Buried trust, p.1

Buried Trust, page 1

 part  #5 of  A Turst Mystery Series

 

Buried Trust
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Buried Trust


  BURIED TRUST

  Kingsley is back!

  Fans will not be disappointed as she takes on an evil so sinister it could bring death to her family, and an unsuspecting farming community. Kudos to Hughes on this unique and compelling series.

  —P. D. Halt, Killer Nashville Silver Falchion Award Best Suspense Novel Finalist

  *********

  “Nancy Hughes is a voice to watch. In BURIED TRUST, she layers an authentic setting with a complex plot, beautiful prose, and touching, believable characters. Her Kingsley is a treasure.”

  —Saralyn Richard, award-winning author of the

  Detective Parrott mystery series.

  DEDICATION

  In memory of the Covid 19 victims, their families, and friends.

  In honor of the scientists who persevered to produce the vaccine to crush this deadly pandemic.

  OTHER BOOKS BY NANCY HUGHES

  The Dying Hour

  The Innocent Hour

  A Matter of Trust

  Redeeming Trust

  Vanished: A Trust Mystery

  Buried Trust

  A Mystery Novel

  by Nancy A. Hughes

  A Black Opal Books Publication

  GENRE: MYSTERY

  This is a work of fiction. Names, places, characters and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to any actual persons, living or dead, businesses, organizations, events or locales is entirely coincidental. All trademarks, service marks, registered trademarks, and registered service marks are the property of their respective owners and are used herein for identification purposes only. The publisher does not have any control over or assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their contents.

  BURIED TRUST A Mystery Novel

  Copyright ©2022 by Nancy A. Hughes

  Cover Design by Transformational Concepts:

  Cover photos used with permission

  All cover art copyright ©2019

  All Rights Reserved

  eBook ISBN: 9781953434739

  First Publication: JUNE 2022

  All rights reserved under the International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

  WARNING: The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal. Criminal copyright infringement, including infringement without monetary gain, is investigated by the FBI and is punishable by up to 5 years in federal prison and a fine of $250,000. Anyone pirating our eBooks will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law and may be liable for each individual download resulting therefrom.

  ABOUT THE PRINT VERSION: If you purchased a print version of this book without a cover, you should be aware that the book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”

  IF YOU FIND AN EBOOK OR PRINT VERSION OF THIS BOOK BEING SOLD OR SHARED ILLEGALLY, PLEASE REPORT IT TO:

  skh@blackopalbooks.com

  Published by Black Opal Books http://www.blackopalbooks.com

  Buried Warning

  Prologue

  Summer, 1849

  “She terrible sick,” the young mother whispered to their children’s father. She ministered to their little daughter with heart-felt anguish, having nothing but a wet rag to soothe her fevered brow. The mother dipped it in the tepid water again, which did little to lower her temperature. “What we gonna do?”

  August heat and humidity pressed on their companions, huddled in the underground shelter. Black fabric covered the window wells, and a lone candle lit the cavernous space. They remained silent as statues, knowing that exposure might betray them to killers. They had followed the route by night, then would proceed tonight when the knock came.

  “She can’t travel.” She followed her husband’s gaze to their three other children, the youngest barely two, and made a decision. Setting the five-year-old in her father’s arms, she headed toward the steps, shrouded in shadows cast by the solitary candle.

  Mounting the cellar steps on all fours lest she stumble, she eased open the door. It made the tiniest squeak but nobody in the great house responded. Ahead, ambers glowed beneath a kettle hung in the kitchen’s corner fireplace. The house, otherwise, seemed dark. Silently she proceeded, groping, hoping to find something—anything—to help her child.

  As she rummaged in the kitchen, the homeowner appeared as quietly as a spirit. Swallowing her fear, the mother begged, “Missy, please help. My baby awful bad sick.” From somewhere nearby a clock bonged twelve times.

  Her hostess followed her into the vast darkened cellar. “There,” she said, pointing to the little girl, cradled in her father’s arms. Three distinctive knocks on the exterior wooden door that led to the woods echoed through the basement. Twenty-six men, women, and children jumped to their feet. The anguished mother sobbed, torn about the risk to her daughter.

  “Leave her with me,” their hostess said. “I’ll nurse her, then send her with those who follow. What is her name?”

  “Rebecca.” The hidden cellar door to freedom opened and a scruffy mountain man beckoned to the travelers. Silent as shadows, each gathered their bundles and headed outside single file. “Go with your family,” the homeowner insisted. “They need you,” she added, nodding to the tiniest boy. “I’ll hide and care for your little one until she’s well enough to rejoin the travelers.”

  “God bless you, ma’am,” she whispered, entrusting Rebecca to the lady. With a final kiss to her daughter’s forehead, she herded her others into the line that disappeared into the inky, moonless night.

  Mrs. Krick made a hasty nest for their newest guest in one of their grown children’s old bedrooms while Mister closed the draperies. Ordinarily, their travelers stayed below briefly, but the dank cellar was no place for such a sick child. Gently she removed the drowsy child’s rags and bathed her. The little angel was skin and bones with sores on her ebony skin.

