Part 10 (1/2)

Once she'd backed out of the driveway, Celeste turned to George. ”Sandra was murdered at some point on Wednesday. That's a fact and not something I pulled from the vision I had. This means Tracy could've been murdered sometime between Tuesday night and Thursday afternoon.”

”From Chicago, it's a two-hour trip to Milwaukee.” George pulled his cell phone from his pocket. ”If you're right about Tracy, then the killer needed at least a five-hour window to drive here, murder Tracy, then drive back to Chicago. Your small list of suspects...do any of them have that kind of time in their day?”

”Lea does.” She didn't work and, according to Kelly, had used the au pair or daycare to free up her day for time at the gym, shopping, lunches and manicures. ”If we could convince the Chicago PD to take another look into Sandra's death, they could confirm alibis for Lea, along with her husband and Kelly's.”

”Sandra told me Lea's husband was okay-not her first choice for her daughter-but he was all right.” George tapped at the cell phone screen. ”She also said she never liked Kelly's husband. Said something about him being very controlling and verbally abusive to her daughter.”

Celeste had witnessed Dale in action. He was a total jerk, but was he capable of murder? Plus, if Sandra never liked Dale, Celeste doubted the heavy betrayal and sadness she'd felt through Sandra would have been as strong.

When George placed the phone to his ear, she asked, ”Are you calling Tracy again?”

”No. A Milwaukee detective I met during my search for Tracy.” He held up a finger. ”Joe? It's George Landry, how you doing?” After a pause, George said, ”I'm standing outside Tracy Saunders' house. I'm worried about her and need a couple of officers here to do a wellness check. Can you make that happen for me?” After a few moments, George thanked the detective and pocketed the phone. ”Joe's coming himself and bringing his partner along with him. They should be here in about fifteen minutes.”

While they waited for the detectives in the warmth of George's SUV, Celeste kept thinking about the timing of Tracy's murders. ”She had to have been killed the same day as Sandra.”

”What makes you think that?” George asked. ”And, you don't even know for a fact Tracy is dead.”

The comforting white light teased her mind. ”You're right. I could be wrong about everything. But let's say I am right. If the killer is from Chicago and needed five hours to come here, drown her, then drive home...if they got to Tracy's around eight that night, that would put them back in Chicago around one in the morning. Right?”

”Right.” He rubbed his jaw with his gloved hand. ”Unless your suspects are known to stay out late-especially during the week-that'd raise suspicions with their spouses.”

”Since I can confirm that Lea was with Kelly on Thursday, and that Kelly's husband was also with them, then went back to work, Tracy had to have died on Wednesday.”

”But can you confirm Lea's husband's whereabouts?”

”No. The police could.”

”If they suspect foul play.” He sighed. ”Look, I'm not discounting any of your suspicions. During the thirty years I'd been with the Chicago PD, I saw things that-if I didn't have proof-people would think I was making up stories. Killing two people in one day? Seen it before. But your suspects are a stay-at-home mom, an attorney and a computer guy. Unless the two husbands took an entire day off of work, they couldn't have pulled off the double murders. There's just not enough time in the day.”

”Which leaves Lea. Did Sandra ever talk about her daughters with you?”

”Sure. Not much though. She did tell me she was worried about how they'd react once they found out about Tracy.”

”So she planned to tell them?”

He nodded. ”Since she was leaving Tracy money, she'd said she wanted her daughters to learn about the half-sister from her, rather than during the reading of her will.”

Another memory from last night's trance tugged at her. ”During my vision last night, as Tracy was being attacked she asked about Sandra. The killer had said something like, 'I'd tell you to ask Sandra, but she's as good as dead.'”

”Anything else?” George asked.

”Yes, Tracy asked if Sandra was dead and the killer told her, not yet. So, if Tracy was attacked the way I saw it, that would mean that Tracy was dead before Sandra.”

He looked out of the front winds.h.i.+eld, just as a dark sedan, followed by a police cruiser, pulled into Tracy's driveway. ”Time to stop speculating and find out if you're right about Tracy.” He turned to her, his eyes grave. ”And I hope to G.o.d you're wrong.”

