Time of Death. BEVERLY BARTON

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her, what would he do? Tell her to come down to the office in the morning and fill out a report? He certainly wouldn’t take a personal interest. He’d hand her problem over to one of his deputies and that would be the end of it.

      There had been a time when Mike Birkett would have gone to hell and back for her. But that had been when he had loved her, when he had thought she was going to be his wife and the mother of his children. That had been before she had gotten on a plane and flown to California to become a famous movie star. Seventeen years and a million heartbreaks ago.

      Lorie slowed her Ford Edge SUV at the stop sign, glanced down at her wristwatch—2:46 P.M.—and wondered what the hell she was going to do. Who could she turn to for help?

      Not Mike.

      And not the Dunmore police. Even if they took the threat on her life seriously, what could they actually do?

      What she needed was a private detective, someone who could find out the identity of the person who had sent her the threatening letters.

      Lorie suddenly had a lightbulb moment and knew exactly who she could go to for help.

      Fifteen minutes later, she pulled into the driveway at 121 West Fourth Street, parked her SUV, got out, and walked up and onto the front porch. She rang the doorbell and waited.

      Maleah Perdue, Jack’s younger, all-American, blond sister, opened the door and smiled. “Hi there. What brings you out on a day like this that’s not fit for anybody or anything, except maybe ducks?”

      “Are you busy?” Lorie asked. “Am I interrupting anything?”

      “You’re interrupting my game of solitaire on my laptop.” Maleah laughed.

      Lorie forced a tight smile. “I … uh … have a problem that I was hoping you could help me with.”

      “Well, come on in and tell me about it,” Maleah said.

      Lorie entered the large two-story foyer.

      “Come on back in the den.”

      Lorie followed her best friend’s sister-in-law. When they reached the small, cozy room, Maleah asked, “Want some hot tea or coffee?”

      “No, thanks. Nothing for me.”

      “Have a seat.”

      Lorie nodded, but didn’t sit down. “I want to hire you. I don’t know how much you charge, but I need a professional.”

      Maleah stared at Lorie, then asked, “What’s wrong?”

      “I received a death threat in a letter about a month ago. I convinced myself that it was just a prank and threw the letter away and almost forgot about it. But I received a second letter identical to the first. It arrived in yesterday’s mail, but I didn’t open the mail until today.”

      “Did you bring the letter with you?”

      Lorie dug in her purse, pulled out the envelope, and handed it to Maleah.

      “Do you think you could get any fingerprints off the envelope or letter?” Lorie asked.

      “Yeah, yours, the mail carrier’s, and anybody else who might have touched it. But my guess is whoever wrote it made sure he or she didn’t leave any prints.”

      Maleah removed the letter from the envelope and read it aloud. “Do you know anyone who might want to kill you?”

      “No. No one.”

      “Does anything in the letter ring a bell? Any of the phrases sound familiar?”

      “No.”

      “Do you have any idea what he—or maybe she—means by ‘midnight is coming’?”

      “No, not really,” Lorie said. “Do you think this is for real, that someone is actually threatening to kill me?”

      “I don’t know, but you’d be a fool to ignore a second letter,” Maleah told her. “I’m glad you’ve come to me. We’ll get in touch with Mike Birkett and—”

      “No!” When Maleah looked at her quizzically, Lorie explained. “I could have gone to Mike, but I didn’t. He’s not going to take this seriously. As you know, we … uh … we share some ancient history. I don’t want to involve local law enforcement, especially not Mike. Not yet. Not until we know for sure that this is for real.”

      “Want my opinion?”

      Lorie nodded.

      “It’s for real.”

      “Then you think somebody wants to kill me?”

      “Possibly. At the very least, somebody wants to scare the shit out of you.”

      Had they all received the most recent letter? He could have mailed them from anywhere, but it seemed only appropriate for the letters to have a Memphis postmark, so he’d made a quick one-day trip back to Memphis. In the future, he’d mail the letters before leaving town. He liked to imagine each person’s reaction when they opened the envelope, how they must have prayed that it wasn’t another dire warning.

      Smiling, he ran the tips of his fingers over his closed laptop where the letter was stored. There would be no need to write a new message each time after this, not when the original said it all so perfectly.

      He could only surmise that each of them was puzzled by the letter, wondering who had sent it and why. Stupid fools!

      Sooner or later, somebody, probably a smart FBI agent, would figure it out, but by then it would be too late. They would all be dead, the guilty punished, and a cruel, ugly part of the past erased. And the best part was that no one would ever suspect him.

      He picked up the glass of chardonnay he had poured only moments ago and sat down in his favorite chair. As he sipped the wine, he lifted the remote control with his other hand and hit the Play button to start the DVD.

      He owned dozens of copies of this particular movie, both on DVD and on video. If he could have purchased every copy ever made, he would have. And he would have destroyed all of them.

      Chapter 2

      Derek Lawrence arrived late. He wouldn’t have even considered attending if this wasn’t his mother’s sixty-fifth birthday bash. As a general rule, he deliberately avoided spending time with the woman who had given birth to him. But not being a total bastard, he had felt compelled to put in an appearance this Sunday afternoon at the party hosted by his sister, a party for family and a few close friends. He had known that to Diana a few close friends meant there would be no less than a hundred in attendance. His baby sister loved nothing better than to host a social event so that she could show off her fifteen-million-dollar estate on the outskirts of Nashville. Unlike their mother, who had come from a middle-class background, Diana had been born into money and had married money. He loved the girl, but the older she got, the more like their mother she became. God help her.

      The house was buzzing with activity. In one glance, he counted thirty people milling about in the massive foyer and adjoining living room. A small

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