Trail of Secrets Page 19
“No, you’re not. Take your mother’s body home and bury her where she grew up. And tell your son about a woman named Hope who came to be an important part of a man’s life in Tennessee.”
“I will. There were several letters in her suitcase she had written to me. She wrote how much she loved me, and that she could hardly wait to get settled in California so I could join her. She said the first thing she’d do would be take me to the beach. There were also several envelopes with pictures of the two of us together. I’ll keep those always.” He glanced up at Seth. “Detective Dawtry tells me there’s a locket in the evidence bin. It has a picture in it of her and me. Maybe someday I’ll have a daughter to give it to.”
“We’ll get that back to you as soon as the trial is over,” Seth said.
Michael pushed to his feet. “I hope you’ll let me know when that is. I want to come back and face the man in court who robbed me of the most important person in my life when I was a child.”
“We will.”
Michael shook Uncle Dan’s hand once more and walked to the door. “I’ll never forget any of you.”
“Neither will we forget you,” her uncle said.
Michael walked out and closed the door behind him. The three of them were silent for a moment until Dan spoke. “I always knew there had to be someone she loved somewhere. I’m glad he finally has closure.”
Seth smiled. “What are you going to do now that you no longer have Hope’s case to keep you occupied?”
“I don’t know,” he said. “I’ll have to look for something. It seems the other problem in my life is taken care of.”
Callie frowned. “What other problem did you have?”
Uncle Dan grinned. “Getting you two back together. I’ve been trying to do it for two years. I’m glad you finally listened to me. The sooner we can get you two married, the happier I’ll be.”
Callie wrapped her arms around Seth’s neck and smiled up at him. “I think we’ve just been sentenced to life without parole.”
Seth laughed, slipped his arm around Callie’s waist, and pulled her closer. “And no appeals. I love you, Callie.”
“I love you, too, Seth.”
She pulled his head down, and his lips pressed against hers. In his kiss she felt the promise of great things yet to come, and she could hardly wait to meet each one with Seth by her side.
* * * * *
Keep reading for an excerpt from GRAVE DANGER by Katy Lee.
Dear Reader,
Every year tens of thousands of people go missing in the United States. Many of them are never found and leave families with unanswered questions about the fates of their loved ones. Trail of Secrets, although a fictional story, is loosely based on the real life disappearance of twenty-two-year-old Gloria Faye Stringer in Texas in 1975. Having known her family for many years, I know the heartache they suffered. Through the efforts of one man in Texas who never gave up trying to find out the identity of the young woman whose death he’d investigated as a young police officer, they were finally able to bring their precious Gloria’s remains back to Tennessee in 2012 for burial. My prayer is that God will bless the families with missing loved ones and will watch over the valiant law-enforcement officers who seek to find them answers.
Sandra Robbins
Questions for Discussion
Dan Lattimer hoped to bring closure to a family by finding out the identity of the young woman whose murder he’d investigated. Have you ever known a family who had a missing loved one? How did you minister to them?
What do you as a parent do to teach your children about the dangers of abduction and how to respond to people they don’t know?
Callie was surprised when she learned about her uncle’s case from twenty-five years earlier. How do you feel about family members keeping secrets from each other?
Callie showed great courage when she attacked the man who was trying to smother her uncle. How do you think you’d react if you saw someone trying to hurt or kill a member of your family?
Seth’s father abandoned their family when Seth was young. Have you had to deal with an absent parent in your life? How did you cope?
Callie wouldn’t marry Seth because she couldn’t have children. Have you or anyone you’ve known had to deal with infertility? How did it affect you?
Anthony pretended for years to be Dan’s best friend. Have you ever been deceived by someone you trusted? What did you do when you uncovered the truth?
Although Peggy worked at the homeless shelter, she showed little concern for the emotional well-being of the people who came there. Have you ever volunteered in a homeless shelter? What can Christians do to help the homeless in the cities and towns where we live?
As an Assistant District Attorney, Abby violated the trust put in her by participating in illegal activities. Have you ever known a public official who took advantage of his/her position? What happened to them?
Michael Traywick missed out on twenty-five years of making memories with his mother when she disappeared. Are you taking advantage of the time you have with your loved ones? What are some ways you are helping your family to have happy lives?
We hope you enjoyed this Harlequin Love Inspired Suspense story.
You enjoy a dash of danger. Love Inspired Suspense stories feature strong heroes and heroines whose faith is central in solving mysteries and saving lives.
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ONE
The dark, hollow eyes of a human skull put Sheriff Wesley Grant on the spot. The sockets, though vacant of life, were filled with questions he didn’t have answers for. Unnerved by the skeleton’s perpetual stare, he averted his gaze to the finger bones camouflaged against the gray pebbled sand. The digits protruded up as though the person had clawed their way out from their oceanfront grave. A grave that had no business being on this side of the island.
Wesley had questions of his own. “Who are you, and when did you get here?” The Maine island of Stepping Stones was his jurisdiction, and if this corpse was a recent death, then it was put here on his watch. Recent dumped bodies only meant one thing.
