Linda Wisdom Randall

Small-Town Secrets


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held the man’s trouser leg in his mouth.

      “Hey!” Frank snarled, but he was no match for the dog keeping him in check. “Tell him to let go.” Frank started to jerk backward, but Jinx’s low growl changed his mind.

      Bree knew he’d be furious, but she wanted to make a point. “Jinx. Keep close.”

      Frank froze when Jinx’s jaws now landed a bit too close to the crotch of his slacks.

      “If you’d had a weapon in your hand, he would have immediately disarmed you,” Bree explained. “And you know the nice thing about having a K-9? He doesn’t spill coffee on the seat, he doesn’t complain about his wife and he doesn’t nag me about my driving. If the situation came up, he would also take a bullet for his partner. Something you can’t always count on with a human partner.”

      Frank’s eyes blazed with temper, but he quickly masked it when he realized the dog picked up on his reaction.

      “Who do I apologize to? You or the dog?” he asked, keeping his voice low and even.

      “Jinx is the one you disparaged.”

      He took a deep breath. “Jinx, I’m sorry if I saw you more as a dog than as an officer,” he muttered.

      “Jinx, stand down,” Bree said softly.

      Jinx released his grip on the man’s pant leg, took two steps back and settled back on his haunches.

      “Say hello, Jinx,” Bree instructed.

      The dog lifted his paw. Frank looked as if the last thing he wanted to do was shake the dog’s paw, but too many people were watching. He circled his fingers around the paw and shook it.

      Bree stepped forward. “I’m not trying to embarrass you, Frank,” she said in a low voice, meant for his ears only. “But I want to make the people in here understand that Jinx isn’t just a dog who happens to have a shield attached to his collar. He’s been trained as a deputy’s partner, which frees up someone to work elsewhere. He was one of the first to work in a trial program to work with detectives also.”

      Frank’s jaw worked as he thought about her words. “Just as long as he doesn’t have fleas,” he said grudgingly, drawing on anything to preserve his dignity before he returned to his desk.

      “You should worry more about me than him on that count.” She offered him a smile.

      He didn’t return her smile. She didn’t take it personally. She sensed he was of the mind-set that didn’t believe women belonged in law enforcement. Nothing new to her.

      He looked around at their audience, officers that pretended not to be interested. “I see one dog collar or chew bone on this desk and there’ll be hell to pay.” He gave a growl worthy of Jinx.

      “Our cue to leave. Jinx. Heel.”

      Bree walked out to her SUV and opened the rear door for Jinx to climb up inside. “Domestic dispute,” she murmured with a sigh, switching on the engine. “My favorite kind of case.”

      She didn’t have any trouble finding the location of the dispute. The first thing she noticed was Cole Becker standing on the sidewalk. He was busy studying what looked like a major war zone. She hazarded a guess that the day before, the green lawn had been lush and flowers bordering the front porch had added a colorful accent to the neatly painted house. Today it looked as if a deranged gardener had been let loose on the lawn. Flowers were torn up and thrown every which way. Chunks of sod were tossed up onto the porch and ground into the steps. And some kind of strange design was burned into the lawn.

      Bree winced as she studied the destruction in front of her.

      Then she sneaked a peek at Cole, who stood nearby. It was a sin a man could look so good in a pair of jeans.

      Keeping her eyes off his illegal rear end, she parked in front of the house and got out. She let Jinx out of the truck and walked up the driveway with him at her side.

      The morning breeze sent a hint of lemony aftershave her way. The man smelled as good as he looked.

      “What did you do so wrong that you caught the Williams-Baxter feud?” he asked, snapping off a couple of photos.

      “Don’t tell me, you not only write the stories, you take the photos, too,” Bree commented.

      “I’m a Renaissance man. I do everything,” he admitted.

      A woman stepped outside. “Who’re you?” she asked in a raspy voice that had an accent more commonly heard in Brooklyn, New York, than Southern California. She wore baggy shorts and a faded blue T-shirt that hung on her bony frame. Chipped red polish adorned her toes and fingernails. A cigarette dipped dangerously from her lower lip. She had the look of a woman who’d lived a hard life and didn’t mind if it showed. She cast a suspicious eye in Jinx’s direction. “He won’t pee on my lawn, will he?”

      As if that would hurt it more! Bree thought to herself.

      “Mrs. Williams, I’m Detective Fitzpatrick.” She moved forward, holding out her hand. The woman took it in a brief shake. “I understand you’ve had some vandalism.”

      “Hell, yes, I’ve had problems. You can’t miss them, can you?” Her eyes flashed fire. In between puffs on her cigarette, she mouthed a few colorful phrases detailing what she thought of the vandals. “Teresa and her spawn are the ones who made this mess on my Harry’s lawn. He works damn hard to keep it looking beautiful and they’ve ruined it. I want them arrested.”

      “Why do you think Teresa is to blame?” Bree’s nose twitched at the acrid smoke. She’d quit smoking when she learned she was pregnant with Cody, and every once in a while that craving for nicotine hit her. Thanks to Mrs. Williams, it was rearing its ugly head.

      “Teresa is my sneaky sister. How do I know she’s behind this? I know because this is something she’d do. Or she’d have her son do it.” She squinted in the plume of smoke rising upward.

      “Come on, Mattie, tell her the truth why you think it was the Baxters,” Cole suggested.

      She glared at Cole. “Everyone knows why, Cole. This detective is here to arrest them. Not hear stories.”

      “Mrs. Williams, I can’t arrest someone just on your say-so. I need proof,” Bree explained.

      The other woman snorted. “It’s not as if I know they’re out here so I run out with a camera. Besides, that’s your job. Proving they did it,” she insisted. “You just go on and do your job and put the two of them behind bars! This yard was just fine last night. That means they did it between the time I went to bed after Letterman and sometime before I came out for my newspaper this morning after the morning news.” She waved her cigarette for emphasis, sending ash flying everywhere.

      “Stand on the sidewalk where you can get a better look at the lawn,” Cole advised in a low voice.

      Bree did just that. As she stood on the sidewalk and looked at the grass, she realized it was more than some kind of design burned in the lawn, it was words.

      “Interesting choice, wouldn’t you say?” Cole asked, moving over to stand next to her. “No crop circles for this person.”

      “Whoever did it can’t spell worth a damn,” she muttered. “Considering this could be considered a favorite obscenity, you’d think they’d know how to spell it.”

      “All you need to do is ask someone to spell this word and see if they use two ks instead of a ck,” he commented. “Too bad that last school bond was voted down. Seems like our schools really need to do something about the students’ spelling skills.”

      “When my Harry gets home and sees what those Baxters did to his lawn, he’s going to bust a gut,” Mrs. Williams said. “You have to arrest them!”

      Bree took a deep breath, then wished she hadn’t when she inhaled a hint of smoke. She was going to have to dig through the glove compartment and