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Death Takes a Ride (The Cate Kinkaid Files Book #3): A Novel
Death Takes a Ride (The Cate Kinkaid Files Book #3): A Novel Read online
© 2014 by Lorena McCourtney
Published by Revell
a division of Baker Publishing Group
P.O. Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287
www.revellbooks.com
Ebook edition created 2014
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
ISBN 978-1-4412-4516-8
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
To a wonderful stepdaughter,
full of fun and adventure,
whose life ended much too soon.
Jane
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
About the Author
Back Ads
Back Cover
1
A light shone dimly in the front office attached to a larger metal building looming behind it. A sign identified the building as H&B Vintage Auto Restorations, and a neon Closed sign glowed in the window. Two vehicles stood out front, one a drab SUV, the other a vintage Corvette convertible, sleek and low and flame red.
“Never mind,” Cate consoled her old Honda. Even standing still, the Corvette looked as if it might be breaking the speed limit. She patted the Honda’s well-worn dashboard. “You have an inner beauty.”
She spotted shadowy movement inside the front door, but Aunt Rebecca had said to go to a side door. Cate nosed the Honda around the far corner of the warehouse and stopped by a door with an Employees Only sign illuminated by a bare bulb overhead. She hesitated before turning off the engine.
Maybe that sign should read Muggings-R-Us. She couldn’t even see the front parking lot from around here. Bare metal showed through the old paint on this hidden side of the building. Weeds grew in a crack between the metal and the asphalt, and a pile of discarded tires out back looked as if it might harbor anything from murderous thugs to mutant rats. A bicycle leaned against the tires. Was that something moving beside it?
Nah. Cool it, Cate. You’re not working a PI case tonight. Nothing’s moving. Just a trick of shadows in the moonlight. Cate dropped the keys in her pocket beside her cell phone, grabbed her purse, and punched the button to lock the door behind her. She shouldn’t be inside more than a few minutes, but who knew how fast mutant rats could get inside an unlocked car?
The night air, even as far inland as Eugene was from the Oregon coast, held a tang of sea that reminded her of sunny beaches and booming surf. Hey, she and Mitch should run over to the coast for the day sometime soon.
She pressed a button by the warehouse door, and the harsh response from inside buzzed her ears. The dead bolt lock snicked and the door opened, silhouetting a husky female figure against a maze of shelves.
“Rebecca sent me,” Cate said. In spite of her uneasiness with the gritty surroundings, she couldn’t help a laugh because the statement sounded so cloak-and-daggerish.
The woman didn’t miss a beat. “You got the password?” she growled back.
“How about, um, carburetor? Or spark plug?” Which was about the extent of Cate’s knowledge of auto parts. “Or maybe shock absorbers?” She’d just had those replaced on the Honda.
The woman opened the door wider. “That’ll work.” She smiled and stepped aside to let Cate enter. “C’mon in. I’m Shirley Brackinbush.”
Shirley loomed over her, broad shouldered and solid bodied in khaki coveralls, sheepskin-lined vest, and heavy boots. She looked fully capable of toting or tossing the heavy car parts lining the wide shelves behind her. Maybe wrestling mountain lions in her spare time. Fiercely curled black hair framed a face weathered and ruddy, but her smile beamed a friendly warmth. Cate put her at mid or late fifties, with considerable time in sun and wind.
An oversized creature bounded up and skidded to a halt beside Shirley. Cate took a step backward. The creature’s broad head stood higher than Cate’s waist, its eyes a surprising pale blue, ears floppy, body covered with a shaggy mottle of bluish-grayish-blackish hair. The tail, long and skinny, looked as if it had been added as a we-need-a-tail-here afterthought. It wore a wide leather collar studded with pointy brass triangles. Dog? Maybe. If you were willing to give the term a broad definition.
“What,” she asked warily, “is that?”
The creature didn’t growl at Cate, but it looked ready to ask for more than a password. Maybe a bribe? Something like half a beef?
“This is Clancy.” Shirley gave the animal an affectionate stroke on his big head. “He can be a little intimidating, but that’s just because he doesn’t know you yet. Clancy, this is—I guess I don’t know who you are either. What happened to Rebecca?”
“I’m Cate Kinkaid. Rebecca is my aunt.” Cate kept a wary eye on the oversized animal. “She had to go over to the church early to help with refreshments, so she called and asked me to pick you up for the Fit and Fabulous meeting.”
“Right. My old pickup conked out. The trailer park where I live isn’t far, so I’ve just been walking to work. I can’t leave until the meeting is over,” Shirley added as she motioned toward an office sign sticking out over a door about halfway across the warehouse.
“A company conference?”
“Just Matt Halliday and Kane Blakely. They’re the H and B of H&B. Mr. Halliday runs things here, and Mr. Blakely manages the Salem branch. Clancy belongs to Mr. Blakely, but Mr. Halliday didn’t want a dog in his office.”
At mention of his name, the dog waved his skinny tail like an animated whip. He stretched his nose toward Cate and sniffed up and down her leg. Did he smell Octavia’s cat scent on her? Did he turn into Psycho Dog when he smelled cat?
