Dark Horse Read online
Dark Horse
Bill Noel
Enigma House Press
Also by Bill Noel
Folly Beach Mysteries
Folly
The Pier
Washout
The Edge
The Marsh
Ghosts
Missing
Final Cut
First Light
Boneyard Beach
Silent Night
Dead Center
Discord
The Folly Beach Mystery Collection
Copyright © 2018 by Bill Noel
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Cover photo by Bill Noel
Author photo by Susan Noel
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ISBN: 978-1-940466-76-7
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Enigma House Press
Goshen, Kentucky
www.enigmahousepress.com
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
About the Author
Chapter One
I was enjoying a sandwich for lunch and halfheartedly watching a Live 5 newscaster ramble on about what was going on in the Charleston, South Carolina, viewing area. The talking head’s report of multiple shark sightings off nearby Sullivan’s Island was sound clutter, until I heard her mention a dead body and Folly Beach, my retirement home for a decade, in the same sentence. My sandwich took second place to me staring at a young reporter standing outside the entrance to the Folly Beach County Park, with the lights of three police cars alternating between red and blue in the background.
I didn’t catch the beginning of the story but the reporter now had my attention as he said, “I’ve been told a body of a female was discovered in a gray mid-sized sedan you can see behind me.” He dramatically turned his head and faced the gathering of police vehicles behind him and turned back to the camera and continued. “The body was found at approximately ten-thirty this morning by a Folly resident who was walking to the end of the island with a metal detector in search of elusive valuables lodged in the sand. Instead, he found something far worse—the body of the woman in the car.”
The station cut to a taped interview with Folly’s Director of Public Safety, better known as Police Chief Cindy LaMond, who said, “The body of a white female in her early forties was found in a gray Chevrolet Malibu with South Carolina plates this morning along West Ashley Avenue near the entrance to the Folly Beach County Park.” Cindy paused.
Reggie, the interviewer, filled the void, “Do you know her identity and cause of death?”
Cindy nodded. “We know who she is but won’t be releasing more information until next of kin has been notified.”
Reggie interrupted, “Cause of death?”
The chief sighed. “It is being treated as a death investigation and there is nothing else to be said at this time. Thank you.” She turned and walked away from the camera.
Cindy and I had become good friends after she moved to Folly from east Tennessee eight years ago and joined the city’s small police force. She had been appointed chief a few years later, by the former chief who was now the mayor. Cindy was funny, excelled at her job, and had no use for reporters of any ilk.
The tape ended and Reggie started to say something but paused as he waited for the talking head in the studio to ask him a question. She didn’t disappoint. “What else can you tell us?”
Reggie did disappoint, “That’s all we know at this time.”
Enlightening, I thought.
“To repeat,” the newscaster said. “A body was found this morning in a car parked along the street outside the Folly Beach County Park. We will bring you updates as they become available.” She went on to say we should check with the Channel 5 website for more information and to read all the latest news we should download the Channel 5 app to our smartphone and tablet. In other words, she stuck a commercial for her station in the middle of the newscast. One more reason I’m not a big TV watcher.
Folly Beach is an island located in the shadows of Charleston. It’s small, only six miles long and a half mile wide, with the Folly Beach County Park anchoring the west end of the barrier island. News of anything happening on the island was big news to its roughly two thousand residents, so I wasn’t surprised when the phone rang before the newscaster could say more than it was going to be a late August scorcher and to get the sunscreen ready.
“Hear about the dead bod at the County Park?” Charles Fowler said before I got to the “o” in hello.
Charles was one of the first people I met when I moved to Folly. For reasons unknown to anyone with a sense of logic, we became best friends. I worked most of my professional life in the human resource department of a large Midwestern healthcare company; Charles retired from his life of paychecks at the ripe young age of thirty-four and hadn’t received a payroll check in the last thirty-one plus years. He was single, his financial needs minimal, and he met them by providing an extra set of hands to contractors, cleaning restaurants during busy season, and delivering packages for our friend Dude’s surf shop. His picture can also be found in the dictionary beside the word “nosy.” Don’t look it up; that was an exaggeration, but only a slight one.
I said, “Just saw it on the news.”
“Who was she and what happened?”
I told you he was nosy.
“How would I know?”
“You mean you haven’t called Cindy yet?”
“Charles, what part of just saw it on the news don’t you get?”
“So, you’re going to call her now?”
The wise thing to do was to say yes, hang up, and call the chief. When it comes to Charles, I don’t always do the right thing, so instead of agreeing, I said, “You have a phone. Why didn’t you call her?”
