Bye Bye Bones (A CASSIDY CLARK NOVEL Book 1)

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Bye Bye Bones (A CASSIDY CLARK NOVEL Book 1) Page 1

by Lala Corriere




  Table of Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Chapter Forty

  Chapter Forty-One

  Chapter Forty-Two

  Chapter Forty-Three

  Chapter Forty-Four

  Chapter Forty-Five

  Chapter Forty-Six

  Chapter Forty-Seven

  Chapter Forty- Eight

  Chapter Forty-Nine

  Chapter Fifty

  Chapter Fifty-One

  Chapter Fifty-Two

  Chapter Fifty-Three

  Chapter Fifty-Four

  Chapter Fifty-Five

  Chapter Fifty-Six

  Chapter Fifty-Seven

  Chapter Fifty-Eight

  Chapter Fifty-Nine

  Chapter Sixty

  Chapter Sixty-One

  Chapter Sixty-Two

  It is said every human has an evil eye.

  Seeing through it is what becomes disturbing.

  Mirror, mirror, on the wall,

  Time for the pretty ones to fall.

  Chapter One

  JAXON GILES PUKED over the edge of his front patio as he waited for the sheriff’s department to arrive. Again. Wiping his mouth with the sleeve of his suit jacket before stripping it off, he tossed the soiled Armani over the stucco wall, managing to avoid the pile of vomit.

  As he dialed 911for the umpteenth time, he felt like the male-version of Nicole Brown Simpson. “You know the house. You’ve been here before. Sandra Vickery is at it again.”

  Jaxon sat down on the second travertine step and loosened his tie. February in the desert brought chilly evening temperatures. The crisp air was now his friend. Hell, Fargo wouldn’t be cold enough to cool down the blood that boiled in his veins.

  The red and blue lights finally made their way up his driveway and an all-too familiar deputy exited the car. Jaxon didn’t recognize his partner on the other side of the car.

  “Mr. Giles, to what do we owe the honor?”

  “She was just here. Again.”

  “Who?”

  “You know damn well. My ex.”

  “Did she cause you physical harm this time?”

  “She was pulling out of the back drive when I got home.”

  “No verbal threats?”

  “Non-verbal. A nice big finger waving at me and you know which one.”

  “Property damage?”

  “No. Because my dog is not my property. He’s my goddamned family.”

  “You need to calm down, Mr. Giles.” The deputy thumbed through his notes and, after a long sigh, said, “So, I see here from dispatch that you arrived home approximately forty minutes ago to find your ex-wife pulling out of your back driveway, flipping you the finger, to quote you, and only later you discovered your dog in the backyard. Deceased.”

  “If you think five-minutes is later, that is correct. You’ve been here how many times? You know she’s the one who killed Gecko!”

  “The only thing I know right now is your emotional state has me most concerned.”

  The deputy motioned to his sidekick before turning his gaze to Jaxon. “My partner will escort you inside your home while I check out your backyard, okay?”

  Jaxon nodded, understanding the stern verbal hint. He knew if he weren’t careful he’d be the one spending the night in a jail cell. After following the second deputy indoors, he poured himself a scotch, neat.

  Worried about his girlfriend, Jessica Silva, he checked his watch. It was 10:15 and Jessica, a local evening news anchor, would be on the air. And safe. Maybe.

  Fifteen minutes later there was a rap at his back kitchen door. The first deputy entered, just ending a phone call.

  “I can’t see any signs of foul play, Mr. Giles. Your dog shows no trace of injury.”

  “Dead is injured!” Jaxon exclaimed.

  “I just took a call from another squad car that drove to Ms. Vickery’s home. The funny thing is that she was home, sitting in the living room watching television. She had no problem letting our deputies inside. In fact, they report she had been sitting on her sofa knitting a baby blanket.”

  “Don’t you get it by now? There is no goddamned baby. She’s brilliant at this game. I haven’t touched this woman in over two years and yet she insists she’s carrying my baby. Maybe she’s delivering an elephant and going for twenty-two months. Either way, it isn’t mine.”

  “Didn’t you report a burglary about a year ago at this property? No sign of forced entry?”

  “It was nineteen months ago. The place was ransacked. Vandalized. The deputies asked me if anyone had a key to my home. At first I said no but then remembered my housekeeper kept one.

  “They wanted to question her, and they did, but I was the one to put the pieces together. My housekeeper has been with me for years. And suddenly, she also began cleaning my ex’s house.”

  “But your wife was cleared, along with the housekeeper.”

  “Ex-wife!”

  The lead deputy took a seat on the leather sofa. “Then give me something. Right now we can’t even bring her in for questioning.”

  Jaxon blurted out, “You won’t touch her because she donates to all of your fundraisers. I get it. She’s Tucson’s own little heiress. Vickery Pools. You guys won’t do anything but kiss her royal ass.”

  He knew he was crossing the line. Frustrated, he tossed his hands up in the air and rolled his head from shoulder to shoulder, well aware of every knot and pop.

