Читать книгу The General's Secretary - Debby Giusti - Страница 10
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Lillie Beaumont gasped for air and fought her way through the dream that came too often. Her heart pounded a warning as she blinked open her eyes, allowing the dark outline of her bedroom to sweep into focus. She lifted her head off the pillow and anticipated the distant thunder before the sound reached her ears.
Low. Rumbling. Menacing, like cannon fire at nearby Fort Rickman, Georgia.
Weeding her fingers through the sheets, she grasped for anything that would calm her spinning stomach and racing pulse.
Another rumble, this time closer.
Then another and another in rapid succession, each encroaching on her space, her air, her life.
The thunder escalated, its cadence steady like the giant footfalls of an evil predator, stalking an unsuspecting prey. Only Lillie wasn’t oblivious to its approach. She knew the storm, felt it in her inner being, breathed it into her soul where she battled the terror and torment of a thousand deaths.
Another volley. Her airway constricted. She touched her throat, yearning to be free of the stranglehold of fear that wrapped around her neck.
Don’t cower. Face your phobia. The words of reason echoed in her head.
“Something happened before she came to us,” her foster parents had told concerned friends after taking Lillie into their home when she was a child. “Our little girl is terrified of storms.”
She wanted to laugh at the understatement. Instead, tears trickled from the corners of her eyes.
The musky scent of wet earth and damp air seeped through the partially open window and filled her nostrils, like the cloying odor of that night so long ago. Eyes wide, she stared into the darkness, anticipating the next bright burst of lightning.
A blast of thunder rocked her world, hurling her from the bed. She ran, as she always did, her footfalls echoing on the hardwood floor. No matter how much she longed to ignore the gathering storm, she had no control over the memories that made her relive the terror of that night so long ago.
In her mind’s eye, she was once again four years old.
“Mama,” young Lillie had cried, longing to be swooped into her mother’s outstretched arms.
Instead, he had opened the bedroom door.
“Go back to bed, child.”
The door had closed, leaving Lillie alone in the hallway, huddled in a ball, shivering with fear, tears streaking her face and trembling body.
Another round of thunder, followed by a kaleidoscope of light that blinded her eyes and made the past fade and the present come back into focus.
Finding the corner, the twenty-nine-year-old Lillie crouched, knees to her chest, heart on a marathon race as thunder continued to bellow. Rain pummeled her copper roof, the incessant pings reminding her of the gossip of the townspeople after her mother’s remains had been found fifteen years ago.
Murdered. Sealed in a steel drum. Buried beneath the earth.
“Mama,” she whimpered, trying to be strong enough to fight off the memories.
Outside, the storm raged as if good and evil battled for her soul, only she was too weak, too crazed, to fight off the attacks.
A pounding.
Close, persistent. Rap, rap, rap.
“Lillie?”
Someone called her name.
“Lillie, open the door.”
“Mama?”
She ran to the front of the house, undid the lock and flung open the door. Frigid rain stung her face, soaking her pajamas and mixing with her tears.
“Help me, Lillie.”
A man she knew only from newspaper photos stood before her. Mid-fifties, with gray, rumpled hair and weather-worn skin stretched across a bruised and bloodied face. Doleful eyes, swollen, suffering, seemingly entreated her to forget the past and think only of his need. “They...they found me...beat me.”
His hand stretched to hers. A small metal key dropped into her palm.
“I uncovered information. The...the answers I’ve been looking for,” he said.
She took a step back.
“I never—” He shook his head. “Your mother—”
A shot rang out.
He gasped, his face awash with pain. “Free us...” He reached for her. “Free us from the past.”
Slipping through her fingers, he collapsed onto the rain-drenched step. She screamed, seeing not only her own bloodied hands but also the battered body of her mother’s killer.
* * *
The phone call dragged Dawson Timmons from a dead sleep. Flipping on the bedside lamp, he rubbed his hand over his face and raised the receiver. “Special Agent Timmons.”
“Sorry to wake you, sir.” Corporal Raynard Otis from the Criminal Investigation Division.
“What’s the problem, Ray?”