“The poor, misguided police chief thinks you are smarter and more sensible than yours truly. She’ll tell you more than she’ll tell me. Go figure.”
“Charles, if I was all those things, I’d have better sense than to call the chief who’s probably still at the park.”
“See,” Charles said, “I know none of those things are true, so that’s why you should call her now. Besides, if she’s still with the body, she’ll be able to tell you more.”
I once again asked myself why I didn’t do the wise thing in the beginning. I told him I give up and hung up.
“Chris Landrum, what in the hell took you so long to butt into police business?” Chief LaMond said.
I hated caller ID. “Good morning, Cindy.”
“Don’t give me that morning cheery voice. My day went to hell before I had my second cup of coffee. I’m standing in the middle of a sandstorm. I’ve got a dead lass sitting in a car about ten feet from me. And now I must take time from my underpaid, overworked job to talk to one of my city’s biggest nosy nellies.”
I heard several voices in the background and the sound of a heavy truck engine. “Did I catch you at a bad time?”
Cindy laughed. “Really? You really asked that? What do you think?”
She hung up before I could respond. The answer to my question was yes.
Fifteen minutes later, the phone rang again. Gee, give me a break, Charles.
I was wrong, it wasn’t Charles but someone who started with, “I saw this big hair, little brain news chick on TV jabbering about a death on your island. Who was she? What happened?”
For years, I had unsuccessfully tried to get friends to start phone conversations with pleasantries like “good morning” or with their name. Bob Howard was the perfect example of you can’t teach old dogs new tricks. During his more than seven decades on this earth, the successful realtor had perfected rudeness, overbearingness, obnoxiousness, and most every profanity. Despite his drawbacks, almost too numerous to mention, he was a friend.
“Good afternoon, Bob. What do I owe the honor of this call?”
“Crap, Chris. You make sugar taste sour. Now answer my questions.”
“How would I know who she was and what happened?”
“Shit, because you butt in anything weird that happens over there. Figured you’d have your nosy nose in the middle of this.”
Before moving to Folly, my life could best have been described as staid, solid, and yes, boring. I went to work in a large, bureaucratic company, lived in a middle-class house in a middle-class subdivision, drove a middle-class car, had married my high-school sweetheart and we had stayed together for twenty years, childless, but had participated in most middle-class activities. Somehow when I moved across the Folly River to the city I now call home, my life turned upside down. Through luck, mostly bad, and being at the wrong place at the wrong time, I had stumbled into the middle of a murder, helped catch the killer, and while accumulating a cadre of characters, had helped the police solve several other unnatural deaths since then. In fact, Bob Howard had aided me more than once in bringing a killer to justice.
“Bob, all I know is what I saw on television; the same thing you saw. It has nothing to do with me. I’m not involved.”
Bob cackled. “Not yet!”
Chapter Two
I flicked off the TV, finished my sandwich, moved to the living room, and smiled about how both Bob and Charles assumed I would know something about the body found fewer than two miles from my small cottage. A few years ago, it would have never entered my mind to give more than a few seconds of thought to what happened. Yes, I had stuck my nose where it didn’t belong a few times, but I only did it at the urging of Charles or when it involved a friend. While growing up and throughout my many years in Kentucky, I had paid a premium on friendships. I didn’t have many close friends, two at the most, but not until I moved to Folly, and I suppose had matured and gotten a better perspective on my world, did I hold friendships as close as I do now. Seeing those friends in danger or in pain tugged at my heart and I knew unless I did something to lessen that danger or their pain, I was a failure. It led me to a few situations that I could easily have lost my life over, but I’ve never regretted getting involved.
A glance at the clock revealed I must have dozed. It was after three in the afternoon and my neck hurt from sleeping in the chair. I stood, stretched, and walked to the screened-in front porch. Several cars were parked in the small lot in front of Bert’s Market, my neighbor on the right, and two large construction vans barreled past the house on Ashley Avenue, Folly’s longest street that ran from the shuttered Coast Guard Station property on the east end, to the site of the death on the west.
To the left of my cottage was Brad and Hazel Burton’s house. In a move that must have had the god of irony doubled over with laughter, the Burtons moved in next to me two years ago. Brad had been a thorn in my side for the five years before that when he had been a detective in the Charleston County Sheriff’s Office. He accused me of murder my first month on the island and despite me helping the police catch the killer, he had been angry with me ever since. Every time I stuck my nose in police business, which was far more times than I had hoped to, Brad was on my case. For a time, he was partnered with Karen Lawson, the detective I had dated for several years, and I got better acquainted with the incompetent detective. To the elation of most of his colleagues, he had retired and moved next door. When he bought the house, he didn’t know I would be his neighbor. When he found out, it was too late to back out and he had avoided me ever since moving in. For that, I was thankful.
