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Small Town Focus, Reed Ferguson Private Investigator Mysteries: Book 14

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“I think my father might have killed my mother.”

With this one sentence, Gina Smith immediately draws me into a case.

Questioning her past and yearning to find the mother she’s never met, Gina hires me to find answers. With the help of my wife Willie, my best friend Cal, and the always amusing Goofball Brothers, my search for Gina’s mother leads me to a rural Colorado town and a puzzling mystery that involves a decades-old kidnapping and an unsolved murder. To complicate matters, the powerful mayor and a charming pastor stand in my way.

I’m the stranger in this small town, and if I’m not careful, the murderer’s focus could turn to me.

Sample Chapter

CHAPTER ONE

She got right to the point. “I think my father might have killed my mother.”

That wasn’t what I’d expected to hear. “Why do you say that?”

She frowned. “I guess that’s not the best way to start the conversation.” Gina Smith was a petite woman with light brown hair that cascaded down her shoulders and long bangs that covered a high forehead. She was dressed in denim shorts, a striped blouse, and sandals, but her demeanor was anything but casual. She let out a little nervous laugh. “Something odd is going on.”

“I’m going to need a little more.”

“I know.” She sat back, drew in a breath, and let it out slowly. “When I told Willie I wanted to talk with a private investigator, I didn’t think it would be so hard to actually do.”

I’m Reed Ferguson, the private investigator she was addressing. Gina Smith is a nurse, and a coworker of my wife, Willie – real name Willemena. It was a hot Wednesday morning in late August, and Gina and I were sitting outside at the Starbucks on the Sixteenth Street Mall. It is in the heart of downtown Denver, and since I no longer have an office, it is the perfect place to meet clients: easy to find, public, and I find that sitting with a Starbucks drink seems to relax people, despite all that caffeine.

“It’s okay, I don’t bite.” I smiled to ease her tension.

“What did Willie tell you?”

“Just that you were raised by your dad, you never knew your mother, and you have some questions about your past that you want to talk to someone about.”

She sipped an iced café latte, leaving a smudge of pink lipstick on the rim of the glass. “That’s true.” She fiddled with the glass for a moment and then began. “I’m an only child. According to my father, my mother left us when I was a few weeks old. We moved to Colorado shortly after that, and he raised me by himself.”

“He never remarried?”

“No.”

“Where were you born?”

“Russell, Kansas, in 1985.”

I’d passed through Russell, a long time ago, as I drove east on Interstate 70 on my way to college in Boston. The most I knew about Russell was that former senator Bob Dole hailed from there.

“Has your father ever said why your mother left?”

She shrugged. “He’s been very vague, and said that she was unhappy, and she had some problems. I always wondered if it was because of me, but whenever I brought up something like that, Dad would vehemently tell me that wasn’t the case. But…” Her lip trembled, and she cleared her throat. “If she’d recently given birth to me, and she was unhappy, how could her leaving not have been because of me? Having a baby is life-changing. I know; I have a son, Ethan.”

“How old is he?”

“Eight. He’s a good kid. I’m divorced, but my ex has been a great dad, really involved in Ethan’s life. I can’t imagine abandoning my son like my mother did me. But maybe she had postpartum depression, or something like that. That could’ve caused her to leave.”

“What does your dad say about that?”

“It’s a touchy subject, but when I’ve asked questions, he tells me that the past is in the past, that he loves me enough for both of them, and that I should let it go.”

I studied her for a few seconds. “But you’ve had a hard time doing that.”

“Yes. Dad doesn’t even have a picture of my mother, let alone anything that belonged to her. And he never even told me her name. I only found out what her name was two days ago. But I’ll get to that in a second. I figure I should give you the background stuff first.”

I was tempted to interrupt her here, but she was on a roll, so I decided to just let her keep talking.

“It’s like he cut her completely out of his life, so she’s a complete mystery to me, and that’s always made it hard. I have an intense desire to know more about her, to know what she looked like, what things made her who she was, and what made her tick.”

“And what made her leave.”

“Yes,” she said softly. She took another drink, and stared at me with intense brown eyes.

“This is all intriguing,” I said, then hesitated. “But I still don’t see why you think your father may have killed your mother.”

“Let me explain.”  Two women sat down at a table nearby, so Gina leaned closer to me. “Here’s the thing. I was never able to research anything about my mother because I didn’t even know her name. But I’ve looked up Dad, thinking that might help me locate her, and I can’t find anything on him. He told me one time that he was born in Boston, but I can’t find any birth records that might be his, or family history. Nothing.”

“How thorough a search did you do?”

She shrugged. “Some internet searches, and I went to some genealogy sites. But with my job and being a single parent, I’m constantly running Ethan somewhere, or taking care of something for him. I don’t have a lot of time to do research, and it’s not easy.”

I mulled that over. “Has your dad ever talked about his childhood?”

“He said he was born in Boston, and grew up near Deerfield, but I can’t find any school records, or an old address for him. He worked at a mill in Deerfield, but he wouldn’t tell me the name.”

“Why?”

She shrugged. “He just wouldn’t, even when I pushed him. I looked up mills in that area, but there aren’t any.” She shrugged. “It’s like he only existed when we came to Colorado.”

I cocked an eyebrow. “Witness protection program?”

“If that was true, don’t you think the government would’ve told me by now, since I’d be in the program, too?”