“Agent Steele is on duty tonight, sir, but he’s tied up, handling a possible overdose, and we’re short-staffed since Agents Patterson and McQueen were transferred.”
With the recent reduction in force, the whole army was short-staffed. “I’m aware of the situation, Ray. Plus, the chief’s on leave until Monday.”
“Yes, sir. That’s why Agent Steele asked that I contact you.” The corporal’s voice was strained. “The Freemont police just notified us about a shooting.”
“Military personnel?”
“Negative, sir. But the location has bearing.”
“Fort Rickman?”
“No, sir. Freemont.”
“What’s the tie-in?”
“The house where the shooting took place belongs to the general’s secretary.”
Dawson groaned inwardly, dropped his feet to the floor and stood. “General Cameron’s secretary? The commanding general?”
“Yes, sir. The deceased pounded on the secretary’s door in the middle of the storm. She answered the knock just before the victim was shot.”
“A drive-by shooting?”
“I’m not sure, sir.”
“We’re talking about Lillie Beaumont?”
“Affirmative.”
“Was she hurt?”
“Negative, sir.”
“The victim...” Dawson swallowed, hoping to keep his voice level and free of inflection. “Do you have a positive ID?”
“Granger Ford. The guy was serving time for the murder of Ms. Beaumont’s mother. Fifteen years ago he was tried and found guilty. His case was recently reviewed, and new DNA testing exonerated him. Ten days have passed since he got out of prison in Atlanta. Now he’s dead.”
Dawson hung his head. Ringing filled his ears. His stomach soured, and for an instant, his world went dark. Granger had called him three nights ago. Not that Dawson had expected or wanted the phone call from his past.
“Shall I notify the staff duty officer at post headquarters?” Ray asked.
“Let headquarters know, and call General Cameron’s aide as well. Tell him I’ll check out the situation and report back to the general when I return to post.”
Dawson would tell the commanding general what the Freemont police had determined about the shooting and Lillie Beaumont’s involvement in the case. He wouldn’t reveal the truth about Granger Ford and the child he had fathered thirty-one years ago. A little boy raised by an unwed mother who had hardened her son’s heart to his drifter dad.
Dawson could forgive his mother’s bitterness, but he never forgave his father’s rejection. Now, with his death, the truth would come out. The last thing Dawson wanted was for the military to know his father was a murderer.
* * *
The storm had subsided by the time Dawson climbed behind the wheel of his Camry. Twigs and leaves cluttered the roadway as he left post and headed to the far side of Freemont, where Lillie lived. Turning his headlights to high beam, he pressed down on the accelerator and reached for his cell phone.
“I’m on my way into town,” Dawson said when Jamison Steele answered. Working together, the two agents had formed a strong friendship. Trust ran deep, and just days earlier Dawson had told Jamison about his past and the father he had never met.
“Otis said you agreed to handle the shooting.” Jamison let out a breath. “Look, I’m sorry about what happened and that you have to be the one to handle the case.”
“It’s not like Granger and I had a relationship. The last thing he wanted was a kid. My mother said he hightailed it out of town as soon as she told him she was pregnant. I never met him.”
“Still, it puts you in a difficult spot. I’ll explain the situation to Chief Wilson when he gets back to work on Monday.”
Dawson pursed his lips. “No need. I can fight my own battles. Besides, tonight should be fairly straightforward. I’ll ensure the Freemont cops handle the case appropriately. Once I share the information with General Cameron concerning his secretary, I’ll file my report and move on to the next case.”
“It’s Friday, Dawson. I’m hoping the weekend is crime-free.”
“Which might be wishful thinking.”
Jamison hesitated. “Have...have you told anyone else about your dad?”
“I didn’t see the need.” Dawson stared into the roadway ahead. “Of course, his death changes everything.”
“We’ll talk at the office.”
“Roger that.”
Dawson disconnected and shook his head with frustration. Granger had made a huge mistake visiting the daughter of the woman he was supposed to have murdered. From what Dawson had pieced together about his wayward father, Granger’s life had been as littered as the pavement with a series of wrong places, wrong times. Exactly what tonight felt like—a wrong turn that could end up detouring Dawson off the straight course he had chosen for his career in the army.
