“Ty was a very impulsive, not to mention DANGEROUS man! Instead of getting to marry Amy, he should have gone to jail for beating up Jesse Stanton. He got off way too easy and the only reason he did was because Val felt pity for him ;> in the real world he’d be done for! #ilovejessestanton“
The fire over which they had cooked the fish Jack caught was mellowing. A cool breeze drifted through the valley from the mountains and the river waters babbled softly in the hush of the advancing evening.
Jack and Lisa sat together on the porch, enjoying the surrounding scenery while they sipped some French wine sent by Aunt Evelyn.
This getaway had been a long time coming, and both were simply happy to be in each other's presence without any distractions or worries.
"What a beautiful evening," Lisa said, leaning her head against Jack's shoulder. "I'm so glad we came out here together."
"Me, too," Jack said. Neither wanted to rehash what happened the last time he ventured out to the cabin alone.
"When you brought me out here that first time, I thought I'd found a piece of heaven," Lisa remarked.
"I remember," Jack said with a smile. "And here we are again, all these years later."
"And it's still a piece of heaven," she said. "I don't think we could get any closer if we tried. My happiness is complete."
"Well, now that you mention complete happiness..." Jack said enigmatically. "There's something I want to show you."
Lisa raised her head from his shoulder. Jack reached into his jeans pocket to pull something from it. A memory stirred in Lisa's mind from the winter evening when a similar motion took place. Back then, Jack had withdrawn a padded pink velvet-covered box to reveal an antique ring that once belonged to his grandmother. Lisa looked now to see a small, square leather pouch resting in his palm.
"What is it?" she asked when he did not utter anything further.
Instead of answering verbally, Jack fished inside the pouch to reveal a shiny, solid gold band—too big for her to wear, she knew right away from its size.
"Take it," Jack said simply.
Gingerly, Lisa reached for it, however puzzled she was, and asked: "What's this for?" He certainly could not be making another marriage proposal; that would be redundant at this point.
Jack stretched out his left hand towards her, splaying his calloused fingers. "Lis, I know you were disappointed when we got married that I didn't want to wear a wedding ring..."
Instant tears sprang to her eyes in understanding of what this meant. "Jack..." A tiny sniffle escaped and a large smile broke out onto her face as she slipped the band onto his ring finger.
"I love you, and I love being married to you," Jack said. "I'm sorry I was too stuck in my ways to add this little piece to our life together."
"And I have something for you, too," Lisa said, brushing aside a tear that had escaped.
"Oh, do you?" Jack asked. "Would this have anything to do with your visit with your legal counsel a little while ago?"
Lisa's lips twitched into a smile. "Why yes, it would, Mr. Bartlett," she answered. "I spoke with my lawyer about some very important things during that visit, which included updating my will and business affairs, but that's another topic for another time."
"Hmm..." Jack hummed, knowing Dan's involvement in her business life was now a thing of the past, thank goodness.
"Jack, I've proudly carried the Stillman name my whole life. I love my name and my family heritage. But you are my family, Jack. You, Lou, Amy, Tim, Ty, Peter, Georgie, Katie and Lyndy—all of you have welcomed me into your home and into your hearts. I don't want to be 'Lisa Stillman' anymore, so I've made a little change."
"You have?" Jack said, elation bubbling up within, sensing, but not quite believing what Lisa was hinting at.
"I wanted to save this surprise for a little later in our vacation, but now is as good a time as any. I want to announce I am now officially 'Lisa Bartlett'," she said, reaching into her shoulder bag to pull out a manila business envelope. She withdrew a document declaring that legal change. "How does that sound to you?"
"I think... I think it sounds like the best thing I have heard in a very, very long time," a beaming Jack replied, looking at the document. "Mrs. Bartlett."
He gathered her into his arms and their lips met in a deep, perfect kiss.
"I love you, Mrs. Bartlett," he whispered when they at last parted.
"I love you more, Mr. Bartlett," she whispered back with her customary response, leaning in for another kiss.
Jack did not argue the point, as he was fairly certain their love for each other burned with equal intensities, and would for the rest of their lives together as husband and wife.
Addendum:
It would come out during Chief Parker's team's investigation that the tiny Raven MP-25 Jesse fired at Lisa, recovered in the barn after Jesse tried to shoot Ty, had been registered to Val Stanton. It was a weapon she had purchased following the death of her husband for the purpose of personal protection while at Briar Ridge.
Thanks to the eyewitness account of "the man in Cabin Two" burning something in the firepit the night of the second attempt on Lisa's life, the forensics team found traces of fabric among the ashes and debris which matched the cotton-polyester blend commonly used in some hospital scrubs.
Prior to re-opening the Dude Ranch for business, Lou permitted the Chief's team to conduct a final sweep of the area, as one piece of the puzzle remained elusive. It took nearly four hours of searching, but the investigators finally found what they were seeking: the motorcycle Earl McCann fled on when eluding capture at the hospital. After his failed attempt at killing Lisa, the cops surmised McCann rode back to the vicinity of the Dude Ranch, secreted the bike in some bushes, and walked on foot to the firepit by the pier. There, he immediately disrobed and burned the disguise he had used to blend in among the medical staff. While he had indeed been hired to bring about Lisa's death by any means necessary, McCann's own death was mere hours away, as his foolhardy pursuit of the wandering bear would seal his fate.
Heartland neighbour and dairy farmer Gerrit Van der Heyden would eventually sight the roving bear on his property a few weeks later. It was confirmed to be the one that attacked Herring and killed Earl McCann. Fish and Wildlife authorities euthanized it, though some would be sad about its fate, given what was known of the beast's role in discovering the culprits responsible for a few unsolved murders and the attempts on Lisa's life.
All Herring's wounds physical, psychological, and emotional, fully healed thanks to the teamwork of Ty, Amy and a recovered Remi.
Adam Parker continued to write his blog and would report on the court proceedings involving Jesse Stanton, Theresa Haywood, Stanley Belmont, and Tanner Gunn. The cases are still being tried at this time, though with the overwhelming evidence against the accused, guilty verdicts are expected.
Fic Update! Bad Business: Ch. 11 Sing Me to Heaven
To the childless wife he gives a home, and gladdens her heart with children.
- Ps. 113
***
Chapter 11: Sing Me to Heaven
Hudson Police Headquarters
6:00 a.m.
Amy yawned widely. Ty observed this action and could not contain a long yawn of his own.
"You're both free to go now," Chief Parker said, satisfied that the debriefing interview with them had gone well. "Thank you for your patience and your cooperation through all this. It's been a long night."
"You're welcome, Chief," Ty said, voice heavy with relief. "I think we're just both glad all this is over."
"Yes, I'm sure you are," Parker said, looking at the pair with sympathy.
"What's going to happen to Jesse?" asked Amy, knowing she would not be facing any charges herself for having shot him.
"Mr. Stanton has been charged with attempted murder for starters," Parker responded. "He's in police custody while he recovers in the hospital, though it's likely he'll post bail. I'm told he came through his surgery just fine. Thanks for not killing him, by the way. That would have created quite the mess."
Amy smiled wryly. "I'll bet it would have. If I'm honest, I'm not sorry I shot him, but I'm glad he's still alive and will face justice for everything he's done."
Parker nodded in understanding. "And Amy—speaking from experience here—I know you're not feeling bad about it now, but if the time comes that it does start feeling bad, you call me, okay? There's also professional help if you need it. Don't underestimate the traumatic nature of what you just went through."
Amy paused before answering. "Thank you for that, Chief. I'll keep that in mind."
Ty looked to her now. "Ready to go?" he asked, grasping her fingers between his.
"Ready," she replied, giving his hand a soft squeeze.
"Hi, Dad?"
"Amy," Tim said, keeping his voice low. "What's the matter?"
"You won't believe what happened last night," Amy said, holding her cell phone to her ear while Ty drove them home.
"What happened?"
"Um, I kinda shot Jesse Stanton."
"You did what?!"
"Dad, he was the one who shot Lisa out on the road the other day," said Amy. "He came out to Heartland because he wanted to make sure Ty wouldn't be able to identify him. I caught him trying to shoot Ty in the barn."
"You didn't kill him, did you?"
"No, he's alive," Amy replied. "Under arrest, but alive."
Oh, so that's why they came and dismissed the cop who was on protection duty, Tim thought to himself.
"Yeah, we thought something big must have gone down, but nobody was authorized to tell us anything specific," Tim said.
"Dad... we know you and Grandpa are at the hospital. Chief Parker told us Lisa's alive," Amy said. "I mean, he said she was still in 'rough shape', but that she's alive."
"Is that how he put it?" Tim asked.
"Yes," Amy said slowly, catching the sour note in her father's voice. "Why, is something wrong?"
Tim snorted. "If by 'rough shape' he means she's probably going to be a freakin' vegetable for the rest of her life and that she'll probably never regain consciousness after that bastard tried to suffocate her..."
Amy's heart dropped to her feet at these words. "Dad... you can't mean..."
"I do mean it, Amy," Tim said. "You're not here. You haven't seen what's been going on. She hasn't opened her eyes once or moved a muscle since that attack."
"But," Amy protested plaintively, "what have the doctors said?"
"Nothing yet," Tim admitted. "Now that she doesn't need that bodyguard anymore, they can take her for another brain scan sometime soon. I guess we'll know more then."
***
Calgary Herald — Online Version
BREAKING NEWS
Herald Newsdesk
May 9, 2019
The Calgary Police Tactical Unit has responded to an incident at the Calgary International Airport. Early reports indicate it is a hostage-taking on a private chartered jet bound for Ft. McMurray.
Authorities have stated the affected area of the tarmac has been contained and that passenger safety at the airport is not at risk. Travellers departing from Calgary International Airport at this time are encouraged to contact their airline for information about potential delays and cancellations.
This is a developing situation. More details to follow as they occur.
***
Lisa stood thigh-deep in the middle of the river's waters. The Rocky Mountains towered in the distance. Other than the flowing water, everything else around her was tranquil. The water should have felt cold running off from the melting winter snowpack on those very mountains, but to Lisa there was no such chilly discomfort.
This is heaven, she thought to herself contentedly, contemplating the rare, happy moments she had been able to spend here with Jack, especially that first special date when she knew she was falling in love with him
On the opposite bank, Lisa's eyes made out the figure of a slim young woman with long, dark hair.
"Hello?" Lisa called, wondering who she might be. She began to approach while asking: "Who are you?"
But instead of answering, the woman raised an arm and extended a finger. Lisa turned around to see what the younger woman was pointing at. Standing on the other riverbank, she recognized a grizzled, mustachioed man wearing a cowboy hat.
Jack. Oh, Jack. You're here. She eagerly started to make her way to where her husband stood.
***
South Calgary Health Campus
Tim cracked his eyes open and sat up from his position in the sleeping recliner. He immediately looked over and saw Jack hunched over at Lisa's bedside.
Nurse Cheryl, too, sat nearby. She saw him stir and said, "Good morning."
"Yeah, good morning," Tim managed to say, giving his face a scrub with his hands. With a start he realised Lisa's armed police guard was nowhere in sight. He relaxed two seconds later upon remembering how mere hours earlier, word had filtered through that Lisa would no longer be in need of that level of protection. How he had managed to fall asleep after speaking with Amy on the phone, he was not sure. Clearly he had been more tired than he realised. "How's Lisa doing?"
"No change," Cheryl responded with a pout. "But given what she went through, that's not surprising..."
"But shouldn't she have woken up by now?" he asked.
"It's difficult to put a timeline on these things, Tim," Cheryl said cagily. "They brought her back from the CT scan about an hour ago. It didn't show any brain damage, so that's a good thing. We just have to be patient."
Tim pressed his lips together, not giving voice to his negative thoughts. Lisa's lying here like a damned vegetable and they're saying we have to be 'patient', giving Jack false hope. It's only a matter of time before they tell us there's no change and no hope and that they're pulling the plug...
"When was the last time you actually slept, old man?" Tim now asked Jack. He looked at his ex-father-in-law with concern, knowing he had maintained his watch by Lisa's side all through the night, and had done so now for several nights in a row.
Jack's reply was curt and low: "I don't know."
"When was the last time you ate?"
"I had one of the sandwiches you brought last night from wherever it was you went."
"Lisa needs you to be healthy when she wakes up, you know," Tim said, trying to bolster Jack's spirits despite his own negativity about the whole situation. "Eat something substantial and get some shut-eye. I'll sit with her."
"He's right, Jack," Cheryl said, glad someone had finally said something, as she was also growing worried about the well-being of her patient's husband. "This isn't the time to be stubborn. Come on, let me buy you breakfast. We'll grab something to go. It's about time for me to take a break, anyway."
"Fine." Reluctantly, Jack pulled himself up from his seat, grunting as his disused knees creaked and sent him a couple jolts of arthritic pain.
"And bring me back something while you're at it!" Tim called out after them.
***
Lisa kept her gaze on Jack as he stood on the dry riverbank. Her progress, however, was hindered by the waters that reached mid-thigh. With much effort and exertion, she could see her destination was finally a few meters away.
Jack suddenly vanished from her sight.
"Jack?" Lisa called in confusion. She turned to look behind her. The young woman with the dark hair was likewise nowhere in sight.
Without warning, the flow of the river's current increased, steadily rising so the level now reached Lisa's hips.
"Jack!" Lisa called again, sensing danger. I need to make it to the other side, she thought to herself.
***
"I haven't thanked you yet for agreeing to look after Lisa through all this," Jack said to Cheryl as they walked towards the cafeteria.
"Just doing my job," the nurse said dismissively.
"Yeah, but all that extra stuff you had to go through with the police screening you, the secrecy, and that armed guard at the door—"
"It's fine, Jack," Cheryl said with emphasis. "A patient's life was at stake."
"Still, I'm grateful. Lisa wouldn't have made it this far without you."
"She's held her own, Jack," Cheryl said. "And she's very lucky to have you at her side. I don't have to tell you things could have been really grim if you hadn't been there the other night..."
Jack merely nodded, absently pulling at his cowboy hat. "Lucky" cowboy hat from now on, he mused.
***
"Hey, Lisa, it's Tim. I'm just here to sit with you for a little bit, 'cause honestly, Jack needs a break," Tim said softly. "I feel like we've just been through this sort of thing with Ty, you know? Some dumb luck this family has...
"I know you probably can't hear a word I'm saying, but I'm going to say it, anyway: You gotta wake up, Lisa. Jack needs you. We need you.
"I wasn't around when Lyndy died, and Jack—he'd already kicked me out of the house by then. But I saw how he loved her. And I see how he loves you now. You're his second shot at lasting happiness, Lisa; a shot he deserves to have for as long as he can.
"I remember the time I first really talked with you, back on that cattle drive we had for Ray's herd. Even then, I could tell he was a different man around you; a better man. If you don't make it, he'll be the most miserable, insufferable S.O.B. on the planet. A man can only take so much loss..."
"Tim, would you please move aside for a moment?"
Tim turned in surprise. He had not even heard when Dr. Kaminska entered the room.
"What's wrong?" Tim asked, picking up on her urgency. He automatically shifted aside so the doctor could get closer to her patient.
"I don't like how her oxygen levels are looking. There might be something going on with how the pleural space is draining. I'll need you to step outside, and please ask Cheryl to come back immediately."
"Yeah, sure. Okay," Tim said, instantly troubled. He quickly exited the room in search of the nurse.
Jack and Cheryl had just begun to return from the cafeteria with their meals when Tim spotted them in the distance.
"Cheryl!" he called. "The doc needs you right now."
"What is it?" she asked.
Jack tensed. "Is Lisa all right?"
"I don't know," Tim said in response to both of their questions. "Something about oxygen levels or whatever."
"On my way," Cheryl said, taking off at a pace, shoving her meal into Tim's hands.
Jack tried to follow as quickly as possible, but Tim stopped him. "Just wait, Jack," he said. "Let them do their jobs. I'm sure everything will be okay."
Annoyed Tim had blocked him, Jack was about to tell him to take a hike, but realised in the small confines of Lisa's room, he would only be uselessly crowding the women. Besides, he was not a doctor. He would be of no help to them.
***
Lisa felt the water all around her. The undertow pulled at her feet, dragging her from the riverbank, submerging her, preventing her from getting to dry land. Her breath was running out. Unless she found the strength to get her head above the surface, she knew she was not going to make it. The inevitable moment would come when she would have to inhale out of desperation.
I'm drowning, she thought, feeling as if her lungs were starting to fill with water.
***
"What's taking them so long?" Jack groused out loud when neither Cheryl nor Dr. Kaminska re-appeared after what seemed to him to be an exceptionally long time, when in reality it was mere minutes.
"I don't know," Tim said honestly.
"Well, I'm going in there," Jack said, making a move for the door.
"Jack, wait," Tim said tersely, grasping him firmly by the arm. "You don't know what they're doing in there."
"Exactly!" Jack said. "Let go of me."
"I'm no doctor," Tim said, still holding onto Jack. "Just stop and think for a moment. You know how badly Lisa was wounded. She's still got a tube in her chest. You going in there right now could put Lisa at more risk. Let them do their jobs."
"I have to do something!" Jack protested.
"Yeah—you have to wait," Tim retorted.
Just then, Jack and Tim noticed a young man with a black guitar case strapped to his back making his way down the corridor towards them. He appeared to be lost, as his uncertain glance shifted around the ward, seemingly looking for a specific room. Instantly alert for the potential threat of danger this newcomer might pose, Jack called out almost menacingly: "Can I help you?"
The young man started slightly. "Uh, I'm Luke," he said, nervously grasping the ID on the lanyard around his neck. "Music therapy. I, uh, it's only my second time here. I think I came down the wrong way..."
