forgotten (Twisted Cedars Mysteries Book 2) Read online




  forgotten

  (a twisted cedars mystery)

  by

  C. J. Carmichael

  Copyright © 2015 by Carla Daum

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

  The author holds exclusive rights to this work. No part of this work may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

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

  Formatting by Anessa Books

  other twisted cedars mysteries

  buried (Book 1)

  forgotten (Book 2)

  exposed (Book 3)

  families of twisted cedars

  The Lachlans

  Katie: Married Ed Lachlan and had two children, Dougal and Jamie. After her divorce she supported her kids by working as a cleaning woman with her partner and friend, Stella Ward. At the age of 55 Katie died of cancer.

  Edward (Ed): Former husband of Katie, and father of Dougal and Jamie. Remarried to Crystal Halloway and had daughter, Emma. Killed Crystal during a domestic dispute and served time in Oregon penitentiary. Upon release six months ago, he skipped parole and his official whereabouts is unknown.

  Dougal: 34-year-old son of Katie and Ed, brother to Jamie. He played high school football with Wade McKay and Kyle Quinpool. At 18 he moved to New York City and began a career writing true crime novels.

  Jamie: 28-year-old daughter of Katie and Ed, sister to Dougal. She is a CPA and works for a local accounting firm. She recently married Kyle Quinpool who has two children from a previous marriage.

  * * *

  The Hammonds

  Jonathan: Former town mayor died two years ago in car crash with his wife. Daughters: Daisy and Charlotte.

  Patricia: Jonathan’s wife, mother of Daisy and Charlotte. Killed with her husband in a car crash.

  Shirley: Jonathan’s sister was the local town librarian before she was found hanged to death in the basement of the library when she was 41-years-old. Her death was ruled suicide. Never married, she lived in a cottage in the forest, five miles from town, which came to be known locally as the Librarian Cottage.

  Daisy: Daughter of Jonathan and Patricia, Kyle Quinpool’s first wife and mother to twins, Cory and Chester. She disappeared shortly after her divorce and hasn’t been heard from since.

  Charlotte: 28-year-old adopted daughter of Jonathan and Patricia. She works as head librarian in Twisted Cedars.

  * * *

  The MacKays

  Grant: Father to Wade and husband of Allison, he was the Sheriff of Curry County for over thirty years.

  Allison: Mother to Wade and wife of Grant. She was a piano teacher until she and her husband retired to Arizona.

  Wade: 34-year-old son of Grant and Allison, he was high school buddies with Dougal Lachlan, Kyle Quinpool, and Daisy Hammond. Worked as deputy in Umatilla County before returning to Twisted Cedars and being elected as Sheriff of Curry County.

  * * *

  The Quinpools

  Jim: Wealthiest man in town. He owns the local real estate business, Quinpool Realty. He and his wife Muriel had one son, Kyle. He and Muriel recently divorced.

  Muriel: Wife of Jim and mother to Kyle, she and her husband moved in with Kyle after he divorced his wife, Daisy. Muriel became the twins’ primary caregiver. A year ago she divorced Jim and moved away from Twisted Cedars.

  Kyle: Son of Jim and Muriel, he works with his father at Quinpool Realty. He had twins, Cory and Chester with his first wife, Daisy, and subsequently married Jamie Lachlan.

  Cory: 9-year-old daughter of Kyle and Daisy and twin sister to Chester.

  Chester: 9-year-old son of Kyle and Daisy and twin brother to Cory.

  chapter one

  july 2010

  day of the accident

  it was almost noon and Sheriff Wade MacKay was on his way home from fishing on the Rogue River in Oregon when he found the crashed truck, the body, the unconscious woman.

  It wasn’t often Wade spent his Friday mornings off duty, but a mental health day was in order after a solid week spent investigating the suspicious death and illegal burial of Daisy Quinpool, nee Hammond. Daisy was a friend from his high school days. Seven years ago, when she left her twin children and ex-husband behind, everyone assumed her well-documented mental illness—which began after the birth of her children—was at fault. Regular withdrawals from her bank account had fed the assumption she’d moved to Sacramento, where she was living under the radar.