When he saw the secretary’s house in the distance, his gut tightened. Police lights flashed from the driveway. The crime-scene crew hovered around the front porch, where a man’s body lay spotlighted in the rain. Maybe this homicide wouldn’t be as cut-and-dried as he had first imagined.
Pulling to a stop, Dawson sucked in a deep breath before he stepped into the wet night. His left leg ached. More than a year had passed since he’d taken a bullet, but the pain remained and grew more insistent with the cold weather.
He rubbed his hands together and grabbed the keys from the ignition, his mouth dry. Steeling himself against any unwanted rush of emotion, he approached the crime-scene tape and held up his identification to the closest cop.
“CID, from Fort Rickman. Who’s in charge?”
The guy pointed to the house. “Head through the kitchen. Sergeant Ron Pritchard’s inside with Ms. Beaumont.”
“Is she a suspect?”
The cop shrugged. “All I know is that we found her huddled in the hallway, crying like a baby.”
Dawson hesitated for a moment and then glanced down at the victim’s twisted body. Regret washed over him. This wasn’t the way life should end. Granger had been shot in the back, probably with a forty-five caliber hollow point from the appearance of the wound.
In stark contrast to the grisly death scene, beds of yellow pansies edged the small front stoop. Ignoring the flowers, Dawson circled the house, picking his way through the wet grass. The back porch, trimmed in white latticework, was graced with more winter blooms that danced in the wind, oblivious to the crime that had recently been committed.
Stepping into the kitchen, he opened his navy windbreaker and wiped his shoes on the small entry rug. The smell of the wet outdoors followed him inside and mixed with the homey scent of pumpkin and spice. A large melon-colored candle sat on the counter near a bouquet of yellow mums and a plaque that read, God bless this home and all those who enter.
The irony wasn’t lost on Dawson, yet surely death hadn’t been Granger’s just reward. The estranged son might have argued the point before the phone call, before Granger had asked forgiveness. Something Dawson hadn’t been able to give. Now he wasn’t sure how he felt. A little numb, a bit confused, even angry. Long ago, he had realized it was better not to feel anything than to feel too much.
Entering the living area, he signaled to the officer in charge, held up his badge and nodded as the local cop continued to question the woman huddled on the couch.
Lillie’s life had been inexplicably intertwined with Dawson’s, although he doubted she was aware her mother’s killer had a son. They’d never been introduced, but Dawson had seen her on post. It was hard not to notice the tall and slender secretary. Usually she was stylishly dressed and perfectly coiffed. Tonight wild, honey-brown tresses fell across the collar of what appeared to be flannel pajamas. Even from where he stood, Dawson noticed the blood spatters on the thick fabric.
She turned, hearing him behind her.
He hadn’t expected her eyes to be so green or so lucid. She wore her pain in the knit of her brow, in the downward tug on her full lips, in the tear-streaked eyes whose sadness wrapped around his heart. His breath hitched, and time stood still for one long moment.
Pritchard asked another question. She turned back to the lead cop, leaving Dawson dangling. He straightened his neck, trying to work his way back to reality.
Long ago, Dawson had learned to weigh everything, never to take a chance. He put his faith in what he could do and affect and impact, not on emotions that left him hanging in thin air.
“The middle of a stormy night.” Pritchard restated the last question. “Yet you opened your door when Mr. Ford knocked?”
“I...ah...” She searched for an answer.
“Do you always open your door to strangers, Ms. Beaumont?” Pritchard pressed.
She shook her head. “Of course not, but—”
Once again, she glanced at Dawson, as if asking him to clear the confusion written on her oval face.
“Had you been asleep?” Dawson knew better than to prompt a witness, yet the question sprang from his lips before he could weigh the consequences.
She nodded, her brow raised and lips upturned for the briefest of moments. “I was dreaming. The knock sounded. Before I realized what I was doing, I was staring at him through the open doorway.”
Pritchard cleared his throat and jotted her answer in a notebook. After recording the statement, he glared at Dawson. “I’m finished questioning Ms. Beaumont. If there’s anything you want to ask her, go right ahead. I’ll be outside.”