"Well, turn around and go back the way you came," snapped Tim, gesturing down the hall. "We didn't ask for any music therapist down here."
"Uh, okay, sorry," Luke said meekly, and began backing up before turning around.
"Wait a minute!" Jack called out, an idea suddenly taking root in his brain. Luke stopped in his tracks and swiveled his head back in surprise at Jack's command.
"Yeah?" came his wary response.
"That guitar any good?" Jack asked.
"Of course it is," Luke replied, almost taking offense. "Why?"
"I'd like to borrow it for a few minutes. Please."
Both Tim and Luke looked at Jack quizzically. Something in Jack's expression and demeanour must have convinced Luke his request was both sincere and desperate.
"Um... okay," he said after a few awkward beats. He slipped the guitar from his back, lowered it softly to the floor and unzipped the case. He withdrew a beautiful sunburst-coloured, six-string Fender acoustic guitar.
"Nice," Jack said approvingly, and deposited his own food items into Tim's already burdened hands. He took the instrument from Luke. Gently, he ran his thumb over the E-A-D-G-E sequence of strings, nodding with pleasure at the tone and resonance. "It's even all tuned up just right."
A small smile flickered on Luke's lips, clearly proud this stranger was impressed with his guitar.
"Be right back," Jack said, sliding the strap over his shoulder. He hustled down to the closed door of Lisa's private room. He still had no idea what was going on behind that door, but he hoped what he was about to do would somehow help matters.
They say patients can hear even if they're not conscious, he thought to himself. Lisa, if you can hear this, I need you to be okay... Jack positioned his fingers in the familiar position across the fretboard and began to strum the familiar chords. After taking a steadying breath, he began to sing:
"There's things I've been meaning to tell you,
There's things that I've just got to say.
So let's go for a walk,
Somewhere quiet to talk,
Maybe you'll see it my way..."
Tim and Luke listened, the former wondering what had possessed Jack to do this in the first place. Then he remembered where and when he had first heard this song. This is what Jack and Amy sang at Caleb's dinky little wedding reception, he thought.
Jack continued to sing:
"I felt for a while we've been drifting,
With no reason to stay or to go.
But I hope that whatever wind blew us together,
Is stronger than we even know..."
***
Nurse Cheryl and Dr. Kaminska heard the sound of Jack's music-making through the closed door, but could not yet pause in their procedure to enjoy it.
"Aspirate PPC," Dr. Kaminska said. "Gently."
"Right," said Cheryl, following her colleague's spoken instructions, though she was familiar with the process. "Instilling sodium chloride..."
"Good," Dr. Kaminska said after a few moments. The pair continued to work together, slowly and methodically to unblock Lisa's pleural catheter.
***
Outside, Jack kept strumming and singing, hoping with all his heart Lisa was going to be okay.
"So walk me over this bridge,
The river's so deep and so wide.
Just walk me over the bridge, my darling,
We'll get to the other side."
***
Lisa's vision was fading. The water that would surely become her grave grew dim and murky. When she was on the verge of giving up, she became aware of a faint sound, seemingly muffled by the water that submerged her. That sound now appeared as a distant point, like a tiny spark, and it was growing larger and brighter. She now perceived it as a sphere that was both music and light. Drawn to it, the sphere expanded and completely enveloped her.
***
"There's times I know you inside and outside
There's times I don't know you at all
But whatever we go through
I'll be here loving you
Even times when you don't hear me call..."
Please hear me call now, Lisa, Jack silently beseeched as he strummed the borrowed guitar.
"I know what we have is worth having,
And I know what's ahead is worth more.
So let's go for a walk,
Somewhere quiet to talk,
We'll see just what life's got in store."
***
The sphere of light and sound that was Jack's voice both surrounded and permeated Lisa's being, warming her and filling her with life. She felt as if she was being drawn up out of the suffocating pull of the river's currents, borne aloft, floating, weightless as a feather. She drifted towards the edge of the riverbank where a man in a cowboy hat stood with a guitar, his heartfelt song calling her to join him.
Jack... you came back, Lisa thought. I'm here. I love you.
***
"Reconnecting bung," Cheryl said.
"And we're done," Dr. Kaminska said a few moments later in relief, noting how Lisa's oxygen saturation level was already improving.
***
"So walk me over this bridge.
The river's so deep and so wide,
Just walk me over the bridge, my darling,
Please be my place to hide."
"Walk me over this bridge,
The river's so deep and so wide.
Just walk me over the bridge, my darling,
We'll get to —"
The door to Lisa's room opened, causing Jack to stop abruptly.
"Is she okay? What happened?" he asked, hurriedly pulling the guitar strap off his shoulder.
Dr. Kaminska smiled faintly. "We had a little scare, but Cheryl and I averted disaster."
"She's going to be okay, Jack," Cheryl said reassuringly while pulling off the PPE gown and tossing it in the laundry basket.
Jack closed his eyes and a silent prayer of thanks passed his lips. "Can I sit with her again?" he asked.
"Of course," replied Cheryl, then spotted Tim still holding their breakfast items. "After you eat something."
***
Calgary Herald — Online Version
BREAKING NEWS
HOSTAGE-TAKING AT AIRPORT RESOLVED
Herald Newsdesk
May 9, 2019
The Calgary Police Tactical Unit has resolved a hostage-taking at the Calgary International Airport without incident.
In custody is one Tanner Gunn, local businessman. Gunn was reportedly trying to flee the country on his private company jet after Calgary Police issued a warrant for his arrest in connection to an alleged murder-for-hire plot. Gunn reportedly took his own pilot hostage and demanded police allow him to take off. He surrendered when the Tac Team stormed the plane. The unnamed hostage was unharmed throughout the ordeal.
News item will be updated as more details become available.
***
Next Day
Hudson General Hospital
"Thank you for all agreeing to this meeting," Chief Parker said to all in attendance in Jesse Stanton's private recovery room. "It's unusual that this type of thing occurs before an arraignment and trial have even taken place—"
"Against my advice," interrupted Percy Clifton, Jesse Stanton's legal counsel. "Mr. Bartlett, I'm sure you're fully aware you are entitled to making your victim impact statement in court during the trial. I've allowed my client to participate in this little meeting as a show of good faith. As I understand, you've all known each other for many long years."
"That's right," Jack stated, looking straight at Jesse, wondering not for the first time how things had gone so wrong with him.
"I want to make it clear this is not a trial, and my client will not be harassed, and he will not be made to answer questions that may further incriminate him in any of the charges brought against him," Percy said. "After all, he is here recovering only because your granddaughter shot him."
"Oh, that's fine," Jack said coldly. "But he's already confessed to shooting my wife, and he was on his way to shoot my grandson-in-law, so cut the crap. We both already know he's guilty."
"That's for the courts to decide," Percy rejoined smugly. "And my client will have a fair trial."
"Yes, I'm sure he will," Jack said with a bob of his head.
"Jack, you may proceed with your statement to the accused," Chief Parker said, acting as mediator.
"Thank you," Jack said, then began his unscripted speech. "Jesse, I won't pretend to know what life was like at Briar Ridge when you were growing up, but I gather it was a privileged one. Must've made you feel pretty high and mighty, having everything handed to you on a silver platter."
Jesse, wearing a sling to support his injured shoulder, did not react to this; Ashley looked away, seemingly embarrassed and ashamed.
"I don't know what kind of values you were raised with," Jack continued. "If you were taught any at all, my guess is you threw them out the window the instant they got in the way of your pursuit of money and possessions."
Jesse remained impassive. Percy seemed to be losing his interest and his patience in this exercise, but Jack was not through. In fact, Jesse's lack of any emotional response was beginning to anger him.
"Was my wife's life so insignificant to you that you thought you could just snuff it out?!" seethed Jack. "What's the matter with you?"
Jesse's sullen expression hardened as he remained silent. He refused to meet Jack's eyes.
"If your mother were still alive—"
Mention of Val set Jesse off like a firecracker. "Don't you bring up my mother, Jack!" he finally snapped. "Her memory—it means nothing to me. Everything about her sickened me, you hear me? Everything! The way she treated us growing up, the way she continued to treat me even after I was supposed to have control of Briar Ridge... The way she kept trying to get into your life and into your bedroom..."
It took every ounce of control Jack possessed not to slam his fist into the young man's face and beat him senseless at that last crass insinuation. Ashley simply stared at her brother, open-mouthed.
"Oh, I can't tell you how thrilled I was that you kept rebuffing her," Jesse continued, not knowing when to be silent, but he was too full of venom and spite to care. "A bitter old woman like her didn't deserve to be happy, not after my father died and left her everything. Briar Ridge was supposed to be my inheritance!"
"You!" Ashley nearly shrieked as the full import of her brother's words dawned on her. "You had Mom killed?! How could you? How could you?!"
Unlike Jack, she lacked any control in that moment and laid into her brother with both fists, pounding at him in a rage-filled flurry of blows.
"Ms. Stanton, stop!" an aghast Chief Parker ordered, moving quickly to intervene.
"You've ruined our family! You've ruined us!" Ashley bawled as Parker did his best to restrain her without resorting to handcuffs.
"Escort her out of here, please, Constable McLeod," the chief said to the female constable who was waiting just beside the door.
The uniformed woman came forward hurriedly at that order. "Let's go," she said calmly, putting a firm, yet comforting arm around Ashley's shoulders. Ashley allowed herself to be led out, her sobs still racking her body.
Jack looked Jesse squarely in the face, having completely ignored Ashley's outburst. "Just tell me: why Lisa?"
"Mr. Stanton, I firmly advise you to ignore that question!" the lawyer squealed. The last thing he needed was his client to admit a clear motive for his actions.
Jesse tried to avoid Jack's gaze, though he seemed to be following his counsel's advice as he remained defiantly mute.
"Answer me, you punk!" Jack bellowed, completely disregarding Percy.
The lawyer narrowed his eyes at Jack. "Mr. Bartlett, I warned you before: my client will not be harassed! Chief, I object strongly to this—"
"It's over, Jesse," Chief Parker's low voice rumbled. "We know about you and Tessa Haywood helping Tanner Gunn to secure all those fraudulent policies on the members of the investors' group. We have them both in custody now. The man Gunn used as a middle man in your little murder-for-hire scheme confessed when Calgary detectives picked him up the other night. You also probably heard about the body we found near the Dude Ranch the other day. It might interest you to learn it was the hitman Tanner Gunn hired through the middle man.
"You should also know Dan Hartfield came to us, fearing for his life because he thought he saw a pattern and that he might be next on the list," Parker concluded.
"Was Lisa on the list, is that it?" Jack asked. "Is that why you tried to murder her?!"
Jesse finally raised his head. His eyes widened slightly in surprise at the intensity of the loathing he read in Jack's glare.
Several beats passed when no one spoke a word.
With a dirty scowl, Jesse finally broke off the staring contest with Jack. "She lived at Heartland," he eventually muttered. "That's why. She—"
"Mr. Stanton, again I beg you to stop talking before you—" interjected Percy in dismay.
"I—I don't understand," Jack stammered in confusion, overriding the lawyer's protests. "What do you mean by 'she lived at Heartland'?"
"Her being at Heartland meant she was closer to Briar Ridge than all the other members of the investors' group," Jesse explained in a tired voice. "Because of that, her movements were easier to keep track of than the others. That's all. That's why Lisa was it. Look, I was desperate, okay? Tanner's gambling buddies—they-they're vicious! They would have killed me if I didn't come up with the money I owed! I was going to lose Briar Ridge!"
"For the love of God, shut up!" Percy groaned and put his head in his hands.
"So when your mother's homicide investigation held up her insurance payouts, you needed another source, fast, didn't you?" Parker supplied the rest of the story.
Jesse did not even bother to deny it. "Yeah," he sniffed.
"That's why Tanner had Stanley Belmont pull Lisa's medical death certificate—so Tessa could start processing the payout for Lisa's life insurance policy."
Jesse nodded.
"And like your sister figured, you're the one who initiated the contract on your mother's life, aren't you?" Parker asked.
"Yeah," Jesse answered, fully defeated.
Percy uttered a few expletives under his breath. Jesse hung his head.
***
Hudson Times—Print Edition
May 10, 2019
Retraction Issued:
The Hudson Times prematurely reported the death of Lisa Stillman of Fairfield Stables. Stillman had been the victim of a shooting on May 2, as well as a physical assault on May 3 at the South Calgary Health Campus. Reports of her death were inaccurate and Stillman remains alive in hospital in stable condition. The Hudson Times apologizes for any confusion on the matter.
— The Hudson Times Editorial Team
***
Parker Residence
When Adam Parker arrived home from school, he was surprised to find both his parents—usually too busy with their respective high-demand jobs to be present together in the house at this hour—waiting to speak to him.
"Hi, Mom; hi, Dad," he began nervously. "What's going on?"
The Parkers looked at each other for a few beats. Without much preamble, Adam's mother asked him to have a seat. The teen slipped his backpack off his shoulders and obediently sat down opposite them in the living room.
"We understand how difficult it must have been for you when you and Georgina discovered that body out at the Dude Ranch the other day," Professor Ann Parker said to her son.
"And we understand you've been raised with a sense of justice, duty, and truth, thanks I'm sure, to my profession in law enforcement," Jim added.
"Right," Adam said slowly, wondering where they were going with this. "So..?"
"So, your father and I want to emphasize we're not totally upset at you for your non-school-related extra-curricular activities," Ann continued.
"What 'non-school-related extra-curricular activities'?" Adam asked with a confused frown.
"Your mother and I named you 'Adam', not 'Hudson Hawk'," Jim said pointedly.
Adam's eyes went wide as saucers. "My blog. How did you—?"
"C'mon, son, did you really think I didn't know about that?" asked Jim.
"I-uh... I hoped it was anonymous enough not to have anyone know it was mine," Adam muttered lamely.
"Give your old man a little credit," Jim said with a chuckle. "I'm a trained investigator."
"I know, I know," Adam said hastily.
"You were poking your nose in some sensitive areas," Jim said, growing serious again. "You could have made the wrong people very uncomfortable with all those theories you were throwing around. It was rash, and it was risky."
"Yes, sir," Adam said, dropping his gaze to his lap, wondering how much trouble he was in.
"Though I have to say you did a remarkable job coming up with your theories with the minimum amount of information available to you," Jim said.
"Oh. Well, thanks, Dad," Adam said shyly.
"We won't tell you to stop blogging, Adam, but..." Ann started to say.
Jim nodded in agreement and added: "Just be careful in the future—not that we expect you to be this close to any more murder investigations any time soon."
"I'll be careful, Mom and Dad. Thank you." Adam declared, relief blossoming now that he realised this was ultimately turning out to be a moment of praise and not punishment.
"That's all we ask, son," Jim said. "Go on, now. Someone needs to keep an eye on Hudson."
"Right. Uh, I'd actually really like to check in on Georgie and see how she's doing," Adam said.
"Go ahead," Ann said.
"Thanks."
***
Heartland
"So, it never was about Herring, was it?" Adam asked Georgie as they sat on the porch after revealing to her the Hudson Hawk blog was his.
"Nope," she replied.
"I guess that's a good thing? Sort of?" Adam asked.
Georgie simply shrugged. "We did find out Jesse was the one who slipped a few poisoned pieces of dog food into the bag of dog chow, though. He did it to get her out of the way so he could sneak up on Ty in the barn office."
Adam heard the note of absolute repugnance in her voice, spoken through clenched teeth.
"She's gonna be okay, though, right?" he asked.
"Ty thinks so. We acted quickly enough that there likely won't be any lasting damage," Georgie said. "But she could have died."
"I'm glad she didn't," Adam said, thinking in that moment of his own deceased dog, Digger.
"Me, too..." Georgie trailed off. Her thoughts had once again drifted to how they found the body near the Dude Ranch. She sincerely wanted to rid herself entirely of the memory of it and the smell of it, the latter of which seemed to have taken up permanent residence inside her nasal cavities. She shivered despite the warmth of the spring afternoon.
"Are you all right?"
"Um, not really," Georgie mumbled. "It's just... everything, you know? It's kind of..."
"Overwhelming," Adam supplied in his usual dry manner when Georgie did not continue. "I thought so. It's perfectly normal to feel that way after all the particularly traumatic experiences you've undergone lately."
"We found a dead body, Adam," Georgie nearly growled, perturbed he was seemingly unaffected by the gruesome incident. "And not just any 'body'. We found the body of the man who killed Val Stanton; the body of the man who nearly suffocated Lisa to death in the hospital... He would have gotten away with everything if the bear hadn't got him first."
"We don't know that," Adam said. "My dad was already turning his investigation to the investors' group and Tanner Gunn. Finding that guy's body only made it easier to connect the dots."
Georgie gave her head a doubtful shake.
"Hey," Adam said, thinking better of his last comment. "I'm sorry. You were grossed out by that body. We don't have to talk about it anymore if it's too much."
"No," Georgie said slowly. "It helps to talk about it. Just not any more right now. Okay?"
"Okay," Adam said. "But for what it's worth, I'm glad we found that guy's body together. I mean, I'm glad you weren't by yourself."
Georgie conceded that would definitely have been much worse. "I'm glad you were there, too, Adam."
"That's what friends are for," he replied, giving a rare, genuine smile.
***
HUDSON TIMES—PRINT EDITION
Briar Ridge Heir Charged With Two Counts of Attempted Murder
Hudson Police also bring charges of insurance fraud and conspiracy to commit murder
Nadir Jutley
May 11, 2019
Jesse Alexander Stanton, heir to Briar Ridge Stables, has been arrested and charged with two counts of attempted murder and one count of soliciting the murder of his mother, Valerie Jane Stanton.
