Blind Tiger - Sandra Brown Page 0,138

holds that spot. Laurel, if you keep seeing him on a regular basis—”

“It’s not on a regular basis.”

“—he’s going to find us out.”

“He already has.”

Irv wiped a napkin over his mouth, then held it there as she told him about Thatcher finding the barrette at the abandoned still site. “It was Corrine’s, but it matched ones he’d seen me wear. A hair clip isn’t conclusive evidence, of course, but even before he found it, he suspected.”

“Has he come right out and accused you?”

“Not exactly.”

“Not exactly?”

“We talk around it. For instance, he let me know that you and Corrine hadn’t been arrested last night by saying he didn’t recognize any names on the lists of arrests. He warns me to be careful.”

“Of the likes of the O’Connors and that Chester Landry. But maybe he’s the one you should be more careful of.”

“He wears a badge now, but I truly believe he’s looking out for us, Irv. He doesn’t want us to get caught.”

“For his sake as well as ours.”

“How so?”

He thought over his answer. “Men like Hutton have this…fortitude. Honor. Whatever you want to call it. Unlike the most of us, it’s hard to bend and damn near impossible to break. If he was put in a position of letting you off the hook, or enforcing the law he’s now sworn to uphold, which do you figure he’d do?”

“I don’t know, and neither do you.”

“No, but I think he knows. That’s why he doesn’t want you to get caught.”

Forty-Nine

As Thatcher and Bill left Barker’s garage, Bill told him they were headed for Gabe Driscoll’s house.

“You’re going to question him about the attack on Norma Blanchard.”

“I am. But I should inform you that you’re still Bernie’s first choice suspect. He put in a call to me early this morning. He asked if I’d ascertained—his word—your whereabouts at the time Norma Blanchard was assaulted.”

“Should I take that personally?”

Bill chuckled. “He’s never going to like you, Thatcher.”

“That doesn’t hurt my feelings. I don’t like him, either. We rubbed each other the wrong way from the start.”

“Because you see through him. Also, he senses that you can’t be corrupted or controlled.” Bill gave him a sad look that said: unlike me.

“Gotta ask, Bill. Was he behind all that shit that happened last night?”

“I accused him.”

“And?”

“What do you think?”

“He was walking his dog when it started.” Thatcher swore. “We’re his damn alibi.”

“Hennessy’s, too. Although Bernie wouldn’t have wasted Hennessy on raiding other people’s stills. But you can bet orders came from Bernie.”

“What’s he after?”

“The Johnsons’ almost monopoly on the boom towns.”

Thatcher said nothing for a time, thinking about the tightening web of danger being spun around Laurel. Then he asked Bill if Dr. Perkins’s medicine had helped Mrs. Amos’s stomach ailment.

Last night while Thatcher was retrieving his gun belt from his room, Bill had commandeered the boardinghouse telephone to call a woman in Daisy’s bridge club, who had readily agreed to go sit with Mrs. Amos until Bill returned home, whenever that might be.

“The tincture seems to have helped. She hasn’t thrown up again, but she was very weak this morning. I hope she can be persuaded to eat something. Her friend Alice Cantor said she would stay with her for however long she’s needed.”

“That’s a huge relief.”

“It is. My county was on fire last night, and probably will be again tonight. I’ve called in all my reserve deputies to help the regulars, but, hell, at least half of them make moonshine themselves or take graft from those who do. That mess, along with the Blanchard assault, it’s like the damn sky is falling. Hated to pull you away from whatever you were doing at the stable.”

Thatcher gave a half laugh. He didn’t hate it near like Thatcher did. He’d have liked to have more time alone with Laurel.

Now, however, he needed to concentrate on the upcoming interview with Dr. Driscoll. Weeks ago, he’d realized that he would never be entirely cleared of suspicion in Mrs. Driscoll’s disappearance until someone else was proved to be the culprit. Even though he’d joined the ranks on the side of the law last night, he still wasn’t wholeheartedly accepted by the other men. The more Bill relied on him, consulted him on tactics and so forth, the more resentment Thatcher felt aimed his way.

This interrogation of Driscoll could turn that tide.

“I went out early to the Kemp house,” Bill was saying. “Took a look around. It’s as Mrs. Kemp described it. Norma’s room looked like a tornado had hit

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