before seven. Normally, I wouldâve been out for a run, but the day after I both find a body and get through a storm is going to be a slow day. I peered at the clock before I lifted the receiver. âThe bodyâs Teenie, the lab in Little Rock said,â hetold me. He sounded tired, though it was early and he should just have risen from a nightâs sleep. âGo pick up your check at Paul Edwardsâs office.â He hung up. He didnât say, âAnd never come here again,â but the words were hanging in the air.
Tolliver had just come in, dressed and ready for breakfast, his favorite meal. He looked at my face as I hung up the room phone.
âBlaming the messenger,â he said. âI guess it was a positive ID?â
I nodded. âI never understand that. You know, they ask me here to find the body. I find the body. Then theyâre pissed at me, and they give me the check like I should have done the whole thing for free.â
He shrugged. âI guess we would do it for free if we could get a government grant or something.â
âOh, sure, the government just loves me.â Paying taxes was excruciatingânot because I minded giving the devil his due, but because accounting for my income was very difficult. I called myself a consultant. So far, Iâd flown under the radar, but that would change sooner or later.
Tolliver grinned while I pulled on a T-shirt and a sweater. Since Iâd planned today as a traveling day, I was wearing jeans. I donât care much about clothes, except my blue jeans. Iâm particular about them. This was my favorite pair, and they were worn thin in spots.
âWeâll stop by Edwardsâs office and get the check on our way out of town.â
âWe better cash it quick,â I said, speaking from bitter experience.
The motel phone rang again. We looked at each other. I picked it up.
âMiss Connelly,â said a woman. âHarper Connelly?â
âYes?â
âThis is Helen Hopkins. Iâm Sally and Teenieâs momma. Can you come talk to me?â Hollisâs mother-in-law: Had he told her what Iâd found at the cemetery?
I closed my eyes. I so didnât want to do this. But this woman was the mother of two murdered women. âYes maâam, I guess so.â
She gave me her address and asked if I could come in a half hour. I told her itâd be an hour, but weâd be there.
IT actually took us a bit over an hour, because after weâd checked out of the motel and loaded our bags and gone into the restaurant, Janine, the waitress Tolliver had entertained the afternoon before, dragged her feet serving us. Sheâd glare at me, try to touch himâa performance both obvious and painful. Did she think I was forcing my brother to stay with me, dragging Tolliver all around the United States in my wake? Did she imagine that if I relaxed my grip on him, heâd stay here in Sarne and get a job at the grocery store, make her an honest woman?
Sometimes I teased him about his conquests, but this wasnât one of those times. His cheeks were flushed when we left, and he didnât say a word as we drove to Paul Edwardsâs downtown office. It was housed in an old home right off the town square, a home which had been painted in lime green and light blue, a whimsical combination Iâm sure theoriginal builders would have deplored. Paul Edwards was fitting into the image Sarne was trying to sell the tourists, that of a fun-house antique town with something interesting around every corner.
Tolliver said, âIâll wait in the car.â
Iâd assumed the lawyer would have left the check in an envelope at the reception desk, but Edwards himself came out when I told his secretary my name. He shook my hand while the parched and dyed blonde watched his every move with fascination. I could see why. Paul Edwards was a man with charm.
He ushered me back into his