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No Good Deed
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No Good Deed Hardcover - 1998

by Lynn Hightower


From the publisher

"The first time Sonora saw the farm, it was dusk, and there were horses running in the paddocks. It did not seem like the kind of place where a young girl of fifteen could saddle up a horse for an afternoon ride, and never come back..."
Joelle Chauncey did not disappear without a trace -- she left blood, and a discarded riding boot. Cincinnati police detective Sonora Blair, a single parent herself, has a feeling this child is not coming back. Tracks from a horse trailer indicate both Joelle and the mare she was riding were taken together. Who was the target--the girl, or the horse? Nobody saw a thing. The farm owner, Donna Delaney, was out. The uncomfortably handsome veterinarian from the farm next door heard nothing. The girl's father, a single parent, was at work.
Joelle's disappearance is only the beginning ... and after a grisly mutilation at the barn, no one is getting involved. But crime talks, and Sonora is led by an eerie and unsettling presence, a killer wrapped in layers of internal conflict, a killer who will follow a bizarre path of good and evil, and dark compulsion. "No Good Deed" is the story of a child's brutal abduction . . . a lover's betrayal . . . and a good cop's journey into the darkness.

Details

  • Title No Good Deed
  • Author Lynn Hightower
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Edition First Edition
  • Pages 324
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Delacorte Press, New York
  • Date 1998-04-13
  • ISBN 9780385323598 / 038532359X
  • Weight 1.32 lbs (0.60 kg)
  • Dimensions 9.55 x 6.48 x 1.21 in (24.26 x 16.46 x 3.07 cm)
  • Library of Congress subjects Detective and mystery stories, Psychological fiction
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 97052634
  • Dewey Decimal Code FIC

Excerpt

The first time Sonora saw the farm, it was dusk, and there were horses running in the paddocks.  It did not seem like the kind of place where a young girl of fifteen could saddle up a horse for an afternoon ride and never come back--though Sonora did not know what such a place might look like.  Girl and horse had vanished sometime around three thirty that afternoon.

The child had not disappeared entirely without a trace.  She had left blood, and a discarded riding boot.

Sonora turned the Pathfinder off the dark ribbon of back road, onto the long dirt driveway that led to the barn.  The sky was black and blue, like a bruise.  It would be dark soon.

Gritty dust rose from the grind of gravel beneath tires that were much in need of replacing.  The Pathfinder hit the bottom of a pothole, and Sonora bounced.  New shocks wouldn't be a bad idea either.

As soon as God and Visa allowed.

Three patrol cars were parked at odd angles at the end of the drive, and blue strobe lights arced across the face of a weathered twenty-stall barn.  There were horses inside, looking out.  Light blazed from the tiny barred stall windows.

Sonora parked her Pathfinder next to a gold Taurus.  Sam was here, then, in the company car.  Maybe he'd have it solved.

She put the Pathfinder in park, left the doors unlocked, paused to look out over the small ten-acre farm.  The fencing was bad--slats broken, whole sections sagging, paint bleached from black to gray by the sun and the seasons.  Sonora assumed the horses stayed in their paddocks because they wanted to.

There was an electric snap in the wind, like you got before a tornado or the advent of fall.  Sonora felt rain and chilled air--a welcome change from the heat of a miserable, bug-ridden summer.  Ants in the kitchen, mosquitoes at night. Silverfish in the drain of the bath.

Something spooked the horses in the front field and sent them cantering across the sparse grass and weed clumps, heads high, tails up.

Thirty minutes ago she'd been dog tired and ready to collapse, dreading the long drive out of Cincinnati's downtown into the suburbs of Blue Ash, counting her cash so she could bring the kids takeout.  The cold air had revived her.

She checked her watch.  Seven p.m. Her children were going hungry.


A  uniform stood outside the office door, looking bored but alert. Sonora flashed her ID, and the man relaxed his pose and stepped toward her.

"Officer Renquist, ma'am.  Detective Delarosa told me to tell you he's out at the scene--"

"We got a body?" Sonora asked.

"No, ma'am.  Just blood."