Dawson read between the lines. Pritchard didn’t want his interrogation compromised by a newcomer from post. A subtle reprimand, perhaps? Not that Dawson would be intimidated by a small-town cop.
As Pritchard left through the kitchen, Dawson took a seat on the chair next to Lillie and held up his identification.
“Special Agent Dawson Timmons, ma’am. I’m with the Criminal Investigation Division at Fort Rickman. The Freemont Police Department is handling the murder investigation, but the CID was called in because you work on post. I’m here as a liaison between the local police and the military.”
“Does...does General Cameron know what happened?” Lillie asked.
“He’s being notified.”
“I don’t want anything to—”
“To jeopardize your job? I don’t see how that could happen. Unless your position as the general’s secretary has a bearing on this crime.”
“No, no.” She held up her hand. “This has nothing to do with General Cameron.”
“What does it involve, Ms. Beaumont?” He leaned closer. “May I call you Lillie?”
She nodded. “You’re not from around here?”
“Georgia born and raised, but my home’s in Cotton Grove, close to the Florida border.”
She swallowed, the tendons in her graceful neck tight. “I don’t know where to start.”
“How ’bout at the beginning.”
She tucked a strand of hair behind her ear. “I was born in Atlanta and moved to Freemont with my mother when I was a baby. We lived in a remote area, not far from the highway.”
Dawson pulled a notebook and pen from his pocket.
“My...my mother disappeared when I was four.” Lillie’s voice was weak. She cleared her throat. “Most folks thought she had abandoned me and returned to Atlanta with a man.” She shrugged. “Her lover. Sugar daddy. Whatever you want to call him.”
“Granger Ford?”
“No. The man she was seeing at the time.”
“How can you be sure it wasn’t Granger?”
“There was a storm the night she disappeared. The thunder awakened me. I was frightened and ran to my mother’s bedroom.”
Dawson’s could envision young Lillie, green eyes wide with fear, golden-brown hair tumbling around her sweet face, scurrying down a darkened hallway.
“The door opened and he...he told me to go back to bed.”
“Who was he, Lillie? Do you know his name?”
She shook her head. “But the memory of that night still haunts me, especially when it storms.”
“Can you still see his face?”
“Enough to know it wasn’t the man who died on my doorstep tonight.”
Dawson did the math. “It’s been twenty-five years. Appearances change.”
She straightened her shoulders. “I know what I saw. The man that night was someone else.”
Dawson made a notation on his tablet. “Who raised you after your mother disappeared?”
“Sarah and Walter McKinney took me in. They were an older couple and didn’t have children of their own.”
“Good people?”
She nodded. The gloom lifted for an instant, revealing her love for her foster parents.
“They wanted to adopt me, but I...” Once again, her eyes sought his. “Maybe it was foolish, but I kept thinking my mother would come back for me.”
A nail to Dawson’s heart. Did all kids give wayward parents the benefit of the doubt? Must go with the territory. Children wanted to be loved. Hope provided comfort during the dark times. When hope gave out, the reality of life had to be accepted, although some people never made the transition and spent a lifetime looking for the love they never received as a child.
“But your mother didn’t come back,” Dawson prompted.
Lillie licked her lips as if gathering courage to continue. “When I was fourteen, the river flooded. Not long afterwards, a steel drum was found close to the water, on Fort Rickman property.”
Dawson knew about the raging waters that had washed the drum downriver. Dental records confirmed the decomposed body found within was Irene Beaumont, who had gone missing ten years earlier.
“The last time you saw your mother was that stormy night?” He repeated what he already knew to gauge her response.
“That’s correct. The night she disappeared.”
“You were four years old?”
She nodded.
“Ten years later, your mother’s remains were uncovered in a steel drum.”
“And found along the river, although I’ve never visited the actual site. Someday...” Her voice was wistful. “Someday I hope to be strong enough to do just that.”
Dawson made another notation on his tablet. “At the time of her disappearance, the townspeople thought your mother had run off to Atlanta with her boyfriend.”
“That’s...that’s what I thought too.”
“Finding her remains must have changed local opinions.”
“The folks in town started to realize my mother had probably been killed the night she disappeared.”
“What did you think, Lillie?”
“I didn’t know what to believe.”
