Authors: Diana Palmer
“You should watch more television, Grier,” Jones piped. “They show all this stuff on the forensic shows.”
“Don't get me started,” Peters snarled at her. “All that high tech gadgetry, millions of dollars worth of equipment, and look what I'm working with!” he exclaimed, nodding around him at aged gurneys and an old porcelain sink and a microscope that seemed to be patched with gray duct tape. “What I wouldn't give for just one of those computersâ¦!”
“They did give you a super investigator, though,” Jones reminded him. “And I'm much better looking than that woman on TV who plays the M.E.'s assistant⦔
“Stop while you still have work,” Peters muttered.
They cataloged the evidence, placing tissue from under her fingernails in one evidence bag, and swabs from her genital area into another.
“With any luck at all, DNA will catch him,” Garon said tautly.
“Only if the perp's DNA is on file,” Marquez interjected.
“It's amazing to me,” the M.E. commented, “how many molesters aren't in any database. What gets reported is just the tip of the iceberg.”
“That's often the case,” Marquez agreed.
Finally the ordeal was over and the M.E. readied the body for pickup by the funeral home.
“Poor kid,” the M.E. remarked. “And her poor parents. I hope the mortician's good at his job.”
Jones rolled the victim away while Marquez and Garon spoke with the M.E.
“I'll send this downstairs to the crime lab,” he told them, indicating the evidence bags. “Unless you want to do it?”
Garon shook his head. “I've initialed all the vials that have swabs. Marquez can pick them up when you finish and put them in his property room at San Antonio P.D. for safekeeping.”
Marquez nodded. “We'll take good care of everything.”
“Just make sure somebody signs for it.”
“You'd better believe it,” he said. “If we catch the miserable excuse for a human being who did this, I don't want him to walk on a breach of the chain of evidence.”
“When will you know something about the DNA?” Garon asked the M.E.
“Get Jones to sweet talk the evidence technicians downstairs,” the M.E. suggested. “She has pull.”
“I bribe them,” she remarked, overhearing them. “I can make éclairs. The head tech is crazy about them. I used to work with him. I know his weaknesses!”
They laughed. It was a nice break from the somber atmosphere of the autopsy. Humor was how they coped with the horrible sights they carried home with them. It kept them from giving in to the pain. They were the victims' advocates. They had to be able to do the job.
“I'll get this report written up sometime tomorrow,” Peters told the men. “You can call and make sure it's ready. But I can tell you, based on what I've seen, that the child died of asphyxiation. The knife wounds would have been fatal, but they weren't the primary cause of death.”
“You're sure she was asphyxiated?” Marquez asked.
The M.E. pulled away the cloth over the child's face and lifted one of her eyelids. The eye under it was blue. Probably it had been a soft blue, full of hopeâ¦
“See these little hemorrhages?” Peters asked, indicating the small red dots in the white of the eye. There were more in the skin of her face. “They're capillaries that ruptured due to sudden, drastic pressure on the neck. We call the condition petechial hemorrhages. They're a hallmark of strangulation. I'm guessing, due to the amount of skin tissue I found under her nails, that she fought for her life. Her attacker will have scratches all over his hands from her attempt to free herself.”
Marquez nodded, knowing that it was unlikely they'd find a suspect before those scratches healed and faded away. “We use similar techniques in law enforcement to subdue dangerous perpetrators; the bar arm hold and the carotid hold.”
“I know,” the M.E. replied. “They depress the carotid artery and induce unconsciousness. I get a victim of it occasionally. Usually kids practicing wrestling moves on each other without supervision. If it isn't done right, it can be fatal.”
“Don't remind me,” Marquez sighed. “We try everything else first, to subdue a lawbreaker. But sometimes everything else doesn't work, and our own lives are in danger.”
“I hope you can find the person who did this,” Peters said, indicating the child.
“We've got to find him,” Garon said simply. “He'll do it again.”
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G
RACE INSISTED
on going home the next morning. Thanks to the quick treatment Garon had given her sprain, she was walking with barely a limp. She had to go to work or she wouldn't be able to pay her bills. She didn't want to tell him that. He wouldn't understand her sort of poverty. From what she'd heard people say about his brother Cash, she knew the family was wealthy.
Garon looked oddly relieved when she asked him to drop her by her house. He was having second thoughts. He'd spent a long, sleepless night thinking about how sweet it was to kiss Grace, and it had left him irritable. He wasn't going to risk getting involved with her. Never again, he told himself.
She was oddly disappointed that he took it so easily, even smiling as they finished breakfast. Maybe he would have kissed any woman he'd brought home. Or maybe he just felt sorry for her. He'd guessed a little of her past. He probably thought he was helping her adjust to men.
Her own thoughts were confusing her. She got into the car with him without a word, waving at Miss Turner. All the way to her house, she stared out the window without speaking.
He let her out at her front door. “Don't chase coyotes,” he said firmly through the window.
She gave him an indignant look. “Are you a wildlife advocate? I won't hurt him unless he hurts my cat.”
He laughed in spite of himself. “If you need us, call.”
“You can do the same,” she told him pertly, and grinned.
That grin made him feel warm inside. He hated it. “That'll be the day,” he muttered, throwing up a hand as he pulled out of the driveway.
She watched him drive off with a sinking feeling. Things would never be the same again. He shouldn't have touched her.
He was thinking the same thing. Which was why he phoned Jaqui Jones, Mrs. Tabor's niece, and told her he'd be at the party the next night, which was Friday.
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A
S
C
ASH HAD HINTED
, the founding families of Jacobsville weren't in attendance at the party. Only a few obvious outsiders turned up. Garon felt oddly out of place with these people. Especially with Jaqui, who rubbed against him at every opportunity, almost panting with desire. He didn't like public displays of affection, and it showed in his face.
