Last Seen Read online




  Table of Contents

  Excerpt

  Praise for Jo A. Hiestand

  Last Seen

  Copyright

  Dedications

  Characters

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Author’s Notes

  Acknowledgments

  A word about the author…

  Thank you for purchasing this publication of The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  The footsteps moved faster this time, the crunch of gravel firm and headed toward McLaren.

  He kept the booth between them, creeping as quickly as he could to the opposite wall as he corkscrewed around. The figure evidently didn’t hear, his light and gaze on the ground. When the light suddenly snapped off and only the rumble of thunder sounded, McLaren froze. Should he remain there or move? What was the person doing?

  Despite the warmth of the night, perspiration soaked McLaren’s shirt. His pulse throbbed in his throat. He considered tiptoeing around the booth’s corner and jumping the man, but if he mistook the man’s position, coming face-on, and the man saw him…

  The gravel shifted and the steps turned the way they’d come. McLaren stepped back as the light played into the lot. When the figure cleared the booth, McLaren lunged forward.

  His fingers reached for the man’s clothing as he found himself falling. The torches crashed to the ground, and McLaren and his adversary were plunged into darkness. Arms and legs thrashed as both men fought for control. McLaren grabbed a wrist but felt it turn and slip from his grasp. His palm pushed against the ground to keep him upright, but he crumpled as a shoe kicked his side. He fell in a rush of pain and blackness.

  Praise for Jo A. Hiestand

  “With LAST SEEN, Jo Hiestand once again moves closer to the front of the class in the British mystery field. Her Michael McLaren seems to occupy an area between the glens of M.C. Beaton’s Hamish Macbeth and the labyrinth plots rippling through Louise Penny’s Three Pines Village. McLaren’s stubborn but relentless nature, coupled with the twisting and turning human landscape, create exactly what this genre calls for when mixed with a charming English setting. Then add multiple motivations to some well drawn suspects and wrap them around fun subjects—music, castles and fairs—to create the perfect anglophile confection.”

  ~Edward King, owner of Big Sleep Books

  Last Seen

  by

  Jo A. Hiestand

  The McLaren Mysteries

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.

  Last Seen

  COPYRIGHT © 2015 by Jo A. Hiestand

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or The Wild Rose Press, Inc. except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

  Contact Information: [email protected]

  Cover Art by Angela Anderson

  The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  PO Box 708

  Adams Basin, NY 14410-0708

  Visit us at www.thewildrosepress.com

  Publishing History: previously published by

  L&L Dreamspell, 2011 as Swan Song

  First Mainstream Mystery Edition, 2015

  Print ISBN 978-1-5092-0169-3

  Digital ISBN 978-1-5092-0170-9

  The McLaren Mysteries

  Published in the United States of America

  Dedications

  To Paul,

  in gratitude for keeping Dena’s ordeal real

  and McLaren’s reactions believable

  ~*~

  To David,

  in thankfulness for your comment

  about McLaren’s personality,

  and for prompting me to steer him back to his old self.

  I still don’t know how he wandered.

  ~*~

  To Chris,

  in appreciation for helping me think through

  the pages of mess

  and finding a way out of the morass

  Characters

  Kent Harrison: Music teacher and folk singer

  Sheri Harrison: Kent’s ex-wife, tour guide at Tutbury Castle

  Fay Larkin: Kent’s fiancée

  Clark MacKay: Curator at Tutbury Castle

  Ellen Fairfield: Curator at Rawlton Hall

  Aaron Unsworth: Kent’s neighbor, president of local Kent Harrison fan club

  Fraser Unsworth: Aaron’s teenaged son

  Dave Morley: Kent’s singing partner, clerk in a music shop

  Ron Pennell: Herbalist

  Trevor Pennell: History teacher

  Lorene Guard: Kent’s student at school

  Booth Wragg: Lorene’s boyfriend

  ~*~

  Michael McLaren: former police detective, Staffordshire Constabulary

  Jamie Kydd: friend and police detective, Derbyshire Constabulary

  Dena Ellison: McLaren’s girlfriend

  Gwen Hulme: McLaren’s sister

  Jerry Hulme: Gwen’s husband

  Cheryl Kerrigan: Home Office forensic pathologist

  Charlie Harvester: McLaren’s former colleague, Staffordshire Constabulary

  Chapter One

  A wave of July heat rose from the flattened grass underfoot, smelling of dry vegetation and parched earth. An odor common to every part of Tutbury Castle that day. Dena breathed deeply, reveling in the scent. For a moment she imagined she was in Portugal’s Algarve region with McLaren, visiting the nature reserve and strolling along the sunbaked beach. That wonderful, all-too-brief holiday…

  “So, where was the body found? Actually here at the castle?”

  The question jerked Dena back to the present, and she blinked.