Hudson Police, in cooperation with Calgary authorities, have also brought charges against Theresa Stephanie Haywood, Tanner Vincent Gunn, Stanley Arthur Belmont, and William Edgar Ulrich in connection with the case.
Story continues on pg. 3...
Email: nadir_jutley
***
Calgary Herald—PRINT EDITION
Arrests Made in Cold Case
Suspects in year-old double-homicide charged with insurance fraud along with conspiracy to commit multiple murders
Erika Volmeyer
May 11, 2019
Calgary Police, with the cooperation of the Hudson Police Department, have made several arrests in connection to the year-old murders of Laurence and Paige Barick.
Local businessman Tanner Vincent Gunn, Calgary resident Theresa Stephanie Haywood, and Hudson resident Jesse Alexander Stanton, have been arrested in connection with the murders of the Baricks, one Valerie Stanton of Hudson, and the attempted murders of Lisa Stillman and Tyler Borden, also of Hudson.
The trio face further charges of insurance fraud and conspiracy to commit murder.
Also facing charges is one William Edgar Ulrich of Calgary, and Stanley Arthur Belmont of Hudson.
Story continues on pg. 7...
Email: e_volmeyer
***
Next Evening
South Calgary Health Campus
"Hiya, Cowboy."
An automatic smile flashed across Jack's face at the sound of his wife's soft voice. He peeled open his eyes and drew himself up to a fully seated position.
"Hi, Lis. How're you feeling?" A tender smile creased his face.
"Like I could use more drugs," she said wryly. "And I am a little hungry, to be honest."
"That's a real good sign," Jack said, gently holding her hand in his. "Want me to call a nurse?"
"Yes, please."
Jack pressed the call button to do just that.
"How are you feeling?" she asked.
"Fine," he replied. "Just fine, now that I know you're out of the woods."
"Your bruises are still pretty awful, Jack."
He drew her hand to his lips to kiss it. "They were all worth it, Lis."
"Any news on the man who tried to... Did they catch him yet?"
"Uh, yes and no," Jack hedged.
She regarded him with a quizzical frown. "What's that supposed to mean?"
The nurse appeared then, halting the response Jack was about to utter. "Everything okay?" she asked.
"My wife's in some pain," Jack explained.
"She's due for another dose," the nurse stated, coming in and adjusting the I.V. flow. Her nametag identified her as 'Sandra'.
"Thanks, Sandra," Lisa said.
"You should be feeling better pretty soon," Sandra said. "Anything else you need?"
"Am I too late to get dinner?"
"Not at all," said the nurse. "I'll have them send you a tray."
"Great," Lisa said. "I'm starving."
When Sandra had departed, Lisa turned her attention back to her husband. "What were you saying about the man responsible for all this?"
"Yeah, about him," Jack said, rubbing the back of his neck as a sudden chill crept up on him. "They didn't catch him—because he's dead."
Lisa's eyes went wide. "Dead?" she repeated. "What happened?"
"What happened is that he got too close to the bear that's been wandering around Hudson, that's what."
"You're joking," Lisa said.
"Nope," said Jack with a serious shake of his head. "Adam and Georgie were out for a ride a few days ago. They thought they spotted something that shouldn't be there, so Adam called his father."
"That 'something'—it was a body, wasn't it?"
"Yup," Jack said in confirmation. "Chief Parker's people found the man's mauled body near the Dude Ranch. He'd been staying in Cabin Two the whole time."
"What?!" Lisa exclaimed.
"I know. Crazy, isn't it?"
"I-I don't even know what to say," Lisa stammered.
"There's more," Jack said uneasily, wondering if the time was right to dump everything on her now.
"More?"
"Jesse Stanton has confessed to shooting you."
"Jesse Stanton?" a perplexed Lisa echoed. "Why would he? I don't—that doesn't make any sense at all."
"I know," Jack said. "It doesn't make sense. But Jesse Stanton, for all his wealth and privilege, hasn't got a moral bone in his body."
Lisa watched Jack and waited for him to explain. "What are you not telling me?"
"Jesse also tried to kill Ty in the barn a few nights ago."
"He what?! Is Ty okay?"
"Ty's just fine," Jack assured her. "All because Amy was on the alert. She caught Jesse just in time. Shot him with my rifle."
If Jack had grown two heads in that instance, Lisa could not have been more astonished.
"Did Amy... kill him?" Lisa asked tentatively.
"Oh, no. Jesse's still very much alive," Jack grunted sourly. And he's lucky Chief Parker was in the room when I saw him earlier. "He's probably going to have a bum shoulder for the rest of his life, though."
"This is crazy, Jack," Lisa said with a shake of her head. "Make it make sense to me, because right now I feel like I've stepped into an episode of The Twilight Zone."
Jack could see Lisa was overwhelmed with all these disparate pieces of information coming her way.
"From what the police uncovered, Jesse conspired with Tanner Gunn to have that dead guy in the woods kill Val," he explained. "They think the dead guy is also responsible for Lanny and Paige."
"Jesse and Tanner Gunn?! Lanny and Paige... But-but... Why?!"
"Both Jesse and Tanner have admitted they needed the money to cover their gambling debts," Jack said. "They had insurance policies taken out for all of you on that investors' group Tanner had going. The police are auditing the group's books now, too. They suspect Tanner's been embezzling the funds."
"Wait a minute, what 'insurance policies'?" Lisa asked, head still spinning. "How was he able—? I never, ever signed up for anything like that."
"That was Jesse Stanton's doing," Jack replied grimly. "Apparently, Tanner roped him into his gambling circle some time ago. When Tanner started owing big-time, Jesse convinced his girlfriend, Tessa, who worked at an insurance agency in Calgary, to falsify the documents. Lanny's was the first."
Lisa's mouth went dry as her lips turned down into a deep pout. "Executive assistant" indeed, she thought now of that not-so-long-ago conversation she had with the young woman at Val Stanton's funeral reception. And to think I thought she was merely a gold-digger at worst.
"So Jesse and Tanner were using us as their personal slush fund, is that it?" she finally asked in disgust after digesting this piece of news. "The investors' group was all a sham from the beginning."
"Hey, you couldn't have known," Jack said.
"But I should have," she replied bitterly. "I should have known nothing good was going to come of anything Dan recommended."
"Well, you'll get no argument from me on that one, Lis," Jack said. "But at least Scott's clinic got something out of it for a while, right?"
Lisa closed her eyes, feeling more drained than ever. "I guess."
"So don't go beating yourself up about it," Jack advised. He hated to give Dan any further credit, but nevertheless told Lisa how Dan had gone running to Chief Parker because he started to suspect he might be the next target on Tanner's would-be hit list.
"If Dan hadn't spoken up, the cops might not have turned their attention to Tanner Gunn so quickly. It's how they were able to find out about his gambling problem—and Jesse's, by extension."
"Hmm," Lisa murmured. "Dan was saving his own skin, is more like it. Oh, did I say that out loud?"
Jack regarded her with amusement. "You did."
"Shoot. I meant to keep that to myself."
"You do make a habit of that, you know," Jack commented.
"Of what?" Lisa asked.
"Keeping things to yourself."
Lisa gave an impatient sigh. "It's not that I want to," she said. "Some things just aren't worth mentioning. There are some things you don't need to hear."
"Like the email threats you got from that fringe animal-rights group?" Jack asked. He had not wanted to spring it on her like this, but he did not want the opportunity to pass now that they were on the subject of keeping secrets.
Lisa stared at him. Her jaw slackened slightly. "H-how did you—?"
"Chief Parker," Jack said. "He had to cover every angle, Lis. His team poked through your emails and found the threats. Why didn't you tell the police? Why didn't you tell me?"
Lisa exhaled sharply, then grimaced at the action. Her chest and side were still so tender, thanks to a couple cracked ribs from when Nurse Cheryl was forced to administer CPR the night of the attack by the hitman. "Fairfield has been receiving those kinds of 'threats' since my dad was alive, Jack," she finally said. "Their bark is worse than their bite. I ignore them because it's not worth it. If I'd told you about it, what would you have done?"
"Probably gone off on them and knocked a few heads together," Jack admitted sheepishly.
"Exactly," Lisa said, "which is exactly what I don't need. There will always be people who don't like horseracing, or the rodeo, or the chucks, or anything with the potential for these animals to get hurt. All I can do is make sure my horses get the best treatment when they're at Fairfield. It's how my dad ran things, and it's how I intend to keep running things. I need to be able to look at myself in the mirror every day and see someone who's doing things the right way."
Jack smiled at her. "In case there was ever any doubt, I see someone who's doing things the right way."
"Thank you for that," said Lisa.
"Still, I wish you'd told me," Jack said. "You don't have to face that stuff alone, even if it only amounts to a bunch of baseless accusations of abuse."
"I promise from now on I will tell you," Lisa said, "if you promise not to go beating them up."
"I promise."
Presently, one of the hospital volunteers arrived with Lisa's dinner tray.
"Thanks," Jack said, taking the meal from the young woman's outstretched hands.
"What is it?" Lisa asked expectantly.
Jack looked at the menu printout sheet and cautiously raised the lids. "Salisbury steak, mashed potatoes, diced carrots, some crackers, and apple juice," he announced.
"I am so glad they're letting me eat solid food," Lisa sighed, gingerly shifting herself into more of an upright position. This was not the easiest of maneuvers as her left arm was still immobilized, and even the slightest motion exacerbated the pain of the patched-up wounds in her side.
Jack caught her grimace. "You okay?"
"Fine," she grunted. "Nothing I can't handle."
"Here, let's get that bed adjusted," he said, taking the bed's control and pressing the button to raise the mattress so Lisa had enough back support.
"Thank you," she said, and relaxed as she reclined more comfortably against the now almost vertical upper section of the bed.
"Ready for the first bite?" Jack asked, scooping up a small mound of the potato.
Lisa nodded, and allowed her husband to feed her. Despite feeling quite hungry, exhaustion very quickly took over.
"Had enough?" Jack asked a few minutes later when Lisa put up a hand to stop him from bringing her another bite of the Salisbury steak. She let go a short breath and gave a tired nod after swallowing. "I think that short walk I got to take today tired me out more than I thought."
"Then let's take a pause from eating. Relax," Jack said, putting down the fork.
"I would like some of that apple juice, though," she said, eying the cup. He lifted the drink and angled the straw towards her lips.
Jack waited while she took a couple sips. Once she was finished swallowing, he set the cup back down. He noted with a flicker of concern that more than half the meal still remained on the tray. Unexpectedly, a memory bubbled up from when they were lost in the woods while the status of their relationship was uncertain.
"How do you know ten years from now I won't need somebody to feed me mashed potatoes?" Lisa had asked when he expressed to her his fears about growing old, and her being burdened with taking care of him.
"You're a lot younger than me, Lis."
"You got pretty quiet there, Cowboy. What are you thinking about?" she gently asked, pulling Jack back to the present.
"I was thinking..." he began slowly, "I was thinking that I never thought I'd be playing the role of caregiver in this marriage."
"And you're doing a great job," Lisa said. "I feel very cared-for, Jack. Thank you for being here."
Bad Business Ch. 10: There the Vultures Will Gather
Author's note: Again, I'm issuing a trigger warning, as there's stuff in here that might make some people squeamish. You've been warned.
To the childless wife he gives a home, and gladdens her heart with children.
- Ps. 113
Chapter 10:
There the Vultures Will Gather
***
Hudson Police Headquarters
The morning debrief with his team was beginning to bring Chief Parker a glimmer of hope they were making progress on the investigation into Val Stanton's death.
"Okay, how's the 'money' angle coming on the Stanton case?" Parker asked, as he looked around the room.
Detective Benoit answered for the rest of them. "Okay, as far as the financial benefits go, our friends at the International Claim Association confirmed two policies existed for Valerie Stanton. The first is a family policy taken out years ago when both Stanton and her husband were alive. That was through Booker & Sons Life Insurance."
"And the second one?"
"That one was through a different insurance company in Calgary," replied Benoit. "Canadian Rockies Life Insurance taken out maybe six months ago. I spoke with both companies, and no surprise: they're reluctant to put the payouts through since Stanton's death is suspicious and is being investigated as a possible homicide."
"Okay, obviously Stanton's children would have put in the claim for the one with Booker," Jim rightly guessed. "Who made the claim on the non-familial one?"
"We haven't been able to find out yet," Benoit replied. "But the premiums were being paid through an offshore numbered account."
"But someone still had to request Stanton's medical death certificate to make the claim and then file the claim," Parker said.
"Right, and we're waiting for the court orders to come through to access that information. I expect to have them by this afternoon."
"Good work, Benoit," Parker said. "Do you, by chance, have the dollar amount on that second policy?"
"Two million dollars," Benoit answered. "Not bad for a financial motive if you're looking for one."
"Nope, not a bad motive at all," Parker said. "Let me know as soon as you hear back about who requested Stanton's medical death certificate for that second claim."
"Of course, Chief," said Benoit, though both men and the rest of the team had a strong hunch who that person might be.
***
At noon, Calgary detective James Prescott called with an update for Chief Parker.
"I can't thank you enough for the heads up with that investors' group list," Prescott said. "The stuff we're digging up about Tanner Gunn, well, it's leading us down a bit of a rabbit hole."
Parker felt his pulse quicken. "What have you been digging up?"
"My undercover guys said Tanner Gunn was in the hole to the tune of around 900K over a year ago with one of the underground, high-roller poker tables in Calgary. But get this: the loan shark who staked him apparently got all his money back, with interest, no problem."
"A 'year ago' also being right around the time Lanny Barick wound up shot to death," Parker said.
"Rather convenient, wouldn't you say?" Prescott said.
"A little too convenient," Parker commented wryly.
"And you're going to love this one. The International Claim Association confirmed policies exist for every single member of that investors' group through various insurance companies," Prescott added. "Which is not unusual on the surface, but what is a little unusual is they all have more than one policy to their names. And the second policy for all of them—all taken out within the last year or so—is with the same insurance company in Calgary: Canadian Rockies Life Insurance."
***
Heartland Ranch House
"I got your text about Remi, Georgie. Are you doing okay?" Adam asked as he hopped off his bike, having just come from school.
"Not really," Georgie replied with a slow, miserable shake of her head. "Everything is just awful."
"I know. I'm sorry again about Lisa," Adam said sincerely, reaching over to give her a friendly hug. "I'll never forget her crazy aunt who brought all those wacky presents that time."
"Yeah, Aunt Evelyn," Georgie said wistfully. "Crazy. She's supposed to be getting here in a few days. Lisa's sister and nephew are supposed to fly in tomorrow."
"Do you know anything more about Remi? Your text said she had a seizure last night."
"Ty says she was poisoned. Strychnine," Georgie said, eyes downcast. "But he said she hasn't had another seizure since then, so that's a good sign. He doesn't know the source of the poison yet, but he and Cassandra are running tests on stuff like her stomach contents to figure it out."
"I guess that's good news, right?"
"I guess," Georgie said, still sullen.
"Hey, do you want to go for a ride?" Adam suggested brightly. "It might take your mind off things."
Georgie looked at him doubtfully. "You're not exactly the biggest horseback riding fan. Are you sure?"
"Yeah, but you like it," Adam said. "C'mon. Let's go."
The pair saddled up and took a path out in the direction of the Dude Ranch, maintaining a slow pace and an easy silence. Georgie was grateful for this, as she was not in the mood for idle chatter. Simply having Adam's company was enough.
Her phone buzzed a message at that point. She looked at the screen and saw it was from Wyatt.
"It's Wyatt," Georgie said to Adam, reining in Phoenix. "Do you mind?"
"No, go ahead," Adam replied. He was relieved for the opportunity to rest, as he still was not entirely comfortable being bounced around in a saddle, even on an easy ride through the woods.
Wyatt: Hey Georgie that totally SUCKS about remi and I hope she gets better
- Mom needed me to babysit Brick after school or I'd be there
- Missing u at class and hope ur back soon
Georgie: Thnx Wyatt that means a lot
- No worries about not being here
- Adam is over right now so between the two of u looking out for me its not so bad
- I hope I'm back soon too maybe tomorrow or something
Wyatt: OK great!
- See u soon
- bye
Georgie: bye
"Hey, Georgie, look!" Adam said, just as Georgie put her phone away.
She glanced up to see Adam pointing at several black birds that were wheeling in the air a short distance away.
"Those are turkey vultures," Adam explained, pulling out information from his encyclopedic memory. "They're carrion birds. Something must've died out there and they're ready to feast."
"Oh, gross," Georgie said, grimacing.
"It might be the bear that's on the loose. It could have killed something and left behind a carcass," Adam posited.
"Again, gross," Georgie said, eyeing him in the hopes he would quit.
"I'm serious," Adam said. "I think we should check it out. You're not missing any Dude Ranch horses right now, are you?"
"No..." Georgie said slowly. "But-but we are missing a Dude Ranch guest. Oh, no. You don't think..."
Despite not wanting to get close to anything that might be deceased, Georgie nudged Phoenix onwards. Adam followed, scanning the foliage ahead.
Following the direction the birds seemed to be flying would take them off the marked trail into the bushes and more wild, overgrown vegetation. The teens decided to dismount and continue on foot. After securing the horses, Georgie and Adam trudged through the bushes and came upon a small natural clearing beneath the canopy of a grouping of trees. Moments later, they sighted an almost unrecognizable but nevertheless very human heap lying prone on the grass, partially obscured by some shrubbery. Their nostrils were soon assailed by the stench of decay. Flies buzzed and were clustering all over the rotting mass of flesh. Two turkey vultures descended on the body, flapping their massive wings as they settled to begin their meal.
