- Chapter One -
The golden retriever was agitated from the moment Tucker Kane let him out of the company truck, dashing up to the old house and back, whining and carrying on. But as Tucker was busy maneuvering the cart up onto the porch, he didn’t pay much attention. Besides, the weather was deteriorating. Intermittent flashes of lightning meant rain any minute. He wanted to be done before it started.
A porch light would have helped. He thought he’d left it on when he dropped off his tools earlier that day, but he’d been intent on making a meeting with a city building inspector at another site, one who hadn’t shown up, to his disgust. Had the man forgotten it?
The heavy metal contraption was awkward to handle, but he finally managed to get it up the steps using a couple of old planks as a ramp. He needed the cart to transfer the wood paneling from the house to the truck. Bracing against the bars of the cart, he took his keys from his pocket.
Suddenly, fierce lightning flashed and thunder boomed. Wincing, he squinted in the dark, trying to find the right key. At his feet, Buddy crowded him, frantically pacing and whining. Some dogs were nervous in a storm, but Buddy wasn’t...usually. Still, he was clearly agitated over something, but Tucker didn’t have time to do anything about it now.
“Buddy! Calm down,” he commanded. “Sit.”
The dog instantly did as he was told, but every nerve quivered. Watching Tucker jangling keys, he literally vibrated with anxiety.
“What’s the problem, Buddy? You think we’ll find a ghost inside this old house?”
The dog’s tail swished, acknowledging his master’s voice with a hopeful look and a plaintive whine. With the correct key finally in hand, Tucker aimed it at the lock. But, to his surprise, he found he didn’t need it after all. He frowned, distinctly remembering that he’d locked the house when he’d left earlier. First the light, now the door. A little wary now, he pushed it open as lightning flashed again and, on the heels of that, loud thunder. All too close.
“Okay, Buddy, we’re in.” Normally he wasn’t leery of weather, but he was glad to get inside. Taking the wood out in a rainstorm might be a little tricky, but he had a tarp to protect it. He had to do it tonight. The house was to be demolished the next morning. And he was in a hurry. Lauren was waiting. He didn’t want a late job and a little rain ruining his date with his fiancée.
Thinking of his beautiful bride-to-be, his irritation faded. He’d been soured on women after the disaster of his first marriage, but finding Lauren changed that. Thank God, she was nothing like Margot.
Buddy startled him by leaping over the threshold and instantly disappearing into pitch blackness. Tucker muttered to himself at having left his flashlight in his tool kit somewhere in the back of the house. Despite streaks of lightning, the dark interior felt out and out creepy. But he finally found the light switch and flipped it on. Relieved, he took a minute to get his bearings and quickly closed the door as another flash of lightning lit the room. Houston was in for a gulley-washer of a storm.
He saw nothing different from when he’d left earlier. Any thief intent on burglarizing the place had been out of luck. The house’s treasures had been removed earlier in the week—hand-blown windowpanes, vintage gas light fixtures, heart pine floors—most everything dating from the nineteenth century. Like Tucker, some people valued age-old relics.
Sad that the place couldn’t be preserved in its entirety. But Tucker had been lucky to win the bid on the rare paneling in the library. He had a contract to use the mahogany to outfit an office in a newer house in River Oaks. Earlier today he’d carefully pulled it off the walls, marked it and stacked it so that now he could quickly load it into his pickup Just then, Buddy dashed back after his foray to the interior. Obviously distressed, the dog whined and circled around Tucker. “Okay, boy, what’s got you so worked up?” Tucker moved past the stairs and down the hall pulling the cumbersome cart behind him. He glanced at his watch. Five after eight. He guessed he had just enough time to load up and leave and still meet Lauren as planned. He’d heard excitement in her voice when she’d called to tell him she had a surprise.
So, upon reaching the old library, he was still smiling as he turned on the lights and saw the body.
For a long moment, he simply froze, eyes wide in shock. He struggled to process the grisly sight before him. A woman lay sprawled on the floor, one arm twisted beneath her, the other flung out. Her hand seemed a ghostly white, nails tipped in blood-red polish. Taking it in, he felt dizzy and disoriented. Bile rose in the back of his throat. It was only when he felt Buddy’s nose nudging his slack hand that he pulled himself together enough to take a hesitant step forward.
