Vanishing Girls (Detective Josie Quinn #1)



Chapter Fifteen





They ate at a diner a few miles from the barracks but in the opposite direction from Denton. It was a relief to be somewhere else for a while. Josie ordered a half-pound cheeseburger with fries and a side of mozzarella sticks. Sex always made her ravenous, made her buzz with energy. She felt like she could do anything. Ray always said that’s what cocaine was like. They’d taken a break from one another in college—she had tried other men and he had tried drugs. Sex with Luke had always been good but never near what it had been like with Ray. Until today. She felt high, like she was on top of the world with no chance of falling off.

Across from her, Luke picked at his own burger and used the longest French fry on his plate to marshal the smaller fries into formation.

“Something on your mind?” she asked.

He didn’t look up. “Ray sign those papers?”

“Not yet. You know he’s busy with the Coleman case, and now with this Spencer thing…”

At the mention of June Spencer, he looked up at her. “I heard about that. Crazy shit. Did you hear her uncle is still holding on?”

She hadn’t. “Has he said anything?”

Luke shook his head. “No. Still in a coma. They didn’t find anything useful on his phone either. A few texts between him and the driver arranging the pick-up, but that doesn’t tell us anything we don’t already know. Word from your department is that they can’t even locate his next of kin.”

“He has a sister in Philadelphia.”

“Yeah, she’s AWOL. No one can find her.”

“So, June Spencer has no one.” It was a statement, not a question. June would be released from the hospital eventually and Josie wondered where she would go. Dirk’s house was her home, but if she was as out of it as Ray had said, she would need someone to care for her. She wondered if Solange would take the girl in, and then decided no. Solange didn’t have that kind of grit.

Luke shrugged. “Unless her uncle recovers or her mom turns up, I guess. Don’t know.”

“Anything new on the shootout?”

He took a bite of his cheeseburger and then placed it back on the plate and wiped his hands on a napkin. “Not much. We had some of our guys in Philly notify next of kin and do some interviews but no one is talking. Big surprise there. We have no idea who was shooting at them, but we do know that they were traveling west. They’d gotten on at the Bowersville exit.”

Josie frowned. “That’s the closest exit to Dirk Spencer’s house,” she said. “So they picked him up and got onto the interstate there. But where were they headed? The next exit is Denton—where they got off at the Stop and Go. They were traveling away from Philadelphia and the next decent-sized town is almost two hundred miles away.”

“Don’t know,” Luke said. “We may never know. Unless Dirk wakes up and can tell us. I’m sure they only got off the interstate at the Denton exit because they were getting shot at.”

“Makes sense,” Josie said. “Not many places to hide on the interstate. Any idea where the shooting started?”

“Looks like about halfway between the exits. We found rounds about three miles from the Bowersville entrance ramp.”

So they got on Route 80 and drove for three miles before the shooting started. It was two more miles to the exit where they’d gotten off, already badly wounded and in trouble. “I wonder if they were being pursued before they even got on the interstate. Maybe that’s why they got on the interstate, so they could get away fast without drawing much attention.”

“We thought of that. Someone’s pulling surveillance of various businesses in Bowersville to see if we can see the Escalade passing through at any point, see if anyone was tailing them.”

“No connection between Spencer and the guys in the car?” Josie asked.

“None that we can turn up. Just that they came from Philadelphia, and he used to live there. Everyone who was interviewed in Philadelphia said they never heard of him.”

“It’s just strange, don’t you think?”

“Lots of strange things going on lately,” Luke muttered, his eyes back on his plate.

Josie paused in her eating, a mozzarella stick poised halfway to her mouth. “What does that mean?”

He met her eyes. “What was that about today? Out in the woods?”

She resisted the urge to roll her eyes. Most men would be grateful. Being with Luke was a double-edged sword: she could count on him utterly to never put her in the position that Ray had put her in, but at the same time his level of care and concern grated on her. “Why do you ask?”

“I’m worried about you. With everything going on… the suspension, what happened at the Stop and Go. Plus, I know you want to work. I know this is killing you. Isabelle Coleman is still missing and you have to sit it out. I just want to make sure you’re, you know, okay.”

Josie forced a smile. She wasn’t okay. For every reason he had just listed, and then some, but the last thing she wanted to do was talk about it. Luke had already done everything he could do for her back in the woods. She reached across the table and patted his hand. “Don’t worry,” she said. “I’m fine.”





Chapter Sixteen





Lisette Matson’s gnarled hands shuffled the deck of playing cards like a magician. Josie was always fascinated by her grandmother’s dexterity when it came to playing solitaire. Or, when Josie was there, kings in the corner. The two of them sat at a table in the cafeteria of Rockview Ridge, the only nursing home in Denton. It was after dinner and most residents lingered in their wheelchairs or at tables—reading books, doing crossword puzzles, or chatting quietly. One man used his feet to pull his wheelchair along, going from nurse to nurse to complain that, “Sherri took my larynx,” his fingers pressing an artificial device to the hole in his throat to say those very words. Throat cancer. Although Josie couldn’t remember his name, she remembered her grandmother telling her about him. Her grandmother knew everyone’s diagnosis. The doctors had had to cut a stoma into his throat to give him a permanent airway which was why he needed an artificial larynx to speak. A nurse in blue scrubs acknowledged him as she pushed her medication cart past the cafeteria doors. “Now, Alton, why would Sherri do a thing like that?”

He pressed the thing to his throat again, his voice robotic. “Because she’s a bitch,” he said and laughed, silently.

Several women in the room, including Lisette, called, “Shut up, Alton!”

The nurse frowned at him before continuing on her way. She tutted. “Alton, that profanity is not necessary.”

Lisette muttered, “He just lives to get under peoples’ skins, that one. You should hear the disgusting things he says to us when the nurses aren’t around, and he accuses poor Sherri of taking his stupid larynx at least once a week. Yet he’s never without the damn thing. Someone ought to take it and shove it up his—”

“Gram!” Josie hissed, holding back her laughter.

Lisette batted her eyelashes in a look that said, “What did I say?” and looked back at her cards.

Across the room, Alton waved a dismissive hand in the nurse’s direction and turned his wheelchair back to the television in the corner of the room, which was playing the local news.

Following his gaze, Josie watched as an old Facebook photo of June Spencer flashed across the screen, the words FOUND ALIVE huge and bold and capitalized beneath her sullen visage. Josie wondered if that was the best Facebook photo Trinity Payne could find of the girl. Or maybe she never smiled. It would certainly fit with what Solange had told her. The screen cut to Trinity Payne, standing outside Denton’s police headquarters in the same puffy coat she’d been wearing two days ago.

Lisette eyed Josie’s left hand as she dealt the final card. “Nice ring.”

Josie smiled tightly. “Luke proposed,” she said.

Lisette’s left eyebrow rose. “You should have led with that.”

Lisa Regan's books