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  DEADLY SECRETS

  (An Indian Creek Texas Mystery)

  By

  Jude Pittman

  PUBLISHED BY:

  Books We Love Publishing Partners

  192 Lakeside Greens Drive

  Chestermere, Alberta, T1X 1C2

  Canada

  ISBN: 978-0-986-74331-3

  Copyright 2010 by Jude Pittman

  Cover art 2010 Michelle Lee

  This book has been previously published as “Anna’s Secret”.

  All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book. This book has been previously published as Anna’s Secret.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, brands, media, and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. The author acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of various products referenced in this work of fiction, which have been used without permission.

  DEDICATION:

  Deadly Secrets is dedicated to my husband John whose love is an everyday treasure.

  Chapter One

  “You just try to throw me out of this cockroach-infested whorehouse.” Anna’s high-pitched shriek echoed through the front door of the Hideaway Bar.

  Kelly McWinter, in the act of stepping across the sill, stopped mid-stride and cursed his luck. He’d agreed to meet bar owner Cam Belsher for a couple of beers but if he’d known Anna was on one of her rampages, he’d have turned Cam’s invitation down flat. Gritting his teeth and preparing to face the inevitable, Kelly strolled across to the bar. A cloud of thick blue smoke cloaked the semi-dark room and Kelly aimed his eyes toward the sound of Anna’s voice.

  “Cam’s got his hands full tonight,” Darlene, Cam’s barmaid, stopped beside Kelly and pointed across the room to where a scrawny little woman in an old black poncho had Cam backed as far up against the pool table as he could get without settling his backside onto the felt.

  “Sure looks that way,” Kelly agreed. “Bring me a cool one, will you? I’ve got a feeling I’m going to need a couple of them.”

  Turning back to watch the show, Kelly was just in time to catch Cam’s eye. “Help!” the desperate barman mouthed a plea and with a resigned shrug, Kelly swung his leg off the barstool and headed across the room.

  “What’s wrong with my best gal?” Kelly moved in front of Anna blocking her view of Cam.

  “Stupid jackass says I can’t hold my whiskey.” Anna lifted her head and wobbled unsteadily.

  “Whoa. Steady now.” Kelly reached out to catch her shoulders just as she lurched and landed flat against his chest. Giggling, she tilted her head and gave him a drunken smile.

  Kelly sighed and tightened his arm around her shoulders. He liked Anna a lot, even if she was a drunk. “Easy now.”

  He took her arm and steered her toward a table where Bubba Tate and Leroy Elliott were set up with one of those giant bottles of whiskey that Southerners refer to as Texas Mickies.

  “How’s it going, boys?” Kelly nodded to Bubba and Leroy.

  “Hey, Kelly!” Bubba grinned at Kelly and reached over to pull out a chair. “How ya doin’?”

  “Not bad,” Kelly helped Anna into the chair and rested his arm along the backrest.

  Bubba, a bowlegged, potbellied shorty with the face of a mischievous boy, pushed his cowboy hat back on his forehead and pointed at the bottle. “Care for a shot?”

  “Thanks, I’ll pass but Anna could probably do with one,” Kelly picked up a glass and handed it across the table. “I’m going over to have a chat with Cam, so how about you boys keep her company for a spell?”

  “You bet!” Bubba grabbed the bottle. “She was sitting here with me’n Leroy before her and Cam got mixing it up,” he said, pouring a healthy shot into Anna’s glass.

  “Good!” Kelly patted Anna’s arm and turned away.

  At the bar, Cam had his head bent over a sink full of soapsuds. “Time for a break,” Kelly shouted over the clamor of voices.

  Cam grabbed the towel from around his neck and wiped his hands. “You bet,” he said, with a sigh of relief. “This place has been nuts ever since the flea market closed and as you’ve noticed, Anna’s geared up for one hell of a bender.”

  “Why not let Darlene take over for awhile and we’ll go out on the patio.” Kelly nodded his head toward the back of the room.