The woman’s hair was in a wild tangle, partially obscuring her face. What was a woman doing here? She didn’t appear to be homeless. He could see the sparkle of a ring on her finger. And that dress… No, not a homeless person. Then who?
With his heart hammering in his chest, he was now close enough to lean over and see her face.
“Oh!” He jerked back, giving out a shocked sound as if he’d been punched in the belly. He stared in horror. He knew that face. He knew that hand, those red, red nails. Holy crap! It was Margot!
For an instant, he could not move. He felt nailed to the floor. He swallowed hard. Shaking his head as if denying the evidence before his own eyes, he wiped a hand over his face and drew in a deep breath, trying to steady himself.
“Margot…”
He dropped to his knees beside her. Bracing himself, he put out a shaky hand and gingerly brushed her dark hair aside. With his heart slamming in his chest, he looked into her blue eyes--familiar blue eyes--now wide and fixed. He looked quickly away, then saw the blood pooled beneath her.…a lot of blood.
He shook his head to clear his thinking. He would have to touch her to be sure. He shuddered with revulsion, tempted to run out of the room, to get out of the old house. He desperately wanted to escape this nightmare. Margot was dead. No getting around that.
Another colossal crash of thunder rattled the very foundation of the house. Taking a fortifying breath, he forced himself to press two fingers to her carotid. He felt nothing. Moving his fingers and holding his breath, he tried again. Still, he felt nothing. But she was not cold. How could that be? .
Withdrawing his hand, he grimaced at the blood on his fingers. Saw they were trembling. He took out his handkerchief and wiped them. His stomach rolled sickeningly. He had to stop and take a few deep breaths. Buddy leaned against him, whining...but in a different way now, sniffing at blood on the knees of Tucker’s jeans from kneeling beside her.
He stood up abruptly, backing away from the body and scrabbling at his belt for his cell phone. Tearing his eyes from his ex-wife’s body, he turned away and managed to dial nine-one-one.
“Hello,” he said, clearing his throat when his voice came out as a croak. “I need—” He stopped. He didn’t need an ambulance, which was what he’d been about to say. He tried again. “I’m calling to report a…a death.”
“What is your name?”
“Tucker Kane. You need to send the police right away.”
“Do you need an ambulance?”
He turned, his gaze coming to rest again on Margot’s ghostly pale, still face. “It’s too late for that.”
He hung up and stood for a second, dazed, struggling to wrap his head around the horror of Margot’s murder. The authorities would be here in a minute or two. He turned away, avoiding looking at the body again. But the image was already emblazoned in his memory. She had been bludgeoned beyond overkill. Whoever did this had to have been enraged. Someone who knew her? Had to be, he thought. But who. Who? And why?
His gaze fell on his tools. He’d left them here earlier, intending to load them up tonight after he’d taken the paneling. He should do it now, before the police came. No doubt they would want to talk to him. Who knew when he’d have a chance to gather them once this was a declared crime scene. Taking a wide berth around Margot’s body, he went over to the canvas satchel. He found it gaping open. He stopped as a sick feeling of came over him; he knew he’d closed it. Using both hands, he reached inside, checking to see that everything was there. But even before he was half done, he knew.
His hammer was missing.
Lauren Holloway stood smiling as she surveyed the table set for three. It was Tucker’s weekend to have Kristy, his little girl, so she’d set a place for the toddler using her favorite Dora the Explorer plate and bowl alongside two china place settings that sparkled in soft candlelight. The silver gleamed. Yellow roses added the perfect touch. They’d been an impulsive buy in the supermarket as she was on her way to the checkout with rib-eye steaks and the trimmings for this special dinner.
She had such thrilling news. She’d been promoted to assistant principal at St. Paul Academy with the promise of running the school as soon as the aging incumbent retired. That was most certainly within the next year. And with her wedding to Tucker Kane in June, it was a wonderful start to their future together.
She couldn’t wait to tell him, but not on the phone. She wanted to see his face. Hear his ecstatic congratulations. Get from him a big hug and a kiss. She expected him to lift her right off her feet in his enthusiasm and swing her around as if she were no bigger than one of the tiny kindergartners at St. Paul. He was that kind of man.
