A Murder of Crows (A Darcy Sweet Cozy Mystery #7) (10 page)

BOOK: A Murder of Crows (A Darcy Sweet Cozy Mystery #7)
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Jeff sat in the middle of the back seat, his arms crossed over his chest.  After Darcy had ignored him completely for the first ten minutes
of the car ride, he had started to sulk.  Now he just sat quietly.  She decided to be thankful for small miracles.  After all, she hadn’t asked him to come along.

“We’re lo
oking for ten Aubrey Lane,” Jon told her.

It was just after the dinner hour, and the sun was starting down towards the horizon.  Children played in fron
t yards and in the windows televisions flashed images of whatever shows the families were watching.  Darcy thought it was a nice place.  A good place to raise a family.

Probably the exact place where Robert Phillips had raised Mark.
  She wondered if they could talk to Robert, too.  That would help confirm what Marla had shown her.

Winding around a curve
on a narrow two lane street Jon found the place they were looking for.  It was a one story home of brick and stucco, the number ten in black letters on the white mailbox.  In the driveway sat an older blue car with a few dents on the driver’s side.  Jeff pulled in behind it and parked.

They got out together and went around to the little walkway that led up to the front door.  Jeff got out by fading through the car door and started to follow them.

“Oh, no,” Darcy said to him, raising a finger in his face.  “You are not coming with us.  I am not going to try to put up with you dancing around my head while I’m talking to someone.  Not this time!”

“Uh, Darcy,” Jon said to her, taking her arm and pointing to the house next door.  Two little children were watching them closely, their eyes wide to see
the crazy woman screaming at the air in front of her face.


Oh, for Pete’s sake,” Darcy muttered, turning away with her head down.  “He better not follow us, Jon, or so help me I’ll find some way to bind his soul into a rock and then I’ll toss it into the nearest lake.”

She was sure Jon was laughing at her, but she let it pass.

Jon pushed the little round doorbell and they heard it buzz inside.  They waited, and then he pushed it again.  This time they heard footsteps coming.  The curtain in the window next to the door moved and Mark Phillips peeked out at them.  The look of surprise on his face was there and gone again as he pulled the curtain back down.

The door opened a moment later and there he stood, changed out of his uniform into casual clothes, wiping his hands on a white cloth.  The cr
ow tattoo was very prominent on his arm.  Its eye was a paler circle in the black, and it seemed to be staring at Darcy.

“Well, hi,” Mark said to them.  “I sure didn’t expect to see you two here.  I was just making some supper.  Want to join me?”

“Actually,” Jon said to him.  “We need to talk.  Can we come in?”

“Sure, sure,” Mark said, stepping back for them to enter.  He seemed overly cheerful. 
“Nice to have company.  Let me get you guys a drink, at least.  Coffee?  Soda?”

Darcy and Jon followed him into the kitchen and Darcy lost a step.  It was the same kitchen that she had seen in her vision. 
Same table where Robert and Marla had sat while Robert was being politely robbed of his life’s savings.  The linoleum was a little more scuffed, the table a little more cluttered, but otherwise it was unchanged from what she had seen.  She nudged Jon and pointed to the table.  He nodded his understanding.

Mark
filled a teakettle with water and put it on the stove to boil.  “I’m afraid all I have for coffee is the instant stuff.  A lot of people don’t like it but it works for me.  You know how it is, right Jon?  When you’re a police officer you don’t have a lot of time in the mornings.  You have to just grab your breakfast and go.”

“True enough,” Jon said in agreement. 
“Lots of things about being a police officer that people don’t realize.  Like how we aren’t paid a whole lot of money.”

Mark dropped a
coffee cup in the sink.  It clinked and clattered before he caught hold of it.  “Oops.  Clumsy of me.  Anyway.  What brings you guys by?  You find out something about Marla’s case?”

“Uh, in a way.
  Yes.”  Jon came around the table, closer to Mark.  “I was wondering if we could talk to your father.  I believe his name is Robert?”

