Page 14 of Shadow Dance (Buchanan-Renard 6)
She poked his side. âI am not scantily clad. Iâm wearing shorts and a T-shirt. Thereâs nothing scanty about my clothing.â
His eyes remained closed, but he was grinning now. âBut I happen to know that youâre not wearing anything underneath that T-shirt and shorts.â
She quickly looked down at her chest. Nothing showed through the fabric, thank God. âOnly you would think about that.â
âAny man would.â
âI donât believe that,â she scoffed.
He laughed. âItâs what we do.â
She tried to pull up the sheet, but it was trapped under his legs. âWhy donât you just not think about it.â
He opened one eye. âDonât think about it?â
âDo you want to hear another story or not?â
âHuh.â
She sighed. âHuh what?â
âYou didnât argue with me about needing a little action.â
He had her there. âI didnât feel it was necessary to respond to such an incorrect assumption. What story would you like to hear?â
Heâd gotten her all riled up again. He didnât know why he got such a kick out of her indignation, but he did. âAm I rubbing you the wrong way, Sugar?â
She rolled her eyes. Oh, brother. âYouâre not rubbing me at all. Iâm putting these papers away,â she warned.
âSorry. Itâs just that youâre real easyââ
She interrupted. âThatâs what all the boys tell me,â she joked.
âYeah? But are you any good?â
Her eyes sparkled playfully. âWhat do you think?â
Noah didnât answer at first. He stared into her incredible blue eyes and lost his train of thought. Sexual banter had always come as second nature to him, but suddenly he had no reply. An image of Jordanâsans T-shirt, sans shorts, making loveâwhizzed through his head and rendered him speechless.
He grabbed the beer bottles on the nightstand and headed for his room. His words were gruff when he finally answered her. âI think Iâd better get out of here.â
TWO PHONES RANG SIMULTANEOUSLY.
Jordan woke to the sounds coming from Noahâs room. She rolled over in bed and opened her eyes a crack as she listened to Noah answer the ring that sounded like his cell phone. She heard him ask âDarlinââ to hold on a minute, and then he answered the other ring. He obviously didnât like whatever the caller was saying to him because his voice turned hard. Then he began to snap out orders. She heard him explain in his donât-mess-with-me tone that he expected results by noon.
A few minutes later he strolled through the door. âThat was Joe Davis on the lineâ¦â he began.
âBefore you tell me what he has to say, you might want to talk to Darlinâ if sheâs still holding on.â
âAh, hellâ¦â he said as he hurried back into his room.
She could hear him apologizing to the caller as he returned. He dropped down on Jordanâs bed, grabbed the edge of her T-shirt when she tried to get up, and said, âHold on. Sheâs right here.â He handed his cell phone to her. âSidney wants to talk to you.â
She didnât believe her sister was on the line until she said hello.
âHow come you have Noahâs phone number?â Jordan asked.
âI donât know. Iâve always known it. That isnât important now. Theo told me what happened. Did you know about the body when we talked before?â
âBefore what? I donât remember,â she said. âDoes everyone know what happened?â
âDylan and Kate donât know, but then theyâre on their honeymoon, so Alec didnât think we should bother them with any worries. Jordan, tell me, are you okay?â
âYes,â she assured her sister. âThe police sorted it all out, and Iâm coming home tomorrow. Iâll tell you everything then. I promise. Sidneyâ¦â she began.
âYes?â
âDo Mom and Dad know what happened?â
âNick called and talked to both of them.â
âHe shouldnât have,â she said. âTheyâll worry, and they both have enough to think about now, what with the trial and all.â
âThey would have found out. Zack would have let it slip.â
âWho told Zack?â
There was a long pause, and then Sidney said, âI might have mentioned it to him.â
Jordan didnât want to argue. She talked to her sister for a few more minutes to reassure her and ended the call. As she handed the cell phone to Noah, she said, âWhen I found that body, I should have called Dylan.â
âWhy? Because Nick told your family?â
She nodded. âSidney insists they would have found outâ¦â
âThey would have.â
âMaybe,â she allowed.