“Probably, unless there’s some reason to keep you in the dark.”

“Like what?”

“I don’t know.”

Her brow furrowed. “It’s like Dad made up his past.”

“You’ve asked him about it?”

“Yes. He just jokes that he was a hell-raiser at school, and then he dropped out. When I pressed him on it, he just told me to let it go. He doesn’t ever talk about that part of his life, only things that happened once we came to Colorado.”

“Does he have family?”

“If there is, I don’t know of them. He says he was an orphan.”

“Who raised him?”

“He stayed in an orphanage and then started working when he was twelve, and lived on his own.”

“Let me guess, he won’t give you the name of an orphanage, and there’s no record of any orphanages in Deerfield.”

She frowned. “Right. It’s possible he stayed at an orphanage in some other city, but he won’t say.” She let out another big sigh. “I should be able to find something on him, but I can’t.”

“And all this has led you to believe your father murdered your mother and has covered his past by creating some kind of new identity.”

“That’s part of it.” She turned red. “It sounds preposterous, I know.”

I didn’t say anything to that, because it did sound unlikely, but I didn’t want to offend her.

“There’s more,” she said.

I took a sip of my macchiato, then set my glass down. “I’m listening.”

“A couple of weeks ago, I was visiting Dad and I went into the den. The news was on, and the anchor was talking about skeletal remains of a body that had been found in a field east of Denver. Based on the size of the bones, the authorities thought it was probably a woman. You should have seen the look on Dad’s face. He was in shock, just staring at the screen with his jaw open. I spoke to him three times before he noticed I was there, and his face was as white as a ghost. I asked him about the remains, and he snapped at me to shut up.” Pain wrinkled the corners of her eyes. “He never talks to me like that. I asked him why the news was upsetting him, and he told me it was nothing, and he changed the subject. Then, the next time I was there, a few days later, I overheard him on the phone. I have no idea who he was talking to, but he said something about the woman in the field, and about it being taken care of, and she was never supposed to be found. He was furious.” She tapped the table for emphasis. “He was talking about that woman.”

“Maybe,” I said. “We don’t even know if the remains are of a woman, remember? Did you ever find out whose body it was?”

“As far as I know, she’s still unidentified.”

“As far as you know.”

She pursed her lips. “I’ve been watching the news since then, and they brought up the remains a time or two, but I don’t believe they know who it was.”

“Does your dad know you overheard his conversation?”

“When he got off the phone, I confronted him, and asked him pointblank who he was talking to, and what the conversation was about. He said I shouldn’t be asking questions if I knew what was good for me. That’s so unlike him, and I finally got mad back. I said if he was hiding something from me that maybe I should look into it myself. He blew up and said I’d better not go prying into the past, that sometimes things need to stay buried.”

“That’s an interesting thing to say, given the news about the woman in the field.”

“I thought so, too.”

I put pieces of her narrative together. “And you think your father had something to do with this woman’s death? If it was indeed a woman?”

It took her a long time to answer. “What if she was my mother? What if sometime in the past she came looking for him and he killed her?”

“Why would he murder her?”

“What if Dad kidnapped me, and my mother found us, and so he had to get rid of her? You see stories like that on TV.”

I stayed silent for a minute. Gina had observed some odd things in her father’s behavior, and I wondered if she realized that she’d made a lot of suppositions, but she had no facts.

“That’s a stretch,” I finally said.

“I know, but it’s possible. I even called the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, and asked them about any children who went missing from Kansas around 1985, but nothing seemed to be a match. Then I found out my mother’s name, but that didn’t help.”

I held up a hand. “The other night?”

She nodded. “I went over to Dad’s, but he wasn’t home. I … snooped around. I probably shouldn’t have, but because of that woman in the field, and how he responded, I wanted to know if he was hiding something. Turns out he was.”

She pulled her phone out of a large purse and scrolled to a picture, then showed it to me. It was a decorative birth certificate, an unofficial form given to mothers when they leave the hospital. It listed Gina Louise Madison as the child’s name, and included two tiny footprints and her weight and height. Mother’s present name was listed as Marsha Jenny Madison. Where the father’s name would’ve been listed, it was blank. Russell, Kansas was the city and state.

“It was hidden in a box in his closet,” she said. “I almost took it, but decided to take a picture instead. I never even knew he had it.” Sadness flashed across her face as she stared at the photo. “That’s my mother.”

“Does he know you found it?”

She shook her head. “I almost called him later and asked him about it, but changed my mind. If he has done something wrong, I don’t want to alert him that I’m suspicious. And if this is all in my head, I’d prefer he didn’t know what I did or what I was thinking.” She sighed. “The whole thing’s been eating at me. I can’t get past why he won’t tell me anything, unless he has something to hide. I even asked him that, and he laughed it off.” She stopped and seemed to gather her thoughts. “I want to know what’s going on, and I’m willing to pay you to get to the bottom of all this.”

I gazed into her pleading face. “Okay,” I finally said. “I’ll look into it.”

Although her dad had certainly been acting strangely, I doubted there was anything sinister behind his behavior, but it would be easy enough to find out, and put her mind at ease.

How wrong I was.

 

I've loved every one of the books in this series. The characters are fantastic. And again, there was an unexpected twist to the storyline. This is one of my very favorite series. ~Reader review

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