  Dena’s friend Gwen Hulme picked up the hem of her cotton blouse, damp from perspiration, and waved it slightly. Her hand went to her neck and she grabbed a handful of her hair, holding it out so the breeze could cool her skin. She pushed her sunglasses farther up her nose and looked into the crowd. “God, it’s hot. This crowd is awful. No air can circulate in this space with all these people. They should’ve had a set number of tickets to sell to keep the attendance down. Where’s Jerry? I thought he was with us.” She seemed already to have lost interest in the original topic.

  Dena stared at the fragment of tower to their left, a remnant of the castle’s glory days, uncertain if the swinging man was really there or her imagination had rigged the sight. “Jerry? I think he left us. Or we lost him. Whatever it was, I last saw him at that herbal booth. I didn’t know he went in for natural health stuff.”

  “I think that was merely something he passed on his way to something else. He most likely is getting a beer. Or ale. Or whatever he can find. He’ll probably have to settle for some drink brewed
in bygone Times.”

  “Would you like anything, Gwen? We don’t have to be back home at any set time, do we?” Even though she was dying to talk to Michael, to get him interested in investigating again… She avoided Gwen’s glance, suddenly feeling foolish for her phone message to McLaren. It was best to leave her feelings on the subject unsaid. Trying to get McLaren interested in another cold murder case would probably produce more animosity than enthusiasm. Still, that cold case last month had pried him out of his protective shell—started him back on the path to becoming human again. “I suppose we could fan out to look for him, but in this crowd, it’s probably hopeless. Maybe he’ll meet us at the car.” She let the blade of grass flutter to the ground.

  Gwen released her blouse and waved to the man approaching through the dispersing crowd. “Call off the bloodhounds, Dena. Here he is.”

  “I don’t think he found his beer. He still looks thirsty.”

  Gwen snorted. “I’ve concluded it’s something he was born with. Jerry! We were about to start a search for you.”

  The brown-haired man alternately looked at his watch and some men dressed in armor clanking past. “What? Sorry. I was longer than I thought I’d be. You two ready to go?”

  “I guess so. Unless you want to see the jousting.”

  He shook his head, glancing ahead to the profusion of booths. “Not particularly. It’s probably a re-mix of yesterday. I enjoyed it then, but I don’t need to see it again.”

  “Just asking. We may as well take in everything we want to as long as we’re here.”

  “Two days is enough for me. We’ve hit all the main events.”

  Dena dabbed at the perspiration on her throat and tried to appear unscathed. Despite the heat, her short skirt and scoop-necked blouse looked crisp. “I’m about Renaissanced-out, to tell you the truth. This reenactment is fine, but I don’t mind going now.”

  “History is great,” Gwen said, “but if I have too much at once I get muddled. Mary, Queen of Scots is about all I know of the place. And even that is confined to knowing snatches of her imprisonment and that bloke in her household who died. Hanged, I think.”

  At the mention of the long-ago murder, Dena glanced at the north tower, standing sentinel-like beyond the castle’s gatehouse. It felt solid enough; the main hall and towers were solid enough, but what images presented themselves on moonlit nights? She could believe the tower had harbored a body back then. The place held that sort of feelingat least for her. Stone ruins, turrets, legends of ghosts. Who knew how many murders and deaths had occurred within Tutbury Castle’s stone walls? Hundreds probably, considering the place’s long life. She crouched, plucked a piece of grass, and wrapped it around her index finger.

  She vaguely remembered that tale of Mary, Queen of Scots, housed here for part of her long imprisonment. It had been nothing more than schoolbook. It took on soul-shaking reality when they’d heard the stories that morning in the castle’s courtyard. Of course, all castles seemed to have their own White Ladies or Keepers or Phantom Drummer Boys, but there was something about this place, especially at dusk, that you couldn’t laugh off as mere tourist clap.

  Her gaze shifted again to the jagged edge of the tower and she squinted at the dark slit higher up the tower’s length. What horrors had Mary suffered when she found one of her priests hanging outside that window swaying like a chunk of meat in the wind? She closed her eyes but the image stayed in her mind.

  Jerry nodded and mumbled that once you saw one sword fight, the others were pretty much the same.

  “Well, I’m ready. Unless either of you’d like a beer or early lunch or something.”

  “I’m fine,” Gwen said. “You want any more photos of the tower, Jerry? The sky’s so nice behind it, all those clouds.”

  “The tower?” He looked around, startled.

  “That one.” She nodded toward the one nearest the car park. A flag fluttered from its top.

  “Isn’t that where that musician was found murdered?” He squinted at the edifice, as though a body might be swaying from the rigging.

  Gwen shrugged, looking confused and curious at once. “I can’t recall. Do you know, Dena?”

  “Yes.” Her tone slid from her earlier determination to one of pain, and her voice quavered slightly. “This is why I want Michael to investigate the death. That man died in my village. I knew him.”

  Chapter Two

  Mist lay thick among the trees, as though caged or entangled in branches and grasses. McLaren cursed the vegetation and the early hour, and walked deeper into the wood. Seconds later he saw the boulder. And the depression where the body had lain.

  McLaren angled his mobile phone closer to his mouth. “Thanks for holding on, Jamie. I’m back.”

