My heart was still thumping like a rabbit's when it hears the dog in the bushes. It was an unpleasant and humiliating feeling, being this frightened. If I hadn't had my pepper spray, or if the sheriff hadn't intervened, by this time I'd have a broken jaw, or some fractured ribs. Three big boy/men, only a few years younger than I... they might have killed me by sheer stupid accident.
Harvey Branscom was as good as his word. He whipped out his cell phone and called the football coach at the high school, and without spelling out what the boys had almost done, he let the coach know they deserved the worst punishment the coach could hand out. I knew a football coach could hand out plenty, especially in season. I wasn't dissatisfied with the bargain I'd struck with the sheriff. I thought that in Sarne it was the best I would manage.
When he thought Scot could see well enough to drive his pickup, Branscom sent the boys on their way to school. After they'd driven out of sight, and my heart had calmed down to a normal rate, Sheriff Branscom said, "Miss Connelly, I guess you aren't popular here in Sarne." I sure wasn't popular with the elder law enforcement segment. His face was hard with repressed distaste. "I'm sorry that happened to you. Scot's had it bad for Mary Nell since they were in the first grade together."
I was still bouncing on the balls of my feet with adrenaline. "And he shows it by beating up another woman?"
"No, the idiot shows it by defending my niece against someone he imagines is going to hurt her," Branscom said heavily. He leaned against his car. At this moment, he looked far older than his years. "People around here just can't understand you or what you do, Ms. Connelly. It makes it worse that you're for real, I think. You did find Teenie, sure enough. But we're not closer to finding out who killed her, and there's still no way to prove Dale didn't. Somehow, finding Teenie has led to Helen getting killed, too. In fact, I guess we'll be burying Teenie and her mother at the same time, side by side, right in the plot with Sally. According to what you told Hollis, that's three murder victims in the same family. I wish that bolt of lightning had struck you a little harder. Maybe you would have seen enough to straighten out this mess."
Or maybe, his unspoken thought continued, I would have been killed and none of this would be a problem. I was swept with a wave of overwhelming disbelief. "You've had months and months to solve any mystery surrounding Dell's death and Teenie's disappearance," I said, almost whispering in an effort not to shout. "You have a police force and a police lab at your service in solving Helen's murder. I'm one woman who can find bodies, and I never claimed to be more. Don't you dare try to shift any of the blame for this whole mess to me."
Another police car pulled up behind the sheriff's. Hollis, creaking and heavily laden in his cop gear, was out of the car and beside us before I could make my mouth try to smile at him.
"Are you all right?" he asked, his hand cupping the curve of my shoulder. He leaned down to look in my face. What he saw there made him angry. "I stopped the Briscoe boy over by the high school for speeding, and he looked so bad I asked what happened to him. He told me everything, didn't understand why I didn't applaud."
I felt old. In the chilly breeze, my running clothes seemed inadequate, and the only warmth in the world was my skin under Hollis's hand. "I'm all right," I said steadily. "I think I'll finish my run and get back to the motel."
"Where's your brother? You want me to go get him and bring him here?"
Suddenly, my head felt as light as a balloon. I realized that the combination of intense fear followed by intense relief—and then equally intense anger—had just made me numb. And it was something, you know... hearing Hollis be intuitive enough to hit on the one thing I found I wanted above all else. But I wasn't going to ask him for it.
"I appreciate your concern," I said very softly. "But I'm just going to run, now."
I don't know if he understood or not; I hope he did grasp my sincerity. Since we were on the side of a public road, I didn't want to hug him. Even if we'd been in a more private situation, I'm not sure I'd have hugged him. But I tried to smile at him as I began to jog down the road. I moved very slowly, because my body chemistry was all screwed up; my muscles didn't know if they were cold from inactivity or warm from adrenaline, and my mind was scurrying around many different corners, but focused on one thing—finishing this run, out of pride.
I got back to the motel with no further incident. I had completed my self-assigned distance. I was walking around the parking lot outside my room, cooling down, trying hard to put the fear behind me. Stupid. I was stupid, stupid, stupid.
My brother came down the road, finishing up his own run. I hastily went to my own door and slid in the plastic card.
"No, you don't!" he called out. "You stay right there."
Shit. I kept my back to him.
He spun me around by one shoulder. He looked me up and down.
"Are you all right?" he asked.
He'd run into one of the lawmen.
"Yes," I said, trying not to sound sullen. "I'm fine. Who told you?"
"I saw Hollis Boxleitner," he said. "That where you were last night?"
I nodded, not meeting Tolliver's eyes.
"We have to get out of this place," he said. "We could go if they found out who did this."
"Maybe it would do some good if I could get to Helen's body," I said. "I might pick up something."
"Hollis said she got a phone call after we'd left her place that morning. The lawyer called her. Paul Edwards."
"What about?"
"Hollis didn't say. I don't guess he mentioned it last night?"
"No." I could feel my face heating up.
"But the sheriff still doesn't want us to go, because he still thinks we must know something."
"We could just leave anyway," I said. "There's no legal way he can keep us here, right?"
"I don't think so," Tolliver said. He'd been gripping my arms, and when he let go, I got that tingly feeling as blood rushed back through the veins and arteries. "But you know one bad word from law enforcement will mean we'll lose a lot of jobs."
That was true enough. The last time a chief of police had been dissatisfied with me—he'd been convinced I had some prior knowledge of the body's location, that I was in direct communication with the killer and out to feather my own nest—I'd had almost no income for six months. It had been a hard time, and I'd had enough hard times. I didn't want any more, ever.
"Your boyfriend'll give us a good word," Tolliver said teasingly, trying to lift my spirits.
I didn't even protest over Tolliver's use of the term "boyfriend." I knew he didn't believe that Hollis was anything to me. As usual, he was both right and wrong.