She was so in love with him.
She twitched at the linen tablecloth so that it hung just right and plucked at a napkin artfully arranged in crystal stemware. Was it too much? No. Her promotion was the result of hard work and a sincere desire to make a difference to children. She wanted to celebrate that and it was all the more meaningful to celebrate it with Tucker and Kristy.
She glanced at her watch. What was keeping him? She went to the kitchen to tinker with the plans for their dream house. She’d been doing this for several weeks—looking at magazines for design ideas, consulting with flooring suppliers, deciding on lighting fixtures. It would be a wonderful house. They were going to be so happy. She transferred a stack of brides’ magazines and a large catalog of samples for wedding invitations from the island to the kitchen counter and perched herself on a stool alongside the blueprints. Pencil in hand, she soon lost track of time.
But an hour later when Tucker still had not arrived, she blamed it on the weather. A thunderstorm had moved in and she knew that in Houston, traffic snarled in a mere shower. Heavy rain produced havoc. Now, with the sound of every car outside, she looked out at the wet street, hoping to see Tucker’s SUV. She’d tried calling him, but his cell went straight to voice mail.
Moving from the window, she went into the kitchen and put the now wilting salad in the fridge. She stood frowning at nothing in particular…and hoping Margot wasn’t the reason Tucker was detained. Lately, his ex-wife had been more vindictive than ever in fighting him for custody of Kristy. Why, she couldn’t begin to fathom—she hardly spent any time with the child.
As she stood thinking, her cell phone rang. Seeing Tucker’s name on the screen, she breathed a sigh of relief. Traffic or the weather, it was one or the other, she guessed. Her voice was joyful when she answered. “Hello! It’s about time. Where are you?”
“In the Heights,” he said in a somber tone.
“What’s wrong?”
“It’s Margot,” he said.
She thought she heard a catch in his voice. “What about her?”
“She’s dead, Lauren. She’s been murdered.”
Lauren sat down on the nearest chair. She stared unseeing at the yellow roses. “What on earth are you talking about?” she whispered.
He drew in a shaky breath. “She’s been murdered. The police are here. I…I’ll be pretty late. But I’ll be there. Just…well, just hold on, will you? I’ll tell you when I get there.”
“Wait, Tucker. You can’t—”
“Sorry, sweetheart. They’re headed this way again. I’ve got to go.”
He hung up. She looked blankly at her phone while her thoughts raced with a thousand questions. Margot murdered? How? Why? It was a horrible thing. And almost impossible to believe. Murder happened to people in books, on TV shows, not to anybody she knew. Although Margot was thoughtless and spoiled, she was young and beautiful, a Houston socialite. How could she be dead? How could she be murdered?
She was pacing when the doorbell rang at midnight. She quickly stepped up to the peephole, saw Tucker, flipped the lock and opened the door.
He was wet from head to toe, his jacket dripping, boots caked with mud. Seeing the blood on his jeans, her eyes widened. If Margot’s murder had felt unreal, bloodstains on Tucker’s jeans changed all that. And his face! He looked shattered. Heedless of his wet clothes, she threw her arms around him. “Oh, Tucker. This is terrible.”
For a long, mute moment, he held her close. “How can I tell Kristy that her mother is dead?” She felt his desperation in their embrace. His breathing was uneven. He was trembling. Her tall, stalwart man trembling? How could that be? “Come inside and tell me what happened.”
He took his baseball cap off and ran a rough hand through his dark hair. “There’s not much to tell. She…Margot’s dead.”
Lauren was shaking her head. “I’m having a hard time believing it. How…What…?”
“I don’t know how or what or even when,” Tucker said. “I just know she’s dead.” Suddenly he looked at the floor as if he’d just realized he was dripping water on the floor. “Could I have a towel, please?”
A towel? She gazed blankly at him before the words registered. “Oh. Oh, yes. Just...” She put out a hand as if to hold him in place. “Let me just go…uh…I’ll be right back.”