Renquist was an older man, with the red flush of high blood pressure across his cheeks.  A lot of lines around the eye--worry or laugh lines, Sonora couldn't tell.  He was on the portly side, but he'd be cuddly in a sweater.  He reminded Sonora of her favorite uncle who used to drink her milk for her when her mom wasn't looking.  Renquist looked tired but alert.  It was not every day a whodunit crossed his path.

Sonora rubbed the back of her neck.  "How much blood?"

"Officially speaking?  A lot."

Sonora glanced over her shoulder at the array of Mazdas, Explorers, and Camrys that were parked in and around the police cars. "A lot of civilians around.  Who are they?"

"Girl's father--"

"What's her name again?"

The officer flipped open his notebook but didn't need to look. "Joelle Chauncey.  Her dad, one Dixon Chauncey, came home from work around five thirty--he lives on the premises in a house trailer with two other children--anyway, he comes home and finds out that his oldest daughter, Joelle, went out riding and didn't come back.  They put up a search, but the girl and the horse were gone."

"Gone?  Disappeared, just like that?"

"Like what, I don't know, ma'am.  But the girl and the horse are gone, and there's a lot of blood."

"Where's the father now?"

Renquist inclined his head toward the office door.  "In there with some of the people who ride here.  Lady that runs the place, she teaches lessons, boards horses."

"She around?"

"She was out at the scene talking to Detective Delarosa, but I think I saw her head back into the barn a minute or two ago.  Her name is Donna Delaney."

Answered the question before she asked.  Experience was a wonderful thing.  "Give me one minute with the dad."

The office door stuck, and Renquist leaned over and yanked it open.  A gust of wind blew Sonora's hair and set off the ting of wind chimes, a circle of pewter horses, hanging just outside the door.

The father was easy to spot.

Chauncey sat way back on the couch, knees tight, chin wobbly with the effort not to cry.  Likely he had shaved that morning, but he was one of those men who would need to shave twice a day to stay presentable.

He was flanked by two women, parents of children in the riding program, Sonora guessed.  They sat beside him offering the consolation of their presence, in exchange for their involvement, albeit on the sidelines, in a tragic but fascinating ordeal.

They would have brought baked goods and a ham, if they'd had sufficient notice.

Chauncey slid forward on the couch and stood quickly to shake Sonora's hand.  He might be out of his mind with worry, but he would not neglect common courtesy.

"Police Specialist Blair.  You're Dixon Chauncey?" Sonora showed him her badge, knowing he would find it a comfort.  She wondered why he was not out looking for his daughter with the uniforms.

"Yes, ma'am.  I'm Joelle's father."

His knees were wobbly, and he teetered forward.  Which answered her question of why he wasn't out looking.

Sonora took his hand and nudged him back toward the couch. "Sit down, Mr.  Chauncey."

He obeyed instantly.

He wasn't overweight by more than fifteen or twenty pounds, which would have been unnoticeable if he dressed with a certain amount of common sense.  He didn't.  He wore his pants tight and curved over his hips, and the length was an inch too short.  Likely the pants had fit perfectly until washed.

He could have been attractive, but he wasn't.  The least endearing thing about him was his posture, back slightly humped, shoulders curved and sloping, elbows bent, like Popeye.  He wore a short-sleeved plaid shirt with a pack of Marlboros in the pocket. His hair was black, like shoe polish, and dull as if he dyed it. It sat on his head like a plastic cap.  Sonora figured he combed it straight down with water every day.

"Have you met my partner, Detective Delarosa?  He got here ahead of me, he drives faster than I do." Sonora smiled gently while she worked him, felt the ease of tension in the room.  The rider mommies gave her a look of approval mixed with relief, and Chauncey braved a shy half smile.

Let him know there was a man on the case, Sonora thought, on the chance that he was one of those people who are particular about the gender of their cops.  Give an air of competent professionalism and leaven it with "I'm just a regular Joe."

Confidence and a bit of comfort for him to hang on to while they found the body of his kid and decided whether he'd had anything to do with it.

The tears looked genuine, at any rate.

The door leading into the barn proper slammed open, just grazing Sonora on the elbow.  She heard a horse whinny and snort, then a thumping noise, as if the horse was pawing the ground.