After she had dressed and packed her things, she zipped her bag shut and went to the connecting door. Noah was snapping his gun holster closed.
âYou were about to tell me what Chief Davis had to say,â she said.
âRight. He told me Sheriff Randy has no idea where his brother is. He said he has people looking for him.â
âDo you believe that story?â
âNo,â he answered. âThe sheriff knows exactly where J. D. is. He probably wants to sit down with Chief Davis and work something out before J. D. comes in. Thatâs my guess anyway.â
âWould the sheriff of Grady County usually handle a murder investigation?â
âYes, but Davis told me heâs on vacation.â
âHawaii,â she volunteered. âWhy doesnât the FBI help the chief?â
âDavis seems to think he can handle this without the FBIâs interference.â
âWhat about Lloyd? Has Davis spoken to him yet?â
âNo,â he answered. âNo one can find him. His garage was unlocked, but Davis says thatâs not unusual. A lot of people in this town donât lock their doors.â
âIâll bet they do now. After all, one of their own was murdered.â
âExcept Professor MacKenna wasnât one of them. He didnât own the house. He rented it, and he kept to himself. Very antisocial. No one really knew him.â
âI think Lloyd knows what happened. If he didnât kill the professor, Iâll bet he knows who did. He was so nervous when I picked up the car. I think he knew the body was in the trunk.â
âIâd say heâs the primary suspect.â
âHe couldnât wait for me to leave,â she said. âAnd that was peculiar because when I first drove the car in, he hit on me and kept trying to get me to go out with him. He tried to keep me in town.â
âDid he continue to try to get you to go out with him after you threatened him?â
âI did notâ¦oh, okay, I guess I did. But it was all so stupid. He asked me what I would do if my car wasnât ready when I came back the second time, and before I could answer, he asked me if I would hurt him. I believe I agreed that I would.â
âI see.â
âNo, you donât see. Lloyd happens to be a very big man. I would have to stand on a chair to hit him.â
âA chair, huh?â
She was irritated that he was making fun of her. âI went over all of this with Chief Davis, and I believe you were standing right there. Werenât you paying attention?â
âLloyd will turn up,â he predicted.
She nodded. âWhen do we meet Chief Davis at the professorâs house?â
He checked the time. âIn an hour.â
âWould you mind if we stopped at the grocery store first? Iâd like to photocopy the rest of the research papers. It shouldnât take long, I promise.â
âAll of those boxes need to go to Davis?â he said.
âCopies donât have to go to him. Iâm going to ask Candy if sheâll mail them to Boston for me.â
Candy was working at the front desk and was all in favor of helping out and making some extra spending money. Jordan filled out a form with the necessary mailing information, told Candy she would bring her the boxes to be mailed, paid her in advance, and headed back to her room.
&nbs
p; Noah was leaning against his door talking to Amelia Ann when she returned. Amelia Ann had brought him coffee and a basket of homemade cinnamon rolls. Jordan noticed that she had put on makeup. The blouse she wore was tucked into her slacks, and the top three buttons were undone. Ten to one she was wearing a push-up bra. Amelia Annâs nervous laughter followed her as Jordan walked into Noahâs room, grabbed the car keys from the desk, and said, âIâm going to start loading these boxes in the car.â
âIâm right behind you,â he answered.
Sure you are, she thought to herself, just as soon as Amelia Ann finishes flirting.
She carried one box outside, rounded the corner of the building, and immediately noticed their carâs right rear tire was riding low.
âGreat,â she whispered. The tire was either going flat or needed air, and the way her luck had been going, sheâd wager it was flat. She dropped the box on the pavement, slipped the key into the trunk lock, and stepped back as the lid popped open.
She couldnât believe what she was seeing. She couldnât move. She shut her eyes, opened them, and nothing had changed.
âOh, come on,â she whispered.