She headed to her laundry room in a daze. . She’d taken towels from the dryer just a few minutes before he arrived. She took two from the basket, holding their warmth close for a minute. When she headed back, she found Tucker sitting on a bench in the foyer, removing his wet boots.
“I’m putting these outside,” he told her, holding them up. “I don’t want to track mud on your floor.”
“It’s okay. Don’t bother.”
But he opened the door and set them outside anyway. She watched as he shed his drenched jacket and reached for the towel she handed over. A dozen questions swirled madly in her head as he mopped his face and hands. Finished, he draped the towel around his neck, seemingly unaware of the streaks of blood now on the towel.
“Let’s go in the den to talk, Tucker. Would you like some coffee?”
“No, I’m okay.” He sat down on the couch and when she was beside him, he sighed wearily. “I’m sorry to drag you into this, Lauren. It’s bad enough that she’s dead, but a thousand times worse that she was murdered.”
“Her poor parents,” Lauren murmured, thinking of Evelyn and Martin Houseman. They’d often been the ones to bring Kristy to Tucker’s or pick her up from his weekends with his daughter. Martin was Tucker’s business partner, and they were active members of their church. “They’ll be devastated --” She stopped as another thought struck. “Where is Kristy? You’re supposed to have her this weekend.”
“She’s with her nanny,” he said, adding bitterly, “Where else?”
Sarah. Of course, Lauren thought. “Should we go and get her?”
“No. It’s late. After talking to the police Martin offered to pick her up and keep her there. She’ll stay with him and Evelyn until I can make arrangements.” He looked at Lauren with despair in his eyes. “How can I tell her about this?”
“The blood…how did you find out about it?”
He rubbed his hands over his face before looking up at her. “I found her.”
“Where? At her townhouse?”
He shook his head. “You remember I told you I’d won the bid on that paneling?” Seeing her nod, he went on. “The wood was in this old house in the Heights scheduled for demolition tomorrow morning. I’d dismantled it earlier, but I had to leave to meet a city inspector at another job site. I waited over an hour, but he didn’t show. Anyway, I knew I’d be late picking up Kristy, so I went over to tell Margot. Her phone was off or something. She was not happy when I told her.”
He glanced beyond her, noticing for the first time the pretty table with flowers and candles, long since snuffed out. He turned to her. “That looks like a special occasion.”
“It’s nothing,” she said. The joy she felt over her promotion had evaporated in the face of Margot’s death. “Is there anything we can do?”
Tucker shook his head. “I was thinking about that on the drive home. I wonder if Kristy should stay with Evelyn and Martin,” he said.
Lauren frowned, not understanding. “She should be with you, especially now.”
“I don’t think it’s possible…. She’ll need to be with her nanny—Sarah’s the one Kristy is most attached to. I can’t rip her away from Kristy too. I just don’t have room for Sarah. Martin and Evelyn do.”
The deep furrows in his forehead stopped her. “What is it, Tucker?”
“Will you be with me when I tell her?”
Her heart ached in sympathy for him…and for Kristy. “Yes, of course, I’ll go with you. Just tell me when.”
“Sometime tomorrow, I think.”
But he still looked distracted, his lips pulled in a tight line, his brow furrowed. “What else is bothering you, Tucker?”
He was shaking his head. “She was murdered at that house where I was supposed to pick up the wood. It’s deserted, derelict. I keep wondering what the heck she was doing there. It would be the last place I’d expect Margot to ever go.”
“The police will probably be asking a lot of questions.”
“Yeah.” Tucker sighed and raked a hand through his hair. Lauren guessed that he was reliving the events of the night.
“Tell me,” she prompted.
His eyes met hers and he reached to hold her hand, intertwining his fingers with hers. “She looked…” He closed his eyes. “She had already bled so much, I knew…” He shook his head. “I knew she was gone.”
“That’s how you got blood on your jeans.”
He glanced down as if noticing for the first time. “I guess so. I had to check her…for a pulse. Just to be sure.”
She touched his arm, giving him a deeply sympathetic look. “It must have been terrible.”
“Worse than terrible,” he said with a shudder. He got up from the couch as if he couldn’t sit still. “She was bludgeoned. Her head…” He looked pale and sick. “An official showed up—I guess the medical examiner. He didn’t need to say death was from a blunt object. It was obvious. I don’t know how long she’d been--” He scrubbed both hands over his face. “I guess the autopsy will tell us a lot.”