  “I’m ordering an autopsy for my dog, Gecko. They’ll take tissue samples and test for drugs. You’ll see soon enough. My dog was poisoned.”

  “Might help.” The deputy paused, took a deep breath, “Why haven’t you taken out a restraining order on her?”

  “Because she doesn’t want to kill me. She wants to hurt me. She wants to see me suffer.”

  “Well, apparently she has. Get the restraining order. And notify all of your neighbors. This is no time to be private.”

  He knew the facts. At best, that order was a worthless piece of paper. The flip side was that it might send this woman over the edge into a cavernous rage.

  Chapter Two

  IT STARTED OFF AS any normal day. I was out of coffee pods. Great. That left me with the bitter tasting dandelion-root tea that was supposed to detoxify my body. I guess it worked since every time I stomached a cup of the nasty stuff I ended up with diarrhea.

  My cat had done her projectile vomiting thing. Never on the til
e floor. Always spewed across the oriental carpet. Of course, I was barefoot when I walked through it.

  And for the fifth time in three weeks, my newspaper beckoned to me as it lay cradled between several mature Prickly Pear cacti pads.

  Then the phone call. This wouldn’t be any ordinary day.

  “Cassidy Clark,” I answered.

  “Detective Manning here. I need your help, Cassie. Big time. FBI may want to get involved but I need you now.”

  “Tell me something that would make me want to work with your sorry ass again,” I said.

  “People are disappearing. All across the valley. Poof. Gone. Like vanished.”

  “Happens all the time here in the desert, given the demographics and the illegals.”

  “Hear me out. That’s not the case. We can’t make a connection but we have five women that have gone missing and they span all of humanity. Old. Young. Rich. Poor. Educated and not. All races. And no illegals.”

  “All female. Why me, now?” I asked.

  “Because we’ve managed to keep a lid on this but I have a hunch we’ve run out of luck. Congresswoman Strong appears to be our newest person to disappear.”

  “I hate that bitch.”

  “So do I. So does most of southern Arizona. But that doesn’t mean we play mean, right?”

  As I looked across my counter at the fancy box of crap tea and back out at the cat puke with a three-foot projectile range, I realized I would not be enjoying the morning paper without serious bodily harm.

  “I’m all in. Be there in an hour.”

  Proclivity toward the insanity of certain crimes, serial crimes being one of them, is what drove me back to his office and what I frequently referred to as his sorry ass. I arrived in less than forty minutes.

  I STORMED IN TO the office of Chief David Manning. The small quarters, close to dank and totally gloomy, didn’t lighten my mood. Gray paint?

  “What’s in the big ugly bag, Cassie? Don’t tell me you’re breaking the rules again.”

  “Maybe.”

  Manning closed his office door. “Okay, let them out. They have to breathe.”

  Finnegan and Phoebe, my so-named pupcakes, eagerly emerged and being Teacup Yorkies and the king and queen of lickers, ran to meet the chief with their tongues hanging out and tails wagging.

  “What do you have for me, Manning?” I whined. “Better be worth it.”

  “It’s only worth it because your name is all over it.”

  “Meaning you don’t have much, do you?”

  “Cassie, you’re the best private detective in town. I have five, maybe six, missing persons. Like I said on the phone, all female, but nothing else ties them together.”

  “I repeat, how many citizens go missing in the valley each year?”

  “A lot. But if you cross off the illegal immigrants, that number is significantly reduced.”

  “We have plenty of gangs around here,” I said.

  “And we have our pulse on them. There’s no way we can keep track of every Trap House or Trap Star, but they aren’t on my radar with these cases.”

  “Okay. So it’s not a crack house or a dealer. Where’s your board of the vics?” I asked.

  David Manning led me back to the conference room and rolled up the map of Southern Arizona to reveal photos and data on all of the missing people. Except one.

  “You said maybe six. Where’s the sixth?” I asked.

  “I’m not sure she fits the profile.”

  “Damn it, Manning. Put up the sixth possible.”

  Manning opened his briefcase and removed a stained accordion folder. He retrieved a paper-clipped bunch of papers that contained one faded photograph and a few loose notes.

  “That’s all you have?”

  “I’ll get you the entire file if you’ll take your high-horse down a notch. If this crime is related, she would be our first. Almost eighteen months ago and only eighteen-years-old. You’d think a runaway but this little lady was studying to take her real estate exam to work with her mother. She lived with her mom and all of our reports indicate she was on top of the world with her new career potential.”

  “Get a better photograph and put her up on the wall.”

  “You’re mean,” Manning said.

  “No. I’m good. That’s why you called me in.”

  “Did I ever tell you that you look like Woody Woodpecker with your red hair pulled up on top of your head?”

  “I didn’t have much time to groom and besides, you look like Don King on a good day.”

  “Hey, at least I have a head of hair at my age.”

  “And a stomach,” I teased.