Something flashed across Mark’s face.  “My father isn’t here.”

“Where is he?” Darcy asked.

Mark leaned back against the sink
and faced them with a stony expression.  “My father died a year ago.  He was an old man.”

Darcy sighed. 
So much for that.  “I’m sorry to hear that.”

Mark shrugged.  “He was in bad health.  See, he never recovered from losing all of his money in a bad investment.  It ate away at him little by little, and I think it was the guilt that ultimately killed him.”

Darcy looked over at Jon.  That bad investment Mark was talking about was the swindle that Jeff and Marla had played on Mark’s dad.

“I think we understand,” Darcy started to say.

“There’s no way you could understand that kind of loss unless you had experienced it,” Mark was quick to tell her.  “I was here when my dad was promised his money would be safe if he handed it over.  He was lied to, and he was such a trusting soul that he didn’t even know what those two had done to him until he tried to get his money back.  Then it was too late.”

“Those two?”
Jon said.  “You mean the two people who stole your dad’s money?”

“Sure. 
Those two.  But then, you already knew that, didn’t you Jon?”

Darcy knew they could have denied it and pla
yed dumb but there wasn’t any point.  This was what they had come here for, to learn the truth.  “We do know about it,” Darcy said.  “We know that Marla was one of the people who stole your dad’s money.”

“So, Mark,” Jon said, “what we’re here to ask you, is what happened when you saw Marla in that bar?”

“What do you think?” Mark nearly yelled at him.  “She stole more than my dad’s money.  She stole his life!  He died because of what she did.  Her and that other guy.  I told her I knew who she was, and that I knew what she had done.  I told her my dad’s name, and you know what she did?  She laughed at me.  Laughed, and said she didn’t remember anyone by that name.”

He shook his head slowly.  The kettle boiled, and he turned to lift it off the burner.

“What happened then?” Jon asked him.

In one swift motion Mark turned and threw the kettle at Jon.  He tried to duck it but it glanced off his forehead and he fell to the floor.  “Enough of this,” Mark muttered.  “I am not going down for killing someone like her.  She deserved it.  She deserved it!”

He started advancing on Darcy.  She tried to get to Jon, to see if he was all right, to look for his chest rising and falling, but then Mark was lunging out to grab her.  She ducked and turned and ran deeper into the house.

“Come back here!” Mark yelled at her.  “You can’t tell them what I did!  Neither of you can leave here!”

Darcy ran down a hallway, to a set of stairs, and then up into the second floor hallway.  She picked a room at random and rushed inside.  A bedroom.  She looked for a place to hide.  Under the bed?  No.  Stupid.  He’d look there first.  She opened the sliding closet door and went in there instead, pulling the door closed behind her.

Now what?

She heard footsteps on the stairs.  Mark, rushing up after her.  “What are you doing?” he called out.  “You can’t hide from me in my own house.  If you leave, I’ll just tell everyone that you broke in here and admitted to killing Marla and I was trying to arrest you.  Who do you think they’ll believe?  I’m a cop!”

Darcy looked around her in the closet.  She couldn’t see much.  The door blocked out most of the light with no slats or openings in it.  She felt
over clothes hanging on their rack and fishing poles and boxes until she settled her hand around something long and thin and metal.  A golf club.  She hefted it up and waited.

She didn’t
even dare breathe.

There wasn’t any sound in the house. 
Nothing.  Was he in the room already?  Was he still looking for her?  Oh, dear God, did he go for his gun?  Was he getting a gun to kill her with?  What was she going to do?

She stood there, terrified in the dark, trembling.

Beside her, a form appeared.  She nearly screamed before she recognized Jeff, holding a finger up to his lips.  Shh.  Quiet.

“What?” she whispered.

He held four fingers up.  Then he tucked one away.  Then another.

He was counting down, she realized.  Four, three, two…

One.