  Jamie Kydd, his mate in and out of the police force, yawned into McLaren’s ear. “So you can locate a rock. Smashing. Is that why you rang me up at this ungodly hour?”

  “I want a bit of information about the scene. As long as I’m here, I may as well go over it properly. It’ll save time. What do you remember about it?” He stood a moment, imagining the scene as it was one year ago. Snippets of television news items flashed in his mind’s eye, crowding into Jamie’s narrative. “White male, forty-five years old, local music teacher.”

  “Last seen wearing jeans and a short-sleeved shirt.”

  “At the Minstrels Court, right?”

  “Yeah. He was last seen carrying a guitar case—”

  “I’d heard it was a cello case.”

  Jamie sighed and went on without comment. “A few witnesses said he was carrying a dark rucksack.”

  “Must’ve been mistaken. That wasn’t at the crime scene.”

  “Unless the murderer pinched it. Witnesses saw him drive off in a late model Land Rover.”

  “Not a new Range Rover? Are you sure?”

  “He was last seen talking to the castle’s curator,” Jamie said more loudly, as if volume alone would correct his friend’s misinformation.

  McLaren refrained from saying the newscast had ID’d the person as a young female fan.

  “But that was never verified about the curator. It could’ve possibly been his fiancée.”

  The possibilities echoed in his head. Last seen…last seen…last seen in the forest near Kirkfield. Dead.

  “Is that what you wanted?” Jamie’s voice shoved the voices from McLaren’s mind.

  “Yeah. Fine.”

  “Have fun frolicking in the dewdrops. I’m going back to sleep.” He rang off through McLaren’s thanks.

  Crouched over, McLaren examined the ground as though he were once more a police constable carrying out a crime scene search, his fingertips probing among the leaf litter, vegetation, and fallen twigs covering the forest floor. He pulled up grass and tossed aside branches. At the base of the boulder he shone his torch. Even in the dawn light its bright beam threw dense, dark shadows across the ground, stretching the blackness until it blended with the gloom beyond the stone. Again he prodded the grass to yield something significant, but nothing surrendered to his persistence. He stood up, his back and hands sore, and stretched and flexed his fingers. Snapping off the torch, he wandered a few steps from the boulder. He stood, viewing the scene from a different angle.

  The car path—hardly more than two ruts of bare soil hardly visible in the enthusiastic short grass of the verge—widened on its eastward journey as it approached the village, angling uphill before disappearing among the cliff faces and trees. But here, at the western end of Kirkfield, it had dwindled into a single-lane footpath nearly choked with Queen Anne’s lace and thistles. It merged with the forest floor on the far side of the boulder. As though the rock were a popular destination.

  But why had the body been here? Why hundreds of yards from the victim’s house? Had he met someone here? Perhaps, but unlikely. The medical report stated the victim had been moved and placed here. So again: why here?

  How long McLaren stood there, he didn’t know. He found himself at times
both an onlooker and participant in the processing of the scene, a stranger viewing as from treetop level and as police detective. Lights flashed—police work lamps, camera strobes, torch beams, car headlights, ambulance lights. Sounds familiar and mesmerizing echoed in his ears—police sirens, car doors slamming, twigs snapping, spoken orders, irreverent jokes. The sights and sounds pulled him into the scene with the intensity of a police investigation. He felt nothing, saw and heard nothing but the shimmering scene before him. Was that his partner’s voice or his nemesis Harvester’s?

  The mist lifted slightly, bringing a defining shape to the blur of dark forms deeper within the damp grayness. Clumps of greenery—wavy hair-grass and toad rush—poked out of the haze, waist high and sun bleached to a deathly paleness, the rigid stems and fuzzy seed heads dotted with dew and rustling softly in the morning breeze. A birch eased out of the obscurity as a woodpecker tattooed its presence from a dead tree. The percussion jerked McLaren from the trance. He lifted his trembling hand to his forehead, suddenly aware of the sweat and his racing heart. As the police lights faded under the sunlight cresting an oak bough, the body sank back into the shadows; the white work suits receded into the mist. McLaren shook off the ghosts clinging from his former career and walked back to his car.

  ****

  The drive back from Kirkfield was a pleasant break in the drenching heat, the wind rushing through the car window fanned his sweaty face.

  Back home, the heat returned with a vengeance. A breeze wandered through the front room’s open window, managed to stir the edge of the curtain as it passed, but did little to eliminate the stuffiness of the room. He raked his fingers through his hair, pulling the damp locks upward so the breeze could cool his scalp. Nothing he did made much difference.

  Surrendering to the heat, he took a sip of coffee as he replayed the message left yesterday on his answering machine. Dena’s voice was enthusiastic. Underscored with a bit of pleading. Nice touch. At least she knew enough not to add flattery.

  He dropped onto the couch, kicked off his shoes and brought his legs up to the coffee table. The sun beckoned him to lay back and nap, forget his tired body for a while. But the mantel clock struck the half hour and prodded him to get on with his day. Napping was no way to earn a living—either as a mender of dry stone walls or as an inquisitive citizen.