“That one I hacked into? That rnorth83 guy?”
“You remember his e-mail name?”
“Sure. He was emailing bigbyrd about some pictures he had.”
“Do you want to look at this paper and tell me if you can decipher what it says?”
Tanner left it on the desk, but adjusted the desk lamp to shine more brightly on it. “H something, right? HU? Should I go into his account again and see if he e-mailed anybody with HU in their name?”
“Can you do that? Do you have time?”
“No problem.”
That was a good idea. “Have a seat,” she said, waving him into her desk chair.
The cat and the fish disappeared and Tanner started working. His long, thin fingers flew over the keys, clicking so loudly that Quincy stared. Chase stared, too, hoping to see the name of the murderer displayed on the screen, along with a picture and personal statistics. That always happened for the sleuths on TV.
“You can go do something else while I work,” he said.
She was probably making him nervous, hanging over his shoulder. “I’ll be in the kitchen.”
Anna had a batch of her favorites, Lemon Bars, coming out of the oven, so Chase grabbed a hot pad and slid the dessert bars onto a cooling rack. She picked one up with a paper towel and blew on it to cool it.
Mallory poked her head into the kitchen. “Did I hear Tanner come in?”
“He’s in my office,” Chase said. “He’ll be out in a few minutes.” Maybe.
Mallory’s face split into a huge grin. “Okay. Tell him I’m here.”
Chase assured her she would. She loved seeing this young love blossom before her eyes. Mallory was working hard at smiling at the customers, and she was doing a much better job than when she’d started working at the Bar None. But no customer had ever gotten the grin she had given at the thought of Tanner being near.
She popped the Lemon Bar into her mouth, closing her eyes as the sweet-tart flavor melted on her tongue.
In less than half an hour, Tanner emerged. “I got it. Wanna see?”
Chase hurried into the office. Tanner pointed to the screen. He had gotten into Ron North’s e-mail account again.
“How long before someone shuts this down?” she asked.
“It might stay out there for years, unless the cops want to close it.”
This time the messages were between rnorth83 and someone called hunkyb.
hunkyb:
not tellin u aginrnorth83:
wotz ur problem manhunkyb:
its all yr fault stay away from her its all yr faultrnorth83:
or?hunkyb:
ill smash in ur ugly facernorth83:
like u did last timehunkyb:
this time ill do it“So,” Chase said, trying to figure out what was going on in this exchange. “Hunkyb warns Ron to stay away from . . . someone, a female.”
“Probably his girlfriend. Or wife. And looks like North was stalking her, like he did all those others. Is she in the notebook?”
“How would I tell?”
“Let’s look at it again.”
“Better yet,” Chase said, “let’s figure out who hunkyb is. This older page references someone beginning with H.”
“Can I touch it? I’ll be careful.” Tanner pointed to the brittle paper.
Chase bit her lip, but nodded.
Tanner grasped the paper at the corner and held it up to Chase’s desk lamp. The letters leapt into clarity, seen with the backlighting.
“HULK,” they both said together.
“Great,” Chase said. “Now we have to figure out who both HULK and hunkyb are.”
“Probably the same person. North gave people nicknames. He wouldn’t call the guy the same thing the guy called himself. This sounds like a big person, either name you use.”
“Someone who thinks he’s good looking, since he calls himself a hunk.”
Her cell phone rang. It was Eddie Heath. A shiver ran up her spine. Eddie wasn’t tall, but he was muscular. And his last name started with H.
THIRTY
“Aren’t you going to answer that?” Tanner asked.
“I’d better. It’s . . .” She couldn’t explain in two seconds that Eddie Heath thought a lot of himself, had a lot of muscles, and had a name beginning with H.
“Eddie, it’s good to hear from you.”
Tanner raised his eyebrows. He had seen her reluctant, maybe scared face along with her hesitation and doubted her words, she was sure.
“Oh yeah? Why’s that?” Eddie asked. Why did he do that? He hadn’t seen her face.
“Just, you know. To thank you for the vinegar stuff.” Yeah, right. She would never drink that in a million years.
“Hey, did my cure work? You sound a lot better.”
“Yes, tons better.” She pointed to her phone and then to the page with the H. Tanner nodded.
“Are you up for a walk?” Eddie asked.
“Not right now. The shop is open. Isn’t yours?”
“I did open today, but I have help here. We got the parking spaces cleared again this morning. Got a lot of customers today, too. That little guy, Hail, he came in for his smoothie.”
“That’s nice.”
Tanner was looking concerned. He scribbled something on a scrap of paper—not the one from the notebook, she was glad to see.
She nodded. “Eddie, could you do me a favor? Could you e-mail me the recipe for that vinegar cure?”
“I can make it for you whenever you want.”