She laughed breathily. “You're an odd one,” she told him as they sipped cocktails beside the buffet table. “Don't you find me desirable?”
“You must know you're beautiful,” he said easily. He smiled. “But I work at a conservative job, and I'm uncomfortable with blatant invitations.”
Her eyebrows went up. “And I took you for an unconventional free spirit,” she purred.
“Looks deceive,” he said, lifting his glass to toast her.
“Yes, well, don't sell yourself short,” she added. “And don't think I'll give up. I get what I want, eventually.”
“Do you?” He smiled. “Why don't you introduce me to your aunt?”
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H
E LEFT EARLY
, despite Jaqui's protests. “Surely you don't work Saturdays?” she asked irritably.
“I run a ranch,” he reminded her. “Weekends are the only time I can devote to it.” He didn't add that his job required him to be on call seven days a week. He worked on the ranch in spurts, leaving the daily operation to his ranch foreman.
“As long as you aren't running after your little neighbor,” she chided. “God, that frumpy woman! And you had her staying in your house, I hear!”
“Her grandmother died,” he said tautly. “She's having a hard time.”
“She's a loser, like most people around here,” she said carelessly. “Pity has brought down many a man. Don't let it bring you down.” She moved against him deliberately when they were on the front porch, alone. She reached up, dragged his head down and kissed him with her whole mouth.
He was vaguely aroused by her, but not enough to accept what was blatantly an invitation to ravish her in the shadows.
He pulled back. “I'll call you,” he said.
“You'd better, lover,” she purred. “Or I'll come looking for you! Good night.”
“Good night.”
He got back into his car, thinking that Grace's shy response was far more exciting than this wildcat's ardent aggression. He felt sorry for Jaqui's aunt. She was a sweet, kind-natured but shy little woman who seemed anxious to please people. Her niece's scandalous behavior had obviously cost her some friends. None of the local rich families had set foot in her house tonight. It was a visible snub, although Jaqui was too thick-skinned to notice. Well, it wasn't his problem.
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H
E WAS FILLING IN HERD
records on the computer when Miss Turner came bursting into his study late on Saturday evening.
“I have to be away for a few days,” she said. “My father lives in Austin. He's had a heart attack and is in the hospital. I must go to him.”
“Of course, you must,” he said at once. “Take the Expedition.”
“Are you sure?”
“Yes, I'm sure. You know where the key is. Do you need an advance on your salary?” he added.
She was pleasantly surprised. “No. But thank you.”
“Is there anything I can do?”
“No, nothing. Thanks, boss,” she added. Her face was pinched with concern. “I'll be back as soon as I can.”
“If you need anything, call me,” he said firmly.
“What about your breakfast?” she wailed.
“I'll fix my own,” he returned. “Now, go. And drive carefully.”
She managed a smile. “Okay.”
“Call me when you get there, and tell me how things are going,” he added.
She was touched by his concern. “I'll do that.”
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H
E WENT TO BED LATE
and was groggy when he woke up the next morning. He got dressed and went downstairs. The house felt emptier than usual with Miss Turner gone. He found a message on the answering machine. It was her, telling him she'd arrived safely in Austin and that her father was holding his own.
He made himself two pieces of buttered toast and a pot of coffee and sat down to drink it. The weekend had gone by amazingly fast. He felt a little guilty that he hadn't phoned to see how Grace was doing. It had probably hurt her feelings that he'd dropped her off at her own house and not bothered to check on her, with her ankle hurting.
Guilt made him impatient with himself. He owed her nothing. But just the same, he drove past her house on his way to San Antonio. Odd, her car was gone. It was barely six o'clock in the morning. He wondered where she was. But everything looked fine, so he put it out of his mind and continued down the road.
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G
RACE DIDN'T SEE
Wilbur when she got home. But she did see why. He'd managed to get out a slightly open window, ripping his way through the screen, while she was at Garon's ranch. She didn't have time to search for him the morning she'd come home because she was already overdue at the florist shop. Saturday was one of their busiest days.
When she got home again, after a day of hobbling and mostly sitting to do flower arrangements, she got the cane Miss Turner had loaned her and hobbled around the property looking for Wilbur.
She found him in a terrible condition, already dead. It looked as if the coyote had gotten him after all. Raging at the top of her lungs, she promised the varmint that she'd even the score one day if it took the rest of her life. Tears rolled down her cheeks as she imagined the poor old cat's final moments. But tears wouldn't bring him back. They'd never brought anybody back.
She covered him with an old pillowcase and rolled him up in a tattered bedsheet. She put him in a box in the back seat of her car and drove him to the vet, where he was picked up by a man who ran a pet cemetery and offered cremation of beloved pets. He had a nice selection of urns that the departed could occupy. Grace picked out a simple, inexpensive one and was assured that Wilbur's ashes would arrive in due time at Grace's house. She wrote a check for the expense, gritting her teeth as she saw the pitiful amount of money she had left after paying bills. She'd have to see if she could get a few extra hours to work this next week, at her second job, to increase her bank balance.
She'd heard at work about Garon's attendance at Jaqui Jones's party. It had wounded her, to know he hadn't spared Grace a single thought after he'd spent time with the beautiful brunette. Grace looked at her drab image in her mirror and felt hopelessly tacky. The only good dress she had was one of her granny's, the black one she'd worn to the funeral. Most of her wardrobe consisted of jeans and sweatshirts and T-shirts with pictures or writing on them. She hardly owned any makeup, and she never took any time to do her hair.