Lauren pressed fingers to her lips. She could almost see the scene as he told it.
“He hit her,” Tucker said in a tone that was flat and lifeless. “Whoever did it hit her over and over again.”
“Did they find it, the murder weapon, I mean?”
“I don’t know. They wouldn’t tell me anything.” He rubbed the back of his neck wearily before looking at her. “They asked me a lot of questions. I expected that, especially since I found her. And I had blood all over me.”
“Not all over you, Tucker. Just on your jeans and with a reasonable explanation.”
“My hands, too.” He held them out as if to show her even though the blood was now gone.
“Because you checked for a pulse.”
He almost smiled at the way she defended him. “I hope the cops are as trusting as you, babe. Everybody knows Margot and I were going at each over custody of Kristy. She’d told anybody who would listen what a jerk I was and how she just couldn’t take it anymore.”
“She was lying.”
“Who’ll believe that now?”
Lauren went to him and put a gentle hand on his arm. “There are always two sides to every story in a divorce, Tucker.”
“I said some pretty nasty things to her today.” He stared down at his feet.
Her heart turned over. “People say things they don’t mean when they’re angry.”
“Yeah, but I did mean it. So now she’s gone and the last words we had were mean.” He drew a strong breath. “I was so ticked off at her, Lauren. She didn’t want Kristy. She never did. She just wanted to torment me.”
Lauren put her arms around him. He was so tense. It hurt her to see Tucker brought low like this. He was usually so strong, so confident. With her heart overflowing, she kissed him softly.
He made a sound, something between a wince and a moan, and wrapped his arms around her, holding her close. “I need you, Lauren. I need you to help me get through this.”
“And I’m here, Tucker. Don’t worry, we’ll get through it together.”
After a minute, he leaned back with his hands on her forearms to look at her. “The police always look at the person closest to the victim, you know.” A sad glimmer filled his eyes. “That’s me.”
“But you’re innocent, Tucker. That’s a fact. Besides, God will see us through.”
“God can’t give me an alibi. She was murdered while I was waiting for an inspector at another site. An inspector who didn’t show, by the way. And I was alone when I found her body at the Heights house. Nobody saw me at either place.”
“You had a reason to be there,” she reminded him. “You came for the wood. That’s your alibi.”
“That’s not an alibi; that’s part of the problem.”
“What?”
“The wood I came to pick up was gone, disappeared without a trace.” He looked at her. “The detective who questioned me asked if it ever existed.”
“That’s ridiculous.”
Tucker was shaking his head. “So you see…I have no alibi.”
The killer sat in a car outside Lauren’s condo. It had been an impulse to follow Kane to see where he went after leaving the Heights house. If the plan was to work, every move Kane made had to be watched. Every opportunity to implicate him had to be seized. Made the most of. The fiancée would probably be a useful pawn. How and when to use her would depend on the course of the investigation. Kane probably had an excess of Southern chivalry where she was concerned. A threat to her might prove very effective. The kid, too.
It had been dicey there for a minute with Margot dead and the possibility that Kane might appear before it was decided what to do. Very dicey. He could have gotten there before the wood was removed or, worse yet, while the wood was being loaded. Or, there was always a chance that he could have spotted the pickup leaving. But none of that happened. The plan—once it was conceived--went like a well-choreographed performance.
No question it was brilliant, but risky. It was always a challenge when dealing with idiots. But in the words of that old sixties rock classic, you can’t always get what you want. And in a perfect world, the whole situation would never have existed in the first place. Thank Margot for that. Nothing would have happened to her if she hadn’t intruded into territory where she did not belong. But the selfish little witch had no boundaries. That had been obvious from day one. And she couldn’t say she hadn’t been warned.
But there was no future in dwelling on the whys and wherefores. What was done was done. What was important now was that suspicion had to be focused on Kane. And focused with such undeniable force that he was quickly seen as the prime suspect.
Putting the car into gear and smiling with macabre satisfaction, the killer eased away from the curb and drove off into the night.
- End of Chapter One -