She was ready for it when the closet door opened and she swung the club with all her strength.  It took Mark in the side of the head.  He spun like a marionette on strings, comically falling face first across the bed. 
Blood welled at his temple.  He didn’t get up.

Still, she stood over him with the club up
raised over her head, ready to wail it down on him if she needed to.  Jeff floated around to lean down over Mark.  When he looked at Darcy, his ghostly face smiled.

“Good job,” he said to her.

“Is he alive?” Darcy asked.  She didn’t want him to die.  Just…not kill her.

Jeff nodded with a smile. 
Still alive.  “Good job,” he repeated.

It was probably the nicest thing she could remember him saying to her in a long, long time.

***

Jon had found her there,
standing just like that.  He was holding a dish towel to the side of his head and it was already stained red with his blood.  He had to drop it as he took fishing line out of the closet and used it to tie Mark’s hands behind his back and then tie his feet together.  Only then did Darcy drop the golf club.

The cut to
Jon’s head bled a lot, but didn’t look that bad.  It would probably heal over without stitches.  They held each other tightly and told each other how scared they had been.  Then they laughed together.

“We have to stop going on dates like this,” he told her.  “Okay?  Next date, we go to the movies.”

Darcy dearly loved this man.  How could she possibly think being with him for the rest of her life would be a bad thing?

The amb
ulance and the Ryansburg Police Department showed up about fifteen minutes after Jon made the call to 911.  Mark was waking up by then, just in time to have the fishing line cut off his hands and replaced by handcuffs.  He was still screaming that Marla deserved to die when they took him away.

Jeff had disappeared.  Darcy figured he wasn’t gone yet, though.

She and Jon were driven down to the police station after Jon’s head wound was bandaged.  An officer was detailed to bring Marla’s car for them.  They gave their statements and all of their information, and then the Ryansburg Police Chief came to speak to them privately.  He personally apologized to them for what had happened.  No one had ever known what was going on in Mark Phillips’ life, he said.  Nothing like this should ever happen at his department.

Jon thanked the Chief and promised there were no hard feelings.  He winced and touched his head as he said it, though.

They were invited to watch part of the interview of Mark through a two-way glass.  The detectives doing the interview looked grim, having to do this to one of their own.  Darcy guessed she could understand that.  Still.  Mark was a murderer.  No matter what reason he might have had for doing it, he had still killed someone.  He had tried to kill them.  He wasn’t a cop anymore.

They listened to Mark go through his story, about how he had demanded Marla give back the money she’d stolen and how she’d laughed and tried to walk away.  After that, Mark claimed not to remember much. 
At least not until he had been grilled on the same question a few times, and then he admitted to having a vague memory of knocking Marla’s head into an alley wall.  Repeatedly.

Then Mark shook his head and he slumped back in his seat, defeated.  “I knew those two had figured it out. 
That out of town cop and his girlfriend.  When she showed me my father’s good luck charm, I knew it.  You don’t know how hard it was for me not to snatch it back from her right then and there.  It was probably the only thing that was taken from my dad that I would ever be able to get back.”

Darcy took the good luck coin out of her pocket.  Flipping it through her fingers one last time, she handed it to the
Police Chief.  “Can you see that he gets this?” she said.  “It’s not much, but maybe it will ease his pain a little.”

The C
hief nodded, respect showing in his eyes for what she had just done.

Chapter Eleven

 

Darcy figured the whole conference was a loss at this point. 
Jon and she went back to the hotel room, deciding to spend one more night here and then head out in the morning to go home rather than drive in the dark.

Exhausted, they both fell asleep almost immediately.  Jon was a comforting presence in the bed with her.  Maybe that was why her dreams were so pleasant and forgettable.  Smudge was in one, but as himself, a lovable ball of fluff who thought he was more human than cat.

BOOK: A Murder of Crows (A Darcy Sweet Cozy Mystery #7)
7.88Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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