Brad and Hazel’s late model Chryslers were usually the only vehicles at the house, so I was surprised to see two Ford Crown Vics in the drive. I was even more surprised when I recognized the dark gray one as Chief Cindy LaMond’s unmarked car. Several questions rushed through my mind. Was something wrong with one of the Burtons? Unlikely, since there were no emergency vehicles at their house, and if there had been an emergency call, members of the Folly Beach Department of Public Safety who served the dual role of police officers and fire fighters would have responded. So, no sirens, no flashing lights, no emergency. Could it have something to do with the death near the park? Was Cindy there to get retired detective Burton’s help? That seemed remote, since she hadn’t felt much better about Burton’s competency as a detective than I had—which was next to none. Then, who did the other vehicle belong to? It could simply have been a black Crown Vic, unrelated to law enforcement. Brad and I were far from being best buds, so I wasn’t about to knock on his door and ask. Let’s hope Charles didn’t see the cars there.
The official-looking vehicles were gone when I walked to Bert’s to get supper. Eric, an affable employee, nearly ran into me as I walked through the double doors into the iconic grocery. He was carrying a stack of boxes and apologized for nearly running me down. He was stopped, so I asked if he knew what the chief was doing at the Burtons. Bert’s is the go-to store for everything from beer to bait and was open twenty-four hours a day. If anyone wanted to know what was going on nearby, Bert’s or the Lost Dog Cafe were the places to begin. They were hangouts for locals and nearly every vacationer who set foot on the island. I was surprised when Eric said he didn’t know and hadn’t noticed the cars, nor had Chief LaMond been in Bert’s this afternoon. It made more sense when he said he had been in the back and this was the first time he’d seen daylight in the last three hours. He offered to ask around and let me know if he learned anything. I thanked him and said it wouldn’t be necessary. My culinary skills were slightly lower than my skills at splitting the atom, so I grabbed a frozen pizza and a cheap bottle of Chardonnay. My cable television had inadvertently landed on the Cooking Channel a month ago, and in a fit of boredom, I spent a half hour watching some famous chef show how easy it was to fix some exotic recipe using the microwave. Perhaps old dogs could learn a few tricks, especially if they were easy, and I was now proficient in using my microwave. I had switched the television off before I was tempted to use my oven.
I figuratively patted myself on my back for mastering heating the pizza, took the last bite which was now cold and tasted a lot like a piece of cardboard slathered with ketchup and called Chief LaMond.
She answered on the third ring and said, “I win!”
“Win what?” I said, skipping my preferred greeting of “Hi, Cindy.”
“Larry bet me ten bucks you wouldn’t call until tomorrow. I said you’d be pestering me before the night was over. Poor boy will never learn.”
Larry was Cindy’s husband of six years and owner of Pewter Hardware, Folly’s best—only—hardware store. I had known him since before he’d met Cindy and considered him a good friend.
“Congrat
ulations, I suppose.”
“Wonder when the little squirt will start believing everything I say,” she said, and repeated, “Poor boy.”
Larry weighed one hundred pounds, more or less, and was five foot one, but only Cindy could get away with saying anything about his diminutive size. And heaven forbid anyone use the word squirt around him unless they were referring to a toy that shoots water.
“Guess he’s a slow learner,” I said.
“You’ve made my night, Mr. Perceptive Nosy Resident. Wait until I tell him what you called him.”
“I’ll deny it. Now could we get to why I called?”
“Sure. I know you geezers are always afraid you’ll die before you get to ask all your questions.”
Since I had now reached the second half of my sixties, I consider geezer status not beginning until I reach my nineties. Cindy was still in her early fifties, but I didn’t see any point in debating her.
“What were you doing at the Burtons this afternoon?”
“And I thought you called to invite Larry and me to supper, or here’s another thought, you wanted to know the details about the body.”
“I’ll have my people check with your people about supper, and of course I want to know about the body, but…”
“The seriously deceased person happened to be a Ms. Lauren Craft, age 41. She had been in her most recent state of dead for two hours when found by a nearby resident headed to the park and its beach to find his fortune in the sand. Looks like a drug overdose, heroin would be my guess. There was a used hypodermic needle on the floorboard below her right hand.”