place and started screwing every guy she could find. I moved back here after she . . . died.â
September had a picture of Sheila living at the house and thought it had probably been a lot nicer then. âDo you know if she was seeing anyone in particular?â she asked diffidently.
âJake Westerly, the miserable fuck.â
Jake Westerly!
September hid her intake of breath behind a short cough. Sheâd just been thinking about him. But Jake . . . linked to this investigation . . . it couldnât be. The idea made her so uncomfortable that it took an effort to snap herself back to the present.
âYou know that she was seeing Westerly for certain?â Gretchen was asking skeptically. âYou didnât mention it before.â
âYou mean to that deputy who told me my wife had been murdered?â Dempsey sneered. âHe was more interested in me and my whereabouts than listening to anything I had to say, so I just shut up. Fuck âem.â
âBut youâve thought it over now . . .â Gretchen prodded.
âSheila knew Westerly from way back. She cut his hair and they were . . . friends,â he said with a twist of his lips.
September remembered, then, that Sheila had worked as a part-time hairdresser. Deputy Dalton had reported that Sheila had no particular client list and had only worked at the salon a short time. He hadnât followed up, apparently, so maybe he did put the blame for Sheilaâs death at her husbandâs feet.
But Jake Westerly!
September suddenly recalled the slide of his hands across her skin, the heat of his mouth, the shock and thrill of intimacy. She felt slightly dizzy. Almost ill. Sheâd had a few other relationships since Jake, but theyâd never had that same, throat-grabbing power. Now she clenched her teeth together until her jaw ached and tried to stay in the moment.
Gretchen asked Dempsey more questions about Sheila: who else she was friends with, how she spent her extra time, did she have any enemies that he knew of. Dempsey didnât have much else in the way of real information. Kept circling around to the fact that âshe couldnât keep her legs togetherâ after theyâd split up, and that she had a real thing for the cowboy type.
September kept silent throughout. Jake Westerly had been a three-sport athlete in high school, tough and strong, but from her recollection, not a thing about him read âcowboy.â At least not then. She wondered now if he hung around The Barn Door . . . his family had lived in the Laurelton area back in the day, and his father, Nigel Westerly, had worked as a foreman/overseer at The Willows when her father first invested in the winery, commuting the forty minutes each way every day. Nigel had been first on the scene of Septemberâs motherâs accident as Kathryn had been driving away from the winery. Heâd tried to save her, but she was gone before the ambulance arrived. Braden, in his grief, had half-blamed Nigel for not saving his wife, and even September, dealing with her own loss, had lashed out at Jakeâs father. But Nigel was as torn up as anyone. Heâd liked Kathryn. Sheâd been nice to him, heâd said, over and over, like a litany. Treated him like an equal. It didnât stop Braden from firing him, though maybe it was a blessing in disguise because Nigel purchased a small vineyard nearby and began cultivating his own Pinot Noir grapes.
But September hadnât known any of that when she was a girl. Sheâd only known that her mother was gone, and then her sister, and that sheâd wanted something special her senior year and sheâd done her damnedest to make Jake Westerly notice her . . . and had succeeded.
She forcibly shut her mind down to those events, concentrating instead on the fact that, when theyâd hooked up, Jake had mentioned the accident that had taken her motherâs life, saying Kathrynâs death had
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