did it to make her feel better. And because I hate your ever-fucking guts. But you ain't going to prove it.'
As if considering, Tucker took out a cigarette. 'You may have a point there, but that doesn't mean you're going to get off clean.' He broke off the tip of the cigarette, lighted it. Caroline took a step back. She recognized that tone, and that look. 'It occurred to me that maybe somebody in my family might have taken my car out that morning. Maybe one of them who doesn't handle the wheel as well as I do. You know, Billy T., that just pisses me off.'
'You want to do something about it?'
Tucker studied the tip of his cigarette. 'I guess I do. I gotta say I don't care for the idea of getting my face pounded on again.'
'You always was a chickenshit.' Grinning, Billy T. spread his arms. 'Go ahead, take your best shot.'
'Well, since you put it that way.' Tucker kicked him squarely in the crotch.
Billy T. doubled over and a sound escaped him like air coming out of a pressure cooker. Still clutching himself, he went down on the side of the road. When Tucker crouched down and took a firm hold on his bruised genitals, Billy T.'s eyes rolled back in his head.
'Don't pass out, boy, not until I finish what I've got to say. You may start thinking again once your nuts slide down from your throat, and I want you to think about this. Listening?'
'Ga' was about the only sound Billy T. could make.
'Good. You know who holds the note on your family's land? Payment's been late three months running. I'd sure feel bad if I had to foreclose. And that cotton gin where you occasionally find the time to put in a few hours a week? By coincidence, it so happens I own that, too. Now, you want to have a reprisal against me, I guess I can't stop you. But you'll lose your land, and your job, and as God is my witness, I'll do my best to turn you into a soprano while I'm at it.' He bore down with his fingers to make his point. All Billy T. could do was moan and roll into a ball. 'I was mighty fond of that car,' Tucker said with a sigh. 'And as it turns out, I'm fond of this lady here that you insulted. So, don't mess with me again, Billy T. I'm not a skinny ten-year-old anymore.'
'Leave me alone,' Billy T. managed to get out. 'You broke something. You broke my works.'
'Don't worry, they'll bounce back. That's why they call them balls.' When he rose, Tucker noticed that Caroline had dropped the pup, who was now relieving himself on Billy T.'s shoes. He grinned, but gathered the dog up. 'Now, that's adding insult to injury.'
He turned to where Caroline was standing on the edge of the road, mouth agape, eyes wide. Tucker hitched the pup under his arm. 'Come on, sugar. I'll give you that ride home now.'
'You're just going to leave him there?' She craned her neck as Tucker pulled her to the Oldsmobile.
'That's the plan. I was thinking we could go take in a movie tonight.'
'A movie,' she said blankly. 'Tucker, I just stood there and watched you kick that man in the…'
'We call them privates in polite company. Scoot on over, unless you want to drive.'
Rubbing a hand to her temple, she did. 'But that's fighting dirty, isn't it?'
'All fighting's dirty, Caroline, which is why I dearly love to avoid it.' He leaned over to give her a quick kiss before starting the engine. In an absent move, he tossed Billy T.'s keys across the road. 'Now, about that movie?'
Caroline let out a long breath. 'What's playing?'
Chapter Sixteen
'Perhaps you'd like a glass of water, Mrs. Talbot.'
Darleen looked at Agent Burns through red-rimmed, swollen eyes ruthlessly outlined with Maybel-line. 'Yes, sir,' she said meekly. In the last forty-eight hours, she'd learned a whole lot about meek. 'I'd be obliged.'
All solicitude, Burns rose to go into the bathroom and pour tepid tap water into a paper cup. He considered himself an expert interviewer-had even instructed a course on the subject. As he would have told his class at the FBI Academy, the first rule of a good interview is to know your subject.
Burns figured he had Darleen Talbot's number.
Sympathy, flattery, and kindly authority. Those were the watchwords here. Burns estimated thirty minutes for the interview, including a four-minute prologue to gain Darleen's confidence. Along with the paper cup, he offered Darleen a kindly smile. 'I appreciate your making the time to come in and talk with me this morning, Mrs. Talbot.'
Cautiously, she brought the cup to her unpainted lips. She'd lost her affection for red lipstick. 'Junior said I had to.'
'Well, I know it's difficult for a young mother to find the time out of a demanding schedule. Where is your little one today?' Burns crossed ask about family off his mental checklist.
'Ma's watching Scooter. She likes to sit with him.' As her eyes darted around the room, lighting on anything but Special Agent Matthew Burns, she fiddled with the collar of her flowered blouse. 'He's her only grandson, you know. My two sisters both have girls.'
'A handsome boy, too,' Burns said, though he didn't know if he'd ever laid eyes on the youngest Talbot.
'He is pretty. His hair's as curly as a little lamb.' A ghost of a smile brightened her eyes. She figured- accurately-that the only reason Junior hadn't tossed her out of the house was his attachment to his son. 'He's quick, too. He's like greased lightning on his hands and knees. I don't know how I'll keep up with him once he starts toddling.'
'I'm sure he keeps you on your toes.'
More relaxed, Darleen set the cup aside. Why, the FBI man wasn't so bad, she decided. People just didn't know him. 'Do you have young 'uns?'
'No, I don't.' Nor did the fastidious Burns intend to. Ever. 'I'm afraid my work keeps me away from home quite a bit.'
'Looking for criminals.'
'Exactly.' He beamed at her, as if she'd just answered a very complex question. 'And it's concerned, responsible citizens like yourself who make my job easier.' Still smiling, he took out his mini recorder. 'This helps me remember accurately.'
Darleen eyed the recorder with distrust. She began to twist her hands in her lap. 'Shouldn't I have a lawyer or something?'
'Why, certainly, if you wish.' Burns sat down behind Burke's cluttered desk. 'But I assure you it isn't necessary for this kind of informal chat. I just need a little background information from you, on your friend Edda Lou Hatinger.' He stretched out an avuncular hand to hers. 'I know this is difficult for you, Darleen. May I call you Darleen?'
Why, he was just as polite as a waiter in a fancy restaurant. Though the comparison would have caused Burns to cringe, it made Darleen respond favorably. 'That'll be just fine.'
'Losing a friend is always painful, but in such a tragic way…' He trailed off, letting his silence offer comfort. 'I'll try not to upset you.'
It wasn't difficult or even painful so much as terribly exciting, but she pulled out a ragged tissue and dabbed her eyes. 'Talking about it just tears me in two. But I want to help,' she added bravely. 'She was my dearest friend.'
'I know.' Pleased, Burns switched on the recorder. 'Special Agent Matthew Burns, interview with Darleen Talbot re Edda Lou Hatinger. June twenty-five. Now then, Darleen, why don't you tell me something about Edda Lou?'
Darleen blew her nose loudly enough to make Burns wince. 'She was my dearest friend,' she repeated. 'We went to school together, and she was my maid of honor. I guess she was like a sister to me.'
'And like sisters, I suppose the two of you exchanged confidences.'
'We never had secrets from each other. My own blood sisters, Belle and Starita? Why, I could never talk to them the way I could to Edda Lou.' Another tear squeezed out, and she caught it with her knuckle.
'And I'm sure she felt equally sympatico with you.'
Darleen frowned over the word. 'I expect.'
