"Son of a bitch!" Mason said.
"Seems likely," Kelly added.
"How about a ride back to Buckhorn, Sheriff?"
"Sorry, Counselor. I'm not running a taxi service."
"I wasn't planning on tipping you. You dragged me into this mess. You can't leave me stranded here."
"Yes, I can. Your partner's death isn't neat and tidy, and I like neat-and-tidy deaths. Now, if you don't mind, I've got a lot of work to do."
"Maybe I can help." Her arched eyebrows told him that she didn't think so. "Look, I admit I'm a reflex smart-ass. But I helped identify the body and brought you here. And I was just trying to protect Pamela."
Mason doubted that Sullivan had died of natural causes, as any decent asshole would have done. O'Malley's indictment on charges that he'd skimmed money from the bank that he owned was inevitable. Sullivan had done everything but confess to helping O'Malley steal the money when he asked Mason to lose documents that incriminated him. Mason knew that Sullivan's only chance to save himself would be to testify against his client. O'Malley couldn't invoke the attorney-client privilege to prevent Sullivan from testifying about their crimes. O'Malley's best defense would be a lawyer who was too dead to testify. Mason was the only other lawyer in the firm who knew what Sullivan knew—or who knew what Sullivan had intimated to him. If Sullivan had been murdered, Mason wanted to know sooner rather than later. His protective instincts were becoming self-centered.
"Who said she needs protection, Counselor?"
"Anybody who starts the day with a dead husband needs protection."
"Miss Farrell can take you back to Buckhorn. This is an official investigation. I don't need any volunteers."
"Don't worry. I'm going home today, but I've got an obligation to my partners to find out what happened." Though true, that was the least of his concerns. But it was the only excuse he could use until he knew whether Sullivan had been murdered. If Sullivan's death wasn't murder, telling Kelly that both his client and his dead partner were crooks would put him on O'Malley's hit list. "Just tell me what your next step is. Maybe I really can help."
Kelly sighed, as if he would accept her annoyance as an answer. His silence said not likely.
"Okay. I follow the most logical line of investigation. That means find out where Sullivan went and who he was with before he died. He left his house around seven. Mrs. Sullivan saw him heading toward a client's condo. I want to know where it is and who owns it."
"How will you find it?"
"I'll start with county records of property ownership."
"Perfect. I may recognize a name and save you a lot of trouble."
Kelly looked at him as if she'd just found a stray dog and couldn't decide whether to feed it or take it to the pound.
"I hope you're ready for a long ride home. I've got some stops to make."
"Sheriff, I'm like lunch meat; I'm always ready."
CHAPTER SIX
Kelly punched in a number on her cell phone as they pulled away in her pickup truck, leaving the call on speaker.
"Riley, it's Kelly. Get your lazy ass off your back porch and meet me at the courthouse in half an hour."
The playful teasing in her voice told Mason that Riley didn't have a lazy ass. He wondered what kind of ass Riley really had that caused Kelly to react that way.
"Listen, little girl. I got you that badge, and I can have it back in a heartbeat. Your daddy never woulda talked that way to me."
Riley's voice was filled with pleasure that said they'd played this piece many times before. Kelly's laughter was rich, lighting her eyes.
Mason was relieved that Riley sounded a generation removed. He was also surprised at his relief. He had lost track of the different emotional chords Kelly had struck with him in less than half a day.
"Friend of yours?" Mason asked.
"Riley Brooks has been the register of deeds since I was a girl. He talked me into taking this job until a new sheriff is elected in November."
"What happened to the other sheriff?"
"He got carried away with strip-searching women who ran stop signs. Someone had to finish out his term."
"Don't tell me you weren't first choice, Sheriff?"
Kelly gave him another annoyed glance. She seemed to have an inexhaustible supply.
"I was an FBI agent for ten years. My partner was killed last winter. I quit and came home. End of story. Now, tell me about the poker game. When did it start?"