  “Sure thing.” Cam walked down the bar to where Darlene stood chatting with a couple of the boys from Eagle Mountain power station. “I’m going outside for a spell,” he said.

  “Gotcha, boss.”

  Cam grabbed a couple of longnecks out of the cooler and followed Kelly outside. The patio—added after his folks retired—was Cam’s pride and joy. The fancy barbecue pit, charcoal smoker and raised platform stage had been an instant hit and the row of outdoor booths flanking the stage allowed non-smokers like Kelly an opportunity to join the fun while still preserving their lungs.

  “So, what’s going on with you and Anna?” Kelly folded his long legs into one of the booths and accepted a beer.

  “Beats the hell out of me, Kelly. She’s been fit to chew nails ever since they came in from the flea market.”

  Kelly frowned. “What did she mean by that crack about you throwing her out?”

  Cam flushed and twisted the bottle between his fingers. “Aw, I wasn’t really gonna toss her,” he said. “I was just tryin’ some damage control. You know how Anna is once she’s had a snootful. She came in the door raisin’ hell with Bubba, even before she’d gotten at the whiskey. When she’s like that, it’s only a matter of time before somebody lights the fuse and she explodes.”

  Kelly sighed and shook his head. “Hopefully, Bubba and Leroy will keep her occupied for a while. In any event, the way she’s pouring it back, she won’t last long.”

  Cam brushed his mop of sandy hair off his forehead and shook his head. “She’s a bit hard to take at times,” he said. “But I’ll give her another hour or two to party, then get Darlene to walk her home. She handles Anna better than I do.”

  “I wonder,” Kelly said, his voice puzzled. “There was a little gal at the flea market earlier today who got into a bit of a ruckus with Anna. Maybe that has something to do with the mood she’s in?”

  “What kind of a ruckus?”

  “Oh, nothing major. Just some gal who knocked Anna out of her chair. I wouldn’t have known anything about it if the girl hadn’t caught my eye when she first came into the flea market.”

  “A looker?”

  “As a matter of fact, she was. But what got my attention was the way she edged into the flea market—almost as if she was hiding from someone.”

  “Oh, one of those flashy dames who always seem to spell trouble?”

  “Nope. On the contrary, she looked more like she belonged over at Lake Country estates than at a flea market—lots of class.”

  “Weird! What would someone like that want with Anna?”

  “It was strange,” Kelly said. “She darted in the front door and into the crowd like a fox with the hounds on her tail and she kept glancing over her shoulder. Of course that made me curious and since I was already on duty, I started following her down the aisle but she spotted me right away.”

  “Getting careless in your old age, Mr. Security Expert?”

  Kelly laughed. “You know what it’s like on Saturday afternoons with the kids running up and down the aisles and mom and pop keeping one eye on them and the other peeled for bargains
. I tried not to be obvious but I had to get close just to keep her in sight and that’s what spooked her. As soon as she realized I was following her, she ducked into the refreshment stand.”

  “Maybe she thought you were stalking her.”

  “Nope. She came in the door watching her back. Anyway, I ducked behind Luis’ patio and watched her after she went inside the refreshment stand. She darted into that little kitchen where Luis steams his tamales, then ducked out again. I had a good view from where I stood, so I stayed put and kept my eye on her. She watched the crowd for a while, looking for me probably, then she started edging up toward Anna’s stall.”

  “Was anybody in the stall besides Anna?”

  “Not at first but Bubba came along while the girl was watching. It was right after he showed up that she went into her act.”

  “It sounds more like you and Bubba set her off than Anna. Hell, she might’ve been an out-of-town collector going to Anna’s stall on business. You gotta look at it from her point of view. First she spots this long, tall country dude with a knowing look in his eye following her down the aisle and she no sooner ditches him than she runs smack into a sawed-off shrimp with exactly the same kinda knowing look in his eye.”

  Kelly threw back his head and laughed. “Frankly, I’d be inclined to chalk it up to a bad case of the jitters if it wasn’t for the way Anna acted after the whole thing was over.”

