The Night Killer - By Beverly Connor Page 0,82

funny movies to watch, and taught them good personal high jinks—she was good to them.”

Garnett and Agent Mathews snickered. Diane shook her head. Frank and Ben just smiled again.

“We’re prepared to believe that,” said Ben. “But we still need to know where they are,” he said.

“Can I talk to Tammy?” he asked.

“Not right now,” said Frank.

“Is she all right?” he said.

“She’s fine,” said Frank. “But this isn’t the most pleasant place to be. You know that.”

“You need to come clean,” said Ben. “It will be better for you and for Tammy. If you didn’t kill anyone, then there shouldn’t be a problem.”

“We didn’t kill nobody,” he said, then closed his mouth.

“Maybe you let them die,” urged Ben.

“How do you let somebody die? People don’t need my permission,” he said. “You get old, you die.” He brushed his hair from his face and rubbed his eyes with the heels of his hands. “Am I going to have to get me a lawyer for you to let me go take a leak?” he said.

“Just a couple more questions,” said Ben. “Why did you chase Dr. Fallon?”

“I thought she might be hurt,” he said.

“Slick,” said Frank, “we are past that explanation. We know she saw the skeleton on her car. Even the sheriff admitted there were bones in the tree. Now . . . why did you chase her? What were you going to do?”

Slick’s dark eyes darted back and forth. “I wasn’t going to hurt her. Just make her forget.”

“Make her forget?” asked Frank. “How?”

“Nothing bad. Just give her some medicine to make her forget,” he said. “Then take her to the hospital and say she wrecked. Which she did.”

“Medicine like Rohypnol, roofies?” said Frank.

“Maybe,” he said. “It don’t hurt you. Just makes you forget,” he said. “That’s all we wanted—for her to forget she saw the skeleton.” He stopped and looked at each of them. “You see,” he added, “we didn’t want to get blamed for it. We didn’t know how it got in the tree.”

“Just one more question,” said Frank. “Tell us about the fight with Roy Barre over your land.”

Chapter 38

Slick held up his hands, palms forward, and pushed the air in front of him.

“Whoa, now. You ain’t gonna mix me up in that. No way. I ain’t got nothing to do with what happened to the Barres or the Watsons.”

“Who do you think did it?” asked Frank.

“Been some talk about some crazy person running around in the woods. Maybe that woman—she was acting kind of crazy.”

Garnett looked over and smiled at Diane.

“You mean running away from someone who was going to drug her?” said Frank. “That kind of crazy?”

“She didn’t know I was gonna drug her. She didn’t know what I was gonna do,” said Slick.

“Exactly,” said Frank.

Slick looked confused.

“Just tell us about your disagreement with Barre,” said Frank. “What was that about?”

“It was mostly between Daddy and Roy. Roy’s land joins mine—what used to be Daddy’s before he died. The property line between us is a creek, which is dumb, if you ask me, ’cause creeks change. Hargus Creek has always been the property line. But there’s two creeks running side by side with about fifty acres between them. Roy said Hargus Creek is the one nearest us. That give him the fifty acres. Daddy said no, Hargus is the one closest to the Barres—which give the fifty acres to us. See? That was the feud—or, at least, part of it. They argued over it for years.

“Daddy needed some money, so he cut the timber on the fifty acres, and Roy caught him at it. There’s some law that says if you cut timber on somebody else’s land you gotta pay three times what you can get out of it. Well, if Daddy had three times what he could of got for the timber, he wouldn’t of needed to cut it.”

Slick brushed some of his stringy blond hair out of his eyes.

“Anyways, it got mixed up in court. Daddy always told me to stay out of court, ’cause it ain’t never fair, it costs a fortune, and the damn lawyers end up with all the money. Well, there Daddy was in court having to pay a lawyer to tell him he was wrong to cut the trees and he’d have to pay up. Weren’t fair. Fifty acres was nothing to Roy. He had thousands. We only had a couple hundred, on account of my granddaddy sold most of it off to the paper company years ago when

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