She slammed the trunk lid down and ran as fast as she could back to Noahâs room. His door was closed. She pounded on it with her fist.
He knew something was wrong the second he looked at her face. âJordan? Whatâs the matter?â
She grabbed his shirt and panted to get the words out. âThereâs a dead body in the trunk of our car.â
LLOYD WAS FOLDED UP LIKE A CONTORTIONIST. ONE LEG WAS bent underneath him, and the other was pressed against the back of his head. He died with the most startled look on his face, not pained, just startled, like a big glassy-eyed carp on the end of a fishhook. Jordan didnât think she was going to be able to get his expression out of her head for a long, long time.
âYouâre right, Jordan. Lloyd was a big man.â Noah stood in front of the open trunk, peering down at the body. He glanced over his shoulder to look at her.
She sat on a stone wall, waiting for him to finish his inspection of the body. She refused to look at poor Lloyd a second longer.
âHeâs not in a Ziploc bag,â she commented weakly. She couldnât imagine why that was important to her, but at the moment it was.
âNo, he isnât,â Noah agreed.
Chief Joe Davis stood beside him. The two men were now on a first-name basis. Murder had a way of cutting through formalities. Davis leaned into the trunk and then said, âSo we agree? One blow, back of the head. Then he was stuffed into the trunk, right?â
Noah nodded. âLooks that way, Joe.â
âThe blow cracked his skull,â Joe concluded. âHad to be someone strong. Someone real strong.â
In unison the two men turned and looked at Jordan. Were they wondering if she were strong enough to kill Lloyd? She folded her arms and frowned at Noah. Heâd better not be thinking such a crazy thought.
Joe looked at Lloyd again. âWhatâs going on?â he asked in frustration. âTwo bodies in what? Two days? Three?â
âIs this your first homicide?â Noah asked.
âSecond if you count Professor MacKenna,â he said. âThough I didnât see the body, the investigation is on my shoulders now. This is the second murder Serenityâs ever had. Weâre a peaceful community. That is, we were until your girlfriend hit town and men started dropping like flies.â
Noah let Joeâs assumption that Jordan was his girlfriend slide. âYou know she didnât do this. She didnât kill either one of them.â
âLloyd was my primary suspect. He had her car in his garage, so he had the opportunity.â
âWhat about motive?â Noah asked.
Joe shook his head. âI hadnât figured that out yet. Iâm gonna get some help. Iâve got two sheriffâs deputies driving over, and they both have more experience.â
âWith homicides?â
He shrugged. âI donât know. Iâve also got detectives from Bourbon on their way too.â
âWhereâs the coroner?â Noah asked as he checked the time. âWeâve been waiting for forty-five minutes now. And where are the lab techs?â
âThings move considerably slower in small towns, you know that. Everyone has to come in to Serenity from other places. Theyâre all on their way,â Joe assured him.
âYou know Iâve got friends who can help.â
Joe nodded. âI know, and if I need the FBIâs help, Iâll ask.â
âWhat about Sheriff Randy?â
âIâll be meeting with him this afternoon. We were gonna meet this morning. He called last night,â he explained. âBut now that Iâve got to deal with this situation,â he said, nodding to Lloyd, âI had to push his meeting back and the meeting you and I have at MacKennaâs house.â
âI want to go with you,â Noah said.
Joe shook his head. âNo. Randy knows me. Heâll clam up about his brother around you.â
âWhereâs his brother? And donât try to tell me I wonât be talking to him.â
âI donât know where J. D. is, but Randy will tell me. Then weâll decide what to do.â
What was there to decide? J. D. had assaulted Jordan. He should be dragged into jail and locked up. Nothing much to decide about that.
âIf you donât bring J. D. in, I will.â
Joe cocked his head and frowned. âIs that a threat?â
Noah snapped. âDamn right it is.â
Joe put his hands up in a conciliatory gesture. âOkay, okay. I hear you. But please, let me talk to Randy alone. I live in this town,â he reminded him. âIâve got to try to do this the right way, so let me take this one step at a time.â
Unlike Joe, Noah didnât care or need to get along with anyone. He was about to tell him that he wasnât going to be patient and that, one way or another, he would be talking to both Dickey brothers, but Jordan drew his attention.
