Max tucked the plastic-wrapped letter into a file on his desk and moved toward the door, effectively herding Ryder Wolf out; she was moving reluctantly when Joe heard Mike Flannery's voice up at the dispatcher's counter, and a softer female voice-and immediately Ryder stepped back into the office, slipping around Max, putting herself out of sight of the hall.
But at this little maneuver, Max took Ryder's elbow and moved her firmly into the hall-where she came face-to-face with her sister.
Joe, slipping out from under the credenza, crouched behind Max in the doorway, watching.
Yes, this was the way he'd imagined Lindsey Wolf. Peaches and cream subtle, a treasure of cleanliness and soft tones that contrasted with her sister's bright, attention-demanding packaging.
Lindsey Wolf was a woman to turn heads, a woman any man would want to follow. Soft brown shoulder-length hair that changed color with the light. Hazel eyes lighter than Ryder's, with no harsh makeup, kind eyes touched with a smile. Her oval face was creamy smooth, and she wore only pale lipstick.
There was a strong resemblance in height and build, in the shape of their faces, and in their fine bone structure, but there the likeness ended in the two sisters. They looked at each other for a long moment, Lindsey's expression puzzled and questioning, Ryder's look stony. She drew herself up stubbornly, as if expecting Lindsey to scold or attack her.
"Why are you here?" Lindsey asked her.
"To inquire about that article in the paper." Ryder looked at her archly. "To see if there could be some connection with Carson Chappell. You have seen the article? A lost hiker, a man who was never found…"
"I saw it," Lindsey said. " Carson wasn't hiking in Oregon, he was here in California."
"That's what he told you."
"And you know differently? What do you know, Ryder?"
"I just thought I'd ask. See what the police might know. I didn't mean to step on any toes-or get you in trouble."
"Why would you get me in trouble? And why, after all this time, would you care?"
Captain Harper took in the exchange without expression, but Mike Flannery clearly showed his annoyance. Lindsey stepped back as Ryder edged past her up the hall toward the front door.
But when Max had seen her out, and Mike was escorting Lindsey down the hall toward Dallas 's lighted office, Max called Mike back. "Why don't you buy Lindsey a cup of coffee?" Max said, nodding toward the conference room. "Take a little break, give me a few minutes with Dallas on several matters."
Mike took Lindsey's arm, his eyes meeting Max's with a question that received only a level look, then guided her back up the hall toward the conference room, toward the smell of overcooked coffee.
15
IN CHARLIE'S BIG family kitchen, the coffee was freshly brewed; Wilma and Charlie had finished their pastrami sandwiches and were feasting on the first strawberries of the season, gleaming in a glass bowl on the table and liberally dusted with powdered sugar.
"This is a good time for you to start riding again," Charlie said. "Of course you don't forget. All your childhood years on a farm before you moved here, how could your body forget? Come on, finish your lunch and let's head out."
Wilma was not a timid person. And how often in the past years had she toyed with the idea of having a horse again? Now that Charlie had offered a place to keep a mount, how could she do otherwise than return to that freedom she'd known in childhood?
"The two of us together," Charlie said, "going up to the ruins, really would look less suspicious if Max finds out. Not that I mean to tell him, but…"
"It's been hard," Wilma said, "keeping secrets."
"As if I had a choice." Charlie rose to carry their dishes to the sink. "When Max proposed, you know that was my one concern, that I'd have to lie to keep the cats' secret." She looked desolately at Wilma. "I didn't know, then, half how hard that would be."
She put the remaining strawberries in the refrigerator and unplugged the coffeepot. "I'd always believed that in a good marriage you wouldn't ever have secrets, would never have to lie, that a solid marriage is based on trust.
"I still know that's true. But here I am lying to him nearly every day, or holding back information, which is the same thing."
"Most marriages," Wilma said wryly, "don't involve this kind of secret." She put their dishes in the dishwasher, they grabbed their jackets, locked the door behind them, and headed for the barn.
In the fenced-in pasture, the two big, half-breed Great Danes raced to the gate, anticipating a run, but Charlie, rubbing their ears, told them they had to stay home. They watched longingly as their master disappeared into the stable-she didn't want them following, nosing around the ruins and sniffing out the buried corpse. While that would be a natural way to "discover" the body, those two would tear up the grave, scatter the bones before she could stop them.
And, worse, their discovery would destroy Joe Grey's plan, which, she had to admit, was very close to brilliant-though it would be a few more days before Ryan and Clyde got home and Joe could put his scenario into action. It was a crazy plan, but one that would accomplish a mission near to Ryan's heart, a project that Ryan had put off for some time.
Bridling Bucky, and watching Wilma, Charlie knew that her aunt had forgotten nothing. Wilma already had the mare brushed and saddled, had checked her feet, and was leading her out into the yard to mount up. And the look on Wilma's face as they headed their horses around behind the barn and up the little trail through the woods was enough to keep Charlie smiling for days. This was what Wilma needed to balance the depression and perhaps fear that could bedevil a person as he or she grew older, even her cheerful and courageous aunt-fear of becoming ill and incapacitated, and, for many, an innate sadness at leaving this world, though she'd seen none of that in Wilma.
Now, if Charlie knew her aunt, she'd soon be shopping for a horse of her own. Wilma was, after all, only in her sixties, way too young to stop doing the things she loved best.
They rode side by side as long as the trail permitted, then Wilma let Redwing take the lead, as the mare wanted to do. Max's big buckskin gelding always deferred to Redwing, usually with a twitch of his ears that Charlie knew was tolerant male humor. They talked only intermittently, enjoying the silence of the woods, the call of a squirrel, the hush of wind in the trees. Redwing snorted at the skittering of small animals racing to hide from them, and once she shied away, but Wilma sat her easily. The birds were busy building nests, calling out their mating songs. They were up on the open hills, above the woods and above the Pamillon ruins, when Wilma turned in the saddle, looking back at her.
"That body, Charlie…isn't there a family cemetery on the property? Could that simply be one of the family graves? Could the cats…?"
"There is a cemetery, but it's in the rose garden at the far north end. Willow said this grave is right beside the house, in a sheltered patio adjoining a bedroom. Who would bury a dead relative outside a bedroom? Where, every time you stepped out the door or wanted to have tea on the terrace, you were walking on them?"
Wilma laughed. "The Pamillons might. They were a strange bunch. I guess they still are. The way they divided up the property, all entangled in trusts and wills that have never gotten sorted out, refusing to get together, leaving this valuable land to fall to ruin."
"I didn't think there were any Pamillons left, at least not around here."
"Nina Gibbs was the last I know of to live nearby, the others are scattered who knows where. Olivia Pamillon was Nina's aunt."