  “How’s that?”

  “Like I said, I was keeping my eye on her and when she started edging toward Anna’s stall, I decided to get a little closer. I had just about reached the entrance when that gal took a flying leap across the aisle and straight into the stall. I hopped on it then and made it to the door just in time to see Anna’s rocker tipping ass over tea kettle dumping the girl face down on the floor and spilling Anna on top of her.”

  “I bet that had Anna chewing nails.”

  “That’s the funny part. The woman was out cold but Anna was okay. When I picked Anna up and dusted her off, I expected she’d cuss that gal up one side and down the other but she never said a thing. Not one single word. She just sat back down in that rocker, turned her eyes onto the girl and kept them there. I swear to God, Cam, she acted just like she’d seen a ghost.”

  “You figure Anna knows the girl?”

  “Either that or there was something going on between them that I didn’t pick up on. The girl came around while I was watching Anna and before I realized what was happening she’d taken off out the door and disappeared into the crowd.”

  “Strange,” Cam shook his head.

  “Yeah, I know. There’s probably nothing to it but that girl’s got my curiosity piqued. I’m going to wait until Bubba sobers up and see if he knows anything about her.”

  “Good plan.” Cam nodded agreement. “By the way, where’d Jake get to?”

  “Oh, he was off somewhere when I left—probably chasing squirrels again—so I came without him.”

  Jake was Kelly’s dog, or as Kelly liked to put it, Jake was a dog and the question of who was master hadn’t been decided. The black-and-tan German shepherd with one ragged ear and enough scars to show he’d been around was all the family Kelly had now that his wife, Lynda and his mom were both dead.

  Jake must have had his ESP turned on because Cam had no sooner asked about him than he came bounding through the gate and up the steps of the patio.

  “About time you put in an appearance.” Kelly reached out to stroke the dog’s head.

  Jake slapped his tail against Kelly’s leg then walked over to shove his nose into Cam’s outstretched hand.

  “He’s probably been out ridding the woods of dangerous squirrels,” Cam said, running an affectionate hand along Jake’s ribs.

  “I guess at least one of us needs to get some exercise.” Kelly unwound his six-foot frame from the booth and stretched to loosen a few muscles.

  “Well, I guess it’s time to get back to work,” Cam said, standing up beside Kelly. “Wish me luck with Anna.”

  “It’d be nice if I could say things will probably settle down around here.” Kelly stepped over to the railing and tilted his head to look up at the sky. “But it’s a full moon out there and I’m afraid it’s going to be one of those nights.”

  The two of them peered up through the pecan trees to where the moon—plump and rich in its fullness—bathed the branches in gleaming silver.

  “What is that old superstition about pale riders and moonlit nights?” Kelly grinned and closed his eye in a teasing wink.

  “Don’t even joke about stuff like that.” Cam shuddered and shook himself as if to ward off an evil eye.

  Chapter Two

  Back at the cabin Kelly stretched out in his recliner and dozed. At one-thirty, when the alarm buzzed for his two o’clock rounds at the flea market, he awoke to find that a storm had rolled in while he slept.

  Kelly swiped the steaming window and squinted at the steady stream of rain that poured off the eaves. “Looks like a real gully washer.” He told the dog.

  Jake, who hated storms, paced anxiously back and forth from the front door to the kitchen.

  “You might as well settle down. We aren’t going out in that stuff. Kelly picked up the coffee pot and flicked the switch for brew then pulled a chair up to the kitchen table. When the coffee finished, he poured a cup and watched as a faint glimmer of light broke through the clouds. Giant maples thick with darkening leaves leaned across the path to the flea market. But by two o’clock the winds had receded. “Looks like it’s about blown itself out.” Kelly told Jake. He pulled on his boots and then grabbed a slicker out of the closet.

  Jake raced across the room and stood expectantly in front of the door.

  “Okay, I get it,” Kelly chuckled. “Let’s get on down there and get it over with.”

