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Chapter Three

The next day dawned beautiful and clear and even colder. The sun sparkled brightly on the snow, but wasn’t nearly warm enough to melt it. I called Danny at the Hall County Courthouse and asked him the best way to get in touch with his stepfather.

“You have a four wheel drive, don’t you, Mrs. DeLeon?”

“Yes, a Jeep Cherokee.”

“Dad’s cabin is about twenty-five miles out the Sandlick Road. He’s on the far side of Jackson Lake. It’s a rough ride in the best weather. I don’t know if I would recommend you trying to get out there in this snow.” He laughed. “But if half the things Cassie says are true, that won’t make a bit of difference to you. Just be sure to take your cellular phone, plenty of blankets, and a couple of flashlights. I’ll be listening out in case you have any trouble. Cassie has my private phone number. Call me direct if you have a problem.”

“Thanks, Danny, I really appreciate it. Is your stepdad all right? I mean, was the surgery on his hip successful?”

“Yep.”

Try as I might, that was the only information I could get out of Danny regarding the personal health and well being of Bert Atkins. I hung up the phone feeling as if I were going out in the snow looking for a grizzly bear.

“Come on, Cassie,” I pleaded. “It’ll be fun! Just you and me and Watson.”

“I don’t think a sports utility vehicle named after Sherlock Holmes’s sidekick qualifies as a person, Mom.”

“Okay, then we’ll ask your grandmother.”

“I don’t care if you ask the Atlanta Braves—I’m not going. This afternoon I’m telling Danny we can’t see each other any­more, and ‘any­more’ means starting right now and includes his whole family.”

“Okay,” I grumped. “I understand. And you’re right. Maybe Mother will go.”

She looked at me with raised eyebrows.

“I don’t quite see Gran in a mountain cabin. Now if Christian Dior’s latest was something in a red plaid flannel and denim, you might have a chance at convincing her.”

Cassie was right. Mother refused my invitation before I even finished asking. She, also, had a perfectly good excuse. Horatio Raleigh, her dear friend and companion, was suffering from a cold. She was taking him some homemade soup and a copy of my latest book, Virtual Violence.

Horatio was the retired director of our town’s sole funeral home. He only went in to the “shop” when someone of note, or wealth, passed away and he was needed as a bereavement consultant. He had served in that capacity last weekend. The family had chosen the super deluxe casket, so he had even attended the burial. It had been a cold and rainy day. His doctor said he would be in bed at least a week.

I would have to go out the Sandlick Road alone.

Watson was warmed up in no time at all, and by the time I had loaded some blankets and old quilts and extra flashlights in the back I was actually looking forward to our little adventure. Danny was probably exaggerating. A little snow never hurt anybody.

Sandlick Road was about twenty miles out of Rowan Springs at the junction of the highway that led to the big lakes in the area. The lakes were there thanks to a big TVA dam project. The area was a great tourist attraction and even in the winter there was a fair amount of traffic. When I turned off the main highway, however, the traffic quickly thinned out. After a short time, I was all alone on the road.

I set my odometer at zero so it would count the miles for me. The road had been cleared, but the snow from last night had formed an icy new surface, and I had to watch carefully for glassy spots. Even with Watson’s four wheel drive, I could feel the tires slipping and sliding in places.

The banks on either side of the road were a combination of new drifts and old snow pushed off by the snowplow, higher in some places than the car. It was like driving down a long white tunnel.

Wynonna was telling me in her own beautifully melodious way about the perils of country love when the big buck came out of nowhere. I saw his heels as he jumped over Watson’s hood, and I did all the wrong things instantly. I panicked and slammed on the brakes to avoid smashing the deer’s hindquarters just as I hit a spot of black ice. Watson spun around two or maybe three times before careening like a billiard ball off the mountains of hard-packed snow on the shoulders. We finally came to a jolting stop after bursting through the last barricade of snow sideways. The horn blew loudly as I slumped forward on the steering wheel.

The blow to the car was on the passenger side, so my air bag didn’t deploy, and at some time during the wild ride, I hit my head very hard against the side window. I might have even blacked out for a moment or two until the blaring horn woke me up. That’s my only excuse for the stupid things I did next.

I would like to think that if I hadn’t been woozy I would have thought twice before leaving the car without a flashlight or my cellular phone. I didn’t even remember to check the mileage on the odometer. If I had, maybe I would have known better than to try and walk the last five miles to Bert’s cabin.

Danny had told me that Bert had a big black mailbox with his name, “B. Atkins,” on it. That was all I could think about as I walked and walked. I suppose I would have walked forever before I realized that the snowdrifts at the side of the road had buried any and all mailboxes. Fortunately, I still had enough sense to follow tire tracks leading off the main road and down a narrow track.

Cold and exhausted, I had been walking a little over two hours when I began to lose it. The sky darkened as the afternoon sun passed behind big clouds that heralded more snow, and I began imagining scenes of warm fireplaces and bowls of steaming hot soup. My fantasy was so strong that I could smell wood smoke.

I had lost the feeling in my feet and legs. The only thing that kept me going was my desire to be with Mother and Cassie, and even Aggie, again. They were there in front of me, but with every step I took, they moved farther away. I started crying in frustration. Didn’t they know how badly I wanted to reach them? I sank to my numb, unfeeling knees and sobbed in frustration.

Aggie relented and came bouncing up to me. She covered my face with big, wet, warm doggie kisses and licked away my tears. I struggled to regain my feet, but my legs wouldn’t cooperate. Cassie joined us. I tried to tell her she looked really silly with a beard, but my mouth wouldn’t work either. Cass reached out and grabbed me roughly by the scruff of my neck and hauled me up. She threw me easily over one shoulder and walked down the trail while I bounced against her wide back and made ridiculous cooing noises at Aggie, who trotted along behind.

As the smell of wood smoke and cooking food got stronger and penetrated my mental haze, Aggie began to look a little strange to me. I wondered vaguely why she had grown so large. Her face was almost as big as her whole body had been yesterday. And when did she get to be a redhead like me?

The Paper Detective

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