"I-I think you'd better call your mom," Adam said shakily, averting his glance from the stomach-turning spectacle. "And I'm calling my dad."
***
Hudson Veterinary Clinic
"Great. The rest of the lab results just came back for Remi," Ty said, clicking on the report in his email Inbox.
Interest instantly piqued, Cass looked over at her colleague. "So, what was the source of the poison?"
"Her dog food," Ty said, staring at the lab results as if to be sure his eyes were not misleading him.
"How did strychnine get into her food?" Cass asked, equally puzzled.
"I don't know," Ty said tersely as he pulled out his cell phone and hurriedly dialled home. "It's a bag she's been eating from for nearly a week. If it had come contaminated from the production line, she would have been sick a long time ago."
Cass stared at him. "Who are you calling?"
"Home," he replied, exhaling sharply. When Amy answered, Ty did not waste time with pleasantries. "Amy, I need you to grab the open bag of Remi's dog chow right now. Don't touch the contents. In fact, use gloves when you handle the bag. Put it in a heavy-duty garbage bag and seal it tightly. Get it down here to the clinic as soon as you can."
"Ty, slow down, please,"Amy begged. "What's this all about?"
Ty caught himself and scaled back his agitation. "The strychnine poisoning," he stated, his spoken pace this time more slow and deliberate. "We tested the water in her dish, and that came back negative. The only other thing in Remi's stomach was her food, so that means her food was the source of the poison."
"What? Are you sure?" Amy's own shocked reaction was not lost on Ty.
"Without a doubt," Ty answered, looking back at his computer screen.
"All right. I'll get the food. Lyndy just woke up from a nap, so she'll have to come with me."
"Okay, thanks, Amy," said Ty gratefully.
***
Lou could not have been more shocked when she received Georgie's call about a dead body near Heartland Equestrian Connections. She had just finished speaking with Evelyn about her travel details and how she would be more comfortable in the house than at the Dude Ranch. Cabins Three and Four were already made up and waiting for Rachel and Ben to occupy when they arrived in Hudson; Cabin Two was still off-limits.
Chief Parker and his forensics team were already at the site when Lou arrived.
"Mom," Georgie called upon spotting Lou, and quickly went to her for a comforting hug.
"Are you okay, sweetheart?" Lou asked, holding her daughter close for several moments.
Georgie nodded. "I'm okay," she said at length. "At least I'm better now that you're here."
"Thanks for coming, Ms. Fleming," Jim said. "I really need you to be present when we talk to Georgie about all this since she's still a minor."
"Of course," Lou said, sending her daughter a look of maternal concern. Parker summoned Detective Constable Patterson to assist in the questioning. Lou stood by quietly while Adam and Georgie answered Patterson's questions as best they could.
"We touched absolutely nothing," Adam said in response to her query about their actions upon discovering the body. "I know you're not supposed to contaminate a possible crime scene."
"I know you know," Jim interjected patiently, "but we don't always follow logic when we stumble upon something like this."
"As soon as we realised what it was, we halted where we were right away," Adam continued.
"Yeah, there's no way we were getting any closer to that," Georgie said, her stomach still churning uncomfortably. "That's when we called you all to come."
"Okay, thanks," Patterson said. "Tell us what led you to finding the body in the first place. We're really off the beaten path, here."
"There were some turkey vultures," Adam explained. "I saw them flying around. They're not too common in this part of the province; that's why I noticed them. Since they're carrion birds, I figured something was probably dead out here. That's when Georgie mentioned the missing Dude Ranch guest."
"Carrion birds," Parker muttered with a shake of his head. "Of all things."
"I'm satisfied with what they've had to say, Chief," Patterson said to her boss. "Are you good?"
"Yes, I'm good," Parker said to his subordinate. "You can head back to the scene."
"Will do," she said, and moved off to rejoin the forensic team's efforts.
Jim returned his attention to Adam and Georgie. "Thanks, both of you; you did great today. You called immediately and kept your cool. I know plenty of adults who would not have reacted in as level-headed a way that you have."
"Thank you, sir," Georgie said demurely.
"Thanks, Dad."
"I'm going to talk to your mom now, Georgie," Chief Parker said. "You can wait for her if you like, but the two of you are free to go now if you want. I may have questions later for you, and you can call me if you think of something you didn't mention here."
"Okay, sure," Georgie said. "I think I'll go."
"Yeah, I'd rather go, too," Adam said in relief.
"All right," Parker said. "Be careful on the ride back."
"We will," Adam said.
With that, the teens returned to the horses and rode back to the ranch house, still not completely over the shock and disgust of discovering the corpse.
Chief Parker now focused his attention on Lou. "Georgie tells me you've been missing a Dude Ranch guest," Chief Parker said.
"That's right," Lou said. "Dov Grosvenor. He's been missing for several days. My manager said one of the guests saw him either late on Friday night or very early on Saturday morning out by the firepit. It's all in the information I gave to one of your constables. He came out here yesterday when I called; I filed a Missing Persons report with him."
"About that," Parker said, "it turns out the name 'Dov Grosvenor' is an alias of some kind. No one exists with that name that we can determine."
"He registered under a false name?" Lou's surprise was evident.
"So it would appear, Ms. Fleming," Jim said. "We're of course working on the assumption this is your vanished-into-thin-air Dude Ranch guest, whatever his name really is. Not a pretty way to go."
"No," Lou said, shuddering at the grim realisation her guest had probably met his horrible end due to an encounter with the roving bear.
As Chief Parker feared, the body was far too bloodied, marred and mauled to be positively identified by anyone. There had been no wallet, but a phone with a cracked screen along with other items had been taken by Parker's forensics team.
"Do you get many hunters out here at the Dude Ranch, Ms. Fleming?" he asked.
"Never," Lou said with an instant negative shake of her head. "Why do you ask?"
Parker looked over at his forensics team. They were still gathering evidence, bagging soil samples, and taking photographs. "I ask because we found a rifle near the body," Parker replied.
The chief was referring to the Special Edition Tikka T3x Compact Tactical rifle, mounted with a Steiner Military 3-15x50mm MSR scope and an Ase-Utra SL5i suppressor, which was discovered a short distance from the corpse. This weapon was of great interest to Parker and his team as they quickly noticed the absence of any serial numbers that could indicate license and ownership.
"No, no hunters," Lou repeated with emphasis, surprised at the news the dead man had been armed. "We've never advertised the Dude Ranch as such, either. It's not like we're a big game resort. At most, our guests do a little recreational fishing out on the pond."
"Hmm," Parker murmured. "You see, I don't like the coincidence of this rifle, the bear attack, and the recent death of Val Stanton. Next question: Do you get many trespassers at Heartland or the Dude Ranch?"
Lou gasped, an awful possibility dawning on her.
"What is it?" Parker asked.
"Um, I'll have to check my bookings, but, if this really is my missing guest, I—I think he was also checked in here during the time Val was killed," Lou said, gulping uncomfortably.
"I'll need to see those booking records, Ms. Fleming," Parker said. "Unless, of course, you'd prefer I get a warrant first."
"No, no, I'll gladly volunteer that information if it means we'll get to the bottom of who this guy is and what happened to Val," said Lou.
"Thank you," Parker said. He then beckoned to his forensics team to join him. "While you dig up those records, I'd like to look at the cabin he was staying in right away, please."
"All right," Lou said. "Cabin Two. Follow me. Oh, this is his truck, by the way."
Parker looked at the Ford F-150 that Lou was pointing to. He remembered how his rookie constable had taken the time to inspect the registration sticker when he came out to speak with Lou and found it to be a fake. Now Parker wondered about the license plate itself. He realised Becket had not mentioned anything about it—just the phony registration sticker. He would have to ask the kid what he found out about who the plate was actually registered to when he got back to headquarters.
"Ms. Fleming, when your missing guest first drove up here, did you notice if he had anything loaded in the back of his pickup? An ATV or a dirt bike, or something like that?" Parker questioned.
"No, why?" asked Lou.
"See these straps and this ramp?" Parker said, pointing to the items in the truck's bed. "He may have had something secured back here."
Lou looked for herself. "He couldn't have been bringing an ATV or a bike," she said in reply. "We don't permit those kinds of vehicles to go zooming all over the place here. Heartland Equestrian Connections is meant to be for peace and quiet. If either Jen or I had seen him pull up with something like that, we would have made him fully aware of our policy, in case he missed it on the website."
"Okay, thanks," Jim said, putting the issue on his mental back burner for the time being. "Let's see the inside of his cabin now, please."
"Let me get the master key," Lou said.
"Just unlock it, but don't touch the handle," Parker said in warning.
"Okay," Lou said. She climbed the steps and unlocked the door without touching the handle, as requested.
"Wait outside, please, Ms. Fleming, while my team goes over everything," said Jim.
"Of course." Lou stood back to let the forensics team first dust the handle for fingerprints and then enter the premises.
While Parker and his team pored over Cabin Two, Lou was gripped with apprehension. I can't believe this is happening. This is going to absolutely kill the Dude Ranch business. Who is going to want to stay here after people find out one of my guests was killed by a bear?
She pulled out her cell phone to access the bookings app to get the information for the chief. Sure enough, the name 'Dov Grosvenor' appeared as having reserved Cabin Two earlier in April, coinciding with the date of Val Stanton's death. Lou shivered at having that piece of information confirmed. Who was this guy, and could he really be responsible for what happened to Val?
Inside Cabin Two, Parker was initially disappointed. A pair of khaki-coloured pants and black cotton T-shirt lay folded crisply on the bed, the latter of which was also made up neatly.
"Chief, we've got something under the bed," one of the forensics team members named Corey Fraser stated. "It looks like a couple weapons cases of some kind."
The forensics photographer, Jason Pruitt, immediately dropped to the floor to snap images of the location of the cases.
"Let's pull them out and see what we have," Parker said, once Jason was finished.
Corey reached in and dragged the larger case out first.
"Empty," Corey said after snapping it open. The interior held sturdy foam packing, the contours of which very obviously matched the tactical rifle they discovered earlier near the body. There were also indentations that matched the shape of the weapon's scope and suppressor.
"Let's have a look inside that second case," Parker said.
Corey flipped the tabs and opened the lid to reveal a pair of Glock 17 pistols.
"Let's get pictures and bag and tag," Parker commanded. His team immediately complied with the instruction.
***
Hudson County Morgue
"Jim, we won't get anything from his fingerprints, unfortunately," the coroner Harlan Blackburn said as the two men stood in front of the stainless steel slab upon which the dead man's reeking remains were laid out, covered by a sheet.
"Why is that, Harlan?" Chief Parker asked, doing his best not to breathe through his nose.
"Not enough left of the fingers. Our guy must have put up his hands and arms defensively to protect his head and neck when the bear attacked. Chewed up his fingers and hands pretty bad. See?"
Harlan raised the sheet to show what was left of one of the dead man's hands.
Jim had seen his fair share of dead bodies in his career, but this was the first bear mauling he had come across, and he felt his stomach flip at the sight of the mangled, rotting digits.
"He didn't leave any prints in the cabin or in the truck, either," Jim said, swallowing hard against the tide of bile rising in his throat.
"I'll get you some dental X-rays and see if we get lucky," Harlan said casually.
"Great," Jim said. "Have you been able to determine a time of death yet?"
"From the observed rate of decay and the stage of the life-cycle of the flies present, I'd say he's been dead close to three or four days, give or take."
"So that would mean he's been dead since Saturday or Sunday," Jim stated.
"Yeah. Plus, turkey vultures tend to be picky about what they'll consume," Harlan continued. "They usually turn up their beaks if something's been dead past the four-day mark. Mind you, overnight temperatures have been close to freezing these past couple nights, which would of course also slow the decomposition... But I'd still say three or four days."
Jim said, "That pretty much squares with what one of our witnesses says about the last time this guy was seen alive. Thanks, Harlan. Let me know when your report is done."
Harlan gave him a thumbs-up. "You're welcome, Chief. The report will be ready lickety-split barring any surprises."
With that, Parker beat a hasty exit out the door. A few breaths of non-decay-scented air later, and he was on his way back to police headquarters to question his procedurally lax rookie constable.
"Becket," he said, upon finding the hapless young man. "About that Missing Persons report you tried to file for the name 'Dov Grosvenor' ... you did actually run the guy's license plate through the database, right?"
A beat of silence passed. "No, sir," Becket said as he visibly paled. "Once I realised the registration sticker was fake and didn't find his name anywhere, I just assumed the plate was fake, too—"
"Rookie," Parker growled. "Never 'assume' anything. Run that plate now and find out who it's supposed to be registered to!"
"Yes, sir. Right away, sir," Becket said meekly.
"Chief, that name 'Dov Grosvenor'..." Benoit said thoughtfully, having heard the exchange.
"What about it?"
"I knew a guy in high school back in Montreal named 'Dov'," Benoit recounted. "I remember it because it was so unusual. He told me he had Jewish ancestry and that the name means 'bear' in Hebrew."
Detective Constable Patterson picked up on this. "How about we see what the name 'Grosvenor' means, too?" she asked while tapping an inquiry into the Google search engine. Two seconds later, she had the result. "You're not going to believe this, but 'Grosvenor' means 'chief or royal hunter'."
"A guy registers under a fake name that essentially means 'royal bear hunter' only to end up getting mauled to death by a bear? If that don't beat all," Kavanaugh said with a dry laugh.
"Now that's what I'd call poetic justice," Parker said.
"Chief," said Becket, coming back with the results of his own search. "The license plate on the truck comes back as being registered to a beige 1998 Toyota Corolla belonging to 79-year-old Mildred McCann of Grande Prairie, Alberta."
"Stolen plate?" Benoit asked what everyone was thinking.
"Maybe," Parker said pensively. "Let's get Grande Prairie RCMP on the line, please, Constable Becket. You're going to explain to them that we have a truck here in Hudson with a license plate that should be on a Toyota in their city. Find out everything you can about the owner and how she might be connected to our dead guy."
"Yes, sir," Becket said, and retreated to his desk to do just that.
***
Half an hour later, Becket reported his findings to Chief Parker.
"Grande Prairie RCMP think they can ID our body," Becket said.
Parker was instantly alert. "Who was he?"
"They think it's Mildred McCann's son, 36-year-old Earl McCann," Becket said. "He's got several outstanding warrants for theft, assault, uttering threats, fraud, and so on. They said he was dishonourably discharged from the Armed Forces years ago for insubordination and pretty much being a violent, loose canon.
"Mildred has Alzheimer's and is in an assisted-living facility. The RCMP corporal I spoke with says Earl never visits, but somehow the bills get paid. RCMP in Cold Lake almost had him a while back when he was stopped for driving around in the truck with the plate registered to his mother's sedan. Those cops let him go because Earl reportedly claimed he had not had time to get to the registry office to make the switch. Those Cold Lake guys assumed he was telling the truth and let him go with a warning to get it done. They didn't realise their mistake until he was long gone."
"See how assuming something can lead to bigger problems?" Parker said, knowing the lesson would not be lost on his rookie.
"Yes, sir," Becket said solemnly.
Parker sighed. "Eh, for what it's worth, Earl McCann does not sound like the kind of guy who would have let himself be taken in because of a petty registration violation. He most likely would have shot and killed those cops in cold blood if they had pulled up his warrants at the time."
Becket's eyes went wide. "I hadn't thought of that, sir."
"All right. I'll let Harlan know to send the dental X-rays to the Grande Prairie detachment," Parker said. "I'm sure they'll be able to confirm it's Earl McCann."
"Yes, sir," Becket said.
Turning to the rest of his team, Parker said: "Now we get to figure out why Dov Grosvenor, aka, Earl McCann, was staying in Hudson and how he managed to get himself killed by a bear. We've got lots of evidence to process, so let's get moving."
***
Heartland Ranch — Barn Loft
Ty was dreaming in the early morning hours. An open country road stretched before him as he rode his treasured Norton motorcycle. Someone's arms held onto him tightly from behind. Without turning to look, he instinctively knew it was Amy. Such a feeling of freedom coursed through him, he did not even wonder for a moment where they were headed, or that none of this made any sense since he was no longer in possession of the Norton.
As is sometimes the case in such dreams, Ty's point of view shifted. He was now observing the ride rather than experiencing it. He noticed with a touch of confusion it was not Amy who was snuggled up close to him, but rather Ashley Stanton. Repulsed, Ty brought the motorcycle to a halt and planted his feet on the ground.
"Get off the bike, Ashley. I'm supposed to be giving Amy a ride."
"What?" Ashley whined. "But this is my brother's bike. You promised me you'd take me out for a spin."
"No, this is my bike," Ty argued indignantly. "Get off!"
"You can't leave me stranded on the side of the road," Ashley complained. "Take me back to Briar Ridge."
Ty thought to himself this was a reasonable request since he really could not just abandon Ashley in the middle of nowhere.
"Fine," Ty heard himself saying. "But if Amy shows up, you're getting off, and I'm taking her."
"Fine," Ashley said.
Ty started up his bike again and turned around, keeping his eyes peeled for any sign of Amy.
The dream then seemed to morph into other images and sights that no longer had any connection to the original theme. When Ty awoke, the dream was already fading. By the time he had brushed his teeth and washed his face, he had already forgotten most of it. However, a small voice nagged in the back of his brain he should have paid attention to something important in that dream, but that detail remained elusive.
***
May 8
Hudson Times—Online Version
Man Mauled to Death
Nadir Jutley
Hudson Police along with Alberta Fish and Wildlife are issuing an urgent alert to all residents of Hudson county after a grisly discovery. The body of an unidentified man, badly mauled, was found in a wilderness area near the Heartland Equestrian Connections resort yesterday afternoon.
