Jaycee paced in front of the old bank building on the main street in Comfort. With its older builders, historical signs, and quiet streets, this place lived up to its name. But they had chosen it as the meeting place for this unusual pow-wow of characters for another reason - its location close to Grandfather's ranch.
She looked at her watch. Eight-forty-eight. Her heart beat faster as she contemplated the day ahead. There were just so many unknowns. As carefully as they had planned things, she knew they were flying blind here. Trusting that Grandfather or Rex would be able to detect the Chupacabra among the myriad of suspects, what if they didn't?
'Relax, Nʉ Sʉmʉ. I promise nothing will happen to you or Angel.'
She smiled, his voice in her head was more comforting than she could have imagined that first day on the steps outside that courthouse. But despite knowing that for the first time in her life, she did not face her troubles alone, she was still worried. She knew that the unspoken bit of that statement was 'if it cost him his life.' But she had quickly come to fear losing this man, every bit as much as she did Angel.
She watched as the white truck with a horse trailer came down the road. Rex came to stand beside her, "So, Masters is the first. Why does that not surprise me? Eager to get his hands on one point two million dollars worth of prime horseflesh."
She chuckled that he chose to use the words she had spoken that first day in the courtroom. "Yes, well, Thad is the red sports car right behind him."
Before the words were even out of her mouth, the car traversed the double yellow line and overtook the truck, pulling into a parking space in front of the bank. She had not seen the young man who got out of it in weeks, since his father's attorney, Mitch Taylor, had deposed him. Despite the seriousness of the matter, Thad Marshall seemed surprisingly jovial.
She held out her hand, "Thanks for coming, Thad."
His smile broke for a moment as he took her hand, "I'm gonna be honest, Jaycee. I need this thing over as soon as possible. I just want to move on with my life."
She nodded as the middle-aged and slightly paunchy man in khakis and a knit shirt got out of the truck and walked towards them. "Rex," was his only comment, not bothering to hold out his hand to his former employee.
She held out hers instead, "Mister Masters, I'm Jaycee Riley, and this is my client Thad Marshall. We'd like to thank you for your patience with this matter. Hopefully, we can come to some mutually agreeable resolution today."
The man eyed her client as if taking the man's measure. "Yes, well, I hope so as well. If not, then I'm prepared to seize the animals again."
Thad was about to say something but was distracted as a police cruiser pulled in next to his convertible. The man who got out was the opposite of Masters - hard in every way, from the toned body that testified to hours spent in the gym, and perhaps a few illegal steroids as well, to the grim look on his aging but still handsome face. This man meant business as he studied them all.
He covered the distance in only a couple of strides. He did not bother offering his hand either, but was polite enough to doff his hat at her, "I'm assuming that you're Jaycee Riley, my wife's litigator?"
She forced a smile; this man was everything that she had been warned about - and perhaps more. "Sheriff Kerr, thank you for coming today."
"Where's Joyce and my girls?" the man got straight to the point.
She was glad that they had decided it was not necessary to involve that client in the matter. The woman and her daughters were deep in hiding, thanks to a network for domestic abuse victims. Jaycee knew that none of them were emotionally stable and recovered enough to handle a face-to-face meeting with their abuser, and she did not doubt after meeting this man that he was that and more.
"I'm sure you're aware, Sheriff, that it is not necessary under these circumstances for your former wife to be present at your deposition."
He shrugged, "We'll see once my attorney gets here." His smile sent a shiver up her spine, "I think you might know the man - Sean Riley."
It did not surprise her that a narcissistic, gaslighting bastard like Andrew Kerr would stoop to such a tactic. But it did shock her a bit that Sean would lower himself to personally dealing with a mere custodial issue. She tried her best not to let that show, as he added, "Biblically speaking even."
Jaycee was glad that the arrival of a shiny new SUV obviated any need to respond to his dig. She turned her attention instead to the young man next to her as she smiled reassuringly at Thad, "At least your father and his attorney came."
Thad Marshall nodded, but she noticed that her client was decidedly less sanguine than when he arrived. His face darkened further when his father got out of the vehicle. Even Jaycee was taken aback by the change in the older man's appearance.
Gone was the self-assured and sanctimonious rancher; in his place was an old man. Perhaps a dying man, she wondered as she watched Mitch Taylor bring a walker out of the back of his car. Even then, Tybor Marshall could barely stand. His skin yellowish and his hands covered in bruises of various shades of black, green, blue, purple, and yellow.
Her attention was fully on her client as she watched the mixed emotions fleet across Thad's face. She reached out and gently squeezed his shoulder, realizing how easy it had been to stereotype him as uncaring - of the horse, the case, and his father. Perhaps it was not that he did not care, but that he cared too much.
Thad nodded at her as he climbed down a couple of steps to greet his father, "Here, let me help you, Daddy."
Tybor Marshall shook his head, "Do you really care, boy? Looks like you'll win by default." But the man allowed his son to grip his elbow and gently help him up the steps.
Jaycee held out her hand to Mitch Taylor, realizing that they could eliminate one suspect from the list. Couldn't they? Could a man in that shape be capable of transforming into - that thing?
'No, he couldn't,' Rex's voice in her mind was a gentle reminder that she was not alone. But she appreciated that he had allowed her to control this circus.
"If you all will bear with me for a few more minutes, we're only missing one more participant," she said in her courtroom voice.
Mitch nodded as Thad spoke quietly with his father. Masters grumbled as he glared at Rex. But it was Kerr's over-confidence that bothered her most, "He'll be here; you can count on it."
She was grateful for Rex's hand on her shoulder, even if Masters did raise his eyebrows, "So, that's why you bent over backward for this case, Ranger."
Rex's only response was a gentle squeeze as the black BMW came down the street. 'Let the show begin.'
***