  She dressed her in a muslin nightshirt she’d dug from the old steamer trunk, cradled and rocked her while spooning small sips of water through her parched lips. Mentally, she inventoried the herbal remedies and tinctures she had on hand and what herbs to harvest from her kitchen garden. She’d gather garlic, bergamot, and calendula for teas and mullein’s large velvety leaves to cover her poultices.

  “Poor little thing. She needs the doctor.”

  “Can’t risk it. You’ve heard him condemn Mr. Lincoln. He’d tell. And the bounty hunters would find us. Brew her a tonic; mix up some salve. Then it’ll be in God’s hands.” The pair offered prayers on her behalf for His intervention.

  Chapter 1

  Present Day

  “Did you see those weird lights again last night?” Todd Henning called to his wife, Kingsley, through the break in the white pine fence row they were planting. He tossed the post hole digger aside to part the branches and hear her response.

  “Just those three other times,” she replied, angling to see him better. “It’s strange. I thought the Amish farmer to our west was buying the land for his son who’s getting married. It’s their custom to buy a farm for the next generation, adjacent to theirs, if possible, to farm together. Those sixty acres to our east would have been right-sized for farming with horses or mules.

  “If he bought it, why would he be prowling around at night with lanterns? They go to bed as soon as it’s dark to get up at five for milking.”

  “I suppose we could check with the recorder of deeds. Or a realtor. Or the township, since you’re so curious. In the meantime, pass me the metal measure and a screwdriver.” They landed near her feet with a thunk. “Thanks.” She anchored the tape’s metal loop into the ground with the screwdriver, then dragged the retractable ruler to mark the exact distance, securing it with a rock to prevent it from retracting. “I’m surprised he didn’t buy our land when it came on the market,” she continued, momentarily neglecting her job to mark another pine’s position.

  “Way too expensive with that historic stone house. They’d have to retrofit it to make it plain. And the Historical Society would pitch a fit. Besides, our seven-acre property is too small for their kind of farming. No, much better to build a house and barn on undeveloped farmland like the property next door,” he replied.

  “That would have been ideal for us if the Amish bought it. We’re so used to the previous owner renting it for crop farming. What if a developer has bought it and throws up hundreds of track houses? Or worse, what if zoning is changed from agricultural to commercial? We could end up living next to a rendering plant.”

  Silence caught the mother’s attention. “Where’s Billy!” She dropped the metal measure and frantically scanned the front yard. “He was right behind me a minute ago.” Todd stopped what he was doing, and the pair jogged through the yard, calling frantic orders for their two-year-old son to show himself immediately.

  “Could he have gone into the house?” Kingsley called, skidding to a stop, gasped, having circled the exterior of their home.

  “He can’t manage the door. Oh, dear God—the road.” They plowed through the twelve-foot wild honeysuckle bushes, rhododendron, and mountain laurel that separated their front lawn from the rural two-lane.

A quick look left, then right revealed no dark-haired toddler in a red hooded jacket.

  “You go east; I’ll go west,” Todd said, pointing and sprinting toward the Amish farm while she ran toward the property of their recent discussion. No little boy.

  Panting, Kingsley wailed to Todd. “Not again!” Burned in her subconscious, no matter how much therapy, yoga, and prayer, she could not stop the day-and-nightmare residual left from their then-infant son’s being kidnapped. Kingsley rarely let Billy out of her sight unless he was secure with family or responsible adults. She knew that wretched things can and do happen to ordinary people.

  Circling to the back lawn a second time where a play gym anchored the back-left corner, the frantic mother stopped. Billy, trotting from the farmer’s field, was clutching the filthiest little dog Kingsley had ever seen. Not wanting to alarm her child and cause it to bite Billy, she summoned her most soothing voice. “Put the puppy down, Billy.”

  The child scowled and stuck out his lower lip. “Mine!”

  “No, honey, that puppy belongs to somebody. And they’re probably worried about him.” Billy clutched the mutt to his chest, hugging its skinny body against his muddied red jacket, the little dog’s feet reaching the child’s knees, its mouth inches from Billy’s cheek.

  Not wanting to frighten the dog and cause him to snap, she tried another tactic. “Some little boy will be worried—Billy—stop! You’re squeezing him. That might hurt.” If the child released his grip just a little, maybe the pup would wriggle free and run home. Instead, the dog covered Billy’s face with sloppy kisses. The cat-loving mother scrunched her face in disgust. Oh, yuk!

  At that moment, Todd ran around the east corner of the house, braking hard. He grinned. “What have we got here?”

  “Your son has found the grungiest little dog and won’t give him up.”

  “Put him down for a minute, son. Let’s have a look. Maybe he has a collar with some ID. Then we can locate his owner. By the looks of him, he’s had a romp in the creek.”

  Rather than following his father’s instructions, Billy clutched the dog tighter, swiveling his back to his parents. “No! Mine!”

  “What are we going to do?” Kingsley mouthed to Todd.

  “Billy, if we’re going to find his family, we’ll need to clean him up first. Do you think he’d like a bath in the laundry tub? You can help shampoo him.”

