Читаем Leann Sweeney полностью

I poured my coffee down the drain, deciding to stop by Belle’s Beans and pick up coffee for both of us. We’d had a steady rain all night, and when I’d gone out for the paper I discovered the temperature was in the low fifties, so that delicious, rich coffee might do us both some good. I put my hair in a ponytail and slipped on a sweatshirt and jeans, not bothering with makeup.

But when I entered Belle’s and saw Tom Stewart in line waiting to place his order, I wished I’d at least opted for lipstick. Despite my reluctance to use him to get information, I did want to talk to him. Just because . . . well, just because. Reaching around the person standing between us, I poked his shoulder.

He turned and smiled when he saw me. “Hey, there. You’re up early.”

“You, too,” I said.

He allowed the woman ahead of me to move up so we could be next to each other in line. “Making my first coffee run of the day. Got to sell my services to a couple on the lake and need to be alert and ready for all their questions.”

“If they need a cat-cam, you’re the man,” I said with a laugh. “By the way, I met your mother the other day. Had supper with her and Ed, as a matter of fact.”

We stepped ahead as the line moved.

“How did that happen?” he asked, color rising up his neck. “Because they are perhaps the oddest pair in town.”

I playfully punched his arm. “Come on. They’re sweet.”

He looked relieved. “I like them, but I never know what people might think when they first meet them.”

It was his turn at the counter and he offered to get my coffee. I told him I was buying for someone else as well as myself and that he didn’t need to buy three coffees. But he did anyway, without asking who the coffee was for. Once he’d paid, he picked up his cup and seemed in a rush to get to his meeting.

“Tom, wait,” I said before he reached the door.

He stood there, waiting for me to gather sugar and cream for my coffees.

I carried my drinks over to him and said, “Remember the other night when you asked me to get a bite to eat with you?”

“Yeah,” he said warily.

“Can I change my mind?”

He glanced down at the two coffees and pointed back and forth between the two cups. “Those aren’t for some guy you’ve met since I last saw you?”

“These? Oh, no. These are for Daphne and me.”

He looked confused. “Wilkerson’s daughter? Oh, wait. That’s right. I heard she was staying at the house.” His shoulders relaxed and his engaging smile appeared. “Tonight good for you?”

“Perfect,” I said. “How about the Finest Catch? I’ve been dying to try that place.”

“Pick you up at seven,” he said, and hurried out the door.

I gave him some lead time before exiting. That had been tough, but I realized I liked this guy and wanted him to trust me. I would figure this out—maybe just ask him straight out if he would let me know what he learned from the computer. That seemed simple enough. But what if he wouldn’t tell me? Then I’d have to contend with Candace.

Daphne, I discovered when she answered the door, had gone back to the unlit cigarette trick to calm herself. She took the coffee gratefully and led me through the house. Neatly stacked and labeled boxes lined the walls in the living and dining rooms, and I decided she must be exhausted after all the work she’d done, even with the help of Candace and me. We went into the kitchen—I could still picture that apple sitting there on the butcher block island, the one Daphne’s father had probably been about to eat right before someone killed him.

Daphne held the cardboard cup to her nose and said, “Heaven.”

Thank goodness she had to remove the cigarette to drink.

We sat at the small round table in the breakfast nook area. Even though a nook by definition is small, this one had been built for much larger furniture. The table, not to mention both of us, seemed lost in the space. Rain had started up again, and it pattered on the roof and meandered down the windowpanes surrounding us.

“Tell me about Baca,” I said. “Why did he come here this morning?”

“I told you most of it on the phone. He said I could have come here to kill my father. He said our—what was his word?—estrangement was well-known.”

“Well-known? I don’t suppose he mentioned who told him that?” I said.

“No answer except to say he had reliable sources,” she said.

“So this information came from someone your father knew. Who were his friends?” I said.

“That’s the problem. I have no idea.”

“I’ve learned he was a regular at Belle’s Beans and spoke to people there. But from the few folks I talked to, he didn’t seem to have any true buddies.”

But I was thinking of Chase and how he and Wilkerson had frequented Belle’s Beans at the same time every day, until Chase’s cat disappeared. Was this the friend that Wilkerson confided in about his problems with his daughter?

“What are you thinking?” Daphne wanted to know.

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