Slowly, the woman released the fawn, her face a mask of horror. The fawn reacted as if suddenly shot through with electricity, and it scrambled and kicked free of the woman.
It stood on thin, stiltlike legs, obviously not knowing what to do. Then it collapsed in a heap.
“What did you do to it?” the woman cried. “Did you scare it to death?”
Joe wasn’t sure what had happened to the fawn until he got down on his knees and looked at it. The other side of the fawn’s head was crushed in from the impact of the car.
When he shone his flashlight on the woman he could see dark blood on her shirt where she had cradled it.
Joe dragged the fawn to its mother. It weighed practically nothing.
Then he turned on the woman. “There are deer all over this road. Every single night. You should know that.”
“It wasn’t my fault,” the woman protested, starting to rise. “The deer jumped out in front of me.”
“No,” Joe said, a hard edge in his voice. “You were going too goddamned fast. In all my years, I’ve never hit a deer, much less two of them.”
“I said it wasn’t my fault.” The woman was angry now.
Joe flashed back to Pope’s admonition about being respectful, putting on a good face for the department. Then he looked again at the dead deer.
“These animals aren’t here just to make scenery pretty for you. They’re real and you killed them,” Joe said. “Lady, you’re a guest here.”
The woman buried her face in her hands.
“Oh, my,” Stella Ennis said with admiration, and he saw the white of her teeth.
“Thank you for your help,” Joe said to Stella, starting to reach out with his hand but catching himself because of the blood on it. Despite that, she reached for him and squeezed his fingers. There was blood on her hands also.
“Call me Stella,” she said.
Something inside him went ZING.
Fourteen
Marybeth Pickett had just finished feeding the horses when she heard the telephone ringing from inside the house. It was already cool and dark, and she was running two hours late for dinner because of their trip to the hospital. She ran from the corral toward the house and entered through the back door.
“I hope it’s Dad,” Sheridan said from where she was doing homework at the kitchen table. Lucy had told them he called and would call back. The kitchen smelled of onion, tomato, and garlic. A frozen pizza was warming in the oven, something Marybeth regretted. They were eating too much of that kind of stuff with Joe gone, she thought.
The sight of Sheridan’s bandaged eye jarred Marybeth, even though she had seen the square of gauze applied by the doctor just hours before. It was likely not serious, the doctor had said. It wouldn’t have been anything at all except that an opposing player’s fingernail had scratched her cornea. The injury had occurred during a skirmish for a ball, Sheridan had told them. Nobody called it, players went for it, Sheridan got to it, and somebody reached around her from behind and raked her across the eyes. Officially, it was considered an accident.
“I hope it’s him too,” Marybeth said to Sheridan, snatching the receiver from the wall.
Silence.
“Joe?”
She could hear labored breathing and something else—
muffled conversation?—in the background.
“Joe, are you on your cell? Can you hear me?”
“I want to talk with him,” Sheridan said from the table.
Marybeth covered the telephone with her hand and shook her head at Sheridan, indicating, It’s not him.
Then she remembered the Caller ID unit that had just been installed, that she had forgotten to look at before answering. The number had a 720 area code, which was unfamiliar.
“Who is this?”
An intake of breath, as if the caller was gathering his thoughts to speak. But he didn’t.
“I’m hanging up,” Marybeth said, and she did. “Damnit.”
The caller’s telephone number vanished from the screen.
She retrieved it from the backup and wrote the number down on the first thing she could find, the margin of the front page of the Saddlestring Roundup.
“Who was that?” Sheridan asked.
“Wrong number.”
“Then why did you write it down?”
Caught, Marybeth looked up. “In case he calls again.”
“I heard you and Dad talking about someone calling us and not saying anything. Was that him?”
“I have no idea,” Marybeth said, her voice more shrill than she would have chosen.
Sheridan glared at her mother. It didn’t matter if one eye was obscured, the glare was the same. “You don’t have to treat me like I’m an idiot, Mom. I’m thirteen. Do you realize how old that is?”
Marybeth braced for another argument. They were 124
occurring with more frequency these days. “Sheridan,” Marybeth said, already regretting her words, “do you realize how young that is?”
Sheridan slammed her pen down on her paper. “You treat me like I’m Lucy’s age,” she said. “I’m not. You forget how much I’ve gone through in my life.”
“Oh, stop it.”
“No,” Sheridan said, her cheeks blooming red, “I won’t stop it. If someone is calling our house and we might be in danger, I want to know about it. Don’t keep me in the dark like a baby.”
Marybeth took a breath, counted to three. “I don’t know that to be a fact,” she said. “We have no idea who is calling, or why. We don’t know if it means anything at all.”
Sheridan continued to glare. Lucy walked into the room, turning her head from her mother to her sister, as if watching a tennis volley.
“Was it so hard to tell me that?” Sheridan asked.
“Tell her what?” Lucy asked. “Was that Dad?”
Sheridan told Lucy, “Never mind.”
“No,” Marybeth said, “it wasn’t your dad.”
“When is he going to call?”
“I don’t know,” Marybeth said, an edge of frustration in her voice.
“He’ll call,” Sheridan said, picking up her pen and going back to her homework.
Don’t be so smug, Marybeth thought, looking at her older daughter, for a moment resenting her and her absolute certainty, and just as quickly forgiving her.
Marybeth picked up the newspaper with the telephone number on it and headed for Joe’s office. As she passed by the table, Marybeth mussed Sheridan’s hair affectionately.
Sheridan turned her head away sharply, as if her mother’s touch offended her.
“Sheridan . . .”
“I’m trying to do my homework here, okay?” Sheridan snapped.
Let it go, Marybeth told herself. Let it go.
She put the newspaper on the stack of unopened mail for Joe. She intended to read him the return addresses on the envelopes when he called, to see if any of the letters were important and should be forwarded to him in Jackson.
And she wanted to ask him if the phone number was familiar. That is, if and when he called.
Fifteen
Sheriff Tassell was late arriving at the statehouse. Joe had spent the time having an unsatisfying conversation with Marybeth, his cell signal fading and coming back, hearing snippets of sentences and asking her to repeat them.
“So Sheridan’s okay?”
“Seems to be,” Marybeth said. “It’s her attitude that needs an adjustment. . . .”
There was more, but Joe didn’t get it.
“So Sheridan’s eye is fine?”
“Joe, I just told you . . .” Lost it again.
He got out of his truck and walked down the sidewalk, pirouetting occasionally, trying to find a steady, strong signal.
“. . . another call where the caller didn’t say anything.. .”
“What?”
“It was from area code seventwooh. Do you . . .”
“Seventwooh?”
“. . . she asked me about it, wondering if it was anything we needed to be concerned about . . .”
“Marybeth, stop,” Joe said, frustrated. “Wait until I get into the house. I can use the phone inside. I’ll call you from there and we can talk, okay?”