She did, too. But as she stepped out of the Explorer and neared the police waiting by the front porch, dread settled on her chest. The killer had climbed these same steps and, under the ruse of wanting to learn how to play the piano, had entered this house and taken Tracy's life. Could she be wrong? After two years without a psychic vision, was her active imagination simply filling in the questionable blanks?

While George introduced her to Detective Joe Foster, a forty-something trim man with dark hair and a deep cleft in his chin, along with Joe's partner, Detective Rob Kliess, the two uniformed officers worked on opening Tracy's front door. After about twenty minutes, they succeeded without causing damage to the door, then one of the officers stepped inside. He immediately stepped back onto the porch, holding a hand over his mouth.

Frowning, Joe looked at his partner, then to George. ”Hang tight. We'll be right back.”

The stench drifting from the house lingered, even after the door had been closed. With her stomach nauseous from the foul odor and the memories of Tracy's final moments, she stood on the porch and watched as George paced. The two other officers also remained outside. The one who had gone into the foyer looked as if he might lose his breakfast at any moment.

Minutes later, Joe opened the door and stepped onto the porch. His face grim and ashen, he nodded to the two cops. ”Get the crime scene tape and set up a perimeter around the house.” Hand shaking, he pulled his cell phone from the front pocket of his coat. His eyes held apology and sympathy when he finally looked at George. ”I'm sorry, George.”

”Tracy's dead?”

”We found her in the bathtub.”

George's eyes widened as he s.h.i.+fted his gaze to her. ”Accidental?” he asked, still studying her.

”No. Before I call this in, I'm wondering why neither of you seem surprised.”

George blinked a few times before wiping a gloved hand down his face. He turned to Joe. ”Ever work with a psychic before?”

Joe glanced to her. ”No.”

”You might change your mind after you hear what Celeste has to say.”

Chapter 10.

CELESTE PARKED IN front of Maxine's. She quickly sent John a text to let him know it would be another hour or so before she'd be home, then she exited the Jeep. Although she considered Maxine her psychic mentor, right now she needed the woman to play the role of psychic therapist. She could tell John everything that had gone on while in Milwaukee-and she would-but John was all about evidence. While she could now present him with plenty of evidence, what she couldn't answer was what had happened when she'd gone to the light with Tracy. Celeste hoped Maxine could help her with this and give her something to rea.s.sure John that she could and would come back from the light, should she ever find herself there again.

When she entered Maxine's, the woman quickly embraced her. Although surprised, Celeste hugged her back. Tightly. She hadn't realized how much she'd needed the physical connection and, in that moment, how much she and Maxine were in sync.

”Are you okay?” Maxine asked, leading her into the kitchen instead of the unicorn parlor. Celeste instantly envied the huge kitchen and all its modern amenities. The kitchen she had at the condo she shared with John was a quarter of the size of Maxine's, and Celeste easily pictured whipping up a meal for a huge party using Maxine's extensive counter s.p.a.ce and double ovens.

”Honestly, no,” she said, taking a seat at the stool in front of the island. She brushed her hand along the quartz countertop. ”Tracy's dead.”

Maxine's eyes filled with sadness, but not shock. When Celeste had called her last evening to ask if they could get together, she'd told Maxine she had planned to meet with George with the hope of finding out more about Tracy. So much had happened since then...the trance, the police treating Tracy's house as a crime scene, the forensics investigators, the black body bag...

”I'm so sorry,” Maxine said, reaching across the island and grasping her hand. ”What happened?”

”Me. I had a trance last night.”

”Trance or vision?”

”Both. And it was the scariest, strangest and, next to Olivia's birth, the most beautiful thing I've ever experienced.”

Maxine's breath hitched. She stared at her with curiosity. ”Can you tell me what happened?”

”I'm hoping you can enlighten me. I thought I had the grounding thing down. But I was so wrong.” She met Maxine's gaze. ”So very wrong.”

Maxine reached under the island, then produced a bottle of wine. ”When I had the kitchen remodeled, I had my contractor install a wine cooler. I know it's a little early in the day, but I have a feeling this conversation calls for more than just a cup of tea.”

Over a gla.s.s of wine, Celeste told Maxine about last night-leaving out the s.e.x she'd had with John. By the time she was sipping her second gla.s.s, she'd finished explaining what had happened at George's office, then at Tracy's house.