“So, what you need is to be properly introduced,” Shirley said. “Clancy, this is Cate Kinkaid. She’s a friend. Cate, this is Clancy.”
Cate had never been formally introduced to a dog before. She stuck out her hand, intending to give the dog a careful pat on the head, but he filled the hand with an oversized paw.
“Nice to meet you,” Cate murmured.
Clancy replaced his paw with a friendly slosh of tongue. Cate started to wipe her hand on her jeans but decided that might be some breach of doggie etiquette and put the hand behind her for a more surreptitious swipe.
“I’m sorry this will make us late for the meeting,” Shirley said.
“I don’t think they’ll lock the doors at the church if we don’t get there on time.”
“Yeah, but I need every minute of it.” Shirley inspected her stubby
fingernails and weathered hands. “Though I think that woman has her job cut out for her, making anything ‘fabulous’ out of me.”
The special presentation at the church on this Tuesday evening featured a well-known inspirational author speaking on “Fifty and Beyond: Fit, Fabulous, and Faith-filled.” Weekly classes, based on the speaker’s workbook, would follow. Shirley had never been in the church before, but the series had been mentioned in the Eugene newspaper, and Shirley had called about it.
“Look around, if you’d like,” Shirley invited. “We’ve got some interesting stuff.”
Cate moved to a shelf and fingered an unidentifiable car part with a maze of coils and wires. The metal roof disappeared in shadows high overhead, and the air smelled faintly chemical, maybe vehicle fluids or some special paint for metal. Splatters of soaked-in oil made peculiar figures on the floor. Rorschach inkblot tests for the mechanically minded?
Cate jumped when a male voice spoke out of an intercom speaker mounted on the wall above a computer on a nearby countertop.
“Shirley, could you bring those inventory sheets to the office now, please?”
“I’ll be right there.” Shirley grabbed a pile of papers next to the combination printer and fax. “Help yourself to some coffee,” she said to Cate.
She waved toward a coffeemaker on the counter and took off in long strides toward the office, boots clunking on the concrete floor. Clancy raced after her, but she closed the door to keep him out of the office. He came back to join Cate.
“We have been formally introduced,” Cate reminded him, just in case he’d forgotten.
She got a Styrofoam cup from a nearby stack and filled it half full from the coffeepot. Hey, good coffee. She strolled along the shelves labeled with names of various car brands to identify the items in that area. Corvette. Impala. Oldsmobile. They didn’t seem to be in any particular order. Movable ladders that rolled on tracks anchored on the top shelf gave access to the upper shelves. A forklift stood between the shelves, apparently to lift larger items to the upper shelves.
Cate shivered in her light windbreaker. No wonder Shirley wore that heavy vest. The warehouse was cold. Morgue cold. Now where had that morbid thought come from? She’d never even been in a morgue. Probably, as Mitch would no doubt say grumpily, PI thinking.
Cate leaned over to study something large and spiky on a bottom shelf. A car part? Or maybe a misplaced medieval weapon? A yell from the office area interrupted her contemplation.
Then a muffled bang. Gunshot? Nah. This place restored vintage vehicles. Backfire bangs were probably commonplace. Although a backfire after hours in the office didn’t seem likely—
Another boom. Cate slammed her Styrofoam cup on a shelf and ran for the office door. Clancy bounded past her when she opened the door, but she stopped short. The door opened into the dimly lit area she’d seen from out front, but it was a sales area more than office. No bangs here. Not even any people.
Then she realized that the actual office was sectioned off from this room, with the opening up front. Clancy’s toenails screeched as he skidded around the corner.
She followed him. The door to the sectioned-off room stood open.
And something sprawled on the floor just inside it.
2
A body, male, big, and brawny in dark pants and hoodie. Face covered with a garish blue-and-red ski mask, gun on the floor near his hand. Bloody wound in his chest.
Cate stared in disbelief. The disbelief deepened when her gaze lifted to the far end of the metal desk in the office.
Another body slumped in a chair, blood trickling from a wound in his head, blood-spattered papers littering the desk in front of him. A wide-brimmed cowboy hat lay on the floor.
Two shots. Two bodies. Two scents. The raw smell of blood and the sharp tang of a just-fired gun. Or guns?
Shirley and a man in similar khaki coveralls stood behind the desk. Shirley still had an inventory sheet clutched in one hand, eyes wide with shock. The man held a gun. A frozen tableau, without sound or movement. Cate was a part of it, she realized, as if time had momentarily stopped for all of them.
Clancy was not frozen, however. He jumped over the body on the floor and thrust his nose into the hand dangling from the body in the chair at the end of the desk.
Then the man with the gun behind the desk moved too. He looked down at the gun in his hand as if he didn’t know how it had gotten there.
“I-I shot him,” he croaked. He looked between the two bodies, then at the gun again, his expression as disbelieving as Cate’s own.
“He shot Kane first!” Shirley pointed an accusing finger at the body on the floor. “He was going to shoot all of us!”