Homicide.
But who? One of his islanders?
The thought of these skeletal remains belonging to one of his charges squeezed his chest in a vise. The weight of that scenario bore down on him like the thick, dark clouds overhead. The April rains offered a reprieve, but the cold wind still whipped at his face. He ignored the chafing on his cheeks for the suffering the guy at his feet had to have experienced.
“Please don’t let it be one of our own. I can’t let these people down. Not when they’ve done so much for me. No, this can’t be one of them.” Wes pushed the horrid idea out of his mind as he pushed his windblown strands of hair out of his eyes. He would know if someone had gone missing. He ran a tight ship here, questioning every happening and every outsider who disembarked the Sunday ferry. This skeleton had to be ancient, put here long ago, before his time. Before his father’s, the previous Sheriff Grant’s, time. Before any of the islanders’ time.
Wesley thought of the history of the island and remembered a couple hundred years ago, pirates used to sail these seas and stop off on the island to count their loot. Yes, that had to be it. He latched on to this theory quickly. This skeleton had to have been buried here by one of the eighteenth-century swashbucklers, killed by a warring foe who broached the shores. Wesley felt sure Dr. Simon Webber, the forensic anthropologist who would be arriving on the island any minute now,
would confirm it. But a check of his watch only brought up another question: What was keeping the doctor?
Deputy Derek Vaughn had left over five hours ago to pick up the man the medical examiner was sending out here to assess the situation. Vaughn had been instructed to bring the forensic anthropologist over to this side of the island as soon as they arrived. It was a two-hour trip each way. That made Vaughn an hour late. Nothing new there. The deputy couldn’t follow simple orders on a good day.
Wes thumbed the radio at his shoulder and called his other deputy, Owen Matthews. Maybe he knew what was keeping Vaughn. “Matthews, what’s your location?”
The radio crackled in his ear as Wesley studied the skeleton’s pelvis that lay exposed in the sand at his feet. Most of its ribs couldn’t be seen, just the front of the rib cage protruded out of the earth. Only one hand stuck out, too. Wesley figured the other one was either still buried, or the wildlife had made off with it. Or, because the guy had once been a pirate—Wesley was sticking with this theory for the time being—there was the chance he’d lost it premortem.
The idea made him cringe and he pushed the radio again, a little harder than before. “Matthews or Vaughn, what’s your twenty?”
His radio chirped followed by Deputy Matthews’s voice. “Sorry, Wes. I’m pulling up now. Vaughn brought the doctor to the station instead. A little misunderstanding, I guess.”
Wesley bit the unprofessional comment about Vaughn from his tongue and asked, “Where’s the doctor?”
“She’s sitting right beside me.”
“She?” He spoke louder than he meant to, then remembered the boys who had found the skeleton that morning stood on the other side of the tall sand mound behind him. They didn’t want to be near the “dead guy” as they’d put it. Their older sister, Pat, joined them as the responsible party, so she waited with them on the other side of the mound, too. None of these people needed to hear him lose his cool about an unexpected outsider showing up instead of the expected Dr. Webber.
“Yup. She’s a she,” Owen said. “Go a little easier on her than you did my wife when she showed up in Stepping Stones, would you?” Before the radio chirped out, Owen added, “I’m sure you’ve learned by now that not everyone is like Jenny Carmichael.”
Owen was right. He also knew Wes had a hard time with outsiders. He’d put the last outsider who disembarked the ferry through the ringer. And Miriam Hunter, now Miriam Matthews, hadn’t been guilty of anything but caring about Stepping Stones as much as he did.
Owen proved his point. Not all people who broached his shores were trouble. They weren’t all like his ex-fiancée, Jenny Carmichael. Wesley recoiled at the memory of the destruction Jenny brought to his life five years ago, but that didn’t mean the lady doctor was anything like Jenny.
He hoped she wasn’t, anyway.
The motor of a boat beyond the sand mound signaled Matthews’s arrival. Wes climbed the steep slope and got his first glimpse of the bone doctor sitting beside his deputy.
A pretty face behind dark-rimmed glasses.
So what? A face meant nothing. He knew this from Jenny. And don’t you forget it, Grant, he told himself as he approached the water and watched the brown-haired woman with a tight bun at the nape of her neck stand to her full, tower-like height. A pretty face and the height to go head-to-head with him.
That didn’t necessarily mean trouble, he reasoned as this new outsider was about to broach his shores.
But even as Deputy Matthews slid out the metal gangway, the uncertainty in Wesley’s mind rang louder than the screeching metal against metal.
All he could wonder was if this outsider would be friend or if she would be foe?
* * *
“I’m here to examine the skeleton.” Lydia Muir stepped off the police boat and down the temporary metal dock Deputy Matthews slid out for her exit. She carried her tool kit in her left hand, her SLR digital camera hung from her neck, swaying with each step. She would hold off donning her forensic white coverall clean suit and rubber boots until she had the chance to assess the scene, but deep down under her grayish-blue wool coat and matching pants, Lydia squirmed in anticipation of suiting up. She hoped her excitement didn’t show too much, pretty sure the five islanders standing in front of her wouldn’t appreciate her smiling in their disturbing situation. They wouldn’t understand that forensic anthropology, the study of human remains for evidence, was her life. A dug-up bone to the ordinary person was a treasure to behold for her.