  Inside the barn that housed the flea market, the beam from Kelly’s flashlight danced over sheet-covered tables. These tables were for the short-term vendors who rented from Friday to Sunday and covered their goods with sheets when they left for the night.

  Permanent dealers had their own shops—enclosed three-sided cubicles with curtained entrances—where they sold everything from cultural standbys like hats, boots, jeans and t-shirts to gaudy jewelry and swirling salsa dresses. Then there were the new and used shops, like Anna’s, where treasure hunters could browse through boxes of ornamental plates, old glasses and beer steins and baskets overflowing with everything from spoon collections to buttons and badges dating back to the civil war.

  Kelly and Jake walked along the aisles. Gusts of wind whipped across the shrouded tables buffeting the sheets into dancing ghosts. The barn steamed with moisture left by the storm and Kelly itched to complete his rounds. He had an edgy feeling that made him anxious to get out of the barn. Jake seemed to feel it too. He paced the concrete, ears perked and alert, as if listening for something half expected.

  When they finally turned into the last aisle, Kelly breathed a sigh of relief and quickened his pace. The refreshment stand, dimly lit by a Budweiser neon guitar cut in the shape of the state of Texas, loomed ahead in the shadows.

  Jake had trotted ahead and he now stopped and lifted his nose, then he pulled back his lips and let out a menacing growl. Startled, Kelly clicked the flashlight on high and shone it into the refreshment stand. Inside, an old refrigerator leaned against the wall and a silver coffee urn glinted on the counter.

  Kelly moved the light across the stand and shone it on the ground in front of the door. The light picked out a dark bundle that looked like rags. Kelly focused the light and started forward, moving fast. He reached a spot where the light sharpened the shadows into images, the bundle became a body and a sharp odor—the kind you never forgot—stung his nostrils.

  “My God,” he cried out and sprinted the distance to the booth with Jake hard on his heels.

  Kelly had recognized the old, black poncho and instinct told him what to expect. Dropping to his knees, he reached out and pulled back the poncho. Jake stif
fened and growled.

  Anna Davis’ pupils had rolled back under swollen lids and her blood-gorged tongue filled her mouth. Fighting waves of nausea, Kelly gulped air and clenched his hands into fists. After a couple minutes, he pulled himself together and got to his feet.

  “Let’s go boy.” He cleared his throat with a kind of strangled cough. “We’ve got some calls to make.”

  Jake fell into step and they crossed to the box in front of the refreshment stand where Kelly flipped the master switch. Bright light flooded the barn and spilled across Anna. Jake growled and Kelly stroked his head. “Easy now.” He settled his hand on Jake’s back. “I need to call the county.” Kelly pulled the phone out of his pocket and dialed the Tarrant County Sheriff’s Department.

  Seconds later, a crisp efficient voice said hello. Kelly identified himself, and the voice requested a report. Kelly complied. “My cabin’s up at the entrance,” he said, when asked to keep himself available. “I’ll open the gates and wait out front for their arrival”. That settled, Kelly pocketed his phone and turned to Jake. “Come on boy, let’s get up the hill.”

  At thirty-eight Kelly still had the smooth, well-paced gait of an athlete and only a practiced eye would notice the stiffness in his left leg—a souvenir from a stray bullet.

  The clouds had been swirled away by the storm’s wind and now moonlight bathed the cabin in an eerie gray and orange glow that seemed to fit the night. As promised, Kelly opened the main gates, and then he and Jake headed for the cabin. On the porch he Kelly settled into an old rocker and Jake flopped at his feet. Silence, like a blanket, covered the flea market. Even the crickets were still. Mechanically, Kelly set the chair to rocking. Pictures of Anna flashed through his mind—a kaleidoscope of memories tracing the years he’d spent at Indian Creek.

  Time passed and in the distance a siren sounded. Squinting northward, Kelly spotted flashes of red and blue lights. Minutes later, a patrol car turned into the yard and pulled up to the cabin.