“I don’t mind at all.”
Sandra set her shoulders square and began to talk. “This is the situation. As you know, my daughter, Beth, was murdered. There’s no debate on that. The problem seems to be who did it. The case never even got to trial. Belize Hernandez pleaded guilty to a lot of lesser charges and he is serving some time in prison…not as much as he would have if he had been convicted of murder, though.”
“It must be so painful for you.”
“God will take care of him and those who deserve to be punished. I firmly believe that even if my husband doesn’t.”
“Faith is a wonderful thing.”
“It is, isn’t it? But that’s not the problem we have, Mrs. Decker. Last week, we received a phone call from the state police in Nevada that a group of hikers in the Mohave Desert found some bones right around the same area where Belize Hernandez told authorities that he had buried his brother, Manny. I don’t know how the searchers missed it the first time. They must have gone over that spot fifty times. But maybe the recent rains washed the bones up or maybe an animal finally unearthed them. The desert is a very fluid thing. It gives and it takes. I suppose that’s life really.” She fluttered her hands. “I’m just talking silly.”
“Not at all.”
“I’m running off at the mouth because I’m nervous.”
“You’re perfectly articulate. Go on. I’m listening.”
“Thank you. You see we have Manny’s dental chart. The same dentist who kept Beth’s records kept Manny’s X-rays as well. It was a miracle that he had Manny’s because the boy only had one cavity his entire life. Good diet. Not a lot of sugar and lots of whole grains. Not like today’s diet, where everything is refined. But that’s an old lady talking.”
“I agree.”
“Anyway, we took the X-ray over to the police in Nevada. Right now they are trying to use it to positively identify the bones.”
“I see.” A kitchen timer went off. “Excuse me, one second.” Rina opened the oven door and took out two broccoli quiches. “Sorry about that.”
“Oh, please. I’m sorry for interrupting you.”
“It’s no problem. So what’s going to happen to the bones if they are Manny’s?”
“That’s the problem.” She sighed. “We are the closest of kin other than that person locked up in prison and his father, who doesn’t want anything to do with his dead son. It’s up to us to decide what to do with the remains.”
“Yes, that is a problem.”
“We can leave them with the police and let them keep them or dispose of them. That’s an option.” She paused. “But I seem to recall…that the last time we spoke to your husband, Lieutenant Decker seemed to be convinced that Manny didn’t do it…the murder.”
“Okay.”
“Do you think he was telling us the truth or was he just trying to make us feel better?”
“If Peter thinks Manny didn’t do it, then I would believe him.”
Sandra looked intently at Rina. “You said the case made the news. What do you think? Was your husband just being nice or do you think Manny was truly innocent of Beth’s murder?”
Rina gave the question some thought. She sat down at the kitchen table and so did Sandra. Finally, she said. “All right. This is what I think. Sometimes Lieutenant Decker does say things that may soften a blow. But in this case, everyone who knew Beth and Manny, everyone who Lieutenant Decker talked to, the former waitresses who worked with Beth, all the old church members who came out of the woodwork to give their opinion, they all remembered Beth and Manny as a very loving and spiritual couple. Maybe they smoked a little marijuana, maybe they had some unconventional ideas about God, but they were very sincere in their beliefs and in their love for each other. Manny seemed to take his job as church leader very seriously. And Beth was very keen on organic farming. For her, farming for wholesomeness and goodness was a religious thing.”
Rina got up and stirred a pot of curried chicken soup.
“Actually, Beth was way ahead of the time. Or maybe she just grew up with a mother who knew all about food that was nutritious as well as delicious.”
Sandra rose and started chopping red peppers. “So you don’t think he did it…Manny?”
“I know, Mrs. Devargas, that nice people can do bad things. But from what my husband has said, from what the newspapers have said, and from what the people who were there have said, I think Manny and Beth were a committed married couple. Personally, I have a much easier time believing it was Belize rather than Manny.”
“But of course we’ll never know unless he confesses and that’s not likely unless he’s on his deathbed.” Her face became troubled. “And that’s not going to be in my lifetime!” She gasped and stuck her finger in her mouth. She had cut herself with the paring knife. “I’m such a klutz.”
“If you cook a lot, you cut yourself. I do that all the time.” Rina opened the cupboard and took out a bandage. “Here you go.”
Sandra put on the bandage and continued to work in silence. A few minutes later, she said, “I think what we’ll do is take home the remains and give my son-in-law a proper burial.” She nodded. “We’ll bury him next to Beth. That’s where he should go.”
Rina felt her throat clog. “A husband and wife should be buried next to one another.”
“I think so, too.”
Rina heard male voices coming from the living room. Moments later, the two Peters came into the kitchen. She felt instant relief.
Decker said, “Thanks for inviting them, Rina. We had to do something to pay Tía Sandy back for all the meals she gave me in Santa Fe.”
“Please!” Sandra protested.
“My wife is an excellent cook. So is her mother. You’ll meet her in about…five minutes. How long before Shabbos?”
“A half hour.”
“So I’d better shower and shave—”
Devargas cleared his throat. Everyone looked at him. “First, before you do anything, I want to apologize for us barging in like this.”
“It’s absolutely fine, Peter,” Decker said. “Really.”
“No, it isn’t fine. It’s not proper and we both know it. But you also must know me a little by now, Lieutenant Decker. I wouldn’t have done it to be friendly. Unfortunately, we’ve come here because we have a problem.”
Sandra elbowed him in the ribs. “No, we don’t have a problem.”
“Yes, we do have a problem,” Devargas insisted.
Sandra gave him an intense “hush-up” look. “No, we don’t have a problem.”
No one spoke.
“I thought we had a problem.” Devargas regarded his wife, a confused expression on his face. “I guess we don’t.”
“No, we don’t!” Sandra said firmly. “We don’t have any problem at all.”
Again there was silence. The doorbell rang.
“I’ll get it,” Decker said.
Devargas said, “No, I’ll get it. That’s my job.” He looked at Rina. “Right?”
“Right.”
“Then I’ll get it.” He walked out of the kitchen, shaking his head.
Rina said, “Peter, why don’t you see if that’s my parents. I think Mr. Devargas would get along great with Papa.”
“They probably would.” Decker left.
To Sandra, Rina said, “Thanks for the fruit plate. We’ll use it for dessert.”
“I would have baked a cake, but it doesn’t travel well.”
Rina laughed. “Cake baking is my mother’s department. I’m sure she brought several of them. You’ll like her.”
“You’re close to your mother?”
“Very close.”
“That’s nice,” Sandra said, dry-eyed. “Mothers and daughters…that’s very, very nice.”
About the Author
FAYE KELLERMAN lives with her husband, New York Times bestselling author Jonathan Kellerman, and their children in Los Angeles, California, and Santa Fe, New Mexico.
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ALSO BY FAYE KELLERMAN
The Ritual Bath
Sacred and Profane
The Quality of Mercy
Milk and Honey
Day of Atonement
False Prophet
Grievous Sin
Sanctuary
Justice
Prayers for the Dead
Serpent’s Tooth
Moon Music
Jupiter’s Bones
Stalker
The Forgotten
Stone Kiss
Street Dreams
Straight into Darkness
SHORT STORIES
The Garden of Eden and Other Criminal Delights
WITH JONATHAN KELLERMAN
Double Homicide
Capital Crimes
Credits
Jacket design by Richard Aquan
Jacket photography by Claire Hayden/Getty Images
Copyright
This book is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogue are drawn from the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
THE BURNT HOUSE. Copyright © 2007 by Plot Line, Inc. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.
ePub edition July 2007 ISBN 9780061739774
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