The owner and operator of Heartland Equestrian Connections, Samantha Fleming, declined to comment on the situation due to the ongoing investigation by Hudson police, but did say the resort will be closed to the public for the next two weeks.
If you see the bear, contact Alberta Fish and Wildlife immediately at 555-625-1540. Do not approach the animal under any circumstances.
More details to come as information is released by authorities.
Email: nadir_jutley
***
Hudson Police Headquarters
"I've got the ballistics report on the rifle we found yesterday at the Dude Ranch, Chief," said Kavanaugh as his boss walked into the room for the morning briefing. The team had been burning the midnight oil working on the evidence collected from the Dude Ranch, and results were beginning to filter through.
"Let me guess: Earl McCann's rifle is the same weapon that killed Valerie Stanton," Parker said.
"You got it in one, Chief," Kavanaugh said, "it's just as you suspected."
"What about the pistols we found in the cabin?" Parker asked. "Anything special about them?"
"Well, we already knew those Glocks—untraceable of course—were the wrong caliber for the Stillman shooting," Kavanaugh said. "But we did get a hit on an unsolved murder on one of the Glocks. I've just shared that information with Detective Prescott in Calgary."
"Oh?" Parker said, interest aroused.
"You're probably not going to believe this, but the ballistics on one of them came back as a match on the Barick murders."
"You're saying McCann was responsible for Stanton and the Baricks?!" Parker exclaimed.
"So it would seem," Kavanaugh said. "Why else would he have been in possession of those weapons?"
"But he didn't shoot Lisa Stillman," Parker spoke, more of a statement than a question.
"Doubtful," Patterson chimed in. "The kind of professional, high-end firearms McCann had, no way he would have been using a pea-shooter like what was probably used on Stillman on the road that day."
"Which means we still have more than one shooter on our hands," Parker said gravely.
Patterson nodded back in silent acknowledgment of this fact.
"Hmph," Parker sighed. "Benoit, tell me you have good news about that phone we found on McCann's body."
"I was just coming to tell you, Boss," Benoit said hastily. "We worked all night. Finally cracked the encryption a couple minutes ago. Look at what we pulled off his message history."
"Show us."
Benoit flashed an image file up on the screen. "That's a picture of Lisa Stillman," he said. "It was received the day of the attempt on her life in the hospital. And then there's also a picture of Val Stanton, received shortly before she was shot."
"A killer for hire, right here in Hudson," Parker said with a shake of his head as he stared at the images. "Okay, so we can tie McCann to Stanton's killing with the photo he was sent, and with the ballistics match on the rifle. He was obviously the one to go after Stillman in the hospital. But if he didn't shoot her, who did?"
"That is a mystery," Benoit said with a shrug. "But that's not all. Two more pictures were sent this past Saturday. Are we seeing a pattern, yet?"
All eyes focused on the two additional pictures Benoit pulled from the phone.
"Our very own Hudson veterinarians," Parker said in recognition of Drs. Scott Cardinal and Ty Borden.
"Who both happened to be on the scene when Lisa Stillman was shot," Patterson said.
"Looks like Stillman's shooter is trying to eliminate any possibility of being identified," Kavanaugh added.
"Tell me you have a bead on who was sending McCann those pictures, Benoit," Parker said.
"We're still trying to figure that out, sir," Benoit answered ruefully. "Whoever sent the pictures was using a burner phone. Unless he tries to make contact again, we can't trace him."
Another thought suddenly occurred to Parker. "What's happened to the court orders to get the ID of the person who requested Val Stanton's death certificate and who filed that second insurance claim?"
"Oh!" Benoit exclaimed. "Those probably came through yesterday right when we were called out to deal with the situation at the Dude Ranch. I'll get on that right away, sir."
***
Hudson Funeral Home
Stanley Belmont could feel a trickle of perspiration starting to make its way down the side of his face. Faced with questions about his involvement with Tanner Gunn's investors' group and his recent application for the medical death certificate for Val Stanton, he nevertheless tried to keep his panic and his indignation in check.
"Of course I requested Val Stanton's death certificate," he said testily in reply to Detective Kavanaugh's question about it. "As the owner and operator of this business and as the one entrusted with handling Val's funeral arrangements, I had every legitimate right to request it."
Patterson and Kavanaugh nodded in agreement, hoping to keep the man at ease before they dropped the next question.
"Yes, we know Ms. Stanton's will stipulated that your business was to handle everything at whatever time she passed," said Kavanaugh.
"Well, then, what's the trouble?" Stanley asked, clearly exasperated.
"The trouble is we can't seem to find a reason why you also applied to receive a copy of Lisa Stillman's medical death certificate," Patterson said, looking him squarely in the face.
Stanley swallowed.
"Lisa's family says she stipulated she wanted a funeral home in Calgary to handle her arrangements," Patterson said. "So I ask you now: why did you request a copy of Lisa Stillman's death certificate when you didn't need it?"
Both Kavanaugh and Patterson noted the nervous shift of Belmont's eyes.
"We also have questions for you about your gambling habits, Mr. Belmont," Kavanaugh said. "You and Tanner Gunn like to frequent the poker tables, don't you?"
Belmont pursed his lips. "And what if I do?" he challenged with a question of his own.
"Nothing, really," Kavanaugh said, "except if those poker tables are illegal. How much are you in the hole for, Mr. Belmont?"
"Um, I think I'd like to contact my lawyer before I say anything more," Stanley eventually uttered after a few moments of uncomfortable silence.
"Fine," Kavanaugh said. "That's entirely your right. But you're treading on dangerous ground, Mr. Belmont, and I think you know you are."
"Call your lawyer, Mr. Belmont," Patterson said. "We can all meet together down at police headquarters."
"Am I under arrest?" Belmont nearly squeaked, his voice nervously rising in pitch.
"That all depends on how you answer our questions," Kavanaugh said.
"Call," Patterson said, nodding at the phone on Stanley's desk. "Then you're coming with us for more questioning."
With a resigned sigh, Stanley picked up the phone and dialled.
***
Calgary International Airport
Lou watched carefully for Rachel and Ben Stillman at the Arrivals gate. She recognized Ben on sight, though it had been years since she last saw him. The handsome, yet arrogant lad she remembered had grown a few more inches since then, and had matured into a young man with rugged good looks. The dark blonde woman nearly hidden behind his tall frame could only be Rachel. Though they had never met, Lou could see the family resemblance instantly, as Rachel's looks were strikingly similar to Lisa's.
Not that they'd ever be mistaken for twins, Lou now thought, but it's clear they were related...
Lou waved to get their attention. As soon as they saw her, they quickened their pace to meet up.
"Hi, Lou," Ben said.
"Hello, Ben," Lou responded, giving him a brief hug.
"Thanks for coming for us," he said. "This is my mother, Rachel."
"Hi, Rachel," Lou said, choosing to give the other woman a quick hug as well. "We spoke on the phone, obviously..."
"Yes," Rachel said. "It's nice to finally meet you face to face after all the times Lisa shared family photos..."
"Your, uhm, the flight was okay? You got everything?" Lou asked awkwardly, indicating their luggage.
"Yes, thanks," Rachel said, in answer to both questions.
"All right, good. Follow me and we'll be off."
The ride back to Hudson was spent mostly in silence. No one quite knew what to say as the subject of what brought them together at this time was still too raw and too devastating to address head-on, though Lou could sense Rachel was brimming with questions she desperately wanted answered.
Rachel did speak once when she mentioned how much certain areas of Calgary they passed along the way had changed, and how much larger the urban sprawl had grown since she was last in that city.
"Hudson has changed quite a bit too," Lou commented. "Especially since all the flooding in 2013."
"Yes, I remember that," Rachel said contemplatively. "The footage we saw on the news was just awful."
"But we pulled through," Lou said, thinking of how members of their community had indeed joined forces to help each other, including the local Hutterite colony.
No one said anything more until they reached Heartland.
"Wow. Are those my old jumps?" asked Ben upon seeing them in the yellow glow of the fading afternoon sunlight when Lou pulled up.
"Yes," Lou responded.
"Who's that riding in the pen right now?"
"My daughter, Georgie," Lou replied with a touch of pride.
"Oh, yeah," Ben said. "She's the kid you adopted, right? Lisa mentioned her a few times. I'm glad someone's making use of them... and since Lisa's technically her family... was her family..."
Ben morosely stopped talking.
"Well, here we are," Lou said clumsily, putting the SUV in park and shutting off the engine.
"You know, I wasn't sure when I'd ever see this place again," Ben murmured.
"I heard so much about it from her," Rachel said as she stared out the windshield at the ranch house. "She told me she was so happy when she finally moved in here with Jack... It's just as 'homey' as she described it. Thanks for bringing us here and for offering to put us up at your Dude Ranch, Lou. I don't think I'm emotionally ready to be at Fairfield just yet. Not when she can't be there with us anymore."
Lou sent a sympathetic glance at Rachel. "Come on. Let's go inside. Amy will have supper ready by now."
They followed Lou up the porch steps. She held the screen and the kitchen door open for them to enter.
"Our stuff will be safe in the SUV, right?" a worried Rachel asked while looking over her shoulder, thinking at once of her luggage.
"You're out in the country again, Rachel," Lou responded. "This isn't the city. No one's going to break in here."
"Right," Rachel said with a wry smile. "I'd forgotten what it was like to leave your doors unlocked."
"Ben," Amy said warmly upon seeing the young man step foot in the kitchen. She approached right away and embraced him as if greeting an old friend.
"Hey, Amy," Ben answered back. "It's good to see you, even under the circumstances."
"I know," Amy said after pulling away. "I'm sorry it took something like this for us to meet again."
"This is my mom, Rachel," Ben said, gesturing to his mother. "Mom, this is Amy. She and I also used to compete against each other on the circuit."
"Hi, Rachel," Amy said, deciding to give the woman a hug as well. She, too, noticed how similar in appearance Rachel was to Lisa.
"Nice to meet you, Amy," Rachel said. "Lisa told me so much about you—about all of you—over the years. I almost feel like I know you."
"Excuse me while I go call my daughter in for dinner," Lou said, hoping to avoid any further mention of difficult topics. "The bathroom is just down there around the corner if you want to freshen up."
"I'm fine," Ben said, shoving his hands in his pockets.
"I could use a bathroom break," Rachel sighed, and made directly for the facilities.
"Why don't you have a seat either here in the kitchen or in the living room, Ben?" Amy suggested. "I'm just going to go check on my daughter."
"Sure," Ben said easily, deciding to lounge on the couch.
A minute later, Amy returned with a still-sleepy Lyndy, who had just woken from a nap in Katie's room.
"Ah, who's this?" Ben asked with a smile upon seeing mother and child.
"Meet Lyndy," Amy said. "She turned two in December. Say 'hi' to Ben, sweetheart."
Lyndy rubbed the back of her hand over her eyes. "Hi," she whispered shyly.
"Hi, Lyndy," Ben answered back with a smile. "She's super-cute, Amy. I bet she's got Ty wrapped around her little finger."
"Oh, does she ever," Amy said with a roll of her eyes and a soft laugh.
"Where is Ty, anyway?"
"Working. He had the day shift at the vet clinic in town, but he's supposed to be on his way home now."
"Right, he's 'Dr. Borden' now," Ben said. "Lisa sent photos of the graduation ceremony."
"It sounds like she kept you up-to-date," Amy said.
"She did," Ben confirmed with a short nod. "Aunt Lisa was proud of all of you; proud to call you her family. It made me feel a little jealous sometimes, to be honest. Made me wish I was back in Hudson, even if I didn't exactly enjoy it when I was sent here during my parents' divorce."
"That was a rough time for you, Ben," Amy said in sympathy. "You know my parents split up too, so I understand. It's hard to appreciate anything when your whole life is being turned upside-down."
"No kidding," muttered Ben.
Presently, Lou returned. "Georgie should be in here soon," she said. "Thanks for taking care of dinner, Amy. I guess we can start as soon as Ty gets in."
"And he should be here any time," Amy stated.
"Is Rachel still — ?" Lou began to ask, jerking a thumb in the direction of the bathroom.
Amy nodded.
"Should I check on her?" Lou asked. "I'll check on her."
Amy was about to protest, but realised the woman had been in there a while.
Lou tapped lightly on the bathroom door. She could not be sure, but she thought she heard the sound of muffled sobs before the sudden flush of the toilet followed by the noisy gush of the faucet.
"Are you okay, Rachel?" Lou called.
"Be out in a minute," Rachel replied in a nasally, constrained voice.
"Okay, we'll be at the dinner table," Lou said before turning away.
***
The meal started out in a subdued fashion. Nobody seemed willing or ready to talk about what had been happening over the past week. They ate and drank in silence, until finally Ben broke the ice. He cleared his throat before beginning to speak.
"You know, I just wanna say to you guys I was a real brat when I was sent to stay here," he said solemnly. "And I'm sorry for all that."
"Oh, that was long ago. You don't have to apologize for anything, Ben," Lou said kindly.
"Yeah, but still. I could have been more gracious about, well, everything," he said. "What's happened... it's been a huge wake-up call for me. I thought at the time Lisa was just trying to get rid of me by dumping me here. But I get it now. I get it. Even then she saw something special in this family. She wanted me to experience that also. I didn't appreciate it enough."
Amy noticed Lou's eyes were brimming, and she could feel the moisture building beneath her own lids.
"Anyway, that's all I wanted to say," Ben said.
"Thank you, Ben," Amy said, giving him a smile of encouragement. "Lisa... was very special to us, too..."
Georgie was starting to get weepy. Ty blinked back his own tears.
"My sister," Rachel began shakily, "was never able to have children of her own. But she regarded all of you as if you were her own. I hope you know that."
Silent tears slipped from Amy's eyes as she recalled the very candid conversation she had shared with Lisa not so long ago about her miscarriages. "We know," she said with a sad smile and a nod.
"All right, enough emotional stuff," Rachel declared. "I want to hear about all of you. I mean, Lisa would call and talk about what was happening with the family, but I want to hear details."
"No, first I want to hear about you two," Amy said. "I have a feeling Lisa probably shared a lot more about us with you than she did about you with us."
"That'd be my fault," Ben admitted. "I didn't communicate with Lisa nearly as much. She'd send emails all the time, but I don't think I sent many back."
"So what's been going on with you, then?" asked Amy.
"Well, I got my MBA as you may know," Ben replied. "I've been working as a financial analyst for a startup in Montreal for the past year. Keeps me busy."
"You should talk to Lou," Amy said, looking over at her sister. "She got her MBA. Put it to good use, too."
"Oh, I've done all right," Lou said, flipping a hand dismissively. "Nothing crazy."
"That's not what Aunt Lisa told me," Ben said seriously. "She told me all about how great the Dude Ranch was. Said you were one of the smartest and most competent women she knew. I think that was after she sold her share back to you. You handle people's financial portfolios, and you also published a book, right?"
"Yeah," Lou said slowly. She was struck by the fact Lisa had taken the time to share such things with her nephew, and that he remembered them.
"And Lisa said that Maggie's Diner is a franchise now," Ben continued.
"It is," Lou said.
"I bet Mrs. Duval never dreamed her little diner would be a franchise in Times Square," Ben said. "You're living the dream, Lou."
"'The dream' is also very busy," Lou said. She looked over briefly at Georgie. "It takes me away from my family much more than I wish it did. I was actually in New York dealing with the franchise when I got the call about Lisa..." her voice trailed off. Unable to continue, she instead took a drink of water.
"Uh, speaking of Maggie's," Ben said to move past the uncomfortable moment, "How's Soraya?"
Amy answered: "She's doing great. Loves London."
"Ontario?" Ben asked.
"England," Amy corrected. "It's where her husband, Dillon, is from."
"Wow. I didn't even know she got married," Ben expressed his surprise. "Time flies."
"Maggie moved out there, too. It's why Lou bought the diner in the first place."
"Crazy decision," Lou said with a shake of her head.
"Hey, Lou, maybe I'll open a Maggie's Diner location in Montreal," Ben quipped. "How much to become a franchisee?"
"Don't encourage her," Amy chuckled with a grin and a roll of her eyes.
***
Hudson Police Headquarters
Stanley Belmont, owner and operator of the Hudson Funeral Home business, tried to decide what his best course of action should be. Sitting beside him in the cubby-hole of a room reserved for questioning suspects was his lawyer, Patrick Randall. For the time being, Stanley had not said a word, choosing to take his Charter-guaranteed right to remain silent.
Detective Constable Patterson looked steadily at Stanley. "We know you had a legitimate reason for getting Valerie Stanton's medical death certificate. But why did you request a copy of Lisa Stillman's death certificate, Mr. Belmont?"
"You don't have to answer her question," Randall advised his client.
"What did you do with the copy of Lisa Stillman's medical death certificate?" asked Patterson.
"He's not answering that one, either," said Randall.
"Fine," Patterson said, splaying her hands on the surface of the table between them. "Look, we know you're not in this alone, Stanley. We know someone either asked you or coerced you into putting in that request for Stillman's certificate. You're the one with the credentials as a funeral home director to legally request such a document. Anyone else would need to be either a family member or they'd do it through a court order, and that sort of thing. The only reason someone would want that document at this point would be to file a claim on a life insurance policy. Money is a very good motive for murder."
"Murder?!" Stanley yelped, forgetting his resolve to remain silent. "I didn't kill Lisa Stillman."
"But maybe you hired the man who did," Detective Kavanaugh broke in.
Stanley shook his head. "I did no such thing!"
"We know about your gambling debts, Stanley," Patterson said. "You and Tanner Gunn are pretty well known out there for your love of the illegal poker tables. He roped you in to that underground scene, didn't he?"
"Don't answer that," Randall warned.
