CHAPTER 53

Wednesday, November 21

5:10 p.m.

Liz reached Islamorada in just under three hours. Not bad considering both the traffic and the rain. The phone book listed Martha Ferguson’s address as Citrus Drive. Having no clue where that might be, she turned into the first minimart she came upon, hoping the attendant would know.

“Sure, honey,” the woman at the register said. She squinted at Liz through a haze of cigarette smoke. Her brown, leathery skin spoke of a lifetime spent in the brutal Florida sun. “Who you looking for?”

“Martha Ferguson. You know her?”

“Sure do. I know everybody on the island.” She stamped out her cigarette. “You certain you want to visit her? She’s a bit prickly, that one.”

“Absolutely certain. I need to ask her a few questions about her daughter.”

The woman’s eyebrows shot up. “Must be pretty important questions to bring you out in this weather.”

Liz didn’t take the bait. She tossed out one of her own. “Have you met her daughter Heather?”

The woman frowned. “Didn’t know Martha had a daughter. Never seen one come around. And I’ve seen almost everybody on this chunk of mud.”

Interesting, Liz thought as she climbed into her car moments later, armed not only with directions to the trailer park where Martha Ferguson lived, but with her trailer number as well.

Less than five minutes later, Liz pulled up in front of a neat-looking double-wide. Light glowed from the home’s interior, indicating Martha Ferguson was probably there. Liz shifted her gaze. From the darkened state of most of her neighbors’ homes, it looked as if she was one of the few who hadn’t evacuated.

Not so smart. Liz knew that a trailer wouldn’t be the safest dwelling in forty-five-mile-an-hour winds. But she had also learned, her short time living in the keys, that Floridians were both a hardy and stubborn lot, not easily sent packing by the threat of a little wind and rain.

She opened her car door and stepped out, umbrella up. A gust of wind slammed into her, ripping both her umbrella and the door handle from her hands. Immediately drenched, Liz managed to get the car door shut, then sprinted through the rain to the woman’s front door.

She knocked, and a moment later the door eased open and a woman peered out at her. “Yes?” she asked, openly suspicious.

“My name’s Elizabeth Ames,” Liz said, teeth beginning to chatter. “I’m with The Keys magazine. I’m doing an article on your daughter-”

“I have no daughter.”

She began to close the door. Liz shot her hand out to stop her. “Wait! Aren’t you Heather Ferguson’s mother? She’s recently been named Key West businesswoman of the yea-”

“I told you, I have no daughter!”

She slammed the door in Liz’s face. Startled by the woman’s violent reaction to the mention of her daughter’s name, Liz stood frozen to the spot, the rain pouring down on her, plastering her clothes to her skin.

She had come all this way, she wasn’t about to give up. She lifted her fist and pounded on the door. “I know she’s your daughter!” she cried. “Why won’t you talk to me? What are you trying to hide?”

“Go away!”

She pounded again. “Women are dying, Mrs. Ferguson. Please talk to me!”

For a moment Liz thought coming here had been a waste of her time, then the door cracked open. “What did you say?”

Liz took a deep breath, deciding on the truth. “That young women are dying. I’m trying to help.”

“What does Heather have to do with that?”

“I don’t know. Maybe nothing. That’s why I’m here.”

“Heather is dead to me,” she said, voice heavy with pain. “She has been for a long time.”

“Can I come in? Please, Mrs. Ferguson.”

The woman hesitated a moment more, then nodded and allowed Liz in. She retrieved a bath towel and offered her a cup of hot tea.

Liz thanked her, and while she toweled off, the woman brewed the tea.

That done, they sat across from each other at the woman’s small kitchen table. “I’m afraid I’m getting your seat cushions wet,” Liz murmured.

“A little water’s not going to hurt this place,” the woman replied, not looking up from her tea. “Besides, if the forecasters’ worst-case scenarios come to pass, a tornado will more than likely toss me into the Atlantic.”

“You’re not afraid?”

“I stayed for Andrew and for George. I’m not about to turn tail and run now.”

They fell silent. Liz sipped her tea. The woman studied her.

“You’re not a reporter, are you?”

“How did you-”

“No tablet or recorder. They always have one or the other. Nosey bloodsuckers.”

“You must have had experiences with the press.”

An expression of intense pain crossed her features and she looked away.

“When’s the last time you saw your daughter?”

“Years ago. After her sister’s-” She bit the words off and began again. “She wasn’t always the way she is now. She was a sweet child. Prone to willfulness and pranks…but what child isn’t?”

She didn’t expect a response and continued. “Then…she began running with the wrong crowd. Fast girls. Boys I didn’t like or trust. She began dabbling in the occult. With drugs. It seemed liked overnight she became a girl I didn’t recognize.”

Martha Ferguson lowered her gaze to her hands, clasped tightly on the table in front of her. After several moments, she returned her gaze to Liz’s. “She became a girl who frightened me.”

Liz struggled to reconcile what this woman was saying with what she knew of Heather from personal experience. The two versions didn’t fit. “How old was she when this happened?”

“Before her fifteenth birthday is when I began to see changes in her.” She paused, the moment pregnant with pain. “At first I thought it was a…a phase. That given a bit of time and strict boundaries, she would return to her normal self…but it didn’t go that way. Her behavior became more bizarre. Her moods blacker, more violent.” The woman’s voice cracked. “The Lord took both my children from me.”

“Both your children?” Liz asked as gently as she could, heart breaking for this woman.

“Yes. My younger daughter, my darling Christina. She was…she was murdered by that madman Gavin Taft.”

Dear God. The connection, she had found it.

Rick had been right about Gavin Taft being the link to the killer. Only that killer was a woman, not a man.

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