“I’m Sheriff Grant.” A shaggy-haired officer stepped forward. She didn’t know too many officers of the law who kept their hair on the longer side. Most looked like the clean-cut deputy who brought her over to this side of the island, or the balding one who brought her out from Rockland. “I wasn’t expecting you,” the sheriff said in a disgruntled tone that had her putting aside her thoughts on his reclusive hairstyle and focusing on his obvious disappointment at her arrival.
Her excitement fizzled a bit. Apparently, he’d been expecting her boss.
“I’m Dr. Lydia Muir.” She offered her hand to shake, glad to see him remove his black leather glove and take it. All hope wasn’t lost yet.
The feeling of his warm grip seeped into her chilled skin, reminding her she should have brought gloves to this frigid, windswept place. She let go and felt the chill in the air more now than before. The first thought that jumped in her head was to take his warm hand in her own again. How silly, she thought, since she much preferred the company of the stiff and dead. But then, Sheriff Grant was pretty stiff. He gripped his jaw so tight, his temporomandibular joint protruded. The man was really mad that Webber wasn’t here.
“I work under Dr. Simon Webber. He sent me in his stead.” Lydia brought her tool kit in front of her to show the sheriff as well as all their onlookers that she had the credentials for being here. She cleared her throat. “I assure you, I’m well qualified to assess the situation. I have a Ph.D. in forensic anthropology, and I—” She bit the inside of her cheek to stop any more insecure blabbering from spilling forth. She had nothing to prove here. I’ve earned this. I’m a doctor—even if Dr. Webber still calls me Miss Muir.
But that would all change after this case. Running a top-notch examination here was exactly what she needed to prove herself in her field, once and for all. God had seen to it. He wanted her to succeed in her own right. Not because of who her father is in the world of science, but because of her own merits.
Lydia breathed deep and silently prayed. God, You have given me the skills and the desire to understand the basic makeup and structure of Your creation. I am ready to handle whatever anyone, even the hard-faced sheriff giving himself TMJ, throws at me.
She straightened all twenty-seven vertebrae of her spine and hoped the onlookers missed her trembling shoulders. She hoped they shook from the whipping wind and not nerves. “It’s quite cold out here, and it looks like it could start to pour any second. Perhaps you can show me the crime scene now.”
The sheriff’s mouth twisted instantly. “Crime scene? Dr. Muir, it is way too soon to call this incident a crime. I’m sure this is nothing more than a historic burial unearthed by erosion.”
Lydia blinked, speechless. She watched the wind lift the front of the man’s blond, silky hair. Piercing blue eyes became exposed to her and chilled her more than the cold wind. His gaze narrowed on her face. A face she knew made her look younger than her thirty-three years. Her dad always said, despite her height, she had a baby face, and in times like this his nickname, “Trinket,” would do nothing for her credibility. Not that it ever did, but that never stopped him from using it.
“Perhaps you are right about the remains being ancient,” she said, treading carefully. “I’m sorry if I made the wrong assumption. I was told a skeleton had been found. The M.E. asked my department for a consultation, and Dr. Webber sent me—”
Saying the words out loud made her realize how ridiculous they sounded. Out of all her other colleagues, Webber had sent her?
What was left of her excitement fizzled out completely as she realized what this really meant. She could have kicked one of the stones at her feet. Webber sent her for the same reasons this guy spouted. Dr. Webber didn’t want to make the trek out to the cold north for old ancient remains. That’s why he told her to box them up and bring them back to him. She was nothing more than a courier of goods. And here she thought she might finally have earned Dr. Webber’s support for the promotion to Director of Anthropology.
Lydia squelched her rising disappointment. She could dwell on it later when she was alone. For now, regardless of why she was sent here, she would see the case through professionally. She would not make any judgment until she had assessed the scene. With her chin lifted a notch, she met Sheriff Grant at eye level, thankful her tight bun didn’t allow the wind to play peekaboo with her strands like his. She had one chance to set the stage and show she meant business.
Lydia pushed her glasses up on her nose—and noticed his deprecatory eyes travel down her tall body. Her bravado faltered as she realized he formed judgments of her. Terms from her childhood, and even adulthood, came to mind. Beanpole. Giraffe. Sunshade. At least her six-one-and-then-some height wouldn’t be blocking any sun on the island today, because there was none.
“Just show me the way,” she said, and caught the other people behind the sheriff staring.
“Not until I have your word that you will keep this discreet,” Sheriff Grant said, pulling her attention back to him. “I’m not looking for some fresh-out-of-college intern looking to make headlines or improve herself in her profession. I want your word that you’re not here to further your career or to make a name for yourself.”
“Further my—?” She sputtered to a stop. How did he know? She attempted to keep her face as still as the granite ledges around her, but her shoulders trembled all on their own. Was it the cold, or was she that transparent?