Vargas didn’t look convinced. “She knew the two victims. When’s the last time Tessa saw your sister?”
She was analyzing the case as he would have if he were on the outside. But he wasn’t on the outside. Sharp was dialed in completely. “The night Kara vanished. She tells me the two fought. Over Madison.”
“This Madison?” she said jabbing her thumb back at his building.
“Yes.”
“Was it some kind of love triangle? Do I smell motive?”
“No. You do not.” He ground out each word.
“Hey man, don’t shoot the messenger. I have to look at this from all angles.”
“Understood,” he said, cooling his anger. “A car hit Tessa shortly after she left that Halloween party. Her leg was badly broken, and she suffered a concussion. She was in the hospital for days. She couldn’t have hurt anyone.”
“Maybe she was hit after she stashed Kara?” Vargas said. “Maybe her thoughts were distracted by a terrible secret and she didn’t see the car.”
“You’re stretching a lot.”
Vargas shrugged. “Tessa could have been working with someone else, like Stanford.”
“No.”
“All I know is Tessa was around when your sister vanished, and now Tessa shows back up and Diane Richardson is found dead. And let’s not forget, whoever held Diane knew how to use an IV, like a trained doctor would.”
“Not Tessa.”
“You rise to her defense too quickly.” Vargas slid off her latex gloves. “You still love Tessa, don’t you?”
“That’s not relevant.”
“It is, if it clouds your judgment.”
“My judgment is crystal clear.”
“You’ve got a reputation for laser focus. But I bet this is the first time your ex has been involved in a case. Or your deceased sister has been mentioned in connection to a case.”
“You’re missing the point.” He tapped the image with his index finger. “Look at what the girls in the photo are wearing. They were headed to a Halloween party, and three were dressed as dolls.”
Vargas studied the picture again. “So you think whoever took your sister overdosed her, and is now back and killed Diane, one of the girls in this picture.”
“I do. Tessa also spoke to her cousin, who was at Kara’s funeral. According to the cousin, Elena was the one that found Kara, and Kara had a lot of makeup on her face.”
“What kind of makeup?”
“I don’t know. The pictures taken at the crime scene were poorly done. I have no clear view of Kara’s face.”
Vargas tapped her finger against her hip. “So, assuming that is all true, we have a guy who likes to make dolls out of living women?”
“A dollmaker. Yeah, that’s exactly what I’m saying.”
“Or are you trying to find a reason for your sister’s death other than the fact she took a walk on the wild side and took too many drugs?”
“Goddamn it, Kara didn’t take drugs,” he said, louder than intended.
Nonplussed, she pulled the picture from his fingers. “I’m not trying to trash your sister. I really am not. But I’m asking all the tough questions I would of any family member.”
He drew in a breath, locking down his frustration. “I get that. I do.”
“But you hate it. And believe me, I know how it hurts to have family questioned.”
How many times had he played the role of devil’s advocate to solve a case? “My sister didn’t use.”
“Okay. I’ll take you at your word on Tessa, your sister, and the cousin who remembers something Elena Hayes said twelve years ago. But,” she added more softly, “I will not ignore any evidence pointing me in a different direction, even if what I find ends up pissing you off. I’d be doing a disservice to your sister and Diane if I did.”
He released his breath. “Fair enough.”
“In the meantime, we need to get ahold of Elena Hayes.”
“Agreed.”
She studied the picture again. Reached for her phone and dialed. Phone to her ear, she said, “Calling Elena now.” After a pause, she held out her phone and they both listened to the voice-mail greeting. At the beep, “Elena, this is Agent Julia Vargas with the Virginia State Police. I need you to call me immediately.” She left her number and ended the call.
“Keep me posted,” Sharp said.
“Will do.”
“And Vargas, thanks. I appreciate the good work.”
The corner of her lip tilted into a grin. “I have a talent for irritating people.”
“Keep it that way.”
As she got in her car, he slid back behind the wheel of his car. He reached for the coffee in his cup holder and took a sip. It was stone-cold. His cell rang.
“Agent Sharp,” he said.
“Deputy Mathew Ryan. I hear you’re looking for Jimmy Dillon.”
“I sure as hell am.”
“One of my deputies stopped him on I-64 driving west about twenty minutes ago. He was driving nearly one hundred miles an hour and gave the officer one hell of a chase. We got him now. He’s all yours if you want him.”
“I do. I’ll be there within the hour.”
He maneuvered onto the interstate, and twenty-five minutes later he walked through the front doors of the small brick building housing the sheriff’s department.
Inside the sheriff’s office an officer glanced up, standing when Sharp entered.
“I’m Agent Dakota Sharp. Deputy Mathew Ryan called and said you’ve got Jimmy Dillon in a cell.”
“I’m Ryan. Your suspect, Dillon, gave us quite a chase. He’s in holding and waiting for you.”
“Thanks.”
“He’s hungover, but he should be clearheaded enough to answer your questions. I’ll bring him to the interrogation room.”
“Thanks.”
Sharp settled in the small room with grayish walls, a simple desk, and two chairs. There were no windows in the room, but a camera nestled in the upper-right corner shot down at him.
The door opened, and the deputy escorted in a wiry man with a crew cut. He wore a white shirt spoiled with sweat, jeans, and flip-flops. He looked at Sharp with bloodshot eyes. Sharp immediately recognized the man from surveillance footage as Jimmy Dillon.
Sharp sat back in his chair, opened his notebook, and clicked his pen several times as Dillon took a seat across from him. Dillon’s pale face made the unshaved stubble on his chin all the darker. The deputy remained in the corner, arms folded across his chest.
“Mr. Dillon,” Sharp said. “I’m Agent Sharp with the Virginia State Police.”
Dillon yawned, and as he rubbed his eyes, the handcuffs around his wrists clinked softly. “Why does state police care about me speeding? Ain’t you got real criminals to catch?”
“I was hoping you could tell me about Terrance Dillon.”
“I don’t know a Terrance Dillon.”
Squashing a jolt of anger, Sharp reached in the side pocket of his notebook and pulled out a surveillance picture of Terrance Dillon laughing beside his father at the gas station. “Is that you with your son, Terrance Dillon?”
Dillon didn’t bother to look. “I haven’t seen my kid in ten years.”
Sharp tapped the picture. “So this isn’t you in the picture?”