Dead Wood - By Dani Amore Page 0,40

was right for my daughter. But I’m not happy he’s dead. He didn’t deserve that.” He paused for a second then said, “Were you there?”

“I was.”

“Were you—”

“Not bad. Just a little shaken up, I guess.” I had a sudden thought that wasn’t very pleasant. But a part of me was intrigued by the triangle between Hornsby, Jesse and Clarence. I waited a beat then said, “Do you mind if I ask where you were when it happened?”

His shoulders slumped a bit, either from disappointment that I was going in this direction, or that overall the chain of events had led to this. “I was at a guitar store in Clinton Township.”

“Witnesses?”

He nodded. “I was there pretty much all day, jamming, checking out guitars, giving a few lessons. An old buddy of mine owns the store.”

“Okay,” I said. I then filled my client in on everything that happened, from the explosion on Hornsby’s boat to my car chase with mysterious Mr. Randy. When I finished, Clarence had gone a bit pale. Imagine Kenny Rogers under the weather.

“Look,” he said. “I’m sorry for getting you involved in this. I want you to stop working on it. Clearly, I was wrong, and the last thing I want, the last thing Jesse would have wanted, was for anyone else to get hurt.”

“But—”

“But nothing,” he said, now pacing around the kitchen. “Let me cut you a check and we’ll be done with it all,” he said. He started rummaging through a drawer by the cookie jar that must have held his checkbook.

“Look, you can cut me a check, because frankly, I always love it when people cut me checks,” I said. “In fact, cut me two if you want to. But I’m not giving up. Someone tried to kill me. Twice, to be accurate. And it’s the same person or people who killed Nevada Hornsby and probably killed your daughter. It’s personal now. Besides, I legally need to have an employer to do some of the things I’m going to do on this case.”

“No.” He said it with conviction, but I could tell he was mulling it over.

“I’m going to do them anyway,” I said. “I’m going to find out who killed your daughter, whether you pay me to or not. Consider me Pandora, and you opened the damn box a few weeks ago.”

“I just don’t get it,” he said.

“Don’t get what?”

“Why someone would do this,” he said. “What are they after? What are they trying to do?”

“As the saying goes, when I know why, I’ll know who,” I said. “Or maybe the other way around. Actually, both would work, I don’t know what I’m saying.”

Clarence shoved his hands into the pockets of his jeans. Wranglers, I saw. Definitely country-and-western. “I thought of something else,” he said.

“Okay.”

“Jesse was building a guitar. A special guitar.”

“I thought all of her guitars were special,” I said.

“This one was really special.”

“Meaning…”

“She told me it was for Shannon Sparrow.”

“Ah.” That certainly explained it. Shannon Sparrow was one of the hottest singers in the country. Technically, she was country, but had achieved that ‘crossover’ status that record executives loved. Her last CD had sold something like seven gazillion copies.

Best of all, she was a hometown gal. Born and raised in Detroit, Michigan. Actually, if I remembered correctly, she’d been born in Detroit, then fled to the suburbs in the 70s with the rest of the scared white people.

“It was going to be her masterpiece,” Clarence said. “Shannon was going to play it at her concert next week.” I’d heard about the concert. Shannon Sparrow was playing a free concert as her way of saying thanks to her hometown. Anna had said she wanted to go. She and the girls both loved Shannon Sparrow. Frankly, give me Tom Petty and some old Stones stuff. But I was already planning to go. The kids would love it and it was free, right? What the hell. Maybe I’d get myself a pair of Wranglers like Clarence and do some line dancing.

There was something in Clarence’s face I hadn’t seen before. It could have been fear. Or more heartbreak. Or maybe he was lying to me.

“Any reason you forgot to tell me this?” I said.

He held his hands wide. “It wasn’t that I had forgotten, I just assumed I would come across the guitar. Jesse told me it was pretty much done.”

I remembered seeing various guitars in Jesse’s workshop and in her apartment. They’d all looked fairly exotic, the kinds of wood you don’t ordinarily

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