|
This is an excerpt from the first in Louise
Gaylord's Allie Armington mystery series, Anacacho:
CHAPTER 1
HEY,
ALLIE, GUESS WHO? Reena Carpenters husky twang
slithers through my telephone to rip open old wounds.
Forget
her? Never. Seven years before, Reena, supposedly my very
best friend and loyal sorority sister, ripped the love of
my life right out of my unsuspecting arms. Over time I managed
to erase her from my mind and ease the ache of my double
loss, but in my dreams those sad months following her betrayal
still replay with haunting clarity.
Reena doesnt wait for my reply. Ive
snagged a ride to Houston on the jet tomorrow. Will you
see me?
I manage a constricted, How
did you know where to find me?
She gives her famous
rusty-nail laugh. Oh,
cmon, now. I have my ways. How about meeting me at
Rudis for lunch?
A familiar cold
nugget settles on the bottom of my stomach, one I hoped
would never return. Rudis
is a little too stiff for my pocketbook, I say, glancing
at the suddenly welcome stack of case files on my desk. Besides,
I only have one week left with this grand jury panel and
Im backed up with presentments. I dont see how
I can possibly . . .
Please, Allie. Reenas voice
pinches with pain. Its graveyard.
Top secret. I havent
heard that word since our days at Texas.
I picture Reena Harper, silky blonde locks
tumbling over her shoulders, as she pulls Susie Baxter and
me onto her bed.
I hear Susie chirp, If its graveyard,
I gotta shut the door. You never know whos out in
the hall. Right, Allie?
Allie. Thats what my father conjured
out of my rather plain but alliterative Alice Armington.
I was the giant of the trio, pushing five foot ten, all
angles and bones. Heir to my fathers aquiline nose,
along with a healthy dose of his love for the Law.
My resolve never to see the woman who savaged
my past wavers. After all, Reena Harper gave my first three
years at Texas an aura of excitement I have never experienced
before, nor since.
I check the court
calendar and see my jury panel has Monday off for Martin
Luther King Dayplenty
of time to run through the cases. Curiosity wins. All
right . . . I guess. How about noon?
Thanks, Allie.
This means a lot. See you tomorrow.
A deep voice behind
me says, Did you
say something about a stiff at Rudis?
I cradle the receiver and swivel my chair
to look into the steady stare of Duncan Bruce, a recent
transfer from Chicago.
Duncan bears his
ancestors tall, massive
build. His hair and heavy eyebrows shimmer with the blue
cast of Highland Clans.
Not that kind of stiff. I was talking
about Rudis killer charge for a simple tuna salad.
Duncan smiles. Come to think of it,
I havent been back since I took my mother there the
last time she camped out in my guest room. He settles
on one corner of my desk and pitches me a file. Check
this.
|