Missing In Conard County. Rachel Lee
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Missing In Conard County - Rachel Lee страница 3

СКАЧАТЬ he told the dog, “I hope it’s from a deer.”

      But he was very afraid it was not.

       Chapter Two

      Day 1

      Kelly Noveno rolled over in her bed with a groan, wishing she could knock the ringing phone off the hook and go back to sleep. Being a sheriff’s deputy, she knew she couldn’t do that even though she’d worked graveyard.

      The night shifts ended in the wee hours with her being too wound up to sleep immediately. Inevitably while she worked she drank far too much coffee, and by the time she reached her snug little house near the edge of Conard City, she was wider awake than an owl. She unwound with recorded TV or music, and often didn’t fall asleep until late morning.

      Thus, no one should bother her this early. She’d made that much clear to the dispatcher. She and her dog, Bugle, must be allowed to sleep.

      Right then Bugle, who was lying beside her on her rumpled queen-size bed, lifted his head and made a sound somewhere between a groan and a yawn.

      “Yeah, me, too, boy.” Except that as she pushed herself upright, she caught sight of the digital clock. Three in the afternoon was hardly early. If she were on shift tonight, she’d be getting up soon anyway.

      “Hell,” she muttered and stood in her red flannel pajamas, shoving her feet into warm slippers. “It’s getting cold, Bugle.” Even inside. The heat must be straining to keep up.

      The phone jangled again, telling her it wasn’t going to let her run away. Pushing her bobbed, straight black hair back from her face, she reached for the receiver and lifted it to her ear.

      “Noveno,” she answered, trying to sound alert and not groggy.

      “Kelly, sorry to wake you,” came the gravelly voice of the sheriff, Gage Dalton. She guessed her attempt to sound alert hadn’t worked very well. “You found a car in the ditch along the state highway last night, didn’t you?”

      “Yeah.” She closed her eyes, remembering. “About eleven o’clock. A trace on the tag said it belonged to Randy Beauvoir. I called and got no answer. Figured someone had picked the occupants up because it was so cold. No sign of any trouble, appeared to be a simple loss of control. I tagged it for tow because the rear end was dangerously near the edge of the traffic lane.”

      All of which had been in the report that she had typed at five that morning. Holiday weekend, lots of activity and lots of people not home. New Year’s.

      “I know you’re probably still tired, but we need you to come in. Three girls are missing, last known to be in that vehicle. Their parents called us half an hour ago.”

      “Oh, God,” she breathed. “I’ll be there right away.”

      SHE FILLED BUGLE’S bowls with kibble and fresh water, then while he filled his belly she hurried into a fresh uniform. Which girls? The thought ran around inside her head like a hamster on a wheel.

      Beauvoir. She didn’t know the family well, but she’d met Randy and May’s daughter briefly last fall during one of those “don’t drink and drive” demos they put on every two years, showing the graphic aftermath of an accident. The girl, woman really, had been pretty and engaging and full of questions because she said she wanted to become an EMT. Eighteen and full of promise.

      “Oh, God,” she said aloud once more.

      Bugle looked at her, forgetting his food.

      “Go ahead and eat,” she told him. “Who knows when this day will end.” Or how.

      SHE GRABBED SOME dry cereal from the cupboard, poured milk on it and ate it too quickly. A couple of power bars wound up in her jacket pockets after she donned her utility belt and gun.

      Time to go.

      Anyone who’d grown up here should know better than to wander away from a vehicle on a cold night. It was easy to get lost out there on those open expanses, and people ought to be aware how fast the cold could become fatal. She couldn’t believe three high school women wouldn’t be aware. It was possible, but she was more inclined to believe someone had offered them a ride.

      It would have been considered criminal by most folks around here to leave someone with a broken-down vehicle in such cold.

      But if someone had offered a ride, who? And where had the girls gone?

      Her stomach kept taking one plunge after another as she drove to the office. Bugle whimpered in his caged-in backseat as if he felt her anxiety.

      “It’s okay, boy,” she said, trying to sound calm. Okay? Less and less likely.

      THE SHERIFF’S OFFICE was a beehive of activity, with barely enough space to move around other personnel. Conversation was quiet, weighted with gravity. It looked like the entire department’s staff was here, along with the city police department under the direction of Chief Madison.

      Before she heard a word, she recognized that a search was about to get underway.

      “Kelly?”

      Sheriff Gage Dalton waved her back to his office. She wormed her way through the crowd with Bugle, greeting everyone with a nod. She knew them all but there was no time for conversation, not now. Bad things were afoot.

      Once inside the sheriff’s office, she closed the door at his gesture and took the seat facing his desk. Every time Gage moved, pain flickered across his scarred face. The result of a long-ago bomb when he’d been with the DEA. While he tried to give the pain no quarter, she didn’t mind his manual suggestion that she close the door herself. Why would she?

      Bugle promptly sat beside her, ears pricked, at attention. He sensed something.

      “Okay,” he said. “You know we don’t usually respond to a missing person report this quickly, especially not when the missing are legally all adults. Any one of those young women has the right to skip town and disappear.”

      She nodded. “But not right before high school graduation. Five months before college and vocational schooling or whatever.”

      “Exactly. Plus, how likely is it for three of them to pull a disappearing act and take nothing with them? One might, but not all of them. So we’re going to start looking immediately. You found the car last night around eleven. We’re not quite eighteen hours into this. Maybe a little more. I figure the first thing to do is start looking along the state highway. You said the car was facing west in the ditch?”

      “Mostly. It might have spun out, I can’t be sure, but I had the impression it was on its way back toward town. I also didn’t see any tire skids, but that doesn’t mean much as dark as it was. I didn’t spend a whole lot of time looking, because there was no injury and no damage.”

      Gage nodded. “I’ve sent some people out to look at the highway for any kind of marks. So what have we got east along that road that might attract three young women on a holiday weekend night?”

      Kelly was sure he knew the СКАЧАТЬ