arrived at her cabin first. He tossed his leather jacket over the back of a kitchen chair, his dark gaze taking in her birds of the northeast puzzle and her Winchester leaned against the table. She hadn’t loaded it yet. She said, “That’s my grandfather’s old rifle. He taught me how to shoot.”

He ran a finger over her new box of cartridges. “When’s the last time you loaded this thing?”

“About a year ago. We had a convicted murderer escape from the state prison. It can get creepy living out here, especially in the winter. There are more people around in the summer.” She dumped scoops of coffee—regular Colombian coffee—into a filter. “I don’t hunt, but I like to keep up my shooting skills. Figured I’d do some target shooting while I’m grounded.”

“And build a puzzle,” Wyatt said.

“There’s only so much shooting and sap boiling I can do. Television reception stinks out here, and I don’t have a dish.”

“I see.”

Controlled, watchful, taking in everything around him. Penelope was afraid he did see. Wondering how obvious she was, she shoved the filter into the coffeemaker, poured in water and flipped it on.

“I think I’ll get the sap boiling again while you two look over my research materials. I hope you’re not expecting a smoking gun—it’s mostly old newspaper articles and transcripts of interviews I had with people around town who remember Colt and Frannie or helped search for their plane. I have the original cassettes, too, if you want to listen to them.” She glanced at him, cool. “Of course, you already know that from your little look-see last night.”

Jack Dunning arrived, not looking like someone who relished digging through research materials, but Penelope supposed the job of private investigator involved plenty of dull, routine work. She sat the two of them down at the kitchen table, where she’d stacked all her materials. She removed her rifle to the study. Dunning hadn’t commented on it, and she wondered if the only point she’d made was that she was a lunatic. She set the cartridges on the kitchen counter and got her canner of sap bubbling, the steam and sweet maple smells soothing her nerves, making the place seem cozier, as if the two men at her table were playing cards or clipping coupons, not trying to catch her in a lie.

Twice she almost told them to strap on snowshoes and she’d take them to what was left of Colt and Frannie’s Piper Cub J-3. Just get it over with. What had seemed the right thing to do on Tuesday no longer was clearly so right on Thursday.

But she resisted—if only because the two men at her kitchen table were so obviously
not
interested in her research materials. Jack was there to scope her out, Wyatt to scope out her and Jack. Newspaper articles from the 1950s and interviews with old people weren’t going to do them any good. She was the one who’d found the long-missing plane. They were the ones looking for it.

As she busily stirred the syrup—it was looking like syrup now—and washed canning jars, Penelope speculated about what Jack knew that Wyatt didn’t know and vice versa. Or what each
thought
the other knew, whether in fact he did or didn’t.

She frowned. She was getting way ahead of herself. They could just be two frustrated men stumbling their way through a problem not of their own making. They suspected her of lying, and they were trying to get her to feel comfortable enough to change her story back again.

Which didn’t explain the fax. Maybe she should ask them who’d messed with Aunt Mary’s fax machine.

Jack Dunning sat her at the table and asked her several questions about interviews she’d conducted. Then, calmly, he asked her about several glaring omissions. “You didn’t interview your father, your aunt or your grandfather. The newspaper articles indicate they were all actively involved in the search efforts, particularly your grandfather.”

“I didn’t get started on the interviews until he was sick. As for my father and Aunt Mary—I haven’t asked.”

The flat, almost colorless eyes narrowed on her. “Why not?”

“Family protocol, I guess. They know about the interviews. If they want to participate, they’ll say so. Now that I have three weeks to kill, I might make it clear that even if they don’t think they have anything to offer, I’d like to get their perspective.”

“Going to write a book?”

Maybe Aunt Mary had been on to something. “No.”

She glanced at Wyatt, saw he was absorbed in a transcript of Uncle George’s memories of those first weeks after Colt and Frannie’s disappearance. Her uncle had been careful, she recalled, not to say too much about the baby he’d found in the apple basket on the church doorstep. Penelope hadn’t asked, but she assumed he didn’t want to draw any more attention to the unsettling coincidence of Colt and Frannie’s ill-fated flight and the mysterious appearance of an infant.

“This dump you say you found,” Jack Dunning said, segueing into the subject that really interested him. “Would there be any record of it?”

Penelope shook her head. “It’d just be stuff an old farmer hauled off into the woods from time to time.”

“Then why isn’t it on a trail or old logging road?”

“I don’t know. When I was a kid, I used to pick through some of the old dumps in the woods for bottles. I had a collection.”

“But you never ran across this dump before?”

“Not that I recall.”

He got to his feet, his gaze more amused than challenging, as if he really didn’t care if she lied to him or not. Either way, he’d get to the truth. “It’s been interesting. Thanks for your time.”

“You’re welcome. Will you report to Mr. Sinclair today and head home?”

He smiled. “Not yet.”

Penelope followed him to the door and shut it hard behind him, then spun around to Wyatt. “Why doesn’t he give up and go back to New York?”

“Same reason I don’t.”

“Because you’re both waiting for me to miraculously drop Colt and Frannie’s Piper Cub in your laps.” She groaned, frustrated, the thought of the fax folded in her underwear drawer and the car outside her house last night interfering with her thinking, her mood. So was being alone with Sinclair. “Can’t you fire him?”

“He’s not my employee.” Wyatt brought his and Jack’s mugs to the sink, checked the bubbling syrup. Without looking at her, he said, “I want to know what’s going on here, Penelope—and I’m not talking about Colt and Frannie’s plane. I’m already fairly confident you found it.”

“Then what are you talking about?”

He stirred the syrup with a long-handled wooden spoon. “You didn’t buy ammo and clean the Winchester because I came on a little strong.”

She said nothing. She stood in the middle of her kitchen, watching Wyatt stir her syrup. Her life wasn’t spinning out of control. It had already spun.

“Penelope…” His voice was low and seductive, but not patient. “Something’s going on.”

“Nothing may be going on. I just—” She plopped on the chair he’d vacated, her Colt and Frannie materials neatly stacked around her. When she’d started, she’d fantasized about discovering their fate. She’d fantasized about meeting her first Sinclair. It just wasn’t Wyatt she’d expected. She shut her eyes briefly, tried to calculate the consequences of giving in to her impulse to tell him everything, then blurted, “I’ve been receiving unsettling messages. They’re more odd than anything else. One came by an instant message while I was on-line, the other by fax. And last night someone spied on me. I think. I’m not positive. It could have been kids.”

“One at a time. Stick to the basics. When, what, where, how. The why is fairly obvious. You said you found a famous missing plane and then said you didn’t.”

“Yes, but this guy’s motive…I don’t know.”

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