  Not until Daisy’s remains were discovered by local true-crime author— and yet another former high school buddy—Dougal Lachlan, had anyone suspected foul play. Making the situation even more terrible, a third high school buddy of Wade’s, Daisy’s ex-husband Kyle Quinpool, was the prime suspect for the crime.

  Law enforcement in Curry County had to deal with their share of domestic violence. But homicides—especially murder—were fortunately very rare. Wade hoped not to see another one for a long time.

  In the back of his SUV, Wade had an ice chest packed with the three summer steelhead trout he’d caught. They would make excellent eating, but he wasn’t looking forward to getting home, or to the weekend ahead in which he’d focus on the investigation of Daisy’s death, probably leading, eventually to Kyle’s arrest.

  The evidence, so far, was pretty compelling.

  And Wade himself had exchanged heated words with his old friend, during which Kyle had all but admitted his guilt.

  Wade felt sickest about Kyle and Daisy’s two kids. Nine-year-old Chester and Cory were away at summer camp right now. Thanks to Wolf Creek Camp they’d missed most of the drama so far, thank God. They’d been dealing with their mother’s absence for seven years already. Now they would likely lose their father to the Oregon State Penn.

  Not exactly your classic happy childhood.

  Which Wade considered himself lucky to have had.

  Back in the days when Wade had been young and summers seemed so blissfully long, he’d fished this same spot with his father. Even then, he’d known he wanted a simple life, like his parents. He loved this corner of the Pacific Northwest, where there were more trees than people, roads that might not see a driver for days on end. He’d dreamed of being the Sheriff of Curry County, with a home, a wife and kids, and one day a week to spend in the wilderness that was the essence of this place.

  At age thirty-three he’d landed the job. Now, a year older, he still didn’t have the wife and family. Frankly, his love life was a mess. On a day like today though, being unencumbered didn’t seem so bad.

  His fishing spot was off Bear Camp Road, a narrow and crooked traverse over the Klamath Mountains that linked the small Oregon towns of Agness and Galice, carrying on to Twisted Cedars, Wade’s home. He patrolled here regularly, knew every curve, viewpoint and pothole. Normally he would have made it home in under an hour.

  If it hadn’t been for the accident.

  He was listening to Chopin’s Nocturne in E Flat Major when he spotted the overturned four-axle. He slowed and pulled over. Gripping the steering wheel, he took a deep breath, transforming from man enjoying a morning off work, to first responder at the site of a traffic accident.

  The music continued, impervious to the tragedy in front of him.

  But Wade couldn’t hear it now. He was studying the scene, looking for signs of survivors. But all was eerily still.

  Wade jerked his SUV to the far edge of the road, leaving room for t
he paramedics when they arrived. It was obvious they’d need paramedics. The truck, which had crashed through a guardrail, lay, like a beached whale, fifty feet down the embankment, backstopped by a grove of old growth cedar. Wade could hear his heart thumping in his chest as he put on his flashers and called in the accident. Then he stepped out into the hot, heavy July air and tried to find a route down the embankment.

  “Hello! Anyone in there?” He picked his way around dogwood and vine maples, sometime grabbing onto the shrubs to keep from sliding down the steep decline.

  No voices responded to his call. All he could hear was the buzzing of insects.

  Stamped over the scent of pine and dirt and living things was the acrid odor of burnt rubber. Dragonflies looped around him as he continued to scramble and claw his way toward the wreck.

  “Can anyone hear me?” he called out, again.

  No answer.

  He touched a hand to the truck, which had flipped over and lay on its passenger side. The engine was no longer running, but the hood was still warm.

  “Sheriff Wade MacKay here. You okay?” Climbing up on the trunk of a dead white pine that had backstopped the truck’s decent, he was able to peer inside the driver side window. A big, balding man, in his late fifties, was slumped over his seat belt.