Jordan scooted off the wall and walked over to him. She brushed her hand down his arm, and said, âJoe, Noah and I would like to help any way we can. Isnât that right, Noah?â He glanced down at her. When he didnât respond, she leaned into his side and repeated, âIsnât that right?â
âSure,â Noah finally answered. This was one of the most absurd situations heâd ever encountered. There was a dead man in the trunk, an inexperienced and possibly inept policeman running the investigation, and a woman who was slowly driving him nuts and now wanted him to be nice.
âI guess you two will be staying on in Serenity a while longer,â Joe stated. It wasnât a question.
âYes, we will,â Noah said. âSo far Jordanâs the only connection between the professor and Lloyd.â
âIâll go tell Amelia Ann weâll need the rooms again tonight,â Jordan offered.
Noah grabbed her hand and pulled her back. âYou stay close to me.â
âIâm going toââ
âShe already knows,â Noah said as he tilted his head toward the window behind the wall. Amelia Ann and Candy were both watching, wide-eyed. Fortunately, from their angle they couldnât see inside the trunk of the car.
Joe suggested they both go back into the motel. âYou two donât have to wait with me. Iâll call you as soon as Iâm finished here and finished talking to Randy.â
Noah put his arm around Jordan and headed inside.
âNoah?â Joe called.
âYes?â
âYouâll be needing another car.â
âLooks that way.â Noah felt Jordanâs shoulders slump under his arm. âYou okay, Sugar?â he asked.
âIâm fine,â she answered with a sigh. âBut Iâm beginning to think this friendly little town isnât so friendly after all.â
ALTHOUGH AGENTS CHADDICK AND STREET FROM THE FBIâs regional office hadnât officially been assigned to the investigation, they were doing as much as they could to help Noah figure out what was going on.
The two men brought Noah and Jordan yet another car, a Toyota Camry. Jordan, who was beyond spooked at thi
s point, insisted that one of them open the trunk and have a look inside before she got into the car. Agent Street had a rather warped sense of what was funny. He thought it was humorous that Nickâs sister had found another body and laughingly called her a corpse magnet.
Chaddick handed Noah a large manila envelope. âEverything you asked for is in there,â he said. âThere are copies of MacKennaâs bank statements for the past year, but Iâll go back further if you want.â
âMacKenna was into something all right,â Street said. âFor eight months heâs only made cash deposits. Five thousand dollars every couple of weeks.â
âAnd he drove all the way to Austin to make those deposits,â Chaddick added. âHe also purchased a new car eight months ago, and the mileage indicates heâs done some serious driving since then. One of the assistants at the college where he taught told me the professor received an inheritance.â
âStrange inheritance,â Street said. âCash every couple of weeks that canât be traced back to anyone.â
âWhat about his phone records?â Noah asked.
âTheyâre in the envelope too,â Chaddick said. âIn the six months that he lived in that house he only received a couple of telemarketing calls. No calls made out either, except for one very short call someone made a half hour before J. D. Dickey says he got a tip that there was a body in Jordanâs car.â
âAre you telling me someone called J. D. from inside MacKennaâs house?â
âThatâs what Iâm telling you.â
âBut I called the professor,â Jordan interjected. âWhen I got to Serenity. He had given me his number. That call has to show somewhere.â
âThen what about cell phone records?â Noah asked the agents.
Street answered. âWe canât find any record of a cell phone listed in MacKennaâs name. Jordan, if youâll give me the number you called, weâll check it out.â
âWe went ahead and had a couple of our people process MacKennaâs car. Iâm betting the only prints they find are his,â Chaddick said. âJoe Davis is in way over his head, but he wonât ask for help from us. You want us to push our way in? We could take over and get you two out of here.â