Cate had seen dead bodies before. Even though Uncle Joe insisted Belmont Investigations didn’t do murders, sometimes it seemed they gravitated to Cate like mud to her clothes when she was a little girl. But never two at the same time before, and never before had the sound of the death weapon actually echoed in her ears.
Cate grabbed the cell phone in her jacket pocket. “I’ll call 911.”
The paper in Shirley’s hand fluttered to the floor. She darted to the body slumped in the chair. “Mr. Blakely!” she cried.
911 answered immediately. Cate gave the operator a terse explanation of the situation. Her name and the address. Two gunshot bodies. The woman on the line wanted more, but Shirley suddenly waved at her frantically.
“Tell them to send an ambulance. Kane isn’t dead!”
Cate knew they’d probably send an ambulance without being asked, but she passed the information along, answered a few more questions, and dropped the cell phone back in her pocket.
“I need something to put against the wound to stop the bleeding!” Shirley yelled. Right now she was holding his bleeding head against her chest, blood staining the khaki coveralls. Clancy had his big front paws on the chair and was frantically licking the man’s face.
Cate dug in her pockets again, but all she came up with was the cell phone, keys, and a crumpled Snickers wrapper. Not exactly life-saving equipment.
But with the cell phone in hand, Cate’s PI instincts kicked in and she quickly snapped several photos: the ski-masked man on the floor, Shirley and Clancy huddled over Mr. Blakely, the dazed-looking man holding the gun. Halliday? Apparently.
Shirley was already improvising by grabbing Blakely’s jacket from the back of the chair and holding it hard against the wound, her arms again cradling his head against her ample chest. Cate discarded the irrelevant thought that under different circumstances, he’d probably have enjoyed that. Even with a bullet wound in his head, Kane Blakely had a certain silver-fox charisma, as if he might at any moment open one eye and give her a conspiratorial wink.
Halliday suddenly came to life. He rushed over to Shirley and leaned across her to touch his partner on the shoulder.
“Kane, are you okay?”
“No, he’s not okay,” Shirley snapped. There was an unspoken “you idiot!” in there somewhere. “He’s shot in the head! But he’s alive.”
“Hang on, buddy,” Halliday said. He patted Blakely’s arm. “You’re going to make it. Just hang on.”
Cate, avoiding the pool of blood, squatted beside the body at her feet. Now she saw his right hand. Tattoos. Four of them across the man’s hand in front of his knuckles. Four skulls. She forced herself to ignore them, felt his wrist and then his throat for a pulse. She was no expert, but she was reasonably certain this man was all-the-way dead. She wanted to go to Shirley too, see if she could help somehow, but she found herself squeamish about simply stepping over the dead body as if it were no more than a heap of old clothes. Even if poor aim was all that was keeping him from being a killer.
Halliday apparently realized the gun still dangled from his hand. He set it on the desk, his movements slow and careful, as if he were afraid the weapon might explode in his hand. He flexed his fingers and stared at the hand as if it were an unfamiliar appendage. This hand that had shot someone
.
“Mr. Halliday, are you all right?” Cate asked.
His numbness turned to a sudden blast of fury. “Who is this guy? What’s he doing here? He shot Kane! Just ran in and shot him.” He sprinted around the desk and, before Cate realized what he was going to do, yanked at the ski mask.
“Hey, I don’t think we should touch—”
Too late. The ski mask came off in Halliday’s hand, leaving the dead gunman’s face exposed. He was probably in his forties, with thinning brown hair pulled back into a skimpy ponytail, a beefy face, coarse skin, and thick neck. His eyes stared sightlessly upward.
“Do you know who he is?” Cate asked.
Halliday shook his head. “I have no idea. But he must have known … how could he have known?” He glanced toward his partner as if looking to him for an answer to the question. Cate wasn’t sure what the question was.
Halliday looked as if he might slump to the floor at any moment. Cate hastily grabbed a plastic chair from the corner and eased him into it.
“I-I’m okay,” he said. “I think.” He ran a shaky hand across his chest as if uncertain whether he, too, had been shot.
“What happened?” Cate asked.
“I-I’m not sure. We needed the inventory sheets from the Salem warehouse, and Kane went out to his car to get them—”
“The Corvette?”
“Yeah. Kane likes to drive our flashiest restorations for a while.” Halliday looked over at the unconscious man and half-smiled, as if this trait of his fallen partner’s were a flaw, but an endearing one.
It must have been Blakely she’d seen at the door when she first drove up, Cate realized. She took another look at the head cradled in Shirley’s arms. Kane Blakely was about Shirley’s age. Distinguished looking, in a rakish kind of way. Even the gunshot wound in the head didn’t hide the fact that he was a good-looking guy, his thick hair elegantly silver, with matching mustache and stylishly trimmed beard. His dark slacks and pale blue dress shirt, although blood-streaked now, contrasted with Halliday’s workaday khaki coveralls and scuffed shoes. On the street, Blakely and that vintage Corvette no doubt drew admiring glances.