Part 13 (1/2)

Jess s.h.i.+fted back to the present. There really was no need to even get out of the car.

”Yes,” she decided. They were here. They might as well have a look.

Hayes went through the usual routine. He got out, surveyed the street, and came around to her side of the car. When he opened the door, she climbed out and spotted her personal BPD detail parked nearby.

Dan still hadn't called her. What could be so important at the cemetery that he wasn't taking calls?

Just wait until he nagged her again about ignoring his calls.

The sidewalk was cracked and gra.s.s had taken up residence wherever there was a gap in the old concrete. The heat and humidity were oppressive. She pulled at her blouse. August couldn't be over soon enough.

”Let's try the front door,” she suggested. She had no desire to wade through the overgrown yard to have a look around back.

Two steps led up to the porch. Sagging boards creaked with their weight. A tree had sprouted in an area that was completely rotted through. Bird nests sat on every available ledge overhead and the tops of the doors and windows. Hooks that once supported a swing at one end of the porch remained, but the swing was long gone. The remembered sound of laughter rang in Jess's ears as images of her and Lil swaying back and forth on that old swing played inside her.

”Is this breaking and entering?” Hayes tested the door.

It was nailed shut but it didn't look as if it would take much effort to change that. ”We have exigent circ.u.mstances, Lieutenant. Since this house fits the profile of our crime scenes, we have to operate under the a.s.sumption there may be a victim inside.”

He scrutinized the door. ”Works for me.”

Jess glanced around the street. Not that there was anyone who might wonder what they were doing. When had this little section of the neighborhood died?

A lot could change in three decades. She'd always pictured this place as staying exactly the same. Even now, she half expected her mother to come out the door shouting for her and Lil to come in for dinner.

The door burst inward. Jess jumped. She stretched the kinks from her neck, squared her shoulders and followed Hayes inside. The house was as dark as a dungeon.

”I have a flashlight in the car.”

”I'll just wait here in the shade, Lieutenant.” One of the perks of being the boss was that someone else had to do the running. It was certainly cooler in here, musty and dank, but cooler.

She checked her cell again. Still nothing from Dan.

By the time she'd scrounged up her penlight, Hayes had returned with his flashlight. ”Lead on, Lieutenant.” This was one time she was more than happy to have someone else go first.

The front room was littered with trash. Discarded food containers and various items of clothing. No decomp smells, thank goodness. Whoever had left the mess it had been a while ago. The ash and remnants of firewood scattered across the hearth suggested the mess had been made last winter. Homeless folks often spent cold nights in abandoned houses. The floors were dirty and dusty but there were no tracks in the dust. Backed up the conclusion no one had been in the house for several months at least.

Moving toward the dining room, Hayes suddenly stopped. The beam of the flashlight he carried paused on the wall above the doorway that separated the living area from the dining room.

It took several seconds for the words scrawled on the wall to penetrate the state of shock and disbelief that instinctively swaddled her brain.

Welcome home, Jess.

6:01 p.m.

Jess sat on the top step as members of the crime scene unit went in and out around her. The sound of hammers and drills played like a twisted score to the comings and goings of the characters in this bad movie in which she was the leading lady. Lori and Harper had arrived. Harper and Hayes had decided to remove some of the boards over the windows to allow some light air inside. Local cops had shown up with the necessary tools. BPD's crime scene unit showed up eventually with lots more lights. Every crack and crevice of the house would be explored.

Lori had started with the closest neighbor to get some recent background on the property. When had the last residents lived here? Had they seen any strangers in the area? Any noise coming from the abandoned house or store?

The intruder who'd left the message had come in through the back door. The tracks in the dust on the hardwood in that part of the house were recent.

This was the only real home Jess had known as a child. Somehow, the intrusion felt more injurious than the break-in last month at her house in Stafford. This marred those early years-innocent years-and damaged the few precious memories she had of her parents. It made her sick to her stomach.

Equally unsettling was the realization that, until today, she'd had no idea she was born in her aunt's house, with said aunt partic.i.p.ating in the delivery. The few pictures she had from her childhood were all taken here. Yet Wanda had photos that were taken at her old house-the one where the first two murder victims had been found.

A big black Mercedes braked to a stop amid the chaos in the street. Jess's heart lightened as Dan emerged from his SUV. She blinked at the sudden rush of tears and cursed herself. d.a.m.ned hormones. As he walked toward her, she stood, fighting the urge to rush into his arms.

”Hey.” He reached out and squeezed her hand and her entire being reacted.

”What happened at the cemetery?” She cleared her throat and dusted off her backside. She probably had dirt and grime all over the skirt of her new suit. Lil would scold her if she found out. ”You were MIA for a while.”

”Vandalism.” He glanced toward the activity beyond the door.

”Vandalism?” The chief of police was called out for vandalism?

”It's a historic cemetery, Jess.” He took her by the elbow and ushered her across the porch.

Vandalism kept him from calling? ”Spears visited Wanda.”

Her announcement gave him pause. ”When did this happen?”

”Two weeks ago. Didn't you get your messages?”

”My secretary called but I...” He heaved a big breath. ”I should've called her back.”

”Or me,” Jess admonished.

He held up his hands surrender style. ”I won't let it happen again.”

”How did you know to come here?” If he hadn't called his secretary back, how was he here now? This made no sense. Mainly she just wanted something else besides Spears, this place and the murders to be riled up about.

”Hayes called me.”

She raised an eyebrow at him. ”You took his call but not mine?”

”I was just about to call you back when he called.”

What did it matter? ”I'm glad you're here.” She had no right to interrogate him just because he hadn't responded to her messages. G.o.d knew, she did it to him all the time. They weren't anywhere close to even on that score no matter how she tried to spin it.

”You want to go back inside?”

She nodded. ”You should have a look.”

They entered her childhood home together. Having Dan at her side made being here less disconcerting. Her detectives had been successful in uncovering several windows. The light filtering through their damaged and grimy panes didn't make the rundown conditions inside look any better. A crime scene tech was still setting up the lights that would make the search for evidence considerably easier.

The message left for Jess had been spray-painted in black across the once yellow wall. Rather than linger on the words, she moved through the house. The kitchen was in worse shape than the living and dining rooms. The backdoor hung onto its hinges by a prayer. The intruder had done a number on it.