Patterson narrowed her eyes.
"Detectives, this is a fishing expedition," Randall said impatiently. "Either you charge my client with something, or you let him go."
"We're getting to that. We know you're in the hole for a cool 1.2 million to a certain loan shark in Calgary," Patterson said to Stanley.
"Oh, someone your pal Tanner Gunn introduced you to, isn't that right, Mr. Belmont?" Kavanaugh asked. "Does the name 'Mick Osbourne' sound familiar, Mr. Belmont?"
Stanley's face went pale.
"You don't have to answer any of that, Stan," Randall repeated his predictable line yet again.
"Mick Osbourne told our Calgary counterparts you've borrowed heavily from him on a number of occasions," Patterson said. "You've been racking up the debt. Mick's enforcers are vicious. Were you being threatened?"
Stanley's eyes swept over to his counsel.
"Did Tanner Gunn ask you to request Lisa Stillman's medical death certificate?" Patterson asked. "Did he promise to get Mick's guys to back off if you did?"
"Um... I'd like a private conference with my lawyer now, please," Stanley murmured weakly after a period of dead silence.
"Granted," Patterson said. She and Kavanaugh got up from their seats and left their suspect alone with his counsel.
***
Chief Parker was waiting for Patterson and Kavanaugh when they reappeared in the bullpen.
"How's the interview with Stanley Belmont going?" he asked.
"I think we've got him," Patterson answered. "He's asked for some private time with his counsel."
"He hasn't admitted anything yet," Kavanaugh said, being more cautious. "But he's definitely spooked."
"Think he's going to spill what he knows?" Chief Parker asked.
"Hopefully," Patterson said. "Because he's definitely not going to want to be the one to take the fall for a murder conspiracy charge."
"He won't if he knows what's good for him," Parker commented. "Good work, you too. We'll see if his lawyer talks some sense into him."
"Okay, since we've been away dealing with Belmont, let's get up to speed. Where are we with our dead hitman's case?" Kavanaugh now asked.
Detective Benoit looked up when he heard this question.
"As you know, Earl McCann's phone was all busted up, so we've taken the SIM card out and popped it into another phone on the off chance the sender will try to get in touch again, but so far, nothing," he said.
"Then maybe it's time we went on the offensive," Parker suggested. "Can you try reaching out to him?"
"I don't think that's a good idea, sir," Benoit answered. "The call history shows there were never any outgoing calls. It might be a giveaway if we try to make contact."
Parker considered this. "You could be right..."
"Hold on," Benoit said excitedly. "Someone is calling right now. ID is blocked. It could be the middle man."
Kavanaugh raced over to help his colleague with setting up a trace.
"All right. Accept the call, Benoit," Parker advised.
Benoit tapped the screen to answer. Before he could say a word, the mysterious caller barged ahead without greeting.
"Hey, remember those two loose ends I told you about? They've still not been taken care of!" the voice barked menacingly. "The client is pissed. I told you on Saturday those had to be taken care of ASAP. You are still in Hudson, right? I told you the client said to stick around, didn't I?"
Benoit did not know if he should chance a reply. "Uh-huh," he eventually mumbled.
"You're makin' me look bad. Do what you're being paid to do!"
The line went dead.
"Did we get him?" asked Parker.
"No," replied a disappointed Kavanaugh. "Whoever this is, he's still using a burner phone. GPS and location services have been disabled. Best we can do is triangulate off the closest cell tower."
"How close can you get us?
"The call pinged off a cell tower around 7th Avenue and 8th Street in the downtown Calgary area," answered Kavanaugh. "He could be anywhere within a three city block radius."
"Get Detective Prescott over in Calgary on the line," Parker ordered. "They'll have the resources and the manpower. We need to find this guy before he disappears."
***
Calgary Homicide Detective James Prescott listened intently to what Chief Parker was telling him. He mobilized his teams as soon as he learned of the active cell phone signal potentially belonging to the individual involved in the hiring of a professional killer.
"Do you have any likely suspects on your radar in the 'middle man' department, Prescott?"Parker asked.
"A few come to mind," Prescott responded, as he and four separate groups of plainclothes detectives converged on the area in downtown Calgary that Kavanaugh had identified.
The light rail passenger trains traversing 7th Avenue that hummed along at 15-minute intervals at this hour of the evening were sparsely filled. Prescott said a silent prayer their quarry did not decide to hop on one of those trains while they searched for him. The man could quietly disappear into any quadrant of the city if they allowed that to happen.
Prescott and two others now crossed those very tracks on foot. "Heading north on 8th Street," he spoke into his concealed comm. "Approaching the Dominion Centre Building with the pharmacy, Tim Hortons, and the Community Corrections Centre."
"Copy," the dispatcher's voice spoke in acknowledgement.
The Tim Hortons franchise caught Prescott's attention, or rather, one of the patrons did. The detective continued walking for a few more paces before silently indicating to his two colleagues he wanted to double back. They understood immediately what he was planning. There was only a pair of street-level doors being used as an entrance and an exit. One of Prescott's colleagues named Koch casually took up his position near that exit should the suspect try to bolt.
"Possible suspect sighted," Prescott whispered into his comm. "William Ulrich. He's in the Tim Hortons."
Chief Parker and his team in Hudson, also linked in to Prescott's feed, heard this announcement. All waited with bated breath to hear how this would go down.
Prescott and the second cop named Diaz swung open the entrance door and made their way inside. The aroma of brewing coffee, sugary baked goods and toasting sandwiches wafted in the tiny space that seated maybe 40 at capacity. The man they were after sat alone in a booth situated right up against one of the windows by the exit door. Prescott and Diaz ignored him for the time being and instead made for the lineup as if they were going to order something.
Known on the streets as 'Billy the Bulldog', it was not a stretch to see why ex-felon and known middle-man William Ulrich had been saddled with that nickname. Small in stature, compact in build and with a prominent underbite, Billy had spiteful black eyes and a mercurial temper.
Prescott pulled out his cell phone and sent a quick text to Benoit.
- Call the number now.
Benoit responded from his desk in the Hudson police headquarters.
- Copy. Calling now.
Prescott turned slightly to see Billy pull out his phone. "What the hell are you calling me for?" he snapped.
Benoit terminated the call without saying a word.
The 'Bulldog' scowled at his screen, put it away, and went back to sipping his double-double*. It was the confirmation Prescott was looking for. He left the queue and made a beeline for his suspect with Diaz right behind.
"Billy, Billy, Billy. Little late for a caffeine fix, wouldn't you say?"
Billy jerked his head up at the sound of Prescott's chiding voice. He saw the two plainclothes cops, instinctively recognized them for what they were, and realised he was cornered. A look of wild panic crossed his features.
"Don't make a scene," Prescott said gruffly, shoving Billy back into his seat as he tried to stand up.
"This is harassment," Billy howled. "I was just minding my own business here."
"Sure you were, Billy," Diaz said, sliding into the seat opposite the others in the booth.
"I had a meeting earlier with my parole officer over in Corrections," Billy said, jutting his generous chin in the general direction of the Corrections Centre. "You can call and ask him. Now I'm just having some coffee and a bite to eat."
"Must have been a really long meeting, Billy," Prescott said.
"Yeah, the Corrections Centre has been closed for hours, Billy," Diaz added.
"So time flies!" Billy protested. "What do you guys want, anyway?"
"Oh, you're coming with us," Diaz said.
"What for?!" Billy yapped.
"See, you're under arrest for suspicion of soliciting murder," Prescott said, pulling Billy up and handcuffing him while informing him of his rights. "Let's go."
***
Heartland – Ranch House
Lyndy was starting to nod off in her booster seat. Despite the afternoon nap, it was now long past her usual bedtime and sleep was beckoning.
"I'll take her back to the loft and put her to bed, Amy," Ty offered. "Plus, I've got some paperwork I've been neglecting that I should take care of."
"Thank you," Amy said, giving both her husband and her child a kiss. "See you when I finish up here."
"Goodnight, everyone," Ty said, giving a short wave to them all while picking up his sleepy daughter, cradling her head against his shoulder and supporting her back.
The rest of them said their goodbyes and watched Ty depart with Lyndy.
They lingered at the table for about a half hour longer, making idle chat about nothing of any significance until the travellers' exhaustion began to take over. Lou noticed, and politely suggested it was time to head over to the Dude Ranch.
Rachel yawned her assent. "I'm ready to turn into a pumpkin," she said.
"Same here," Ben said. "Thanks for the meal, Amy. See you tomorrow."
"Yes, thanks, Amy," Rachel said. "You've all been wonderful. I can see why Lisa loved you all so much... and why she loved being here."
"You're welcome," Amy said. "See you tomorrow."
***
The dog was nowhere to be seen. He heard through the grapevine about the possible case of strychnine poisoning, and he patted himself on the back for that one. Stillman's sister and nephew had spent dinner at the ranch house, but the elder Fleming sister had just taken them somewhere; maybe to that hole of a place she called "Heartland Equestrian Connections" like it was some five-star resort. He was slightly surprised they were even using the place since the news earlier that day said some dead guy was found nearby yesterday, but he figured that was none of his business.
The old man still had not come back, so that meant another possible threat was cleared from his list of concerns. Now all he had to do was make sure he could get to Borden in the barn office, then he could focus on Dr. Cardinal in the clinic. Things were approaching a critical juncture now, but there was no turning back. He could no longer let them live when the chance remained they could identify him, no matter how remote that possibility.
He readied his weapon, slipping it into his jacket breast pocket once again. His aim had not been as perfect as he had wanted when he fired at the Stillman woman, but in the end it had not mattered. She was dead, and she would never again be talking about who might have shot her.
I won't mess up this time, he vowed, picturing in his mind how he would take out Borden. He would shoot him, then trash the barn office, paying special attention to the medicine cabinet. Make it look like an attempted robbery gone bad by a desperate junkie. Nope. I definitely won't miss this target, and the same will go for Cardinal.
***
With the dishes washed and put away, Amy sat tiredly in the ranch house kitchen. She entertained the thought of brewing a cup of tea, but decided she should just head back to the loft and decompress there. She was about to do just that when the kitchen telephone extension rang.
It was getting to be a little late for anyone to be calling since it was already past nine o'clock, but Amy nevertheless checked the call display.
HUDSON POLICE
She picked up the phone right away.
"Hello?" she answered.
"Good evening, this is Chief Jim Parker. Is Lou Fleming available?"
"Sorry, Chief," Amy said, "she's stepped out for a little while."
"I see," Jim said. "I was hoping to talk to her and provide an update about the body we found by the Dude Ranch. But I'm glad I caught you at the house, too."
"Why is that?" Amy asked.
"We're convinced the dead man we found was hired to kill Valerie Stanton, and we're almost certain he was the one who attacked Lisa and assaulted Jack in the hospital. We found evidence on a cell phone belonging to him—photos of Val and Lisa. The timeline of Val's shooting and the incident at the hospital line up with when the photos were sent."
"That's crazy," Amy said, blood running cold at this revelation.
"There's more, I'm afraid. Your husband and Dr. Cardinal also seem to have been targeted," Parker said.
Amy almost could not believe her ears as she listened to what the chief was saying. His call that evening had been most unexpected, as was the information he was now sharing.
"The latest pictures he was sent before he died were of Ty and Scott, so it's highly likely he was being paid to kill them, too."
"Are you sure?" Amy asked, her heart skipping a beat as this message sank in. When will this nightmare end? "But who was he?"
"We've been in touch with another RCMP detachment about that," Parker said, not yet wanting to disclose what they discovered to a civilian. "I can't share those details about his identity at this time, but the police in Calgary have the man who sent the pictures in custody right now. Unfortunately, he's just a middle man. Even so, he's refusing to talk right now about who's behind all this."
"Chief," Amy said, trying to calm her nerves, "is my husband still in danger?"
"Until we know for certain who initiated the hits, we can't be sure," Parker admitted. "My advice would be to take whatever precautions you deem necessary. I unfortunately can't spare or justify the manpower for a protection detail at this time based simply on broad speculation. That said, I have to say I am still personally worried. If this dead guy truly was contracted to take out your husband and Dr. Cardinal, chances are whoever did the contracting might simply hire someone else to get the job done. We should not assume the threat has passed. Stay on the alert while we work on it."
At these words, Amy sent a furtive glance out the window. The security lights illuminated the expansive yard. She glanced up at the loft above the barn, suddenly thinking how very exposed it was. The distinct lack of a secure door leading to her living space with her husband and their child was troubling. If someone breached the barn door during the night, it would be very easy for that person to come creeping up the stairs unnoticed and unhindered.
"Chief, thank you for telling me," Amy said, having already made up her mind what she was going to do.
After she ended the call, Amy quickly made her way to the barn. Ty looked up from his paperwork as soon as he heard her. "What's going on?" he asked, confused by her anxious appearance.
"I just spoke with Chief Parker," Amy said hurriedly. "Ty, he was calling about the dead guy they found by the Dude Ranch... he said they think someone contracted him to kill Val and Lisa. They found Val and Lisa's pictures on his phone."
"You've gotta be kidding me," Ty said, staring at her, mouth agape.
"No," Amy replied grimly. "That's not all. Chief Parker said there were also pictures sent recently to the dead man's phone of you and Scott. I don't like how vulnerable we are in the barn loft. I think we should all stay in the house tonight and lock the doors, or at least until Chief Parker and his team get to the bottom of this. I'm packing an overnight bag for me and Lyndy; you should do the same."
"All right, you go ahead with Lyndy. Has Chief Parker contacted Scott?"
"I don't know," Amy said with a shake of her head.
"I'll call him," Ty said, rising to his feet. "Let me finish up here, and I'll join you in the house soon."
"Okay," Amy said, and kissed him quickly before heading up the stairs. After filling a bag with clothes and other necessities for herself and her child, Amy gathered a sleeping Lyndy in her arms, hefted the bag onto her free shoulder, and made her way back down.
***
He watched as she walked at a brisk clip across the yard from the house to the barn. He had been about to make his move, but stopped in his tracks when he saw this. The vet was no longer alone now, much to his frustration. He would have to wait to see what happened next. Had he missed his opportunity? He decided to wait a little longer. His patience was rewarded when about ten minutes later, she reappeared, this time with the kid in her arms and a bag on her shoulder. He watched as she nearly ran back into the house. A vile smile spread across his face. The vet was finally by himself in the barn! It was now, or never. Still, he waited for a few minutes to be sure she was not coming back. He wanted no witnesses. But ultimately, if she did come back, and if she interrupted what he was about to do, he had no qualms about ending her on the spot, too.
***
Scott, having just got off the phone with Chief Parker, was nevertheless grateful for Ty's call.
"It's crazy," Scott said to Ty. "But I think I'll be okay at the clinic tonight. The police station is a couple blocks away, anyway, right? Nobody could be that stupid to try something with the cops so close."
"Right," Ty said, hoping Scott actually was right about that. "Be careful, man."
"I will," Scott said. "You, too."
***
Amy knocked on her niece's bedroom door.
"Come in," Georgie answered.
"Georgie, we're staying in the house tonight," Amy announced upon opening the door.
"Uh, okay," Georgie said in surprise. She stared at Amy whose body language spoke of pent-up tension. "What's going on?"
"I just spoke with Adam's dad," Amy explained. "That dead guy you two found? It turns out he might have been hired to kill Val and Lisa. The police found their pictures on his phone."
"What?!" Georgie exclaimed.
"But that's not all," Amy said. "They also found pictures of Ty and Scott, so I'm thinking we'll all be a lot safer together here in the house until the police figure out what's going on."
"You know, you guys really do need to get a door with a lock for your loft," Georgie said.
"Yeah, yeah," Amy muttered. "I've put Lyndy down in Katie's room for now and Ty and I will be in my old room."
"Okay. I really wish Jack and Tim were here," Georgie said wistfully.
"Me, too," Amy said. "But for now I'm just going to sit in Katie's room and be with Lyndy until Ty arrives." She was grateful her younger niece was still staying with Peter in Vancouver.
"And Lou had better get back here soon from settling Rachel and Ben in at the Dude Ranch," Georgie added.
"Maybe you should call her," Amy suggested.
"Yeah. Okay, I will," Georgie said, pulling out her cell phone to do just that.
***
He watched for any sign she would be back. When five minutes passed, he decided the coast was clear. It was time to finish this. It was time to clean up the mess for which he had only himself to blame. And after handling this job, the last item on the list was Scott Cardinal, but making that one also look like a burglary gone wrong would not be too much of a problem either, he figured. He crept out of the shadows towards the barn, hand inside his jacket breast pocket, ready to pull out the pistol.
***
"Mom, you need to get back here," Georgie said.
Lou could not mistake the urgency in her daughter's voice.
"Why, what's going on?" asked Lou, who had just finally bid goodnight to Ben and Rachel in their respective cabins.
"Adam's dad thinks the dead guy we found is the one who killed Val and Lisa," she said.
"Val and Lisa?" cried Lou.
"But Mom, there's more," Georgie continued. "Chief Parker says Ty and Scott could also be targets. Amy just brought Lyndy to the house and Ty's coming, too. They're all going to stay in here tonight. For safety."
"Um, okay, that's a good idea," Lou said, already approaching the SUV. "I'll be there soon—"
"Hang on a second, Mom," Georgie interjected, "Amy's trying to tell me something."
"It's okay, honey," Lou said, "you go ahead. I'll just hang up now."
Lou ended the call without waiting to hear Georgie's reply.
***
He could hear the vet scuffling about up in the loft. That was fine. He would just wait until he came back down. Then, bam! He would shoot him right between the eyes. He would never know what hit him.
