Bitterroot Lake Alicia Beckman (highly illogical behavior .TXT) đ
- Author: Alicia Beckman
Book online «Bitterroot Lake Alicia Beckman (highly illogical behavior .TXT) đ». Author Alicia Beckman
Sarah bit her lower lip and nodded. âThen I thought the woman in the dream might be you. But what if itâs Mom?â
21
Sheâd come to the lodge expecting to be alone, but now that she finally was, Sarah wasnât sure what to think or feel. Nic was still in town, Janine out cleaning cabins. Holly had gone for a run, saying it was time she shook off her self-pity and got moving.
As intrigued as she was by the finds in Caroâs trunk, she had work to do. She couldnât inventory dirt. And if her mother did decide to sell, they had to know what work the place needed. She took her notebook and phone to the top of the house. Room by room, she snapped pictures, took measurements, and made notes. In between rooms, she made trips to the cellar to move laundryâsheets, towels, and curtains Janine brought in from the cabins.
She set a basket of towels on a kitchen chair. Mundane tasks like folding laundry could be meditative. Other times, they opened the cracks that let sadness creep in, the spidery, many-fingered tendrils of sorrow in a life. All the things that were supposed to be perfect, but never were.
When had she become such a mope?
She reached for the next towel. It didnât come and she gave it a tug.
âMeeow.â
âOh. Bastet.â She scooped up the cat, one claw catching on a thin white dish towel that fluttered up with her. Fluttered like the nightgown on the woman in the dream.
Sarah loosened the catâs claw from the fabric. âWho are you?â she asked. âWhat do you want from me?â
But she wasnât talking to the cat.
âSarah?â
âNic. Youâre back.â Sarah set the cat on the floor and picked up the towel. Saturday, the stitching read, beneath the outline of a girl hanging laundry. Apt. She tossed it aside to rewash, then turned on the heat under the teakettle. âPerfect timing. The cat and I were just about to take a break. What did you find out in town?â
âI hardly know where to start. I met Dan Fleming for lunch at the Spruce. Nice guy.â
âSo why was he in business with Lucas?â
âYou cynic, you.â Nic cracked a wry smile and sat. âThey kept separate clienteles. He had no idea Lucas had done any work for McCaskill Land and Lumber.â
Curious. Sarah plunked bags in two heavy white mugs.
âHeâs been interviewed at length, of course,â Nic continued. âHe was meeting with clients when Lucas was killed.â
âWhat about Misty?â The kettle whistled. Sarah filled the mugs and set them on the table. She checked her chair for the cat before she sat, but the creature had disappeared. âThey live in Whitefish, right?â
âRight. She keeps an office above the shop there, where she was holed up all afternoon. Dan says the sheriffâs office confirmed both alibis. Thanks.â Nic spooned sugar into her tea. âHeâs adamant that there was nothing going on between him and Misty until after she left Lucas, but Lucas didnât believe that.â
âWas Lucas serious about a congressional run?â
âDan doesnât think so. Lucas was really good at shaking hands and making promises, but the job is a lot more work than that.â
Sarah frowned, wondering why her brother had done business with the man.
Nic took a quick sip, then set her mug down, holding it with both hands. âI was in the prosecutorâs office when she got a call from the state crime lab.â
âAbout the letters? Thatâs the only physical evidence they have now, unless theyâve found the gun and matched the fingerprints.â
âNo. No gun yet. And itâs harder to get prints from a gun than you think. Plus, itâs a common model. How did your cousin put it? âGuns are like pine cones in Montana. Shake any tree and at least one will fall out.â Thereâs probably a .38 in half the houses in the valley.â
Her mother hadnât wanted guns around the kids, so her father kept his deer rifles and the shotgun he used to hunt ducks in a safe in his office. And the handgun he always carried in the woods. You never knew what trouble youâd run into, heâd said. You might hit a deer on the highway and need to put it down. If Connor did the same, heâd left it in his truck when he came inside.
âThey canât seriously believe,â Sarah said, âthat Janine would ever own a gun, let alone use it. Not after what happened with her mother.â
âWe know that, and I reminded Leo and the prosecutor. But our beliefs donât prove anything.â
âAnd you called me a cynic.â
âThey have to be skeptical. Because people arenât consistent. Our observations arenât as accurate as we think they are, and theyâre influenced by what we want to believe,â Nic said. âEvery single one of us has done something even our closest friends never imagined we would do.â
Not a reminder she actually needed.
âHereâs where things get ugly. Two things. I probably shouldnât tell you either one.â
âNic. Tell me.â Sarah put her palms on the table and leaned forward.
âThey got a search warrant for Janineâs apartment in Missoula. Thatâs routine. They found a file in her desk drawer. Filled with clippings about Lucas over the years.â
Sarah sat back. âWhat theââ
âEvery time his name made the paperâfor some lawsuit, when his father died, when he ran for County Attorneyâshe kept the article. Itâs a thin file, but âŠâ
âBut itâs a file. Holy cow. Whatâs the second thing?â
âThe secretary, what was her name?â
âRenee Harper.â
âRight. She told you theyâd taken the computers and printers to check for evidence that Lucas wrote the letters to you, Holly, and Janine. They also took a laptop from his house, and according to Dan Fleming, quizzed both him and Misty on whether Lucas had access to
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