Mason didn't blame her for being more interested in figuring out who killed Sullivan than in becoming his new best friend, so he didn't mind changing the subject.
"After dinner, about eight."
"Was Sullivan there when the game started?"
"No, he didn't get there until after nine."
"So we've got at least two hours unaccounted for. Give me the names of the players and, this time, leave out your imaginary playmates."
"Scott Daniels, Sandra Connelly, who runs the litigation department, Harlan Christenson, Angela Molina, Phil Rosa, and me."
"Who are Angela and Phil?"
"Angela is the executive director of the firm, chief bean counter, and administrator. Phil Rosa is an associate. One of the rising stars in litigation."
"Was Sullivan alone when he left the card game?"
Mason hesitated because he knew where she was headed. She was interested in more than tracking Sullivan's movements in the hours before he died. She was making a list, probably a short one, of suspects. Mason didn't know whether she would put his name on that list if she learned that Sullivan had asked Mason to commit a crime. He didn't want to find out. All he could do was steer her investigation away from the O'Malley case until he knew if Sullivan had been murdered. If he had been, Mason would tell her everything and put his faith in the system.
Kelly cut through his hesitation. "If you don't tell me, Counselor, someone else will. Someone always sees something, and they're always anxious to talk about it."
Mason knew she was right.
"Sullivan left with Cara Trent, one of the law school students who work for us during the summer."
"I'll need a list of the names, addresses, and phone numbers of everyone who was at the retreat, especially Cara Trent. I've only got the partners' names so far. Chances are one of them will know where Sullivan was before and after the card game."
"I've got a firm directory at the hotel. You can have it."
"Fine. Let's start with you. Where were you last night?"
The color rose in Mason's cheeks as he considered the tone of her question.
"I was in my room before the card game, and I spent the rest of the night on the beach where you found me this morning."
"Alone?"
"Alone. Before and after."
"Did you talk with anyone? Did anyone see you?"
"I had room service. You can check with the hotel."
"What about when you were on the beach?"
"Just a couple who were too busy with each other to notice me. You better take me in, Sheriff. I confess. The job was too good. I couldn't stand all the money."
"Let's hope everyone else is so helpful."
The corners of her mouth creased in a neat smile.
Well, even the Berlin Wall eventually came down,
Mason thought.
"Was Sullivan working on anything that might make someone want to kill him?"
He should have expected the question, but her smile had left him flat-footed. He had felt the same way in his last rugby match when a forward got past him with a fake pass. There was a reason that that move was called a dummy. And he was it.
"The firm has a lot of clients. They have a lot of problems, and they are unhappy about all of them."
"I spent the last ten years sifting through more double-talk than you can imagine. Make this easy on both of us and tell me if any of those clients might want to kill him."
"I'm not going to speculate about any client. If it turns out that my partner was murdered, I'll tell you everything I can. Until then, I can't tell you anything because of the attorney-client privilege. I'm sure the FBI has heard of that."
"Mason, I'll make this simple. If you withhold information in a murder investigation, I'll shove your smart mouth right up your smart ass. Are we clear on that?"
"They teach you how to do that at the FBI Academy?"
"The first day."
CHAPTER SEVEN
Kelly downshifted as they rolled into the center of the county seat, Starlight, Missouri. The Pope County Courthouse was a classic colonial edifice at least sixty years old. It rose from the center of the town square, with Missouri limestone columns guarding the entrances on all four sides. A Civil War cannon stood resolutely on the south quadrangle. Neatly manicured grass, still lush in spite of the midsummer heat, fanned out from the foundation, flanked by concrete sidewalks.
The courthouse reminded Mason of Tommy Douchant's case. It had been his job to do well and do good for Tommy, and he had done neither. His slogan had never proven to be so empty. Afterward, he went over every detail of the trial with Claire.
"Do it over again," she told him.
"I can't get a new trial without new evidence. You know that."
