It almost seemed, what with having the bachelor party at The Pour House, like Bo was deliberately rubbing Demi’s nose in his wedding.
Yup, fireworks were definitely going to be on the agenda tonight, Carson thought. One beer and he was out of there, he promised himself again. He had no burning desire to break up a bunch of drunken men who should know better, doing their damnedest to knock each other’s heads off. Bo had said he was inviting both Coltons and Gages to this party. Gasoline and fire, Carson thought.
He swore under his breath. No, he definitely didn’t need this.
With a sigh, he pulled into The Pour House’s parking lot. Because he wanted to be able to drive off the lot with a minimum of maneuvering—and make sure that his car didn’t get dented by some celebrant who had overindulged in liquid courage, Carson decided to park all the way in the back of the lot. It would be a bit of a trek to the bar’s front door, but it was between that and his peace of mind, and his peace of mind definitely made it worth it.
So he guided his vehicle all the way to the last row of the lot. The lot happened to back up against a grassy embankment.
Pulling up the hand brake, he sat there for a while, trying to get into the right frame of mind.
It wasn’t happening.
With a sigh, the police detective got out of his car and locked it. Carson was about to start walking toward the entrance of the bar when he thought he saw someone lying facedown at the very far edge of the lot.
Carson paused, squinting. That part of the parking lot was pretty dark. What streetlights there were didn’t reach that far.
“Looks like someone’s already been partying too much,” he muttered under his breath.
Some people just couldn’t pace themselves accordingly and this guy obviously couldn’t hold his liquor, Carson thought. With a resigned sigh, he changed course and headed toward the drunk instead of the bar. If he didn’t wake the guy up and get him out of the way, Carson had no doubt that during the course of the evening, someone was liable to run the drunk over.
The lot wasn’t all that full yet, he observed. This guy must have got a really early start. From what he could make out, the man was half on the edge of the lot, half on the grass at the very perimeter of the parking lot.
Drawing nearer, Carson saw that the man, whose face was obscured because it was turned toward the grass, had one arm stretched out with his index finger raised, like he was trying to draw attention to something.
That’s odd.
And then, despite the fact that it was pretty dark there, Carson saw that there was writing on the ground just above the man’s head. It looked as if he had written something—
In blood?
Taking his phone out, he hit the flashlight app, then squatted down. Using the light from his phone, Carson looked at the ground just above the man’s head more closely.
“It looks like you wrote Demi C,” Carson murmured, half to himself. The last letter was barely finished.
Demi C? Demi Colton?
Carson’s eyes widened. What was this guy doing, writing the name of his brother’s former girlfriend on the parking lot asphalt? And where had the blood come from? Had the guy hit his head?
“Hey, fella, wake up. The parking lot’s no place to take a nap.” He shook the man’s shoulder but couldn’t seem to rouse him.
Blowing out a breath, Carson rose to his feet and circled the man’s body so he could get a look at the drunk’s face.
“C’mon, fella, you can’t sleep it off here. You’ve gotta get—”
The rest of the sentence froze on Carson’s lips.
The man he was trying to wake up was his brother. Bo’s eyes were wide-open and unseeing.
There was a black cummerbund stuffed into his mouth. And he wasn’t breathing.
Chapter 2
Detective Carson Gage’s hands were shaking as he urgently turned his brother over onto his back. Any hope of trying to revive Bo disappeared the moment he saw the bullet wound.
His brother had been shot right through the heart.
Irrationally, Carson felt for a pulse anyway. There was none. Swallowing a curse, he sat back on his heels. His brother’s skin was already cold to the touch. This was January in Red Ridge, South Dakota, but death brought a different sort of cold with it and there was no mistaking it for a simple reaction to the weather.
“Damn it, Bo, I told you playing fast and loose with women would be the death of you someday. Why d’you have to prove me right?” Carson demanded angrily.
He curbed his impulse to straighten Bo’s clothing. Bo always took pride in his appearance and death had left him looking disheveled. But the crime scene investigators were going to need to see everything just the way he had found it.
Shaken to the core, Carson got back up to his feet and opened up his cell phone again. He needed to call this in.
It took him a minute to center his thoughts. He was a trained police detective, Carson silently upbraided himself. He couldn’t afford the luxury of coming apart like some hysterical civilian who had just unexpectedly witnessed death up close and personal—even if this was his half brother.
Taking a deep breath and then exhaling, he put in a call to his chief, Finn Colton. As he waited for Finn to pick up, he looked again at the name his brother had written in his own blood.
Demi C.
Demi Colton. Carson shook his head. When this got out, it was going to throw all of Red Ridge into one hell of an uproar, he thought. As if the feud between the Coltons and the Gages needed more fuel.
The next moment, he heard Finn’s deep voice as the chief answered his phone. “Hey, Gage, aren’t you supposed to be at your brother’s bachelor party right now, getting drunk and toasting Bo’s last few hours of freedom? What are you doing calling me?”
Carson enunciated the words carefully, afraid that if he spoke any faster, his voice was going to break. He and Bo weren’t close, but they were still family. “There’s been a murder, Chief.”
“Damn,” Finn cursed. Instantly, the voice on the other end became serious. “Whose?”
Carson paused before answering. “Bo’s.”
“This your idea of a joke, Gage?” Finn demanded impatiently. “’Cause if it is, it’s not funny.”
“I only wish it was, Chief,” Carson answered.
“You’re serious,” Finn responded, stunned. When no contradiction came, Finn asked, “Where and when?”
Carson looked down at his brother’s body. The whole scene seemed utterly surreal to him. “I just found him two minutes ago, lying facedown at the edge of The Pour House’s parking lot.”
“The Pour House,” Finn repeated. “Isn’t that where his bachelor party is supposed to be taking place tonight?”
“One and the same,” Carson answered his superior numbly. He realized he was leaving the most important part out. “And, Chief?”
“Yeah?”
“Looks like Bo wrote a name in his own blood. Maybe his killer’s name.”
Carson heard a noise on the other end as the other man said something unintelligible before going on to ask, “Whose name did he write?”
“Demi C.”
This time there was total silence on the other end for approximately thirty seconds as the information sank in.
The city of thirty-five thousand citizens had more than its share of Coltons. There were three branches in total, as different from one another as the seasons were. The chief liked to say that he belonged to the middle branch, the one that was neither rich nor poor and rough around the edges.
But whatever section he gravitated to, the chief was still a Colton and Carson couldn’t help wondering how Finn Colton would deal with having to bring in one of his own as a suspect for first-degree murder.
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