Dawson heard the confusion in her voice. “What happened next?”
She hesitated before she spoke. “Granger Ford worked for Nelson Construction at the time. The police were investigating the employees and found a picture of my mother under his mattress in the motel where he was staying. They accused him of murder. He was found guilty and sent to jail.”
Dawson tapped his pencil against his notepad. “Did you testify at the trial?”
“Supposedly, the case was open and shut. They didn’t need to place me on the stand.”
Hearing Lillie’s response ignited a fire deep within Dawson’s belly. From what he had read about the trial, the prosecution had deemed the case open and shut because Granger was a drifter who worked construction when he needed money. Personnel records at Nelson Construction verified the laborer had been on the payroll at the time of Irene Beaumont’s disappearance and again when the steel drum, bearing the Nelson Construction name and logo, had been found.
“Do you know anything about the case?” Pritchard stood in the doorway to the kitchen. Dawson hadn’t heard him come back inside.
“I did an internet search before I got here.” Dawson pocketed his notebook. “Easy enough to access news stories about Granger’s release from prison. The article included information about Irene Beaumont’s murder.”
“The article probably didn’t mention that they found the T-shirt she must have been wearing in the drum along with her decomposed body.” Pritchard sniffed, unaware of the pained expression on Lillie’s face. “Two blood types were identified on the fabric. A-positive, which was Irene Beaumont’s blood type, and B-negative. That matched Granger Ford’s type.”
Anger welled up within Dawson. He had read the transcript of the trial and knew Granger had denied, under oath, ever seeing the bloodied T-shirt or having known the victim.
Dawson made sure his voice was even, his gaze level, before he spoke again. “Yet Mr. Ford was recently released from prison?”
The cocky cop nodded. “Law students from the University of Georgia got wind of the case. They probably hoped to make a name for themselves.”
“And the outcome?” Dawson knew too well what the determination had been.
Pritchard pursed his lips. “Something about the blood type being incorrect.”
Granger’s blood had proved to be a rare “Du”-positive, which would appear negative on an initial rapid-slide test. More definitive blood typing had not been run prior to his trial, and the jury found Granger guilty because of a bloodied T-shirt and an inaccurate blood type. In addition, DNA testing had not been done, and as Lillie had mentioned, a photo of the deceased had been found under the mattress in Granger’s motel room, which anyone on the housekeeping or janitorial staffs could have accessed.
“An open-and-shut case, eh?” Dawson couldn’t resist the barb that went over Pritchard’s head.
“Recent DNA testing verified the B-negative blood on the T-shirt wasn’t Granger’s. He was released from prison ten days ago, but we’re not sure when he arrived in Freemont.”
At least seventy-two hours earlier, judging from the phone call Dawson had received when Granger got to town. He kept the information to himself. Pritchard could do his own investigation.
A second cop opened the back door. “Sarge, we’re ready to transport the body.” Pritchard followed him outside.
Once they were alone, Dawson turned back to Lillie. “What did Granger say when you opened the door tonight?”
“That someone had found him and beat him. I heard the shot. He fell forward.” She stared at her hands. “I...I tried to catch him.”
“Did he mention who had found him or did he say anything about your mother?”
She shook her head, but something about her expression told Dawson the secretary knew more than she had revealed.
“Do you think Granger killed your mother?”
She chewed her lip. “I...I don’t know.”
“Don’t know or won’t say?”
She hesitated.
“Did Granger contact you after he was released from prison?”
“He called me and wanted to meet. I refused. He said he had information about my mother’s death.”
“Yet you turned him down?”
“Part of me didn’t believe him. The other part wanted to keep the past locked away.”
She lowered her gaze and picked at her sleeve.
“There’s something else, isn’t there?” Dawson asked.
“I know it sounds crazy after a man has died, but...” She pulled in a nervous breath. “I’m worried about what this will do to military and civilian relations in the local area.”
“Meaning?”
“You’ve heard about the new Fort Rickman Museum scheduled to be built on post?”
Dawson narrowed his gaze, trying to make the connection. With construction ready to commence, the huge, multistoried structure promised to be state of the art, with an extensive collection of historical memorabilia and artifacts. In addition, a grand ballroom, auditorium and banquet facilities would attract large-scale events and needed revenue to this part of Georgia.