***
Ty noticed Amy had already packed both their toothbrushes and toothpaste as he made one last sweep of the loft to make sure he had not forgotten anything essential he might need for an overnight stay in the ranch house. He swung his duffle bag over his shoulder, unlatched the baby gate, and began to head downstairs.
***
His ears picked up the sound of footfalls. Borden is coming down, he thought, feeling his pulse start to race with excitement. He slid the gun from his breast pocket and steadied his hand, pointing the piece up at the staircase in anticipation of his target's appearance.
***
"Drop the gun and step away from my husband!" Amy's command was crisp and unwavering.
The interloper paused, arm still outstretched, weapon aimed up at the nonplussed Ty.
"Drop the gun," Amy ordered again, measuring every word, her own arms steady as she held Jack's rifle on the man threatening her husband. "I'm warning you: I know how to use this, and the police are on the way."
The balaclava-clad, would-be killer turned slightly to face Amy. He seemed to be considering his options. Perhaps he doubted Amy's skill with the rifle and figured he would be able to carry out his deadly task. Or perhaps he knew very well that she could kill him with one pull of the trigger. His shoulder eventually drooped, seemingly in submission, followed by a lowering of his pistol.
Ty let out the breath he was unaware he had been holding.
In a flash, the stranger twisted away from Amy and once again raised his weapon to Ty. An ear-splitting blast ripped through the barn office. A cry of agony escaped the lips of the masked stranger. He stumbled to the floor, clutching at his shoulder. A few horses neighed in surprise as the explosive ka-boom echoed through their stalls.
Ty dropped his bag and sprang from the steps towards the downed man. He kicked aside the small pistol, whirled around, and drove his foot into the small of his back. "Stay down," he growled.
Knowing the other weapon was far out of reach and Ty's sturdy boot was keeping the villain pinned, Amy crept forward and yanked the balaclava from his head.
"Jesse!" she gasped upon recognizing him.
Jesse Stanton craned his neck and glared back up at her sideways, eyes revealing a mix of shock and torment. Shock that Amy had carried through with her spoken threat; torment due to the bullet that had torn through his shoulder.
"That was you that day, wasn't it?" Ty snarled in an accusatory tone. "Riding your Ducati when Scott nearly plowed into you. You shot Lisa!"
Jesse could not deny it. "Yeah," he muttered, not bothering to meet Ty's infuriated gaze.
"Did you also go to the hospital to finish the job? Huh?!" Ty exclaimed.
"No, that wasn't m-me. Someone else." Jesse mumbled.
"You're lying," Ty said. "You went in there, you snuffed out her life, and you escaped on your bike again."
"No, I swear that wasn't me!" protested Jesse. "I wasn't anywhere near the hospital."
Ty clamped his mouth shut. Jesse seemed to be telling the truth.
"Let me up, will you?" he begged.
Ty considered the request. Every bone in his body wanted to continue keeping him jammed squarely to the floor, but mercy prevailed. "Okay, I'm letting you up, but I'm warning you Amy won't hesitate to shoot again if you try anything. Understand?"
"Yeah, yeah," Jesse grumbled.
Ty lifted his foot carefully. Jesse scooted himself up and scrambled against the barn wall like a rat being let out of a trap. He pressed his hand to his bloodied shoulder, wincing in pain as he did so.
"If it wasn't you who attacked Lisa and Jack at the hospital, then who was it?" Ty asked.
"I don't know," he replied, not meeting Ty's gaze. "It just wasn't me, all right?"
"You might not have gone after her in the hospital, but you're still the reason she ended up there in the first place," Amy said angrily, thinking of what Chief Parker told her about the pictures on the dead man's phone. "You're the reason someone else got to her. You're the reason she's dead."
"Whatever," Jesse mumbled.
"After all these years, Jesse," Amy said. "Our families. You know us! You-your mom! She and my grandpa and Lisa—they all knew each other for years. They were friends!"
"Don't even start, Amy!" Jesse snapped contemptuously. "'Friends'? My mother—my mother hated Lisa Stillman."
He caught the expression of astonishment on their faces at this revelation. "That's right," he continued, enjoying this last taunt he could needle them with. "Oh sure, she was friendly to her face in public. But… You should have heard the things my mother said about Lisa when she got into her liquor—some friend! And I… I hated my mother."
"So, did you kill her, too?" Amy ventured to ask, her voice brittle.
"No," Jesse replied through gritted teeth. "But I sure didn't shed any actual tears when I heard she was dead."
"You're lying," Ty countered as he narrowed his eyes in suspicion. "You were the only one who knew for sure when she took Herring out for that ride. You're the one who reported her missing. You're the one who told the police where they should conduct their search. You purposely directed their search away from Lookout Point, didn't you?"
"Doesn't mean I'm the one who pulled that trigger," Jesse said with a leer, though he was still visibly in quite a bit of pain. "Wish I was, though. Briar Ridge… was supposed to be mine to run as I saw fit! She was supposed to… grrr… be living full-time in Florida. Instead, she just kept coming back here, hanging on, telling me what to do, interfering in my decisions... treating me like some clueless child! Gah! I actually thought I would be free of her when she had that s-second bout with the cancer, b-but she beat that, too."
Ty had heard enough. "Stop talking," he snarled. "You're making me sick listening to all your crap!"
Amy had also heard enough. She handed Ty the rifle. "The police should be here any minute. I'm going to go back to check on Lyndy and Georgie."
"How 'bout an ambulance?!" Jesse hollered desperately.
Amy ignored him as she scurried out the barn door, hoping Georgie was not too freaked out by the loud report of the rifle.
"How 'bout you shut up!" bellowed Ty, keeping the rifle trained just to the left of Jesse's ear. "You're lucky she didn't take off your head when she shot you."
"No, I am not enjoying this," Ty hissed. "None of this is enjoyable. What did Lisa Stillman ever do to you? Was shooting her some kind of thrill-seeking game for you? Jealousy over Fairfield's success?"
"Borden… Your guesses are so cold, you… heh… make Antarctica feel like a sauna," Jesse laughed feebly.
"Do you have any idea what you've done to this family? What you've done to Jack?"
"That old m-man can die and go to h-hell," Jesse grunted, his teeth chattering now. "The w-way my mother pined away for him… even-even after he m-married Lisa… it was em-embarrassing… sickening… Dunno what she s-saw… He was nothing like m-my father…"
Ty noticed Jesse's shivering. What with the pain and blood loss, he was probably starting to go into shock. "Okay, just keep quiet now, all right?" Ty said, using a gentler voice he was surprised he was able to muster. "You don't want to bleed out here before the paramedics come."
"H-how 'bout some pain k-killers in the meantime, Borden?" Jesse asked with a lop-sided smile. "Y-you got some of the good stuff here, don't you?"
Ty glowered at Jesse. "I said keep quiet. You're not getting anything from me."
"Worth a try." Jesse gave a weak laugh, then finally shut his mouth.
After checking to ensure her niece and child were fine back at the house, and after hastily explaining why there had been a weapon discharged, Amy returned to the barn. "I have the 911 dispatcher on the line," she advised, holding her cell phone to her ear. "An ambulance is heading here, now."
The shrill whine of a police siren caught their attention next. Red and blue lights splashed brightly against the walls and reflected in the windows. The cruiser came to a halt in front of the barn. Car doors opened and slammed shut; footsteps crunched the dirt and gravel.
"Everybody okay in there?"
Ty recognized the voice of Chief Parker; Detective Kavanaugh was right behind the senior officer. Jesse's head sank to his chest in utter defeat at their appearance.
"Chief! Jesse just tried to shoot Ty," Amy said, pointing at the weapon. "That's the gun right there."
Chief Parker looked on the barn floor and saw what he recognized as a Raven MP-25. He bent to retrieve it, gingerly picking it up with a gloved hand by the trigger guard.
"And um, I just shot Jesse," Amy admitted, noticing for the first time her hands were shaking.
"He, uh, he also just confessed to shooting Lisa out on the road that day, Chief," Ty said quietly as he handed over Jack's rifle to Parker's other gloved hand.
"You mean he confessed to killing her," Amy uttered furiously, feeling an overwhelming sense of grief and anger cascading over her. "He's the reason she ended up in the hospital in the first place. He's the reason that guy was able to get into her room and–and—"
She could not continue. All the stresses and tragedies of the past few weeks seemed to descend on her at that moment, crushing her with their weight. Tears she had not known that were still in reserve spilled out. Ty's own eyes clouded as his heart ached for all the losses the family had endured. He crossed over and gathered her up into his arms.
"And she's not dead," Parker announced.
He was met with stunned silence from them while Kavanaugh knelt to take Jesse into custody.
"What are you sayingؙ—Lisa's not dead?" Amy gasped, gazing now at the senior officer.
"H-how?" Ty asked shaking his head. "I thought she..."
"That's what we needed everyone to think," Kavanaugh said, being careful not to jostle his prisoner too harshly. "Well, almost everyone."
"I can't believe it!" Amy exclaimed in jubilation. "She's really alive?"
"Yes, really," Parker said. His face broke into a wide smile, pleased he could finally bring some good news to this long-suffering family. "She's still in pretty rough shape, mind you, but your dad and your grandfather are with her right now at the hospital under police protection."
"This is incredible!" Ty said. "But why make us think she didn't survive?"
"All in good time, Ty," Parker said calmly. "Our investigation is still on-going, but catching Mr. Stanton red-handed here tonight has certainly blown things wide open for us, and we expect to be making another arrest in Calgary very soon."
"Who?!" Jesse dared to ask.
"Wouldn't you like to know," Kavanaugh quipped dryly. "But maybe you'd like to guess?"
Jesse pursed his lips.
"Not even one guess?" Kavanaugh goaded. "Aw, you're spoiling my fun."
But Jesse refused to speak.
"Jesse Stanton, you're under arrest for attempted murder," Kavanaugh said. "It is my duty to inform you that you have the right to retain and instruct counsel of your choice in private and without delay. Before you decide to answer any questions concerning this investigation, you may call a lawyer of your choosing or get free advice from Duty Counsel. If you wish to contact Legal Aid duty counsel I can provide you with a telephone number and a telephone will be made available to you. Do you understand?"
"Yeah," Jesse mumbled. "I wanna call my lawyer."
"Fine," Kavanaugh said. "We'll make sure that happens while we wait for the ambulance to get here. Let's go."
Kavanaugh started shuffling his prisoner off towards the barn's open door.
"Amy? Ty?" Lou's voiced called out.
"In here, Lou!" Amy called back. She was so wrapped up in what had just happened, she did not even hear when her sister pulled up in the SUV.
Lou jogged over to the entrance only to stop in her tracks as Kavanaugh hauled Jesse out. "I thought I heard a gunshot just now—" She stared at the arrestee and his bloodied shoulder. Now she chanced a look inside the barn and saw Jim holding the rifle in one hand and a pistol in the other.
"We're okay, Lou," Amy said to assure her sister. "But, um, Jesse just tried to kill Ty. I shot him with Grandpa's rifle."
"You!" Lou cried. She glanced back over her shoulder at Jesse, who was being made to sit inside the cruiser. "Jesse came to kill Ty? Why?"
"Because he didn't want any more witnesses around who could ID him as Lisa's shooter," Parker said.
"Jesse shot Lisa?!"
Parker nodded. "We'll have to wait on the ballistics to confirm," he said, indicating the Raven he was holding. "But he's already admitted it."
"And Lou," Amy said, brimming with joy, "Lisa's alive. She survived the attack in the hospital."
"Lisa's alive?" Lou repeated, dumbfounded.
Parker nodded, a smile still pasted on his face. "I'm sorry we had to do that to all of you, but between my department and the Calgary police who were investigating that attack, we agreed it was the best option to keep her safe until we caught all the ones responsible."
"And have you caught all the ones responsible?" Lou asked tentatively, looking once again over at the cruiser where Jesse Stanton was bring granted a privileged call with his lawyer.
"We're close," Parker admitted. "This thing is still in motion, but we're hoping to have everyone in custody by tomorrow. Arresting Mr. Stanton here tonight is already a big win for us."
"He probably also poisoned Remi," Amy said, as all the pieces were starting to fall into place in her mind. "That's why he came over to visit the other day."
"Your dog was poisoned?" Parker asked in surprise.
Amy nodded.
"Strychnine," Ty explained. "We don't keep that at Heartland. She's going to make it, but we were really concerned for a while there."
Lou put her hands to her temples. "This is too much. I think I'm getting a headache."
The whine of an ambulance and another police cruiser filled the night air.
"That would be the paramedics for Mr. Stanton and my backup officers," Chief Parker said. "It's going to be a long night while we get everything straightened out here."
***
Canadian Rockies Life Insurance — Calgary Branch
5:00 a.m.
The young woman switched on the desk lamp at the workstation. Using the overhead lights, especially at this early hour, had the chance of attracting unwanted attention, and she needed secrecy for what she was about to do.
Using the credentials she had spied long ago from an unwitting co-worker, she logged into the company mainframe and accessed the Policies database. She quickly located the one she had specifically come to find:
LISA RENÉE STILLMAN
Hurriedly, she began entering the required data to kickstart the claims process. Now that she had the medical death certificate information, things could finally proceed.
Date of Filing:
The field automatically populated with the current date of May 9, 2019.
Policy Holder:
Here, she input the name of the dummy corporation she was instructed to use in this scenario.
Date of Death:
She consulted the copy of the certificate and typed "03/05/2019".
Place of Death:
"South Calgary Health Campus".
Cause of Death:
"Cardiopulmonary cessation".
Next, she entered the certificate number and pressed ENTER to continue.
When presented with the options for the payout, she immediately selected "Lump Sum" over the other choices. She hovered the cursor over the "Process Now" button and clicked on it. As soon as she did so, the overhead lights glowed to life in the room without warning, causing her to gasp in surprise.
"Getting an early start to the day, Ms. Haywood?"
Tessa Haywood jumped at the unexpected question. She swiveled around in her chair to see Kavanaugh and Patterson standing a few cubicles behind her. Her eyes darted to the exit. Calgary detectives Prescott and Diaz guarded that escape route. Tessa guessed right away why they were all there. She spun back to the desktop monitor. There was nothing she could do now about the Stillman policy, but the rest of them... Tessa tried to access the policy database again.
"Hudson Police! Step away from the workstation, Ms. Haywood," Patterson said loudly.
Tessa ignored Patterson. She had to eliminate any evidence of the fraudulent policies for all those other members of that investors' group before these officers could uncover them.
"I said: Step away from the workstation, Tessa," Patterson commanded again. She began her approach with Kavanaugh following.
Tessa's level of panic skyrocketed.
"Stop what you're doing now!" Patterson ordered. "Tessa Haywood, you're under arrest for insurance fraud and conspiracy to commit murder—"
"They made me do it! They made me do it! Tanner and Jesse made me!" Tessa screeched desperately, perhaps hoping this admission would grant her some kind of immediate leniency.
Patterson nevertheless yanked Tessa up from the chair and secured her wrists in handcuffs, giving her a quick pat-down in the process.
"You need not say anything," Patterson intoned gruffly, knowing she had to legally issue this warning. "You have nothing to hope from any promise or favour and nothing to fear from any threat, whether or not you say anything. Anything you say may be used as evidence. You have the right to retain and instruct counsel in private without delay. Do you understand?"
Tessa merely nodded her head.
"I need you to answer either 'yes' or 'no', Ms. Haywood," Patterson said.
"Yes, I understand," Tessa said, barely above a whisper.
"Good. Let's go."
***
*double-double: How you order a coffee with two creams and two sugars at Tim Hortons
To the childless wife he gives a home, and gladdens her heart with children.
- Ps. 113
***
Chapter 6
Fragile
Ty had to hustle to keep pace with Jack after parking the truck as the older man nearly ran through the hospital Emergency entrance to reach the admittance desk.
"I'm Jack Bartlett," the cowboy said breathlessly to the nurse, not bothering with any pleasantries. "My wife, Lisa Stillman, was admitted here earlier by ambulance."
"Yes, please have a seat, Mr. Bartlett," the admitting nurse said. "I'll need you to wait until I can get one of the doctors to come see you."
"But," Jack said desperately, "is she okay?"
"I don't have an answer for you other than that she was taken in for surgery. Please, sit. I promise someone will be out to see you."
"Let's go, Jack," Ty said, putting a hand on Jack's arm to lead him to the chairs.
Obediently, Jack walked with Ty, still unable to process what had happened. He sank into an empty seat next to Ty, alternately cycling between acute rage, fear, and despair.
How? Why? Who could do such a thing to her?
Ty wanted to say some sort of words of encouragement, but after seeing for himself the extent of Lisa's injuries, he, too, feared the outcome might not be what any of them hoped for.
"We need to let the rest of the family know," Ty eventually uttered. "I'm just going to step outside. Be right back."
"Okay," Jack replied quietly.
With that, Ty retreated to the exit and pulled out his cell phone to call his wife, who this morning seemed to be in much better spirits than she had been since miscarrying. Now he would be calling with more bad news.
***
At around 4:00 p.m., Jack was finally greeted by one of the surgeons dressed in light blue scrubs. "Mr. Bartlett, I'm Dr. Perry," the middle-aged, bespectacled man said. "I'm the thoracic surgeon on call today."
"How's my wife doing, Doc?" asked Jack, trying to read the man's expression for any hint of what answer he should be prepared to expect. Ty bounded up next to him for support.
"She's alive, Mr. Bartlett," replied Dr. Perry.
Both Jack and Ty sighed in relief.
"Her injuries are still rather grave," Dr. Perry warned. "She was a twelve on the Glasgow Coma Scale when admitted, and—"
"Is-is that good or bad?" Jack interrupted, thinking the "Glasgow Coma Scale" thing sounded familiar, but could not remember if a twelve was a favourable number or not.
