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“I guess.” Lex left the table without picking up his plate.

“Huh-uh. Get back here. You know the drill.”

“Sorry, Dad.” He looked at me. Firmed his chin. “Is Sophie quitting because of me?”

“No. Why would you-” Had the kid taken the blame for everything at his mom’s house? “To be honest, Sophie is getting on in years, and it’s gotten harder for her to do all the things she used to do. It doesn’t have anything to do with you. In fact, she was pretty excited when she heard you were coming. More cookie recipes for her to test out.”

“I never knew anyone who had a housekeeper and a cook,” Lex said.

“Sophie’s more than just a housekeeper to me. She’s sort of filled in since my mom died when I was a kid.”

“Oh.” Lex hustled off after a warning from his father about being late for school.

Dawson wrapped himself around me while I rinsed the dishes. “I know you’ll miss her. I’ll miss her, too. But this is probably the best for everyone.”

I disagreed.

And in my mind, this was a temporary situation, anyway. Sophie would be back.

13

We probably should’ve been at the tribal police department getting the tribal officers’ input on the case. But instead, I found myself at home base-the Rapid City FBI office-in the conference room, alone with Agent Turnbull.

And it seemed a bit… official. Instead of the brainstorming session Shay had hinted at.

“We’re in agreement that the Shooting Star and Dupris cases are connected?”

I nodded. “Any reports back from the crime lab?”

“Yep. Verline also had high levels of digitalis in her system.” He rapped his pen on the blank sheet of paper in front of him. “So now, how about if we start with a list of possible suspects.” Then he looked at me pointedly.

“What? You want me to go first?”

“Yep.”

Damn. “Junior Rondeaux.”

“Why?”

“He’d been sneaking around with Arlette, effectively pissing off both his father and Verline.”

The tap-tap-tap of Turnbull’s pen sounded on the table as he studied me. “Why would Verline be mad if her live-in’s son was making time with the tribal president’s niece?”

I’d get a browbeating for not immediately telling Turnbull about Junior Rondeaux cornering me last night. It’d be entertaining to watch steam blow out of his ears-if not for the fact all that steam would be directed at me. “Before you have an aneurysm, I was in shock after yesterday’s events when Junior waylaid me in the parking lot at the tribal PD.”

“Why didn’t you bring him into the police station? He was right fucking there. I was right fucking there.”

Yep, Turnbull was really pissed if he used fuck in the office. “He took off, and I didn’t think ‘by any means necessary’ was appropriate use of force in this case. Yes, I could’ve shot him in the leg. But I figured it’d be counterproductive, since he’d end up in the hospital, unable to answer our questions anyway.”

Angrier, faster tapping with his pen. “What exactly did Junior Rondeaux tell you?”

I relayed the conversation to the best of my recollection. When I reached the part where Junior told me of his fear of Rollie’s threats to Verline if he found out she’d been cheating on him, I hesitated. And Mr. Intuitive G-man caught it.

“No editorializing, Agent Gunderson.”

“Fine. Junior said Rollie would kill her.”

Silence.

His handsome face was a total blank.

I tossed out one of the two other theories I’d been kicking around. “What if Junior killed Verline to protect her? If Verline had a hormonal moment, especially if Junior had been telling Verline about spending time with Arlette to make Verline jealous and force her into a decision about leaving Rollie. Verline could’ve offered Arlette a ride, claiming to know Junior, drugged her, and staked her.”

“So you think Verline picked Arlette up from school that day?”

“It’s a possibility. Arlette was keeping Junior a secret so she wouldn’t tell Naomi about her lunch plans.”

“Where would Verline have obtained digitalis?”

I said, “From Rollie,” without thinking. “He and his family are into all that native natural herbal stuff.”

More pen tapping. “Go on.”

“Let’s say… Junior knew Verline killed Arlette, and he also was starting to suspect that Verline wouldn’t leave Rollie, no matter how much she claimed she wanted to. Junior knows Rollie is an unfit parent. He also knows that if Verline turns up dead, the cops will be looking hard at Rollie for the murder. So he’d frame his father, make sure Verline’s kids are taken care of, and protect her crime.”

After I finished, I had the strangest feeling Turnbull was holding back laughter.

“You done?”

“No.” I crossed my arms over my chest. “I haven’t even mentioned Saro.”

That brought him up short. “What would Saro’s part be in this?”

“Junior works for Saro in some capacity. If Rollie is in jail for Verline’s murder, his business is kaput. Getting rid of a business rival plays into Saro’s hands. Not to mention, Saro is obsessed with finding Verline’s cousin, Cherelle, for her part in his brother Victor’s murder. Maybe Verline took something from Saro, and Saro made an example out of Verline by whacking off her hand as a warning to others on the rez who might think about crossing him.”

“After you left to talk to the Dupris family, we also discovered at the scene that Verline’s tongue had been cut out.”

“Jesus. But that makes sense if Saro is involved. If Verline had talked out of turn, or wouldn’t talk, Saro would remove her tongue as another example.”

“And Saro’s reason for killing Arlette?”

“He’s sadistic. He may’ve done it for kicks. But I heard grumbling in the tribal PD that the new tribal president has demanded tribal cops put the smackdown on drug dealing. They’re not even supposed to let a single prescription pill pass hands. There’s no way the cops can police it. Maybe Saro voiced his displeasure with Latimer Elk Thunder’s edict by killing his niece. There was no way of knowing how little Arlette meant to her uncle.”

No response but a cool stare.

“What?”

“I find it interesting, and maybe a little disturbing, that you didn’t mention Rollie Rondeaux as a possible suspect. Even his own son thinks he’s guilty.”

I said nothing.

“So along those lines… do your job. Don’t discount anything. Don’t discount anyone. Get me some proof to back up either of your theories. Within the confines of the law.”

I stood. “Don’t insult me, Special Agent Turnbull. I’m a team player. I know what team I’m on. Rah-rah! Go FBI! and all that shit.”

“You’re a drumroll short of nailing that punch line, Agent Gunderson.”

Everyone was a comedian. I slipped on my coat, shouldered my purse, and walked out.

• • •

Junior Rondeaux’s twenty-four hours were almost up.

Verline’s sister had told us where Junior lived-a shack on someone’s property. Looking at it now, I doubted the place had running water. Maybe it had electricity. The windows were boarded over.

I parked on the street and backtracked to the door, which wasn’t completely closed. Loud noises-moans and groans-came from inside. Was Junior hurt? I pulled my sidearm, kicked the bottom of the door with my boot, and said, “FBI. I’m coming in.”

First thing I saw? A naked ass. Then a naked back. The girl on the bouncing mattress screamed when she saw me. She shoved Junior so hard he flew out of bed and landed on that naked ass. She yanked the covers up but not before I got a glimpse of her pendulous breasts.