a half hour and had just put up the last of the groceries when his cell phone rang. He glanced at the caller ID and frowned. The Jakes family hadnât been all that happy with him lately, and he hoped Trey wasnât about to read him the riot act.
âHey, Trey, whatâs up?â
Trey didnât mince words.
âMomâs dead. She was murdered on the way home from Paul Jacksonâs memorial service. The killer thought he took Trina out, too, but she was still breathing when I found her. They just took her into surgery. I thought you should know.â
Lee grabbed on to the kitchen counter to keep from going to his knees.
âOh, my God. Oh, my God. Iâm so sorry about Betsy. Did they take Trina here to Webster Memorial?â
âYes. Iâm in the waiting room outside the OR.â
âIâm on my way,â Lee said, then grabbed his wallet and his car keys, and left on the run.
All the way to the hospital he kept remembering those last moments with Trina and the sadness in her voice. She couldnât die. She was the best thing that had ever happened to him.
* * *
Trey hung up the phone and looked at Dallas, but they didnât talk. There was nothing for her to say. His motherâs body was on the way to the morgue. There would be an autopsy, and since the murder had taken place in Webster County, the county sheriff, Dewey Osmond, had taken charge of the crime scene, just as he had when her classmate Dick Phillipsâ body was discovered.
Dallas couldnât quit shaking. This was a nightmareâa horrible, hideous nightmare. Both of their parents deadâmurderedâfor something that had happened when they were kids. When she reached for Trey, he grabbed her hand. She saw the shock in his eyes, and when she saw the tears, she cried with him.
* * *
The news of Betsy Jakesâ murder swept through Mystic like wildfire. There were plenty whoâd been at the memorial service who hadnât taken Trey Jakesâ comments all that seriously until now. Heâd asked the members of that ill-fated graduating class to think back. Heâd said there were some in Mystic who knew things. Heâd asked them for their help. Heâd mentioned a ten-thousand-dollar reward. Now every classmate left in Mystic, as well as everyone whoâd been in high school then, was thinking back to the night of graduation, going through everything they could remember and every bit of gossip theyâd heard.
* * *
Lainey Pickett lived almost ten miles outside Mystic, and after being dumped by Sam Jakes years earlier, she had purposefully shut that place and the people out of her life. She did her business and shopped in a neighboring town and coped with life the best that she could. She hadnât been at the memorial service because she knew nothing about any of the murders, which meant she didnât know anything about the announcement Trey Jakes made there, either. She made it a habit not to think about the Jakes men in any manner whatsoever.
Sheâd spent four of the past ten years getting a PhD in history, and for most of the past six years sheâd been teaching online classes for the University of West Virginia. Her life wasnât perfect, but she had taken it for granted until last Christmas, when sheâd found the lump in her breast.
A double mastectomy and a round of chemo treatments later, she was now minus boobs but cancer-free and getting ready to begin breast reconstruction. Her once-thick red hair was growing back, and she was alive, and for that she was grateful.
She had just finished her last class of the day and was getting ready to answer some student email when her cell phone began to vibrate. She had forgotten to turn the ringer back on, and when it began to rattle across the counter, she grabbed it before it fell off.
âHello?â
âLainey, this is Dallas Phillips.â
Lainey froze. She and Dallas had once been close