"Then get the evidence and quit feeling sorry for yourself and Tommy. I can't stand pathetic."
He promised himself that he would. It had been four months since Tommy's trial and three months since he'd started at Sullivan & Christenson. He'd discussed the case at the first partners' meeting he attended after joining the firm. No one was interested in investing time and money in a case that had already been lost. His promise was gathering dust.
Riley Brooks met them in the office of the register of deeds. He was well past six feet, with a skin-and-bones frame that made him appear even taller. A ring of gray hair circled his bald head like that of an ill-kempt tonsured monk. He sat on the edge of a table, his high-top sneakers tapping the linoleum.
"What'll it be, Kelly? Drug smugglers? Terrorists?" he asked, rubbing his hands together, hoping for both.
Kelly feigned irritation, but her eyes said she was glad to see him.
"Just property ownership records, Riley. I'll save the bad guys for regular office hours."
Riley, disappointed but dutiful, dug up the plans for the coves that included Sullivan's house and the four coves between it and the dam, which was the direction Pamela Sullivan had last seen her husband heading. The legal descriptions enabled him to print out the names of the owners from the county's computer system. Reminding Kelly to lock up when they were done, Riley left them alone in the courthouse.
"If we divide the records, we'll be done faster," Mason suggested.
Kelly tore the printout in half. "Recognize any names?"
Mason recognized one name and wasn't surprised when he saw it. He was willing to dodge her other questions, but he wouldn't lie to her.
"Just one, SOM, Inc."
"Who or what is that?"
"A company owned by Richard Sullivan and Victor O'Malley."
"I don't suppose O'Malley is one of those dangerously unhappy clients."
"He pays his bills on time."
"Thanks. I was beginning to think I'd have to torture you for information."
"Does this mean I get a deputy's badge?"
"Not yet. I don't want the responsibility if you injure yourself pinning it on. Let's go see if anyone is home at SOM's condo."
The condominium was two coves away from Sullivan's. The condo was part of a garden-style project with two units on each of three floors. SOM's was on the top floor. No one answered when they knocked. Kelly and Mason walked around to the back and peered through the sliding door on the balcony. They were about to give up when a woman appeared on the balcony of the other top-floor condo.
"It's about time you people showed up. I've been complaining for months."
She was short with the kind of fat that begins at the ankles and ends just below the ears. Her sundress billowed from her shoulders like a two-man tent.
"I'm Sheriff Holt. What have you been complaining about?"
"I know who you are, honey! I read the papers. Who's your boyfriend?" She ran her eyes over Mason, shaking her head, and whispered loud enough to make certain he heard. "Nice looking but soft. Stick to the local talent, Sheriff. Ozark men got better staying power."
Kelly swallowed her laughter and introduced Mason. Velma Marie Fouche invited them in for a cup of coffee and conversation, both of which were served in a living room furnished with one of the few remaining knotty-pine pit groups.
"I'm sorry, Velma, but I haven't been told about your complaints. Bring me up to date."
Velma warmed to Kelly's easy manner. Mason was learning that she had a style for every occasion.
"It's the women. Every week there's a new batch. It's disgusting!"
"Tell me about the women."
"Oh, you know. They're young and pretty and bouncy."
"Who are they with?"
"Men old enough to be their fathers!"
"Have they bothered you?"
"Nope."
Kelly smiled. "Then what's the problem?"
"My husband. He sees these sweet young things and gets ideas. Won't leave me alone, and I need my rest."
Mason choked on his coffee, but Kelly didn't miss a beat.
"I'll see to it that we look into your complaints. Did you see any of these people last night?"
"Well, I couldn't sleep, so I went out on the balcony for some air, and I seen two of 'em walk down to the dock and get in a boat."
"What time was it?"
"Close to midnight."
"What kind of boat?"
"One of them powerboats, like the skiers use. Can't stand 'em—they're too loud and they scare the fish off."