  Manning taped the only photo the file contained to the wall of fame before writing down the key facts.

  I took a seat on one of the regular government-issued cheap chairs to study the wall.

  Nothing gelled. An eastside twenty-three year old with aspirations of becoming a model. Working some television ads and a little print. Missing for ten months. Eight months ago, a waitress from mid-town. Employed by a chain restaurant but rumor had it she was moving up to white linen tabletops. Thirty-four. A hairdresser at Cosas Buenas Spa and Salon, forty-nine, missing for five months, and living on the far northwest side of town. Two months ago, a socialite from the foothills, thirty-seven. Congresswoman Elizabeth Strong, forty-one. And the new addition to the wall. The eighteen-year-old, trying to forge out a career. We have young women. Blondes. Brunettes, and the obvious fake redhead.”

  I slapped my hands down on his desk.

  He shook his head and grinned. “Just getting back to you for that comment about my fat gut.”

  “What about relationships?”

  “Two are married if you include the congresswoman, and we feel we can. Their marriage, by the way, apparently works for them since she’s in D.C. half the time and the husband keeps a condo in San Diego. He’s a senior vice-president of a pharmaceutical company that’s headquartered there.

  “Three have boyfriends. All of them have co-operated with us.”

  “No recent break-ups?” I asked.

  “The waitress is divorced, but it was years ago. The husband is remarried and living in London.

  “It’s kind of interesting although I don’t know why these days. None of the vics have children. May or may not be something.”

  Manning added, “We have DNA on all six. Just in case a Jane Doe shows up we can identify, and they do show up around here. No matches so far.”

  “What about personal belongings? ID, credit cards, cell phones?”

  “We found four of the missing persons’ purses with all the contents and cell phones in their places of residence or at their work place. All of their valuables had been left behind. The other’s cell phones were recovered. One was stuffed in a kitchen drawer and another, on a nightstand. The ones that owned vehicles left them behind. Two of the women relied on Sun Tran for transportation.”

  “Doesn’t look like they hit the road. And without cell phones, if they did there wouldn’t be any GPS tracking.”

  “No, Cassidy. That’s why you’re here,” Manning said.

  “Sign of break-ins? Struggles?”

  Manning shook his head. “Nothing.”

  “No unidentified cremains reported?”

  “You know very well that the skull, hips and femurs do not reduce to ashes. You also know we have top mortuaries and crematories here. No one has reported an extra head coming out of the cooker.”

  “You have two possible vics up on the board that must have money. The socialite and the congresswoman. No ransoms?”

  “Nope.”

  “Histories of depression?”

  “Not that we can find of any significance. Always a couple on anxiety pills. Sleeping pills. That’s a given in our current over-medicated population.”

  “It’s possible these are random crimes of opportunity. Nothing but easy targets with no connection,” I spit out, even though I didn’t like that idea. But it was plausible. �
��For now, everything and anything is possible. And you know, with the congresswoman gone and the FBI coming to visit, it’s time to notify the public.” Past time, I thought.

  “I know. I’ll take care of it. When it’s the right time.”

  I closed my eyes. Manning knew my M.O. He exited the room, telling me he would send me the complete electronic case files on all six women.

  I stewed in that dreary room for nearly an hour. Getting up and touching the photographs. Sitting back down. Closing my eyes. Opening my eyes. I felt nothing except for that nagging spirit that has led me into trouble and almost destroyed me more times than once.

  Chief Manning had his hands full of something evil.

  Chapter Three

  JAXON GILES PHONED THE woman he loved. Off the air now, she’d probably be getting ready to drive home.

  “Get security to walk you to your car and drive straight home,” Jaxon said.

  “What’s this about?”

  “My ex. Again. Please, just do this. And don’t be alarmed if there is a silver Impala parked outside your home. He’s your security and your shadow for the immediate future.”

  “Now you’re scaring me,” Jessica said.

  “No. This is a prudent precaution.”

  After saying goodbye, Jaxon called his top assistant. Together they reviewed their schedule. The assistant would re-schedule the appointments where Jaxon’s presence would be mandatory. She would take over the rest.

  Early the next morning, Jaxon hit the phones. The vet agreed to personally come by in an hour to collect the remains of Jaxon’s dog, Gecko. The locksmith could be there by ten, promising to install electromagnetic locks that would prevent any lock bumping.

  The alarm company would be out to check his existing system and add motion-activated lights and cameras, inside and out. They’d change the codes to his keypads, doors and the driveway gate plus install a driveway alert so that any approaching vehicle would sound a warning. The back driveway, which had served the outdated and unused servant/guest quarters, would be blocked off entirely. The construction crew would be out the next day.

  Jaxon’s landscaper couldn’t be there until the following morning but his instructions were crystal clear. Plant the biggest cacti, with the meanest spines, all along the perimeter of the property’s stucco walls. Plant more under all of the home’s windows. Remove any trees or bushes that posed a visual block from the house to the grounds.

 

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