"Shut that up, or you're going out." A woman's voice. Harsh.  Inflection sounding kind of Chicago--Midwest, anyway.

The horse was instantly quiet, as was everyone else in the room.

The woman stood in the doorway, taking them all in.  Her attention created a frisson of awareness that said watch-your-step. Her chin was pointed, face almost drawn, hair a cotton-white blond because she was worth it.  She did not wear a lot of makeup, and her features were strong.  She bordered pretty, if you liked them hard-looking.  Her eyes, dark, flat, and judgmental, went back to Sonora, and she extended a hand.

"I'm Donna Delaney.  This is my farm and my office."

Tiny lines, half-circle grooves like hoofprints, arced the corners of her mouth.  She had thin slash lips and wore jeans and a flannel shirt that fit her loosely.  She was thin, and she looked good in jeans.  She scraped her feet on the doorsill.  Her black rubber boots were crusted with mud, manure, and wood shavings, and her feet were long and slender.  Her throat and shoulders were dark brown, the permanent tan of a woman who spent a lot of time outdoors no matter the heat.

"Detective Blair," Sonora said.

"So you come in pairs.  I've talked to the other one already. Delarosa."

"I have a few questions--"

"I already talked to your partner."

Sonora was aware of the rapt attention of the women on the couch.  "That so?" She smiled, keeping it lazy.  "Ms.  Delaney, did you see Joelle Chauncey this afternoon?"

Delaney's eyes narrowed, then she turned and headed for the door, glancing back at Sonora over her shoulder.  "It's past feeding time, and my horses are hungry.  Want to walk along beside me while I work?"

"I won't keep you much longer," Sonora said.

Delaney hesitated.

"I can feed them, Donna." Chauncey stood up again, then leaned against the wall.  His voice was small, sad, and brave.

"You can't even stand up," Delaney said.

"We'll do it." The two women got off the couch, looked at each other, nodded their heads.  This was something they could handle. Glad to be of help.

Delaney gave them a mere flicker of attention.  "Don't worry about the horses in the back stalls.  And only give that pony a taste.  He's pigfat as it is." She looked back at Sonora.  "No.  I didn't see Joelle today."

"Were you here?  What's your usual schedule?"

"I get here in the morning, a little before eight.  Leave around twelve thirty.  Got back at six, today's Tuesday.  I do private lessons on Tuesdays, usually in the evening.  Other days I'm back by four."

"Is there usually anyone here between noon and four, or six on Tuesdays?"

"No.  Unless I'm showing a horse for sale or something, it's usually dead around here in the afternoons.  Picks up at night for lessons from five to eight, except Tuesdays, like I said.  When I do private.  Then I feed and bed the horses and go home.  Joelle usually helps me."

"Was Joelle in the habit of riding out by herself in the afternoon?"

"Yeah, she'd usually ride after school for a little while, before lessons started.  She wasn't really supposed to go out on Tuesdays, though, because nobody else is here.  It's better if someone's around to keep an eye out.  But one of the arrangements I have with Dixon is that his kids get to ride the horses.  He's supposed to look after them, I'm not their baby-sitter."

Sonora glanced at Dixon Chauncey, wondering how Delaney's insensitivity would register.

Defensively.

"She wasn't supposed to ride by herself," he said quickly.

Sonora looked back at Chauncey.  "She did, though, didn't she?"

"I should have been stricter with her about that.  But she was a good rider."

"She could handle herself," Delaney said.  High praise.

Joelle was only fifteen, Sonora thought.  A lot of things could come up that a fifteen-year-old couldn't handle.

About the author

Lynn S. Hightower is the author of three previous novels, including "Satan's Lambs, " which won the 1994 Shamus Award. An author who produces "miraculously fresh and harrowing" fiction ("Kirkus"), she is a genuine talent whose gritty, powerful voice and outstanding forensic knowledge recall the work of Patricia Cornwell. She's trailed homicide cops and witnessed an autopsy firsthand to ensure the authenticity of her stories. Born in Chattanooga, Tennessee, she currently lives in Lexington, Kentucky.
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