  Blood trickled out of his mouth and Wade’s gut tightened. Using both hands, he pulled at the door, working against gravity to wrest it open, until finally he could get his shoulder under it, and gain access to the victim.

  He checked for breathing and a pulse, but found neither.

  Wade had seen a lot of accidental death in his fifteen-year career. He knew how to deal. You didn’t look too long. Or think too much.

  Averting his gaze from the death scene, he let the door fall shut, the sound crashing through the forest stillness.

  Then he circled the wreckage, to see inside the other side of the cab. Most truckers travelled alone. Even hitchhikers were rare these days.

  But this guy had company, a woman with long hair, reddish-blonde and stained with fresh blood. She was strapped into the passenger seat, her body limp.

  Thanks to the width of the load, there was space between the passenger door and the ground, about two and a half feet. Wade lowered his body to the carpet of wild grasses and wiggled into a position where he could get a better look. Her weight was partly resting on the door, so he couldn’t open it. But the glass in the window had pebbled and he was able to reach in, check her neck for a pulse.

  She was alive, but still losing blood from her head wound.

  He ran back to his truck for a blanket and first aid kit. He didn’t dare move her, but he could make sure she was warm, and staunch the bleeding until help arrived.

  When he brushed aside her hair to locate the wound he saw she was pretty and a lot younger than the driver, maybe in her late twenties or early thirties. A diamond glinted on her ear lobe. It seemed to be the only jewelry she was wearing. Her hair smelled pretty, as if she’d recently washed it.

  Her jeans and T-shirt looked wrinkled, as if she’d been wearing them a while. But even he could tell they were expensive brands.

  What would a woman like this be doing with a burly, middle-aged truck driver? Could she be his daughter?

  He called dispatch again, warned them what to expect, all the while keeping a gentle pressure on the wound. Eventually the bleeding stopped. He applied a rudimentary bandage then turned his attention to the miscellaneous items that had fallen to the passenger side of the cab. Anything that hadn’t been secured had ended up here, including a black, leather wallet.

  Inside was ID for the driver: Chet Walker, age 52, height five-feet, ten-inches, weight two-ten, hometown Klamath Falls. Emergency contact was listed as his wife.

  Poor woman would soon be getting a phone call that would change her life.

  Methodically Wade examined the rest of the contents. The driver’s cell phone, was here, but no purse or cell phone belonging to the female passenger.

  The other items in the truck seemed of no significance. Mentally, Wade inventoried them, pausing occasionally to check the woman, and say a few words of reassurance.

  An empty disposable coffee cup, a wrapper from a McDonald’s burger; a square of pale yellow flannel; a Mariner’s baseball cap, foil-wrapped caramels and a package of peppermint gum.

  A breeze came up from the west, and a piece of paper wafted up from the cab, floating toward the smashed window. Wade snatched it from the air. It looked like a page ripped out of a book.

  Upon closer examination Wade realized it was the Author Bio page from a novel. And the photo staring up at him was of someone he recognized—his old school buddy, now successful true crime writer, Dougal Lachlan. In a phrase that stated originally from Twisted Cedars, Oregon, two words had been underlined: Twisted Cedars.

  What the hell?

  Wade had an evidence bag in his pocket. He put the page inside, then turned his thoughts to the woman’s missing ID. Maybe she had something in the pocket of her jeans, but he wouldn’t be able to get at it until the paramedics arrived.

  Wade placed a gentle hand on the injured woman’s arm. “Help is coming. You hang tight.” Still she gave no response.

  Wade mulled over the accident scene. There were no dead animals, the usual cause of single vehicle accidents in the summer when the roads were good.

  Maybe Chet had suffered a heart attack or stroke.

  Noticing a trail of blood from the woman’s forehead to her left eye, Wade used the clean flannel cloth to wipe it away. He wished he could do more. She was awfully pale, terribly still.

