Читаем Digging Up The Dirt полностью

The ring was a small band of what looked like gold, and there were stones mounted on it. They were encrusted with dirt, however, and An’gel couldn’t tell what they might be. Hadley pulled out a handkerchief and rubbed some of the dirt away. An’gel caught her breath as the sun hit the now exposed stones.

An emerald, surrounded by diamonds. She recognized the ring.

Hadley closed his eyes and clutched the ring to his chest. His words came out with a sob. “It’s Callie’s.”

An’gel’s gaze shifted to the finger bones sticking out of the earth, and her eyes filled with tears. Sarinda Hetherington might have been right after all, she realized.

Callie Partridge perhaps never left Ashton Hall alive.

An’gel stared dully into the fire in the front parlor at Ashton Hall. Her back ached, and she wanted to be at home. She’d had to feed the flames several times in the nearly two hours they’d been waiting in the parlor. Dickce sat nearby with Endora curled up in her lap. Benjy occupied one end of the sofa, and Peanut lay at his feet. Their host was in the library across the hall, talking to Kanesha Berry, chief deputy from the Athena County Sheriff’s Department. They had each already had a turn with the deputy, but she had asked them to wait for a while longer.

“Just because her ring was found there doesn’t necessarily mean those bones are Callie’s.” Dickce stroked the cat’s head. “She could have lost it there. Maybe those bones are two hundred years old. The grave might have been there when Hadley’s ancestor planted the tree, and he never knew it.”

“I would give a lot if that were indeed the case,” An’gel said. “It would be a whopping coincidence, though, don’t you think?”

“Yes, I suppose so,” Dickce replied. “But I’m certainly going to hope and pray that’s the truth of it, and it’s not poor Callie lying there in the ground.”

An’gel cast a quick glance at the sheriff’s deputy who stood right outside the open door of the parlor. She got up from her chair and sat next to Benjy on the sofa. In an undertone she said, “Could you see Hadley’s face when he first looked at the bones?”

Benjy nodded. “He looked shocked to me.”

“Shocked as if he was upset the bones were found, or shocked as if he had no idea they were there?”

Benjy considered that a moment. “Shocked like I don’t think he knew the bones were there, but I don’t know him at all.”

“We don’t really know him ourselves, not anymore,” Dickce said. “Forty years ago he was a carefree, irresponsible playboy. The man who came back could have changed a lot.”

“He did seem stunned when he realized he was holding Callie’s ring,” An’gel said. “I would swear that was a complete surprise to him.”

“Do you remember when Hamish gave Callie that ring?” Dickce asked. “I do.”

“Yes,” An’gel said. “It was for their tenth anniversary.” For Benjy’s benefit, she added, “Hamish threw a lavish party here at Ashton Hall, and he gave her the ring in front of everyone.”

“Three years before Hadley disappeared from Athena,” Dickce said.

“Hamish sounds like a romantic kind of guy,” Benjy said.

“He was, where Callie was concerned,” An’gel said. “He loved her deeply, so deeply that at times I think it frightened her.”

“She was the center of his life.” Dickce picked Endora up and cradled the cat in her arms. Endora yawned and stretched before settling down contentedly against Dickce’s chest.

“He must have been pretty devastated when she disappeared,” Benjy said.

“He never got over it,” An’gel said.

“If that’s really her out there by the tree,” Benjy said after a brief silence, “do you think he could have killed her?”

An’gel shuddered. “I’d hate to think so, but he was so obsessed with her. If he thought she was in love with someone else, well, I suppose he could have killed her in a fit of jealous rage.”

“What about Hadley?” Dickce asked in a low voice. “If he killed her, that might be why he disappeared and stayed gone so long.”

“But then why would he come back?” Benjy said. “If he did kill her, wouldn’t it be safer for him to stay away?”

“Yes, it would be safer,” An’gel said. “But there’s the matter of Ashton Hall and whatever money Hamish had. Hadley probably inherited a fair-sized fortune on top of the house and the land. That might have been a powerful enough lure to bring him back even if he murdered his own sister-in-law.”

The sound of a voice coming from the hallway ended their conversation. An’gel turned her head to observe Kanesha Berry advance into the room. Since her earlier conversation with the deputy she had debated whether to bring up the death of Sarinda Hetherington. She decided that she ought to share her ideas and suspicions with Kanesha.

Kanesha regarded them with her habitual calm expression. “Ladies, and Mr. Stephens, I’m sorry to keep you waiting this long, but it was helpful to have you here in case I needed to talk to you again. But you can go now. I’ll follow up with you soon, once we know more about the identity of the remains.”

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