"Fifteen is optimal; anything lower than eight, not so much," Dr. Perry answered. "But a twelve isn't terrible, and means she's not comatose. We're mostly concerned about the internal injuries caused by the bullet to her side."
"Just tell it to me straight, Doc," Jack said. "Is she going to be okay?"
"She's still in what we'd call critical but stable condition. We're cautiously optimistic, Mr. Bartlett," Dr. Perry began. "There was a good deal of internal bleeding and we had to re-inflate a collapsed lung. We ascertained she was shot twice. One bullet perforated her left arm through the bicep. It penetrated her left side between her 8th and 9th ribs, nicked the intercostal arteries, skirted across the abdominal wall in a slightly downward trajectory and ended up lodged above her right pelvic bone. She has a tube in her side to facilitate drainage, and that will stay there until we're sure everything is clear.
"The damage to her left bicep was a clean through-and-through, and my colleagues and I don't anticipate any lasting effects or impairment. With time and physiotherapy, that arm should be just fine, but for now, we've got it immobilised and in a sling."
"Doc, what about the other bullet?" Jack asked.
"As near as we can determine, the second bullet hit her skull at an oblique angle and fortunately glanced off without penetrating," Dr. Perry said. "The impact still caused a hairline fracture. We were concerned there might be some brain swelling, but the CT scan showed that's not the case. We are seeing a small extradural hematoma and we're choosing a wait-and-see approach with that one. Sometimes, the body can absorb a small amount of blood in cases like these. We'd rather not have to go drilling into her skull to drain the blood between her skull and the dura mater—that's the tissue that surrounds the brain."
Perry noticed Jack's pained, pinched expression at the description of Lisa's litany of injuries.
"It could have been a lot worse, Mr. Bartlett," he said, trying to put a more positive face on things. "She's on oxygen and we'll keep her sedated in the ICU overnight, keeping a close eye on that lung and that skull fracture. The last thing she needs is for the lung to collapse again or for the hematoma to worsen."
"Can I see her, Doc?" Jack asked, hating that it sounded like he was begging.
"Ten minutes," Dr. Perry said. "She probably won't know you're there because of the heavy sedation, but..."
"Thank you," Jack said. He looked back at Ty.
"Go ahead," said Ty. "I haven't been able to reach Tim yet, so I'll hang back here and keep trying."
***
Jack was unprepared for how frail Lisa appeared lying in the hospital bed. For a second, he thought he was experiencing an attack of angina, but it was simply a sensation of his heart being torn apart at the sight of his beloved's critical condition.
"I'm here, Lis," he whispered as he slowly brought himself to a seated position beside her. "Though the Doc says you probably won't know it."
There was no response from Lisa, whose pale face and bandaged head remained motionless. Jack was encouraged, though, by the slow rise and fall of her chest.
I hate hospitals, Jack thought, fighting to suppress painful memories of when Lyndy was dying.
Moisture brimmed under Jack's eyelids. This cannot be happening. This is insane. Who did this to you? You have to pull through, Lis. You have to pull through, because I don't think my heart could take it if you didn't.
The ten minutes sped by much too quickly for Jack's liking as a nurse came to retrieve him. He reluctantly got to his feet to vacate the room, but not before planting a soft kiss on Lisa's cheek.
"Please come back to me," he whispered in parting. "I love you."
His ears ached to hear her endearing "I love you more". Instead the silence mocked him and chilled his heart as there was no response.
***
"I, uh, I was able to reach Tim. He's on his way," Ty said to Jack when they met up again in the waiting area.
"Good," Jack said. "Thanks. I think I'll stay here and wait. I want to be here when she wakes up."
Ty was encouraged that Jack said "when" and not "if".
"Okay," he said with a nod. "I'll stay, too, at least until Tim gets here."
Jack nodded tiredly.
"We'll get through this, Jack. She's made it this far, right?"
Jack nodded again. "Right."
***
An hour slipped by. Activity around the ICU flashed past without Jack's awareness. Patients were wheeled through the halls on gurneys by the porters; custodial crews cleaned; doctors and nurses filtered past. At some point, Ty went to find coffee and something to eat, items Jack barely tasted, but nevertheless consumed. Eventually, a familiar voice invaded his mental space. Up to that point, Jack's thoughts were fixated solely on Lisa, and what he would do if she did not pull through.
"Jack," Tim said upon spotting his ex-father-in-law. "What the hell happened? Ty said something about Lisa getting shot?"
Jack bobbed his head once in response.
"Well, do they know who did it?" Tim asked.
"No," Jack uttered darkly. "Some yahoo on the road."
"'Some yahoo'? That's all you got?!" Tim exclaimed.
"The police are investigating," Ty broke in. "I was there with Scott right after it happened."
Tim turned to look at Ty. "You were there? And you didn't see anything?"
Ty sighed. Having been over the scenario a hundred times in his own mind, it was exhausting to have to tell Tim now what he witnessed out on the road that afternoon after having told Chief Parker.
"Not really," Ty answered. "All we know is there was a guy on a motorbike shortly before we saw Lisa's Porsche in the ditch."
"That's it?" Tim snapped. "'A guy on a motorbike'."
"Pretty much."
"You saw a guy on a motorcycle?" Jack said in surprise. "You didn't tell me that."
"Sorry," Ty said. "It was so fast, Jack. I didn't really see anything clearly. I didn't want you to be torturing yourself thinking about it."
"Well, that's great! Super helpful," a sarcastic Tim said. "All we gotta do now is get a list of every guy in Hudson who rides a motorbike and say 'Hey, did you shoot Lisa Stillman?'"
"Tim..." Jack uttered. "Enough. Ty and Scott saved Lisa's life out there."
Tim sputtered incoherently for a few seconds before simmering down. "So now what?" he finally said.
"We wait," Jack said simply, feeling totally drained.
"I'm gonna head back to Heartland," Ty said.
"Go ahead, Ty," Jack said. "Thank you for everything you did today. For Lisa."
"Of course," Ty said. "Call us if there's any change, okay?"
"Yeah, I will."
With that, Ty left Jack and Tim.
"Thank you for coming," Jack eventually said to his ex-son-in-law after Tim sat down in the chair vacated by Ty.
Tim's expression softened. "You're welcome."
Several beats of silence passed, interrupted by the occasional public address system announcements. Hospital staff continued to go about their duties.
"You doing okay?" Tim eventually asked.
"No," Jack's voice cracked, rough as sandpaper and choked with emotion. "I can't lose her, Tim."
Tim clamped his lips shut, unsure of what to say or do next. His ex-father-in-law had certainly seen more than his fair share of loss; now this. He reached out a hand and laid it on Jack's shoulder in an act of solidarity and, hopefully, comfort.
***
Ty could have sworn his boots' soles were made of lead weights. Every step he took as he ascended the stairs to the loft was slow and painstaking. Amy was waiting for him. She sprang up from the couch as soon as she saw the top of his head.
"Ty," she said, voice halting. She knew her recent avoidance of him had hurt; knew no explanation for that would suffice, but now they had to pull together if they were going to make it through this latest crisis.
"Amy," Ty replied unsteadily, unsure of her emotional state. Would she welcome the sight of him, or reject him as she had lately?
But she approached him without hesitation, taking him in her arms for a quick hug. She stepped back and looked at his haunted expression. She smoothed back his hair before bringing his face to hers and kissing his mouth firmly. Amy felt him relax as he wrapped his own arms around her, silently begging for a deeper kiss, which she obliged.
"I'm so sorry for pushing you away after—"
"I know, Amy," Ty responded swiftly. "I know all that was hard on you." It was hard on me, too.
"But I didn't have to push you away like I did. Not after all we've been through," Amy said, looking into his green eyes. She gave a sad laugh. "You'd think I would have learned by now, but I was so afraid."
"Afraid of what, Amy?" Ty asked, pained to hear the tremor of fear in her voice.
"That you'd blame me for losing the baby."
"Blame you?" a grieved Ty uttered. "I could never. It wasn't your fault. Don't ever think it was your fault."
"I know that," she said in a rush. "I know. But I was afraid you'd blame me, anyway. That maybe you would think I was working too hard; not taking it easy with the client horses; taking too many risks by choosing to ride this time."
"I did not think any of those things," Ty said, taking her in his arms again, wanting with all his might to drive away her misplaced guilt. "All I could think about was how grateful I was that you were going to be okay; that I hadn't lost you, too; that Lyndy was still going to have both her mother and father in her life."
When they finally broke apart, Amy took in his handsome face again. There was still some pain he was trying to conceal, but she could sense it did not have to do with their own situation; that was already starting to heal.
"Ty, h-how bad is Lisa?"
He turned away from her at that point, wanting to spare her the details of what he had seen and experienced on the side of the road that afternoon.
"Ty?" Amy spoke again, the tremor returning to her voice.
Ty sank into the leather seat Amy had once bought him for an early birthday present, giving rest to his weary feet on the ottoman. "Not good."
Her eyes went wide. "What does that mean?" Ty was never one to sugar-coat anything, but those unnerving words were hard to digest.
He stared into his lap for a few moments before raising his eyes to meet hers.
"She was hurt pretty badly," Ty said dully. "She could die. Scott and I, we did what we could. Then the paramedics got there, and they did what they could. I don't know if it was enough. I mean, the surgeon used the phrase 'cautiously optimistic', but... They've got her in the ICU. Any number of things could still go wrong."
"But who could have done something like this?" Amy questioned, seating herself on the sofa. "When you called and told me, I couldn't believe it."
"I know. It's crazy."
"And you didn't see anybody on the road?" Amy asked, suddenly gripped with the wild, possibly irrational fear he might have seen Lisa's assailant—and if so, would that person now want to silence Ty in order to avoid identification and arrest?
Ty looked up before giving his head a long shake in the negative. "I told Chief Parker the only other person we saw was a guy on a motorbike. He nearly ran into Scott, in fact. We were just coming over a hill, and there he was, right in our lane."
Amy let out a small gasp. "You don't think that that was Lisa's shooter, do you?"
"Chief Parker asked the same question. I honestly have no idea. Maybe. I didn't see a gun. But right before we avoided slamming into him, I thought I heard what sounded like a car backfiring a couple times." He shuddered. "It's obvious now what those sounds really were."
"Gunshots," Amy whispered in horror.
"Yeah," Ty nodded in agreement, hating himself now for also concealing that part from Jack.
Tentatively, Amy asked: "How's Grandpa?"
"I've never seen Jack so angry," he answered. "I'm actually worried about him. His words were—and I quote—'If she dies, I will kill the bastard responsible.'"
Amy's jaw dropped. "Grandpa really said that?"
"Yes. And it sounded like he meant it."
***
BREAKING NEWS
Hudson Times—Online Version
Nadir Jutley
May 2, 2019
Motorist Shot
Hudson Police are investigating the shooting of a motorist on Range Road 292 earlier this afternoon. The middle-aged female victim was taken by ambulance to the South Calgary Health Campus and is listed in critical but stable condition. Authorities do not currently have any suspects in the shooting and have not released the name of the victim.
More information to follow as details emerge.
• Email: nadir_jutley
***
By nine p.m., there had been no discernible change in Lisa's condition.
"Go home and get some rest, Mr. Bartlett," one of the ICU nurses advised. "It makes no difference if you're waiting here or if you're waiting at home, and I'm willing to bet you'd be more comfortable waiting at home. We'll call if anything changes."
"Let's go, Jack," Tim urged. "Come on. Besides, have you notified Lisa's sister? Her aunt?"
"No, I haven't," Jack admitted with a sigh, dreading having to make those particular calls.
"Someone needs to call the rest of the family—Lou; Peter," Tim said. "And I'm starving."
"Trust you to think of food," Jack grunted, but nevertheless realised going home for the night was the right decision.
***
It was nearly midnight in New York when the call startled Lou from a deep sleep. She sucked in a breath, her heart hammering in her chest. The noisy chimes of her cell phone continued, louder than her half-awake brain wanted to tolerate. Lou reached blindly for the device, wondering who might be calling at such an ungodly hour. She peeled open one eye to squint at the bright screen that lit up a small patch on the bedside table.
The number was instantly familiar: HOME.
Lou's racing pulse skipped a beat. Foreboding enveloped her as she knew in no uncertain terms there was nothing but bad news on the other side of that call. Still, she managed to compose herself while mentally stamping out bleak memories of years gone by of a different call informing her of her mother's death and Amy's grim situation.
"Hello?" she said, throat gritty.
"Lou, honey," a familiar male voice spoke.
"Dad..." Lou said, voice wobbling, an ache clutching at her heart. Please, please don't let it be something wrong with Grandpa.
"Lou, there's been an accident," Tim pressed on. "You should probably come home as soon as possible."
"An accident?" Lou repeated. "What's happened? Is Grandpa okay?"
"Yeah, he's... it's not Jack. He's... unharmed," Tim replied.
"Oh, thank God. Wait, is it Georgie?!" Lou exclaimed, her thoughts now striking out to her daredevil daughter. Please, not my child. She's been through so much already.
"No, Georgie's fine, Lou."
"Katie?!" Lou asked in a panic, then instantly decided Peter would have been the one to call if that were the case, unless both of them—.
"No, it's Lisa," Tim replied with impatience before Lou's next frantic guess jumped to Amy or Ty. "I don't know how else to say it, but they're saying someone shot her when she was driving up to Calgary for a meeting this afternoon."
"Shot her?!" yelped Lou, this time mentally reeling back to an incident involving gun-toting, low-life cattle rustlers and her father using his own body to protect his youngest daughter. "You said it was an 'accident', Dad!"
"Well, there was," Tim said defensively. "Her SUV went off the road. Thankfully Scott and Ty were heading back into town right then and found her in the ditch."
"Is she all right?" Lou dared to ask while fearful of the forthcoming answer.
"Jack says she's critical, but stable; whatever that really means," Tim grumbled. "Anyway, you gonna come home, or not?"
"I think I have to. I mean, I wanted to come when Amy—you know—but I was at a crucial point with the franchise stuff and there was a lot to get done. But now..."
"Yeah, yeah, fine. Just let me know when you're getting in."
"I'll get on the booking site right now."
"Okay. 'Bye for now."
***
Hudson Police Headquarters
The half-a-dozen officers who gathered in the conference room fixed their collective gaze on the large flat-screen TVs mounted on the wall.
Portraits of Val Stanton and Lisa Stillman appeared side-by-side, along with bullet-point details of their respective cases.
"Anyone see what I'm seeing?" asked Chief Parker.
"Two blonde, blue-eyed, middle aged women; both residents of Hudson; both involved in the horse business," offered Detective Constable Jennifer Patterson.
"Stanton was shot first. She was killed while riding a horse belonging to Stillman. Stillman discovers Stanton's body. Then Stillman winds up shot, too," added Detective Toby Kavanaugh.
"From a distance, it's not that difficult to mistake Stanton for Stillman, I should think."
"So, where are we going with this?" asked Patterson. "Do we think it was a case of mistaken identity in the Stanton case? That someone might have been aiming for Stillman in the first place?"
"Maybe," Parker uttered. "We can't rule out the possibility. Stillman told me she has a fairly regular routine of riding out to Lookout Point in the mornings. The trouble is the M.O.s are substantially different in these shootings, and Stanton was shot later in the morning—later than Stillman claims she would normally be out there."
He pointed out differences between both incidents.
"Val Stanton was shot once from behind while on horseback, right through the heart, with a .308 caliber round. Reconstruction of the shooting showed a trajectory of about 80 yards, placing the shooter in a copse of Aspen. The shooter also policed his brass. That indicates this was a very professional job.
"In the Stillman shooting, the weapon was a pistol. Stillman was shot twice—once in the left side and once in the head. The surgeons recovered one of the bullets while they were operating. The other was recovered by our guys from the inside of the SUV's ceiling after it bounced off Stillman's head; we found the .25 ACP casings in our sweep of the crime scene area. We're quite sure the shooter was riding a motorcycle. Ty Borden and Scott Cardinal weren't able to get a good enough look to positively identify the bike, so that's probably a dead end. Stillman remains in critical but stable condition in the ICU. Despite all that, something about this one seems decidedly amateurish."
"Do you think it was just someone out shooting at drivers for kicks?" Patterson asked.
"Maybe," Parker said with a frown. "If so, I don't like it. That kind of activity speaks of someone who's mentally unstable—and liable to do it again."
"We've been over the hunting accident theory in the Stanton case," Patterson said, looking again at Val's picture.
"And discarded it," Kavanaugh said.
"Right," Patterson said. "But that leaves us with very little to go on in terms of motive or suspects."
"You two questioned her children," Parker said. "I've read your reports, so I know you're not keen on pinning their mother's murder on either of them."
"No," Patterson said slowly, "but Jesse Stanton did seem to me like he was trying to hide something. I mean, he has a clear alibi for his whereabouts when his mother was shot, but..."
"But what?" Parker pressed.
"I just don't like the guy," Patterson said with a shrug. "He was too smug. All his answers sounded like they were rehearsed."
"I agree," Kavanaugh said. "I don't like him, either, but that could also be I just don't like spoiled rich kids."
Patterson nodded. "Unfortunately, being a 'spoiled rich kid' isn't a motive."
"No, it isn't," Parker said. "Let's keep digging. If it is a case of mistaken identity with the Stanton murder and Stillman was the intended target, we need to find out why. If the cases are unrelated, then we're still looking for two shooters and two motives, and to be honest, I hate both options."
"Love or money," Kavanaugh said offhandedly, as he stood to leave the meeting.
"Or both," Patterson said.
"Whichever one it is," Parker said seriously, "find out, and find out fast."