  “They’ll be here soon.”

  She remained unresponsive. He took note of her left hand, and the pale line of skin where a wedding band might have been. Her nails were painted turquoise.

  Wade glanced up at the sky and guessed it was an hour past noon. So much for his peaceful break from mayhem. Then again, he shouldn’t complain. At least he hadn’t been in the oncoming lane when this truck went off the road.

  “Who are you lady?” He spoke again hoping his voice would reassure her, even though she wasn’t conscious. “Seems like you were in the wrong place at the wrong time today.”

  In the distance, he finally heard the sound he’d been waiting for. But even the sirens didn’t wake her up.

  chapter two

  in the summer, the favorite after-hours hangout for the locals of Twisted Cedars was the Linger Longer, mostly because the tourists preferred Wally’s Wharf. Wally’s had a quaint nautical décor, trendy tapas menu and a pretty rooftop patio overlooking the ocean.

  In contrast, the Linger Longer was a no-frills establishment, selling beer, pizza, burgers, and chicken wings. A small dance floor near the front didn’t see much action until after ten, while the pool tables in the back were almost always busy.

  This Saturday night, Charlotte Hammond, the town’s librarian, leaned on the well-worn pine bar while she ordered two draft ales.

  “Sorry about your sister, love.” Sean Fitzgerald said, while he filled two tall glasses for her.

  Dark-haired, charming Sean had been the guy all the girls had a crush on back when Charlotte was in high school. She’d collaborated on a science project with Sean once. She’d done all the legwork, of course. He’d handled the presentation. Even at sixteen he had the confident air of one who’d figured out life and knew how to get what he wanted.

  At twenty-eight, Charlotte still couldn’t say the same for herself.

  “Thanks Sean. Is Mia here tonight?” Sean’s wife worked almost as many hours as he did.

  “No, she isn’t working weekends anymore. Not until we find a new babysitter. We caught the last one making out with her boyfriend on our living room sofa.” Sean shook his head, disapprovingly. “Now Mia only works during the hours when her Mom is free to babysit.”

  It didn’t seem that long ago that Sean would have been the boy sneaking in to neck with a babysitter. How had the years gone by so quickly?
/>   Charlotte smiled vaguely, then headed back to her table.

  She was expecting Wade any minute. He’d dropped by her house last night to make sure she was okay and to set up the meeting. His consideration was typical of him, and not at all surprising given that, not long ago, she and Wade had been a couple. They’d dated for about six months before he’d foolish proposed to her on the night of Kyle Quinpool and Jamie Lachlan’s wedding.

  The wedding had been in May, little more than six weeks ago. And since then, the shit had certainly hit the fan. Poor Jamie must be wishing she’d taken her brother Dougal’s advice and called the whole thing off. Charlotte couldn’t blame her for her lack of perception, though. Even she, Daisy’s younger sister, had been fooled by Kyle. Maybe it was his golden-boy good looks, or his charming smile, but she’d never once suspected him of harming her sister.

  Let alone killing her—and burying her body behind the family cottage.

  But it sure looked like that was what had happened.

  Charlotte took a long drink of her beer, thinking she should have ordered something stronger. She suspected Wade had arranged this meeting so he could bring her up to date with the investigation into Daisy’s death. But she wasn’t sure she was ready to hear the details.

  So far, all she knew were the bare facts. Dougal Lachlan, true crime writer, and very recently, and surprisingly, Charlotte’s lover, had been digging up the old garden behind the Librarian Cottage five miles out of town on Old Forestry Road—which he was currently renting—when he’d come across Daisy’s remains, wrapped in a large green tarp.

  That had been a week ago.

  Since then, Charlotte had been living in a state of shock. She’d barely registered Dougal’s decision to make his move to Twisted Cedars a permanent one. Last Friday he’d flown back to New York City to pack up his belongings and his cat. She hadn’t heard from him since, though it was possible he’d left her a message on her phone.