“I know the museum will be a boon to the local economy,” Dawson said, “but I don’t see how one man’s death could adversely affect the project.”
“Funding is the problem.” She sighed. “Which sounds so inconsequential compared to the taking of a human life.”
“But—”
“That’s why I didn’t want to meet Granger when he called a few days ago. I knew if anything about my mother’s death was brought to light, the construction project could be affected.”
Dawson rubbed his hand over his jaw and let out a frustrated breath. “I still don’t get the tie-in.”
“You’re not from around here so you probably don’t know Karl Nelson.”
“Only by name. Didn’t the stolen barrel your mother’s body was found in belong to his company?”
“That’s right. Nelson Construction Company was the low bid on the museum. Mr. Nelson has been more than generous keeping the projected costs at a minimum.”
“He also owns a number of businesses in town?”
“And is known for his charitable contributions. Over the years, he and his father before him have done a lot for the local area. Mr. Nelson has also donated heavily to the museum building fund and has been working with General Cameron to attract more donors. They’re hosting a special ceremony on Wednesday to secure the remaining pledges.”
Dawson was aware of the event. “The CID, along with the military police on post, will be providing security for the high-profile guests.”
Lillie nodded. “General Cameron wants everything to go without a glitch. Mr. Nelson personally assured the donors that Freemont and Fort Rickman are exemplary communities that will showcase the best in Georgia living and draw new businesses and attractions to this part of the state.”
“You’re afraid the murder investigation could cause the donors to change their minds?”
She nodded slowly, as if struggling to find the words to express her feelings. When she finally spoke, she splayed her hands. “I work in General Cameron’s office and am the contact person for those attending the ceremony. A pending murder investigation that involves the company, especially since Granger was killed on my property, could shed the wrong kind of light on Freemont and the project, maybe even on General Cameron. Especially if information leaks out about my mother’s murder.”
After everything that had happened, Lillie wasn’t thinking rationally, but Dawson understood her concern. The museum project had been the talk of the post for months and everyone was eager for construction to commence. Small-town gossip could get out of hand, and with an abundance of charities needing funding, negative publicity could sway donors into changing their minds about supporting the building project.
Before Dawson could offer her reassurance, Pritchard stepped back inside.
“We’re ready to wrap things up.” He glanced at Lillie. “The front step is sealed off. Some of my men will return in the morning to go over the crime scene again. Use the kitchen entrance until I give you the all clear, and stay in the area in case we have more questions.”
“I’m not planning to leave town.”
Dawson stood and pulled two business cards from his pocket. He gave one to Pritchard. “The CID office phone number and my personal cell are under my name.”
Retrieving the pen from his pocket, Dawson jotted down an additional number on the back of the card he handed Lillie. “I live in the bachelor officers’ quarters on post. The handwritten digits are for the direct line to my apartment at the BOQ.”
A uniformed cop approached Pritchard. “We found some numbers scratched on a scrap of paper tucked in the victim’s jacket.”
Pressure pushed on Dawson’s chest as Pritchard read from the paper. “Nine-seven-one-four.”
Lillie stared at Dawson’s business card and silently mouthed the last four digits of his BOQ phone number. Nine-seven-one-four. The same numbers found in Granger’s jacket.
She glanced up at Dawson. Her forehead furrowed.
Oblivious to her questioning gaze, Pritchard pulled out his cell. “Might be a portion of a phone number. I’ll add the local prefix and see what we get.”
Pritchard tapped in the digits and then shook his head as he disconnected. “The number’s not in service.”
Dawson needed to leave the little house in the woods before the Freemont cop tried the unique prefix for Fort Rickman phone lines.
He turned to Lillie, who continued to stare at him. “Don’t hesitate to call me, ma’am, if you think of anything else that might have bearing on this case.”
One of her finely arched brows rose ever so slightly. “Shall I use your cell phone or your BOQ number?”
The muscle in Dawson’s neck twitched. “My cell.”
Lillie knew he was withholding information from Pritchard. Just as she was.
Maybe they could trade secrets.