  Billy peered over the dog’s head at his father as if he knew he was being played. “Maybe the puppy would like a treat?” Todd suggested. Billy’s little brain appeared to be working the new angle. “Do you think he’d like Pandora’s kitty treats or a cookie? Mommy, are there enough cookies for Billy and the pup?”

  Billy smiled. “Cookies. The big ones. With the chips.”

  “We’ll need to fashion a collar and leash, so he won’t get lost in the house. Mommy, do you have something of Pandora’s we can use?”

  Cats do not have leashes, you fool, she telepathed, but instead verbalized a reasonable response. “I’ll see what I can makeshift. In the meantime, why don’t you see if you can keep Billy safe?” she hissed over her shoulder. At the front door, she glanced back at her filthy child who was beaming with delight at the pup who was licking his chin.

  Shortly she returned with a skinny leather belt, a leftover from her pre-Billy size zero wardrobe. She handed Todd the belt and a leather punch she’d snagged from the basement workbench. He eyeballed the dog, gauging the size of his neck, and punched several holes near the buckle. Approaching cautiously, he slipped the loop over the animal’s head and fastened it securely. “There. Do you think you can walk him to the door?”

  “Todd! Persian runner?”

  “Easy, Mom. I’ll pick him up if we can get someone’s cooperation.”

  If only. Kingsley knew she’d wish later that they’d grabbed a camera. Filthy dog and child, standing side by side on a crate in the basement, watching Todd half-fill the tub with warm water. Her precious boy looked for all the world like a miniature of her husband with his crystal blue eyes, curly dark hair, and dimples when he laughed. When Todd reached for liquid detergent, she reacted. “Eyes!” And leapt to remedy the situation by running upstairs for baby shampoo.

  Todd lifted the dog into the water, letting Billy maneuver his plume of a tail. The dog tolerated his bath surprisingly well, bracing his front paws on the divider that separated the double tubs while licking his muzzle continually when Todd hosed off the shampoo. Blackened water cursed down the drain, revealing a beige dog with black tips on his ears. Todd laughed. “He’s adorable!”

  Oh, brother! Not you too. “Daddy,” she hissed in her best executive-banker voice, “Do not get attached. We need to find his owner. He’s merely clean enough to ride in the Explorer.” Her husband looked up quizzically. “Well, he’s not getting in my Lexus,” she preempted.

  “Dear—it may have sentimental value since your Grammy left it to you, but it’s ancient.”

  “But it’s my ancient clean. Boycar. Dog. Dad. SUV. You get it?”

  “Yes’m.”

  * * * * *

  “That’s Scruffy! At least that’s what the kids call him,” said Jacob, the Henning’s next-door dairy farmer. He’d just hiked uphill from the barn, wiping his florid face with a red bandana. “We thought he was black!”

  “So, he’s yours?”

  “Well, we’ve been feeding him. Took him to the vet. Got his shots. He sleeps in our summer kitchen then spends the day out and about. Sneaks in the coal bin to nap. One of these day’s he’s going to get hit on the road. He has the wanderlust.” The Amish man gazed at the two-year-old, planted in the grass, his arm around the pup that was snuggled against him. The pair looked adoringly at each other.

  “He must belong to someone,” Kingsley said. “Any idea who? Is he chipped? Anyone reported him missing?”

  “Vet said no. He’s been around, ah, maybe six months. Someone put him out on the highway when he was a puppy and sped off.” He frowned. “But I wouldn’t worry about him. Won’t be long now till he’s just a splat on the highway.”

  Kingsley’s temper flared. “That’s a terrible thing to say!”

  The farmer shrugged. “Tis true. Couple of our cats get hit every year, but we have no mice in the barn. Guess it’s nature’s way.” The Amish man nodded toward the boy and dog. “Boy loves that dog.”

  “But. But. I’m a cat person.”

  “Yeah. Got a few dozen of them ourselves.”

  “But we’re gone all day. Who’s going to let him out?”

  The farmer approached the dog, and with no objection from the pup, pried his mouth open to look at its teeth. “He’s a young’un—I’d say, maybe a year? House train him and he’ll be good for twelve hours. Dogs hate to soil. Wait here. I’ll get you the name of the vet. She can tell you all about him.”

  Kingsley looked from Todd to Billy to Scruffy, shaking her head. “First off, that name’s gotta go. It’s undignified.”

  As they entered their home via the front door, Kingsley remembered Pandora, her long-haired tuxedo cat who’d arrived when Kingsley had no intention of adopting a pet. Her best friend, Barrie, had brought the kitten one stormy night, complete with her motorized litter box and plenty of food. Same ploy—the kitten was doomed to the kill shelter unless someone would take her. Kingsley had left her own adorable Pesto with her parents when she left for college, after which her mom refused to return her. Pandora and Pesto could have been twins, Barrie having seen Pesto’s photo on Kingsley’s desk. The cat lover was hooked.

  The Hennings foursome stood on the same square yard in their foyer not sure what to do next. Pandora was nowhere in sight. “Go for it,” Todd said, encouraging Kingsley to unbuckle the leash and let the puppy explore. Nose down, he sniffed in widening circles, finally picking the living room to his left. “Nose brains,” Todd said. “They can go blind and deaf, but as long as they can smell, they can adapt.”

 

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