and mold and brown bottles and empty beer cans littering the area. The place oozed sleaze.
I parked not far from the room Megan pointed out, number twenty-one. We both got out of the car, but before we could take two steps, a door swung open and Courtney staggered out into the sunshine.
She shaded her eyes and shrieked, “Yee-ha! It’s Megan!”
She wore the same clothes she’d had on when I saw her last night, only the blue jeans skirt was now on backward and she wore no shoes. Arms above her head, she shouted, “It’s my birthday, Megan! Did you know that?”
“It is
“She’s sure celebrating something,” I said.
“I don’t get it. On the phone she was crying and saying she wanted to die,” Megan said. “Now look at her.”
“Probably been snorting coke since you two talked.”
Courtney swayed in our direction, bridging the gap between herself and Megan and then falling into her arms.
“I’m here to take you back home,” Megan said.
Courtney pulled away and laughed. “Home? Didn’t you know?”
“Know what?” Megan said quietly. She was putting on her usual strong front, but her breath was coming fast and she was twisting the ring around and around.
“Our house in Dallas was repossessed. Let’s celebrate that!”
Megan turned Courtney back toward the room, saying, “You have a home with us. Now, let’s get your stuff and get out of here.”
I followed, but before I entered the motel room, I heard a car engine. I looked around and saw a white Taurus slow to a crawl as it passed the motel.
But then I recognized the driver. She was wearing that cloche hat. The woman and I locked eyes for an instant, and then she put the pedal to the metal and sped away.
What the hell was she doing? Following her daughter? But I didn’t have time to consider other possible explanations because a guy tore past me out of number twenty-one. At least he didn’t slam a door into my face, something I was mighty grateful for. I had to smile as I watched him run to a rusted blue pickup, though. He was naked as a worm aside from a straw cowboy hat.
I then stepped into the dimly lit room. It smelled like a mix of semen, urine, and sweat, the stench so strong it nearly knocked me back out the door. Courtney was sitting cross-legged on the queen-sized bed, an unlit cigarette hanging from dry lips. Megan had her hand over her mouth and nose, and I was tempted to do the same.
“I’ve got a pint of Jack Daniel’s somewhere for the party,” Courtney said, her words all running together. She then looked at me and said, “Who invited you, bitch? Oops, I
Megan started to say something, but I cut her off by raising a hand. “Call me whatever you want. Just be nice to Megan, because she cares a lot about you.”
“Yeah, she came here for my birthday.”
“No, she came here because you asked for her help,” I said.
Courtney looked at me, her heavy-lidded eyes dark and empty. “Yeah, but why’d she have to bring
“I volunteered. But this isn’t about how much you dislike me. This is about how both of you have lost your fathers in a week’s time and how you need each other. Roxanne needs both of you, too.”
“My father?” Courtney said, looking confused. The cigarette fell from her lips onto her lap, but she didn’t seem to notice.
“You told me you’d heard about him on the news,” Megan said.
“Oh,” Courtney said, swiping a hand through her hair. “That’s right. He jumped off the roof. But you know something? I always told him he wasn’t allowed to die until they found a safe place to bury his liver.” She raised her head to the ceiling and started to laugh, but seconds later her shoulders started to shake and she began to sob. And seconds after that, Megan was beside her, holding her, stroking her cousin’s messy hair and trying to comfort her.
I stepped outside for some fresh air and to make a call. This girl would need more help than Megan could offer. I’d seen used syringes on the nightstand, and the white stuff on the carpet by the bed probably wasn’t talcum powder.
Kate was with a client when I reached her office, but I had her receptionist interrupt. After I told her the situation, Kate said she’d contact either a drug counselor or someone from Narcotics Anonymous and get them over to the motel as soon as possible. With any luck, they’d get Courtney into a detox unit pronto.
Courtney had thrown a minor fit but did not protest as much as I thought she might when the drug counselor arrived at the motel room. She seemed to connect with the guy—maybe it was their similar cobra tattoos. Anyway, he happened to be one of Kate’s success stories when she was working under a supervising psychologist. The guy was a recovered addict now certified as a drug counselor. With his support, Courtney was admitted to a mental health facility in Galveston, the whole process taking about two hours. Then a relieved Megan drove Courtney’s car back home while I decided to get my interview with Fielder over with.
The acne-scarred Henderson was again working the desk at the Seacliff Police Station. But there was a whole lot more action than the last time I’d been here. The place was crawling with cops in khaki, blue, and green uniforms from every jurisdiction.
“Man, who threw you against the wall?” Henderson asked with a grin when I’d entered.
“I had a little accident,” I said. “Is the chief in?”
“She hasn’t left. Found her asleep in the chair this morning. I’m worried about her. This case is eating her lunch. She even had you on the short list of suspects.”
“Yeah, she hinted at that.”
“The chief doesn’t hint, Ms. Rose.” Henderson grinned, then stood and gestured for me to follow him down to Fielder’s office. “Yesterday she was swearing like a sailor about you and how you were the next Lizzie Borden, but she’s got her sights set on someone else today.”
“And who’s this latest suspect?” I asked.
My timing was off because Henderson opened Fielder’s door just as I asked the question.
The woman might be over her head with two murders in a week’s time but that didn’t mean she’d gone deaf. “Don’t be pumping my officers for information, Ms. Rose. Henderson, leave us alone.”
“Yes, ma’am,” he answered, his cheeks as red as a baboon’s butt. He knew he’d been the cause of her irritation with me and probably felt guilty.
“And you can go home, Henderson. You’ve been here long enough today.” She didn’t look at him, just snatched up a folder and shoved some papers inside.
“I’ll leave when you do, ma’am,” he said, bowing out of the room.
Wish I could go home. From her wrinkled clothes, her eyes shadowed beneath by the darkness of fatigue and her surly attitude, this conversation promised to be unpleasant.
“Where’s your lawyer?” she said. “Because I don’t have time to wait around for whoever you’ve hired.”
“I don’t need a lawyer,” I said quietly.
“Oh, but won’t that upset your
“Too bad if it upsets him. I make my own decisions, Chief. I’ll bet you do, too.”
She met my gaze, a rare moment of eye contact. “So you’re ready to tell me what happened?”
“I would have told you last night, but—”
“But I was a bitch. Is that what Jeff told you? That I was an incompetent bitch?”
“You know, I think you’d interrupt me even if I were talking in my sleep,” I said.
“So sorry,” she said sarcastically. “Sit down.”